Tags
Age of Climate Chaos, Capitalism, Climate Change, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Corporate $tate, Depression, Eco-Apocalypse, Michael Ruppert, Peak Oil, Resource Wars, Security and Surveillance State, Suicide, The Elite 1%, Vandana Shiva
Humans live on hope and without it they fall into depression, oftentimes taking their own lives. In ‘The Evolution and Psychology of Self-Deception‘, optimism bias is said to be a defense or coping mechanism for survival. Most turn to religion for the ultimate hope of an afterlife nirvana. Voluntarily and unflinchingly holding one’s eyes open to the searing light of reality is an unnatural act for humans. For many, simply dealing with everyday life and the stress of surviving the concrete jungle is enough to drive them to despair, madness, and suicide. Whether they realize it or not, any normal person taking in the full scope of the multiple crises we face is surely prone to depression to some degree or another. I am now finding that I have to periodically distance myself from blogging on these subjects because it’s affecting my personal relationships as well as my mental/physical health. Suicide is on the rise in the modern world:
Death on the Farm:
…Since that crisis, the suicide rate for male farmers has remained high: just under two times that of the general population. And this isn’t just a problem in the U.S.; it’s an international crisis. India has had more than 270,000 farmer suicides since 1995. In France, a farmer dies by suicide every two days. In China, farmers are killing themselves to protest the government’s seizing of their land for urbanization. In Ireland, the number of suicides jumped following an unusually wet winter in 2012 that resulted in trouble growing hay for animal feed. In the U.K., the farmer suicide rate went up by 10 times during the outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease in 2001, when the government required farmers to slaughter their animals. And in Australia, the rate is at an all-time high following two years of drought.
Suicide Rate Rises Sharply in U.S.:
From 1999 to 2010, the suicide rate among Americans ages 35 to 64 rose by nearly 30 percent, to 17.6 deaths per 100,000 people, up from 13.7. Although suicide rates are growing among both middle-aged men and women, far more men take their own lives.
Why Suicide Has Become an Epidemic–and What We Can Do to Help:
…We know, thanks to a growing body of research on suicide and the conditions that accompany it, that more and more of us are living through a time of seamless black: a period of mounting clinical depression, blossoming thoughts of oblivion and an abiding wish to get there by the nonscenic route. Every year since 1999, more Americans have killed themselves than the year before, making suicide the nation’s greatest untamed cause of death. In much of the world, it’s among the only major threats to get significantly worse in this century than in the last…
…This year, America is likely to reach a grim milestone: the 40,000th death by suicide, the highest annual total on record, and one reached years ahead of what would be expected by population growth alone. We blew past an even bigger milestone revealed in November, when a study lead by Ian Rockett, an epidemiologist at West Virginia University, showed that suicide had become the leading cause of “injury death” in America. As the CDC noted again this spring, suicide outpaces the rate of death on the road—and for that matter anywhere else people accidentally harm themselves. Somewhere Ralph Nader is smiling, but the takeaway is darkly profound: we’ve become our own greatest danger.
This development evades simple explanation. The shift in suicides began long before the recession, for example, and although the changes accelerated after 2007, when the unemployment rate began to rise, no more than a quarter of those new suicides have been tied to joblessness, according to researchers. Guns aren’t all to blame either, since the suicide rate has grown even as the portion of suicides by firearm has remained stable.
The fact is, self-harm has become a worldwide concern. This emerged in the new Global Burden of Disease report, published in The Lancet this past December. It’s the largest ever effort to document what ails, injures, and exterminates the species. But allow me to save you the reading. Humankind’s biggest health problem is humankind…
That last article I quoted above, from a mainstream periodical, has more truth written between the lines than its author even realizes. Humans are their own worst enemy and perhaps the rise of suicides across the globe is a reflection of our ecocidal culture, one that values money over life and reduces everything to a financial statistic. Capitalism is the most pervasive religion on the planet today. Most living at the end of modern history have adopted the ruling elite’s belief system which says that all problems can and will be solved via the “free market” and human ingenuity, but as one Indian philosopher of the 21st century wisely observed:
“Nature shrinks as capital grows. The growth of the market cannot solve the very crisis it creates.” ~ Vandana Shiva
People are a reflection of their environment, and so it is in the waning days of industrial civilization and predatory capitalism that many will no longer have the will to go on. From an interesting obituary written by a friend of Michael C. Ruppert:
…I look at Ruppert’s life, his hard struggle, his victories and his short-comings. I wish we were closer in his final couple of years. I loved him. I say the following with love. I say the following because I don’t want to know any more great truth-loving writers to die this way. If you have a drinking problem, hit a meeting. Reach out. It worked for me, to stop flailing about, running from city to country to city, always moving, thinking a big move is going to change things. Get centered. Pray and meditate. Be still.
Something snapped in Ruppert sometime later in that decade, after the book. He moved to Venezuela, in rushed effort to seek political asylum from the Chavez government. Ruppert probably wasn’t anti-imperialist enough for their tastes, at least not in a leftist way. Oh, and the CIA/DIA family background probably didn’t help.
I wept. I felt rage today. I was mad at you, Mike, going out this way. It was too similar to Gary Webb, to Jim Hatfield the Bush biographer. I don’t want this pattern. Tell me it’s not the fate for writers of deep truth, to die, alone, shooting their brains out, because they went deep and hard after the invisible forces, the slithering stag. The hunter became hunted by the dragon.
No. Mike will be remembered for his discipline, his writing, his development of a critical paradigm. Our society is stronger for the deep analysis. In the same way that Ruppert investigated Gary Webb’s death, it’s up to us now to do the scientific and careful analysis of the crime scene. To pick up where he left off, and wake up to a new view of the matrix…
In their search for the truth, perhaps some travel too far down the rabbit hole of civilizational and environmental collapse to ever escape its malignant shadow; it consumes them like a cancer. A copy of Ruppert’s suicide letter can be read here. His research and thinking lead him to the inner sanctum of dark revelation and the unsettling details of civilization’s trajectory. The vaporware dreams of a technological utopia will most certainly go up in smoke as social unrest and resource wars consume the nations of the world in an age of climate chaos. The evil genius of mankind will be revealed in evermore lethal and destructive ways to kill his fellow man. And waiting in the wings of industrial civilization’s collapse is the toxic and radioactive tsunami from an aging fleet of nuclear reactors dependent on a functioning electric grid. Humans are capable of great acts of compassion and selflessness as well as great acts of cruelty and violence. The system rewards sociopathic behavior at the expense of the health of the whole. Ignoring such stark realities won’t change our odds for survival.
RIP Michael C. Ruppert, Feb. 3, 1951- April 13, 2014
Full Documentary of ‘Apocalypse, Man’:
“RIP Michael C. Ruppert.”
Indeed.
Thanks xraymike79 for this post.
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Seamless? Not quite. Let me explain. I have lived with thoughts of self deliverance that began in childhood. In adolescence I remember sitting in my family home’s dank basement trying to convince myself to “do it”. Dostoyevsky, Kafka, and Camus were my gurus then, and Hamlet’s soliloquy my theme song. Later life did little to persuade that life was not a serious mistake. As I futilely tried to drink myself to death, my often inwardly repeated mantra was, “I wish I was dead.” I guess that qualifies me as one who entertained a long affair with the demon lover of self destruction.
So how is it that I am still here at the advanced age of 83? A long story….but here is the point – how do I deal with NTE now? In spite of my previous tendency to pronounce a pox on all that lives and whatever gods they are cursed with, I somehow developed, in spite of my dark moods, a love affair with all that is good and true and beautiful. In spite of the hell we have created for ourselves, there have been those who brought forth the most exquisitely beautiful realities that I am most totally and truly in love with. This is the seam of Light that I choose to celebrate and sustain my life with in the face of our seemingly certain final self destruction and poisoning of all life on this planet. This is my gesture of defiance to the forces of Darkness that seem to be winning this ancient struggle against hope and love and sanity. With Camus, this is my absurd gesture against all that is seeking to destroy all that I love so much….
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The absurd gesture of defiance perhaps offers a new meaning to “rebel without a cause.”
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You know Death seems to hold all the trump cards in its game against Life. But somehow Life dares to put itself forth in this universe of exploding stars and icy space. So what if Death has the final trick of every game? The play’s the thing, so damn the dark ending, let’s celebrate all that’s bright and wonderful in this dance with Death. Would all this fascinating tango even be possible without its Dark Partner?
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Wise words to live by.
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I think most readers here know the great J Krishnamurti quote:
“It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.”
When I first read it I found it to be profound and personally validating. I believe the increase in suicides is an escalation of symptoms from an increasingly sick society. When you are raised to believe that your value as a human is based on your ability to pay taxes and consume and then you lose your job, what value do have then? I think we will see more people choosing to opt out as we go forward and it will remain largely ignored. I am completely convinced that we are fucked, but now is not the time to opt out. As long as my mother is alive, I am duty bound to carry on.
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Trauma is insidious. It not only increases a person’s risk for psychiatric disorders, but can also spill over into the next generation. People who were traumatized during the Khmer Rouge genocide in Cambodia tended to have children with depression and anxiety, for example, and children of Australian veterans of the Vietnam War have higher rates of suicide than the general population.
Trauma’s impact comes partly from social factors, such as its influence on how parents interact with their children. But stress also leaves ‘epigenetic marks’ chemical changes that affect how DNA is expressed without altering its sequence. A study published this week in Nature Neuroscience finds that stress in early life alters the production of small RNAs, called microRNAs, in the sperm of mice (K. Gapp et al. Nature Neurosci. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nn.3695; 2014). The mice show depressive behaviours that persist in their progeny, which also show glitches in metabolism.
The study is notable for showing that sperm responds to the environment, says Stephen Krawetz, a geneticist at Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit, Michigan, who studies microRNAs in human sperm. (He was not involved in the latest study.) “Dad is having a much larger role in the whole process, rather than just delivering his genome and being done with it,” he says. He adds that this is one of a growing number of studies to show that subtle changes in sperm microRNAs “set the stage for a huge plethora of other effects”.
In the new study, Isabelle Mansuy, a neuroscientist at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, and her colleagues periodically separated mother mice from their young pups and exposed the mothers to stressful situations either by placing them in cold water or physically restraining them. These separations occurred every day but at erratic times, so that the mothers could not comfort their pups (termed the F1 generation) with extra cuddling before separation.
http://www.nature.com/news/sperm-rna-carries-marks-of-trauma-1.15049
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Indeed.
We can even find evidence of deceptive behavior in species prior to the human species (On The Origin of Propaganda), and I think that the mass-extinction events that have bombarded organisms of this planet have caused much if not all of it.
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i think you are onto it there mike, it’s the trauma, creates depression. oh, some people may not have gotten too beat up physically, but the mental is still there.
treated like dogs, it sinks in, feelings of worthlessness, loss of hope. according to the ancients hope is quite an evil thing, created a dichotomy, a split with reality, hard to reconcile.
but then, when the anointed one speaks of “the audacity of hope”, who’s to argue, he does wear some nice suits. too bad they’re empty.
“How does it feel to be
One of the beautiful people?
How often have you been there?
Often enough to know
What did you see when you were there?
Nothing that doesn’t show
Baby you’re a rich man
Baby you’re a rich man
Baby you’re a rich man too
You keep all your money in a big brown bag inside a zoo
What a thing to do
Baby you’re a rich man
Baby you’re a rich man
Baby you’re a rich man too”
geez, maybe the boys were satanic after all.
but seriously, people are hurting all over, it’s insidious.
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Fascinating stuff mike. Reminds me of Gabor Mate’s insights in his book In The Realm of Hungary Ghosts. A stressed and dysfunctional society impacts us all. Nevertheless, we are only here individually for about a hundred years at best. Has there ever been a golden age where terrible things were not happening for people on Earth? No. Like James Joyce said, “History is a nightmare from which I am trying to awake.” Might as well serve and enjoy the higher possibilities that exist while we are here. There are plenty of things one cannot change; why not focus on some good things that are still possible while we are still here drawing breath?
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Gabor Mate – Good man. It’s interesting how many fellow non-practicing addicts keep showing up on various collapse blogs. I wonder if there is anything to that?
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Someone commented yesterday on a video I created 2 years ago. Now is a good time to repost that video…
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Is that where you go to mediate xraymike?
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meditate. Or both.
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The Sonoran and Mohave Desert have good places to escape the people and noise of the city.
This reminds me of a story that a patient told me in Needles, CA. Her husband was a drunkard and very abusive to her. Having taken as much of him as she could bear, she stopped the car and told her husband to get out and walk home. They were on the outskirts of town when he got out of the car. She drove home and left him there in the desert on the side of the road. The next day when she got worried that her husband had never returned home, she called the police to look for him. They found him passed out under the shade of a scrub bush and lying next to a large rock. Right next to his head was a four foot Mojave rattlesnake.
The police retrieved him from the snake before he was bitten. After that day he never beat or cursed his wife again.
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Don’t know why exactly, but this story made me laugh…
Bill McKibben gets a species of gnat named after himself.
http://grist.org/article/bill-mckibben-checks-have-species-named-after-me-off-to-do-list/
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Me too. it must be knowing McKibben is only green on the outside and chasing an impossible dream based on slight tweaking of present arrangements. Or maybe its knowing we’ve broken through 400 and 350 is now a sick joke.
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I can tell you why it makes me laugh: he plays along so nicely with the fame machine, accepting honors and accolades that amount to precisely nothing — even or especially in relation to his stated mission. His response is the same pro forma PR garbage spat out continuously by politicians and media who enjoy seeing their names in lights, and I guess now on bugs. My take on McKibben these days is echoes that of ulvfugl, whose excoriation of McKibben made it quite clear that whatever environmental message McKibben used to espouse in good faith has since been coopted. Sick joke indeed.
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@Kevin and Brutus,
You are both right on the money.
Here he is in the local rag to advertise his appearance in my town(Flagstaff, AZ) next week. Too bad I can’t attend because I’d ask some pointed questions.
Click to enlarge…

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Lots of good stuff, as always.
An important point arose in discussion yesterday; a friend pointed out that we should not refer to those at the apex of the pyramid as ‘elites’, or ‘global elites’ because doing so sends a wrong message. I must admit that though I often refer to them as sociopaths or psychopaths, I have fallen into the trap of calling the ‘the elites’.
Alex pointed out that is entirely the wrong word, and I agree.
elite: a group of people regarded as the best in a particular society or organisation (Oxford dictionary).
Now as far as the dumbed-down masses are concerned, that may be true. Many of the uninformed, non-thinking fools that make up a large portion of western societies do look up to the ;elites’. And ‘the elites’ regard themselves as elite. But for anyone who is awake, it is entirely the wrong word. We may colloquially refer to them as scumbags, self-serving liars, looters-and-polluters, eco-vandals, ecocidal maniacs, evil-doers etc, But such terms do not fit well in formal writing.
I’m sure the answer is ‘out there’ somewhere, probably in the writings of Bertrand Russell or Mark Twain. .
I gave the document I delivered to NPDC yesterday the title: ‘The Culture of Death and New Plymouth as a Sacrifice Zone.’ It highlights my preliminary observations and conclusions with respect to the blackening and greying of the district.
How much of this blackening and greying of the district is coming from the psychotic sociopaths who are in control, and how much is coming from the subjugated population in response to what they are being subjected to will take months to fathom our (my goodness, the British navy is everywhere still).
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fathom out
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“elites” also carries a connotation of superior intelligence, diligence, worthiness. A fair number of elites are just plain stupid, lazy, obnoxious folks that don’t even necessarily work that efficiently together, they’re just bull-headed.
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One of your best xraymike.
mike k and apneaman – I like the way you think.
I’m familiar with death and suicide via family and circumstances. I too am not very concerned with the work-a-day world and have all but retired, though not voluntarily.
I don’t think we have more than about 5 years before things deteriorate badly enough to drop the population precipitously and continually due to habitat loss, ocean acidification, erratic and extreme weather and pollution, even if the electrical grid hasn’t yet failed completely. Add it the global military situation (if ever we could stop war, now would be a great time) with hot-spots popping up everywhere like, and in addition to, volcanoes and earthquakes and things are looking bleak.
The population isn’t going down yet either, “so we got that goin’ for us, which is nice.” to paraphrase Carl Spackler from Caddyshack upon hearing from the Dalai Lama that on his deathbed he would receive total consciousness.
It’s getting so crazy I think i’m going to try and re-invent myself as a standup doomer comic – make ’em laugh out loud at their predicament. i’ll do the Borscht Belt, i’ll hit Vegas (and bring my own water) – maybe even hire a snare drum and cymbal man in the wings for effect. No cruises though – no, i’ll throw up right here on land, thank you very much. Are you kiddin’ me? Last cruise I was on was terrible! Second day out some guy falls overboard – the ocean spit him back on the deck (ba-doom, tsssshhh)!
Hey i’ll be here all week! Tip the wait staff!
.
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One of my favorite one liners: “With all the comics out of work,your trying to be funny?”
I’m always ready to help someone in their choice of a new career. lol
http://www.wikihow.com/Start-Doing-Stand-up-Comedy
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Xray Mike, keen to email you re Generation Alpha project. Can you send us an email to generationalpha.facebook@gmail.com. Cheers, Ben.
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Collapsitarians@gmail.com
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Cheers
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Reblogged this on Damn the Matrix and commented:
This post from XRayMike is a great follow on from my own post about Michael Ruppert’s sad departure…. I believe, more than ever before, that when TSHTF millions will suicide, incapable of dealing with their new post collapse realities…..
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As for the “elite” my understanding is that the scum rises to the top.
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“Margaret Atwood speaks to Jian about the real-world foundation of her fiction, why we’re fascinated with end of the world stories and the enjoyable aspects of life, post-apocalypse.”
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First:
I will miss Michael greatly. I was not taken by surprise when this news broke. He told us this was one of the two ways he would go and I respect him for being a man of his word. He did his best to point us in the right direction. It would be tragic for him to be alive long enough to see that effort go to waste as we continue our suicidal reign.
Second:
Capitalism, Communism and all of the variations in between. Do they matter when it is actually the POPULATION NUMBERS and their LIFESTYLES that are creating the unsustainable burden on planet earth? No matter what ‘system’ we choose to live under, population is the first problem, then lifestyle.
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On this blog, we’ve gone round and round on your second point. Overpopulation is a problem but it’s not the root cause. Fossil fuels, the Green Revolution in agriculture, and advances in medicine have allowed our numbers to soar, but the root of all evil is money and the driving force behind the ills of society and the destruction of the planet is capitalism. I am certain of that.
In the book ‘Ecology and Socialism’ by Chris Williams, the author explains that nothing meaningful will ever be done on climate change or the general problem of environmental destruction under capitalism which is required to continuously expand production to cope with the interest-bearing debt on which it’s based, cares only about short-term profit, and is unable to support any other value. Williams shows how hunger and poverty are also caused by capitalism, not overpopulation. He concludes: Only by holding land and the instruments of production in common and producing to meet social need rather than profit will the simultaneous exploitation of nature and humanity end. Michael Ruppert understood this and that is why he said we must change our relationship with money. Other analysts have come to the same results such as Richard Smith and Ted Trainer:
Beyond Growth or Beyond Capitalism? A Reprise
Click to access esee2011_33bb83_1_1304793549_9860_2495.pdf
Green Capitalism: the God that Failed
http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/21060-green-capitalism-the-god-that-failed
Why a consumer society can’t fix the climate
http://thebulletin.org/why-consumer-society-cant-fix-climate
Global problems cannot be solved without huge and fundamental change, because they are directly caused by our present socio-economic system.
https://socialsciences.arts.unsw.edu.au/tsw/
There is much more data and links I could give you, but I’m running short on time right now and will get back to this subject later.
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I will give you this:
Due to the capitalist/credit system in the environment of cheap fossil fuels, the poulation has been allowed to swell beyond what would otherwise be sustainable numbers (NG based fertilizers and Petro base insecticieds).
That being said, continuing with capitalism and the infinite growth paradigm is certainly suicide.
When we realize what we can do without fossil fuels, we will finally realize that population IS THE first problem. Yes, if we had started a world wide permaculture movement with all nations and peoples involved, we might have been able to sustain current numbers, but it would have had to have been started years ago and already be productive.
Since we have not made ANY effort to produce our food in an ecologically sound manner, we will not have nearly enough for the current population once our fossil fuel endowment is depleted.
All you have to do is look at a population graph. 2-3 billion for many years, then fossil fuels came along and Boom!, we are at 7 billion. I cannot see how the population issue is NOT the primary problem facing our society today. To say it isn’t is to dwell among the techno-utopians.
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Again, look at what I said: It’s not the root problem.
Let me put this question to you… How do you propose to solve the overpopulation problem?
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That is a very good question. If we ran our world logically instead of for profit and power, population would never have gotten out of hand. Shoulda, Coulda, Woulda…
Since we didn’t live logically and form our societies around sustainable systems, we now have a population problem. It’s no problem for those with money and power though, it keeps them where they are.
Regardless it is a problem now. I don’t know that there is cut and dry solution to the problem without running into seriously ethically suspect methods.
I am always of the mind that individual liberty is the most important part of the human experience. That being said, I lean toward leaving it up to nature to take care of the population problem. It’s not a ‘solution’, but from what I have seen, human solutions of the last 200 years have only lead to more complexity and more problems.
It is up to each individual to do their best to withdraw from the techno society and ease themselves into a life of sustainability and subsistence.
Check out my youtube channel to see what my wife and I are doing.
https://www.youtube.com/user/timothyilldill
Permaculture is the only solution although too late. But it will be the only way forward.
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OK. Excellent.
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Brutus, I have to disagree with you slightly.
‘look at a population graph. 2-3 billion for many years, then fossil fuels came along and Boom!’
Having grown up in England I very much think of the fossil fuel party as having started around 1780 and having got into high gear by 1880, Americans and people of other nations may have a different perspective.
An important point I want to make is that England was importing food energy before fossil fuels energised steam ships: sugar from New World plantations. Once steam ships became commonplace and refrigeration and canning were invented, food from as far away as Argentina and New Zealand began to arrive in Europe. And Europe began exporting people in large numbers to ‘new lands’ where they ‘bred like rabbits’.
I put it to you that the population graph was creeping upwards extremely slowly from around 700 million and had reached about 1.5 billion when fossil fuels began to ramp up the growth rate. That was mid-1800s, which is William Catton’s perspective.
As we know, it all went all completely bonkers after WW2 and the fossil fuel party went into overdrive.
What ‘scares’ me is that the last time England had a naturally sustainable population was in pre-Elizabethan times, when the population was around 3 million: I believe the current UK population is about 63 million, of which the vast majority live in England.
Mass permaculture: the great experiment that should have been tried but wasn’t because the corporations and money-lenders wouldn’t allow it.
I used to say that we had about 5 billion too many people. Now it’s about 6 billion too many.
I wonder whether anyone in the future will say this of professor Albert Bartlett: “He was right.”
.
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I’m happy to be corrected when I’m in error, but I think you’re addressing someone else about when population began to catalyze from fossil fuels and go into overshoot.
Also, Tom called me out in a different threaded comment below but didn’t read what I had written carefully. As with previous blog posts (commentators getting hot and inflamed), I really don’t want to get into the back-and-forth about who’s (more) correct, so I will just sit things out. A few modest tweaks is sufficient for me.
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I was not surprised by Ruppert’s exit. I’m not saying he wasn’t important. I am not saying that we aren’t all massively screwed with no going back. I am saying though that I saw a photo of a banner at a rally that said “The Future Is Sh*t. All I want is revenge” That said, I am not completely sold on End-of-days horrors, All-is-lost and Surrender-Dororthy – that is pretty much all the fodder that seems to go down at NBL – with the privileged yupper caucasoid classes of America who will under no circumstances threaten their ultra-lucky status in the world and would rather see the whole ship sink rather than “do” something.
I do believe reality is emergent, and new possibilities arise as new actions are realized.
So, gauche as it may be, I reference Danny Haiphong’s article on Huey Newton’s http://www.blackagendareport.com/content/death-us-capitalism-and-huey-newton%E2%80%99s-theory-suicide , which urges a different approach to No-one-gets-out-of-here-alive.
I can’t read or listen to Carolyn Baker anymore, can barely deal with the crew at NBL, and I was deeply disappointed to hear about old uncle Mike. Even on their best days, they make capitulatory nihilism, non-action, non-confrontation and acceptance much easier for the responsible and deeply complicit to swallow.
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What is “right action” then? Taking down industrial civilization by any and all means?
Is this what you advocate (according to the article you linked to, it looks like it)? Let’s take it to it’s logical conclusion then – once the electrical grid no longer functions we get Fukushima x (approx.) 400 and the entire planet gets a massive dose of human-made radiation for perhaps millions of years to which no living thing can adapt and thrive (without DNA damage, and excepting the slime mold growing in the Chernobyl sarcophagus).
The conclusion McPherson comes to is that we’re damned if we do or not – so we should do whatever we love while trying to “do no harm” (as if that’s even possible – fundamentally, I don’t think it is, since we have to eat to survive). I don’t go along with Baker’s response (you can read what I said at NBL if you wish). i’m not making any excuses for anything, i’m just stating that at this late date and the “Titanic” (ind. civ.) sinking, it’s too late to actually accomplish anything by any means (to save us or what little we can from our ruined environment – now beyond our control with all the self-reinforcing feedback loops kicked in and arising). So resorting to violence, deserved as it is, won’t do anything to change our course, but it may make many feel better to bring down the cause of our predicament before exiting themselves (or while exiting themselves). So go for it! Are you personally willing to take up arms in a suicidal mission that will have little if any effect? Then do it. Lead by example.
Similarly, there’s a lot of talk about geo-engineering as a “fix.” Upon examination these efforts won’t help either and could make matters drastically worse. The problem we’ve always had as a species is that our big brains find “solutions” to current problems but fail to see the consequences of our actions. This leads to further problems down the line that require another, or more technical, “fix.” Now we find ourselves at the apex of industrial civilization with all its complexity and there are no more fixes – we’ve run the course, are running out of cheap energy and run into the limits to growth that have been there all along to keep our numbers down (the root of all our problems it seems).
If you’re of the “prepper” mentality you’re finding your way to perhaps a community of like-minded, well armed, perma-culturists willing to put all their collective wealth into one last stand – to hold off the forces of collapse as long as possible, while trying to survive as long as possible. Good on ya, mate! It too will fail, but at least you’ll be around for the end (in theory). This is the avenue RE and the Doomstead Diner folk are advocating. Join them if you wish!
Finally, i’m not advocating suicide, but then again – there are no “sane” or “acceptable” or even effective responses to the insanity of what we’ve done.
If you find yourself with terminal cancer sometime in the future, how long will you endure the pain and suffering before succumbing to the inevitable? These questions and points i’m illustrating are all to the end that it’s a personal choice how we deal with the coming catastrophe and is beyond “morality” or “ethics.”
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Truly excellent reply, Tom. I’m in full agreement except your final statement that our choices lie beyond morality or ethics (no scare quote needed). To my mind, it’s precisely morality and ethics that determine our response if we have conscience, whereas it’s pragmatism if we don’t. There is some overlap, but taking pragmatism to its logical extreme (which is where I suspect we’re going out of pure, visceral desperation), it’s advantageous for me to kill you and take your stuff or to kill you before you kill me and take my stuff or kill you so you have no claim on sharing my stuff, etc. Ethics and morality restrain us from instrumental and inhumane responses.
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Exactly. This is why those in power at the top of the capitalist hierarchy like to shift the discussion away from “business-as-usual” and towards the issue of overpopulation. Business-as-usual will certainly cull the numbers in the most brutal and inhumane way possible without touching the root of our problems.
See my reply to Timothy above.
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Brutus, thank you, but to your last sentence: “Ah, but for how long and under what circumstances?” Look I agree, as long as we can maintain our humanity and we’re part of this “civilization” with its weird, slanted (to those who have) rules and “the law” we’ll operate under those conditions. Once it goes to shit, can you realistically say that we’ll continue with our ethics and morality when starvation and scarce resources loom large? Being honest and looking at history it either ends in violence or suicide (and in rare cases cooperation for a while).
Overpopulation is certainly a very large part of the problem. With too many people, no matter what system you have in place (even in a thought-experiment with no money and every resource distributed fairly to all members of the population) the needed resources for “growth” (or even mere survival) will not keep up! That’s the whole idea behind overshoot. [see Catton’s book]
I don’t see the so-called elites getting off easy or a free pass when things deteriorate sufficiently. Who will protect them (and if you were in that position, wouldn’t you defect and kill them yourself and take the resources they’ve hoarded from looting the commons for as long as they have so that you and yours can survive longer)?
Anyway, I look forward to your clarification (ie. how’s this morality, or the law for that matter, going to play out in the end when there’s no civilization to back it up?).
I saw this and thought it worth re-posting here:
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/20/magazine/its-the-end-of-the-world-as-we-know-it-and-he-feels-fine.html?_r=0
It’s the End of the World as We Know It . . . and He Feels Fine
[one quote from the article]
Instead of trying to “save the earth,” Kingsnorth says, people should start talking about what is actually possible. Kingsnorth has admitted to an ex-activist’s cynicism about politics as well as to a worrying ambivalence about whether he even wants civilization, as it now operates, to prevail. But he insists that he isn’t opposed to political action, mass or otherwise, and that his indignations about environmental decline and industrial capitalism are, if anything, stronger than ever. Still, much of his recent writing has been devoted to fulminating against how environmentalism, in its crisis phase, draws adherents. Movements like Bill McKibben’s 350.org, for instance, might engage people, Kingsnorth told me, but they have no chance of stopping climate change. “I just wish there was a way to be more honest about that,” he went on, “because actually what McKibben’s doing, and what all these movements are doing, is selling people a false premise. They’re saying, ‘If we take these actions, we will be able to achieve this goal.’ And if you can’t, and you know that, then you’re lying to people. And those people . . . they’re going to feel despair.”
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Thanks for the excellent link to the Kingsnorth article.
As I acknowledged to Timothy, overpopulation became a problem when mankind artificially boosted the carrying capacity of Earth for humans with fossil fuels, but overpopulation is not the root cause of our demise. It’s a symptom of the socioeconomic system that employs the tools of technology for its primary objective of profit. Every other consideration outside of the profit motive is either secondary or not a consideration at all.
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Yes, I agree that population is not the root problem; however it’s the main elephant in the room today as Tom says. If we could discuss BAU and population/consumption it would be fantastic.
Attended McPherson’s presentation in NYC this week. So, this week I got to see and hear both sides of the aisle. I hide in plain sight these days (like the purloined letter) and watch for signs of kindness, interest and understanding. Instead what I saw was aggression, impatience, and ego.
After speaking of being nice to other human beings throughout the talk it was interesting/horrifying to see what occurred after the talk. It was like watching piglets struggle to get the teats of their mother with the weaker ones being pushed aside and crowded out while the stronger ones suckle to their hearts content.
People snapped back to wanting to be the stars of their own shows as they engaged in conversation with others. It’s fascinating to see how little time each wanted to give to an other. To listen and interchange thoughts and ideas. We want to get our point across and minimize what the other has to say.
One interaction was centered on the concept of recycling. One guy was RIGHT and KNEW it all, the other didn’t understand and had a different opinion. That opinion was shot down without a beat after being uttered. (I tolerate no disagreement was being communicated). That’s not how I saw it, that’s how it played out before me. To me the one who was RIGHT was WRONG, only he took up so much space and marked his territory that it was futile and dangerous to speak your mind.
So, the lovely left isn’t as perfect as they may think.
Gail pointed me in the direction of this book, “Do As I Say, Not As I Do.” Written by a conservative it pulls the curtain back on the hypocrisy of the left. Being neither completely conservative nor liberal I’m open to the criticism of either side. Why should the left get to point fingers at the right when their hands are dirty as well.
Perhaps later I’ll share more.
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My next essay will be on consumption/BAU. Prepare yourself. It won’t be pretty.
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From The Grapes of Wrath:
Tom Joad: No, Ma, not that. That ain’t it. It’s just, well as long as I’m an outlaw anyways… maybe I can do somethin’… maybe I can just find out somethin’, just scrounge around and maybe find out what it is that’s wrong and see if they ain’t somethin’ that can be done about it. I ain’t thought it out all clear, Ma. I can’t. I don’t know enough.
Ma Joad: How am I gonna know about ya, Tommy? Why they could kill ya and I’d never know. They could hurt ya. How am I gonna know?
Tom Joad: Well, maybe it’s like Casy says. A fellow ain’t got a soul of his own, just little piece of a big soul, the one big soul that belongs to everybody, then…
Ma Joad: Then what, Tom?
Tom Joad: Then it don’t matter. I’ll be all around in the dark – I’ll be everywhere. Wherever you can look – wherever there’s a fight, so hungry people can eat, I’ll be there. Wherever there’s a cop beatin’ up a guy, I’ll be there. I’ll be in the way guys yell when they’re mad. I’ll be in the way kids laugh when they’re hungry and they know supper’s ready, and when the people are eatin’ the stuff they raise and livin’ in the houses they build – I’ll be there, too.
Ma Joad: I don’t understand it, Tom.
Tom Joad: Me, neither, Ma, but – just somethin’ I been thinkin’ about.
….Just some food for thought….
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In the unique circumstance of the overwhelming probability of near term extinction of humankind, we are faced individually with decisions our culture has not prepared us for, and indeed pretends that there is no need for. We are challenged to come up with our own creative response to this global tragedy. What we do in this regard will be a reflection of everything we have thought and been up to this point. Hence I realize that I cannot tell anyone what they should do or feel about this matter. I don’t think there is any “answer” or “solution” to our situation that is the “correct” one. Therefore I have a deep tolerance and acceptance for what others put forth as their take on this impossible situation. Personally, I think that an absurd gesture is perhaps appropriate to the absurdity we are facing. This attitude frees me from excessive worrying about whether my gesture is the best one, or even a rational response to the irrational. I feel freed from judgementalism toward myself or anyone else. You do your thing, and I’ll do mine. I really wish you good luck with all this….
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I wonder how many “know” that they are immune to all effects of fracking? Drill,Baby,Drill!
“Where ignorance is bliss, ’tis folly to be wise.”- Thomas Gray
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2014/04/17-3
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…“In the last hundred years we’ve increased about 1.5 degrees Celsius, so that’s going to be a huge sledgehammer coming down,” says Jorgenson.
In that case, there are likely to be more drunken trees. Right now, around 7 to 8 percent of the land in the middle boreal zone in Alaska is showing some signs of drunken trees or other melting-related impacts, says Jorgenson.
With the impacts hitting home, the road that winds near his house has to be rebuilt every few years because of damage caused by slumping. This year, engineers are adding insulation to try to reduce the impact of the melting, but that’s expensive. (See “World Not Ready for Climate Change.”)
What’s a “Thermokarst”?
Drunken, or “collapsed” trees, are one of the more visible signs of change in the north. Ground that collapses as a result of melting permafrost has a technical name: thermokarst. (Thermo means heat, and karst refers to collapse.)
In addition to collapsed trees, slumping land often leads to the formation of new thermokarst lakes, if enough meltwater collects in a depression. In that case, drunken trees are often found ringing the water.
“The melting permafrost as a process in the region is very, very serious,” says Tero Mustonen, who leads the Snowchange Cooperative, a nonprofit organization in Finland. A warming north has “profound consequences for both the global system and the local human societies,” he says, adding that the release of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, from thawed ground is a particular worry.
Other impacts include disruption to reindeer migrations, changes in river courses, and stress on fisheries. (See “7 Species Hit Hard by Climate Change.”)…
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The name Ralph Borsodi was recently mentioned in the comments at Greer’s blog, someone I had never heard of, but who I find to be a great thinker, and one who resonates with the collapse world view. A self taught economic and advertising consultant in NY who not only didn’t drink the kool-aide but did a complete 180 and became a vocal advocate for, and hands-on pioneer of, the back-to-the-land movement during the previous great depression.
He clearly understood the role of predatory capitalism and corporate fascism as the root causes of what he called “This Ugly Civilization”, and that those in turn were enabled by the massive fossil fueled energy subsidies made manifest as the industrial revolution.
The Life of Ralph Borsodi: Unsung American Back-to-the-Land Pioneer
http://newschoolofliving.blogspot.com/2013/04/the-life-of-ralph-borsodi-unsung.html
Borsodi turned to writing to express his distaste for inefficiency, injustice, environmental degradation and aesthetic destruction. He published The New Accounting (1922), National Advertising Versus Prosperity (1923), and The Distribution Age (1927). He saw American capitalism moving towards collapse[1] and he found urban, industrial civilization, a product of a ‘century of progress,’ “appalling, dehumanizing, and ugly.” For Borsodi, mass production industry served its own ends, not human needs. Industry wasted valuable resources. Advertising drove an artificial demand for products. Labor became degraded, the factory a “repetitive treadmill.” He found it revolting that the factory system had become the dominant American culture.
Borsodi believed there were two really valuable things in life: The natural resources of the earth and the time spent in the enjoyment of life well lived. He saw living the homestead life as an opportunity to practice skills, restore pride in work, create a healthy balance with nature —all important facets of a life worth living. He was not determined to eliminate the factory – he valued modern products and appliances – but only to remove it as the dominant institution and foundation of American culture. The factory, he believed, should produce things that were desirable and essential to support life on the land and do so with skill and foresight and pride in work and product. He took some encouragement from the progressive movement of his time as an example of a popular counter-revolutionary endeavor. He thought consumers, particularly the middle class and farmers, and not politics, could alter the factory system. He saw farmers, who were caught up in mass production, as their own worst enemies. However, he knew that public action on any scale was a remote possibility.
His ideas came to a clear focus with This Ugly Civilization (1929): We must go back to the land, Borsodi insisted. He believed that the homestead, centered on the family that lived on it and producing the essentials of life for themselves, would be the means to restoring the good life. The homestead, he asserted, would raise food of superior nutritional quality, provide real physical work and health, develop manual and practical skills, strengthen familial bonds, and become the school for, and improving, the education and character of children.
Links to a few of his books at the bottom of the relevant wikipedia article:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_Borsodi
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in short, the Luddites were right.
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I have presented the local council with the following (plus images) to think about.
The Culture of Death and New Plymouth as a Sacrifice Zone
The following information and comment form an initial assessment from an on-going study.
Sacrifice zones: locations around the world which the global elites choose (encourage) to become polluted and degraded, and locations where they allow (encourage) the general populace to become disorientated, impoverished, depressed, suicidal etc. in order that corporate profits, especially those relating to extraction of energy resources and minerals, can maintained. Well known sacrifice zones include the state of Alberta (tar sands), West Virginia (coal), the Niger Delta (oil), the Gulf of Mexico (off-shore oil), Mississippi (oil refining), Olympic Dam (uranium mining) etc.
Additionally, as wealth becomes ever more concentrated in the hands of the few at the top, towns and cities become sacrifice zones, places where ordinary people have no hope because traditional industries have been closed down or relocated, leaving a large proportion of the populace dependent on government handouts. Noted examples are Camden, Detroit, New Orleans, Pine Ridge etc.
As global economic and environmental conditions deteriorate entire regions or countries become sacrifice zones, i.e. Haiti, Greece, Portugal, Spain, Iraq, Syria, Ukraine etc. Decades ago China established numerous sacrifice zones in order to rapidly industrialise, but now most of the land area and practically all the rivers have become sacrifice zones. With air pollution at extraordinarily high levels, the streets and general populace becomes sacrifice zones.
Whereas many indigenous cultures took some care of their environments and, for instance did not excessively pollute waterways, lakes and seas, global industrial capitalism regards oceans and seas as sacrifice zones. And the atmosphere and climate systems have become a sacrifice zone, as life terminating emissions continue to burgeon and no action whatsoever is taken to remedy the situation. Indeed, all action is geared to making everything worse via the insane agenda of economic growth whatever the cost.
Rather than being looked upon as unprecedented catastrophes, the rapidly accelerating meltdown of the Arctic Sea and the Greenland ice sheet are viewed as opportunities for further exploitation or fast depleting resources, converting those regions into sacrifice zones. Taken to its logical conclusion, global capitalism will designate the entire planet and all the people on it as a sacrifice zone.
Since oil was discovered in Taranaki in the nineteenth century and since dairy faring was established, Taranaki has increasingly become a sacrifice zone, a place to be looted and polluted. Since most western governments, including that of NZ, act as agents for global corporations, we must expect ever greater sacrifice of what is left of the liveable environment in Taranaki to be sacrificed to global industrialism, the tank farms, Motunui, Waitara Valley, fracking and drilling, industrialisation of food production, expansion of Port Taranaki witnessed thus far being just the start of a much worse horror story yet to come.
As a component of the dumbing-down of the local populace, geared to manufacturing consent for and acceptance of death and destruction, a culture of blackness is being promoted.
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Scientifically, black is the absence of colour, the ‘colour’ that absorbs light and heat and reflects very little. Black ‘takes’ and ‘gives back’ very little.
Psychologically, culturally and existentially, black is the colour associated with (in no particular order):
Night: danger, fear of the unseen and that which cannot be seen
Death: black hearses used for transport of corpses
Mourning: the traditional colour of clothing worn by widows
Plague: The Black Death
Spread of disease: black rats
Gangrene: appendages turn black
Cruelty: black torture chambers and dungeons
Air raids: blackout curtails
Pneumoconiosis: miners’ black lung disease
Disease of fruit: black spot
Decay: organic matter turns dark brown or black
Injury and assault: being beaten black and blue
Being punched in the face: a black eye
Depression and suicide: being in a black mood
Blocked skin pores: black heads
Dampness: black mould
Anxiety: a black cloud on the horizon
Cheapness: bright dyes and pigments are more expensive
Mass production: ‘any colour as long as it’s black’.
Rogues and villains: dressed in black to avoid detection at night
Scoundrel: a blackguard (bla-gard)
Undisciplined mercenaries: Blackwater
Grime and filth: Britain’s black cities
Pollution: black smoke
Oil spills: ‘Black death devastation: more oil soaks beaches’ (SMH)
Evil: demons, witches, satanic rites etc.
Piracy: skull and crossbones on a black background.
Ignorance: being in the dark, unenlightened
Danger: many venomous species have black/red/yellow markings.
Fascism: The Black-shirts, the SS, the Gestapo
Fetishes: black rubber/PVC suits, black knee-high boots
Loss of freedom: taken away in a Black Maria
Loss of consciousness: blackouts
Loss of electric power: blackouts
Impurity: the opposite of virgin white
Transgression: a black mark against one’s name
Superstition: black cats
Tarnishing: silver turns black in polluted air
Inedibility: overcooked food burnt black
Aggression: teams dressed in black play more aggressively
Menace: large black objects frighten humans
Violence: Blackhawk attack helicopter, black weapons
Subjugation: Black and tan constabulary, SWAT teams
Market crashes: Black Tuesday, 29th October 1929
Black Monday, 19th October 1987
Humiliation: Black Wednesday, 16th September 1992 (UK Pound)
Bushfires: Black Friday, Victoria, 13th January 1939
Black Saturday, 7th February 2009
Drowning: Black Sunday, Bondi, 5th February 1938
Massacre: Black Friday Iran, 8th September 1978
High radiation: black objects warm and cool quickly
We note that the negative associations with black far outnumber the positive, arguably by at least 20 to 1. And psychologically the ramifications of blackness are difficult to measure but are clearly enormous. Indeed, very few positive associations can be made with black, Black Beauty and Black Pearl a couple of the few that are well recognised.
For reasons that are very obscure but probably associated with cheapness and availability, a collection of rugby players who wore rather dingy clothes and played as though they were all backs became known as the All Blacks. As with most things cultural the choice of the team ‘colour’ was almost entirely arbitrary.
Throughout most of New Zealand’s history this had little effect on the nation’s psyche, and New Zealand underwent the explosion of colour that characterised the late 1960s and 1970s.
In recent decades however, following the corporatisation of sport, and sport being seen as a major source of profit for corporations, there has been a continuous campaign of dumbing-down the general populace and persuading them to buy any piece of crap as long as it had some spurious connection with the All Blacks. Sadly, a large portion of the populace is so uninformed and so dim-witted they fall for the ploy every time, making choices about what to eat or drink or wear on the basis of phony connections with an internationalised confidence trick and money-making scam
In more recent times a very disturbing trend has emerged in New Plymouth: the wearing of black clothing whatever the weather or the occasion, the adoption of black as the predominant corporate colour to be worn by staff, the purchase of large numbers of black vehicles, the construction of black or dark grey buildings and the painting of existing buildings grey or black.
The effect on the city is to deaden it and destroy any vibrancy it ever had, exacerbating the mood of gloom and despondency that prevails as the global economic system collapses and the populace comes under increasing stress.
Additionally, visitors to the district are presented with an ever more depressing, ever more monochromatic urban setting, particularly in the CBD.
This sinister ramming of blackness down the throat of the general populous is beginning to create a creepiness amongst the awake and the aware (admittedly only perhaps 5%, at best 10%, of the population who question what is going on).
In no particular order:
Company/organisation Corporate colours worn (bottom, top)
Countdown black pale blue
New World black grey
Pak’n’Save black black
Pizza Hut black black
Burger King black black
KFC black yellow/red
Burger Fuel black black
McDonalds black black
TSB navy navy
Mobil black mid blue
BP black black
Z black blue
Caltex black orange-red
Repco black black
Warehouse black red
Puke Ariki black black, red, white, blue. most black
Liquorland black black
Tasman Toyota black grey
Smith & Smith black black
Dick Smith black black
Tiger Group black black
Courier Post black black drivers black, black/orange
VTNZ black black black black/grey
Mitre 10 black black/orange
FCO beige grey-blue
Unichem deep navy teal
Bedbathbeyond none none green apron
Harvey Norman black/navy pale blue
BedsRUs black deep purple
Bendon black black
Payless Plastic black black
India Today black red/black
Subway black black
Café bbs black black
Lighting Direct black black
Bristoes black blue/darker blue
Rebel Sports black black/grey
Baby City black blue
Postie none none (black and pink on the day)
Numberoneshoes black black
Warehouse Stationery black pale blue
Noel Leeming black black/red/grey
Wet & Forget black navy/grey
Godfreys black fluorescent green
Lighting Plus black black
40/45 25/45 total 65/90
In view of the fact that deep navy and grey are not significantly different from black (and cannot be distinguished from it under sodium lamps) and the woman in one retail outlet, given the choice wore black, it would be fair to say that retail-commercial at the time of the study was done was dominated 43/45 and 32/45 = 75/90 = 83% black or dull, i.e. four out of five interactions of customers would be with a person dressed almost entirely in black or dressed dully.
The CBD has taken on a dismal character, not only as a result of gaudy advertising displays which are increasing making the city look like an unregulated Asian market zone, but also as a consequence of the insidious erection of black or grey or deep navy blue buildings and the painting of bright-coloured building some depressing shade of grey or black.
This dismalisation of the district, to coin a term, may well be in preparation for more ramming down the throats of the populace highly unsavoury practices such as fracking in residential zones, as is now happening in the US and on the agenda in the UK. Those who oppose such foul schemes will presumably be persuaded to stop protesting by men in black armed with assault weapons, has been happening in Canada recently.
Like a cancer, the sickness of industrialism has to keep growing until it kills its host, the living planet.
As this study is ongoing and was only commenced recently, I can only present rather rushed preliminary findings.
Kevin D Moore 17th April 2014
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Kevin: you can send them this too, from your neighbor Australia, to show the “proper attitude” they’re adopting
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and i’m sure you saw this (so I guess you aren’t alone down there fightin’)
http://robinwestenra.blogspot.co.nz/2014/04/new-zealand-economy-headed-for-disaster.html
12 Reasons Why New Zealand’s Economic Bubble Will End In Disaster
New Zealand’s economy has been hailed as one of world’s top safe-haven economies in recent years after it emerged from Global Financial Crisis relatively unscathed. Unfortunately, my research has found that many of today’s so-called safe-havens (such as Singapore) are experiencing economic bubbles that are strikingly similar to those that led to the financial crisis in the first place.
Though I will be writing a lengthy report about New Zealand’s economic bubble in the near future, I wanted to use this column to outline key points that are helpful for those who are looking for a concise explanation of this bubble.
Here are the reasons why I believe that New Zealand’s economy is heading for a crisis: [I just highlighted the headings, read for cogent commentary]
1) Interest rates have been at all-time lows for almost a half-decade
2) Property prices have doubled since 2004
3) New Zealand has the world’s third most overvalued property market
4) New Zealand’s mortgage bubble grew by 165% since 2002
5) Nearly half of mortgages have floating interest rates
6) Mortgages account for 60% of banks’ loan portfolios
7) Finance, not agriculture, is New Zealand’s largest industry
8) New Zealand’s banks are exposed to Australia’s bubble
9) Australian and Chinese buyers are inflating the property bubble
10) New Zealand has a household debt problem
11) Government overseas debt has nearly tripled since 2008
12) The New Zealand dollar is overvalued
How New Zealand’s Economic Bubble Will Pop
New Zealand’s economic bubble will likely pop as a result of rising interest rates across the yield curve, which would put pressure on the country’s property and credit bubbles. New Zealand’s key interest rate is expected to continue rising after its March hike due to rising domestic inflationary pressures, while longer-term bond yields are likely to rise as a side-effect of the Fed’s taper and eventual Fed Funds rate increase. The popping of Australia and China’s bubbles are two other external factors that have a high probability of contributing to the popping of New Zealand’s bubble.
Here is what to expect when New Zealand’s economic bubble truly pops:
•The property bubble will pop
•Banks will experience losses on their mortgage portfolios
•The country’s credit boom will turn into a bust
•Over-leveraged consumers will default on their debts
•Stock and bond prices will fall; the New Zealand dollar may weaken
•Economic growth will go into reverse
•Unemployment will rise
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Province of Alberta
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Thanks for the correction. I knew but it slipped though because I was thinking of states in the US at the same time. A proof-reader would be useful
We all make silly mistakes, like Paul Beckwith recently talking about a 10 or 20 millimetre sea-level rise when he meant 10 or 20 centimetres, and Guy talking about Arrhenius Svante.
Paul’s pronunciation of Guy sounded very French.
.
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Apologies for errors,
The ‘black’ document was compiled (including photographs not included here) in a matter of a few hours, to meet a ‘submission’ deadline (time prior to that having been devoted to compiling the main, 42 page, information and comment).
I still won’t ‘submit’.
Amongst the awake there is an ominous feeling of something big coming, which has been confirmed by:
http://robinwestenra.blogspot.co.nz/2014/04/new-zealand-economy-headed-for-disaster.html
Amongst the ‘ignorant masses’ there is a feeling of ‘don’t worry, she’ll be right’, confirmed by the gridlock in the CBD following one day of shops being closed over the long weekend. (I cycled, as usual, and moved about unhindered.)
Getting Kiwis out of cars when fuel is relatively cheap ($2.16 per litre) is akin to pulling a giant anaconda out of its lair on a rainy day.
Even as we head straight into catastrophe, the NZ government is committed to spending $15 million on upgrading roads and bridges in NP, in anticipation of substantial growth in internal combustion engine transport. The projects are expected to take 30 months to complete, which should be very interesting if the anticipated falling off the internationally tradable oil cliff in 2016 occurs, or if the globalised economic system collapses, as all the indicators are telling us will happen quite soon.
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The solar spectrum penetrates the atmosphere, moves molecules, moves life and then continues on its way. The winds, waves and animals are moving hither and yon but all are moving in the same direction.The main impulse flows through us, picks us up and drops us down in due time without remembrance or record. We humans exist and perform perfunctory comparison between ourselves and the place of our nativity and proclaim independence as we cut the umbilicus from the stern mother on whom we commit matricide. Although we rarely liked her discipline and reprimands, she saw to it that we were fit to survive. Soon human orphans will walk the earth and will cry for their mother’s caress but there will be no response. The wind will blow, the rain will fall, the waves will crash on the beaches and hardy creatures will still move hither and yon, but humans will shall be incarcerated within the earth’s firmament, never again to commit violence against themselves or others.
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FBI Uncovers Al-Qaeda Plot To Just Sit Back And Enjoy Collapse Of United States
http://www.theonion.com/articles/fbi-uncovers-alqaeda-plot-to-just-sit-back-and-enj,35788/?utm_source=Twitter&utm_medium=SocialMarketing&utm_campaign=Pic:2:Default&recirc=advertising
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I believe Putin is sitting in his easy chair with a large bag of popcorn and enjoying the show as well.
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The Ultimate death cult of black in the good ole days when we could get away with wars before nuclear weapons and had fossil fuels aplenty to do the reconstruction! Those days never to return SIGH…http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=68lO7n6EhDs
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The Oligarchs Rule
By Ron Forthofer
16 April, 2014
Countercurrents.org
In a 1971 memo, Lewis Powell, then a corporate lawyer and soon to be a Supreme Court Justice, stressed the need for change in how the business community participated in politics. That memo was in response to numerous successful efforts that advanced the public interest in many areas.
Since Powell’s memo, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers, and other wealthy and powerful groups and individuals have staged a slow-motion takeover of our government. These oligarchs, through their money, have corrupted all branches of government as well as many of the regulatory agencies. This corruption has led to a system of crony capitalism.
Here are a few examples demonstrating the extent of the takeover.
Campaign Financing
Recent Supreme Court decisions on the 2010 Citizens United case and the April 2, 2014 McCutcheon vs. the FEC case opened the floodgates to huge amounts of money pouring into elections. These decisions allow the wealthy and powerful to exercise even more undue influence over candidates and the outcomes of elections.
The unseemly pilgrimage to Las Vegas over the last weekend in March of some possible Republican candidates for president demonstrated these politicians’ lust for campaign funds. These men went to Las Vegas to participate in the ‘Sheldon Adelson primary’ and to meet other wealthy Jewish donors. In case you don’t recognize Adelson’s name, he and his wife Miriam spent $93 million during the 2012 election and they intend to invest more in 2016. Given that a key Adelson litmus test is support for Israel, these Republican politicians tried to outdo one another in showing their devotion to Israel.
Housing Finance Reform
On March 11th, the leaders of the Senate Banking committee announced an agreement on a housing finance reform proposal. The proposal, despite all the groups backing it and the support from President Obama, appears to be another huge taxpayer ripoff. A key provision of the proposal would limit investors’ losses in mortgage backed securities to 10% of their investments. Taxpayers would be required to reimburse investors for any additional losses. This federal support would make these investments very attractive while hurting competing investments such as municipal bonds that fund state and local improvements.
However, provision of this assurance, without real improvement in upgrading the criteria for qualifying for a mortgage, would likely lead to another huge financial disaster. Instead of providing more corporate welfare for the too-big-to-fail banks, a reasonable reform would be to continue Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as public entities.
Trans-Pacific Partnership Negotiations
Six hundred representatives from the corporate world, and almost nobody representing the public interest, have been working with the U.S. trade negotiators on the Trans-Pacific Partnership since March 2010. Although marketed as a trade agreement, only 5 of its 29 chapters deal with traditional trade issues such as tariffs. Most of the chapters deal with topics such as increasing the length of drug patents, removal of bank regulations, and empowering corporations to challenge laws protecting our environmental and health safeguards.
If you have not heard of this negotiation, don’t be surprised since the oligarch-controlled media have generally avoided this topic, called ‘NAFTA on steroids’ by many activists. We know how poorly NAFTA turned out for the average worker versus how well it turned out for the rich and powerful.
As of August 2013, there were 12 Pacific Rim nations secretly negotiating the details of the agreement. Obama strongly supports these negotiations that would lead to a further entrenchment of corporate control at the expense of democracy and sovereignty.
Climate change, Wall Street, and health care
Three additional examples are the roles of: 1) the fossil fuel companies in preventing any real movement on climate change; 2) the gigantic banks that led to the transfer of trillions of dollars from the 99.99% of us to the those at the very top of the wealth ladder; and 3) the health insurance and pharmaceutical industries in increasing health care costs unnecessarily while limiting health care coverage.
Community Rights Networks
One way of reclaiming our rights from this corrupt system is to join with others. One group working to promote local self government is the Colorado Community Rights Network (http://www.cocrn.org/). This group is attempting to get an initiative on the ballot here this year. The Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund (http://www.celdf.org/) works nationally to help us reclaim our rights.
Ron Forthofer, Ph.D. is retired Professor of Biostatistics at the University of Texas School of Public Health, Houston, Texas; former Green Party candidate for Congress and for Governor of Colorado
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Powell’s memo was titled “Attack on America’s Free Enterprise System”. It reminded me of this Chris Hedges piece on Ralph Nader.
https://www.truthdig.com/report/item/how_the_corporations_broke_ralph_nader_and_america_too_20100405
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Ralph Nader was the last candidate I voted for. His almost total repudiation by the american public told me all I needed to know abut the fraudulent electoral scam of mind control. An honest man doesn’t have a chance in the present system…
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[selected quotes – read the entire article]
http://robinwestenra.blogspot.co.nz/2014/04/climate-change-war.html
Saturday, 19 April 2014
Climate change war
“Climate Change War” Is Not a Metaphor
The U.S. military is preparing for conflict, retired Navy Rear Adm. David Titley says in an interview.
In a recent interview with the blog Responding to Climate Change, retired Army Brig. Gen. Chris King laid out the military’s thinking on climate change:
“This is like getting embroiled in a war that lasts 100 years. That’s the scariest thing for us,” he told RTCC. “There is no exit strategy that is available for many of the problems. You can see in military history, when they don’t have fixed durations, that’s when you’re most likely to not win.”
In a similar vein, last month, retired Navy Rear Adm. David Titley co-wrote an op-edfor Fox News:
The parallels between the political decisions regarding climate change we have made and the decisions that led Europe to World War One are striking – and sobering. The decisions made in 1914 reflected political policies pursued for short-term gains and benefits, coupled with institutional hubris, and a failure to imagine and understand the risks or to learn from recent history.
In short, climate change could be the Archduke Franz Ferdinand of the 21st century.
Earlier this year, while at the American Meteorological Society annual meeting in Atlanta, I had a chance to sit down with Titley, who is also a meteorologist and now serves on the faculty at Penn State University. He’s also probably one of the most fascinating people I’ve ever spoken with. Check out his TEDxPentagon talk, in which he discusses how he went from “a pretty hard-core skeptic about climate change” to labeling it “one of the pre-eminent challenges of our century.” (This interview has been lightly edited and condensed.)
Slate: What’s the worst-case scenario, in your view?
Titley: There will be a discrete event or series of events that will change the calculus. I don’t know who, I don’t know how violent. To quote Niels Bohr: Predictions are tough, especially about the future. When it comes, that will be a black swan. The question is then, do we change?
Let me give you a few examples of how that might play out. You could imagine a scenario in which both Russia and China have prolonged droughts. China decides to exert rights on foreign contracts and gets assertive in Africa. If you start getting instability in large powers with nuclear weapons, that’s not a good day.
Here’s another one: We basically do nothing on emissions. Sea level keeps rising, three to six feet by the end of the century. Then, you get a series of super-typhoons into Shanghai and millions of people die. Does the population there lose faith in Chinese government? Does China start to fissure? I’d prefer to deal with a rising, dominant China any day.
Slate: Despite all the data and debates, the public still isn’t taking that great of an interest in climate change. According to Gallup, the fraction of Americans worrying about climate “a great deal” is still roughly one-third, about the same level as in 1989. Do you think that could ever change?
Titley: A lot of people who doubt climate change got co-opted by a libertarian agenda that tried to convince the public the science was uncertain—you know, the Merchants of Doubt. Unfortunately, there’s a lot of people in high places who understand the science but don’t like where the policy leads them: too much government control.
Where are the free-market, conservative ideas? The science is settled. Instead, we should have a legitimate policy debate between the center-right and the center-left on what to do about climate change. If you’re a conservative—half of America—why would you take yourself out of the debate? C’mon, don’t be stupid. Conservative people want to conserve things. Preserving the climate should be high on that list.
Slate: What could really change in the debate on climate?
Titley: We need to start prioritizing people, not polar bears. We’re probably less adaptable than them, anyway. The farther you are from the Beltway, the more you can have a conversation about climate no matter how people vote. I never try to politicize the issue.
Most people out there are just trying to keep their job and provide for their family. If climate change is now a once-in-a-mortgage problem, and if food prices start to spike, people will pay attention. Factoring in sea-level rise, storms like Hurricane Katrina and Sandy could become not once-in-100-year events, but once-in-a-mortgage events. I lost my house in Waveland, Miss., during Katrina. I’ve experienced what that’s like.
[Unfortunately, he ends on the supreme “hopium” of faith in humanity to come together at the last minute and make profound (what he calls catastrophic) changes to avert war and change things. Yeah, right, that’ll happen]
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True things are not always pretty, and pretty things are not always true.
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http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/politics/57836973-90/utah-lands-lawmakers-federal.html.csp
Western lawmakers gather in Utah to talk federal land takeover
‘It’s time’ » Lawmakers from 9 states gather in Utah, discuss ways to take control of federal lands.
It’s time for Western states to take control of federal lands within their borders, lawmakers and county commissioners from Western states said at Utah’s Capitol on Friday.
More than 50 political leaders from nine states convened for the first time to talk about their joint goal: wresting control of oil-, timber -and mineral-rich lands away from the feds.
“It’s simply time,” said Rep. Ken Ivory, R-West Jordan, who organized the Legislative Summit on the Transfer for Public Lands along with Montana state Sen. Jennifer Fielder. “The urgency is now.”
Utah House Speaker Becky Lockhart, R-Provo, was flanked by a dozen participants, including her counterparts from Idaho and Montana, during a press conference after the daylong closed-door summit. U.S. Sen. Mike Lee addressed the group over lunch, Ivory said. New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Wyoming, Oregon and Washington also were represented.
The summit was in the works before this month’s tense standoff between Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy and the Bureau of Land Management over cattle grazing, Lockhart said.
“What’s happened in Nevada is really just a symptom of a much larger problem,” Lockhart said.
Fielder, who described herself as “just a person who lives in the woods,” said federal land management is hamstrung by bad policies, politicized science and severe federal budget cuts.
“Those of us who live in the rural areas know how to take care of lands,” Fielder said, who lives in the northwestern Montana town of Thompson Falls.
“We have to start managing these lands. It’s the right thing to do for our people, for our environment, for our economy and for our freedoms,” Fielder said.
Idaho Speaker of the House Scott Bedke said Idaho forests and rangeland managed by the state have suffered less damage and watershed degradation from wildfire than have lands managed by federal agencies. [read the rest]
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Good idea. Keep that corporate bribe money and kick backs in state.
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Tom said: ‘and i’m sure you saw this (so I guess you aren’t alone down there fightin’)’
New Zealand has many factors in common with the US: it was never bombed in WW2; there were good times after WW2; there is a culture of invincibility and ‘it could never happen here’; educational standards are not particularly high, especially in the field of science, which has always been underfunded; until recent times the land was bountiful with the minimum of effort;
I am not alone, though few people are prepared to push the boundaries as far as I do. The interesting thing is, the number of people who control policy and the information flow is incredibly small; my guess is that around 100 people out of a population in this region of 100,000 control practically everything. The number who oppose their insane agenda is much larger. But since ‘they’ are in control of the information flow and the processes, those on the outside are largely ineffective in changing anything.
There has been an interesting trend in that participation in the voting process has been declining; this is a combination of apathy and active disengagement: anyone with a brain that functions properly has no faith in politicians or their processes.
Yes, I had seen that article about the shit storm coming to NZ. As with all mainstream and semi-mainstream analysis, there is a tendency to focus on interest rates, debt ratios, bubbles etc. and be omit (completely oblivious of) energy factors, especially the looming rapid decline in internationally-traded oil, which will render practically all current policy redundant, since NZ imports mot of its oil and petroleum products.
Demand destruction may allow some remnant of the global economic system to stagger on for a few more years.. Or not.
There was a time when NZ led the world. I sometimes wonder whether it would be possible to resurrect that spirit.
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After so much ‘gloomy’ stuff it’s time for a good laugh: “better days are to come.”
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/president-obama-uses-annual-easter-message-to-offer-hope-to-americans-9271176.html
President Barack Obama has used his weekly address to encourage Christians around the world to draw strength and inspiration from the Easter message.
Speaking to Americans on his weekly radio and Internet broadcast, President Obama said the Easter story is one of hope and faith and reminds us that better days are to come.
“For me, and for countless other Christians, Holy Week and Easter are times for reflection and renewal,” he said. “We remember the grace of an awesome God, who loves us so deeply that He gave us his only Son, so that we might live through Him”.
“And this Sunday, Michelle, Malia, Sasha, and I will join our fellow Christians around the world in celebrating the Resurrection of Christ, the salvation he offered the world, and the hope that comes with the Easter season,” the President added.
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K.M.,
I feel so much better I want to share this with the world. lol
Turn up the volume & everyone sing along.
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Let me be the first to wish everyone, what my old Italian neighbor would call a
Hoppy Yeast (or whatever other beverage is your pleasure).
Soon the market problems that have been hidden will cause the global economy to knot up, the lack of necessary resources will cause supply chain problems, the increasing prices in commodities and energy will render vast swaths of the global population poorer still, problems with growing enough food will cause starvation in every country, scarce or too much water will have impacts not easy to deal with, all of this and much more will intersect in various combinations and permutations so that humanity will be completely overwhelmed and all this that we’re living now, leading up to it, will be recalled as the good old days.
Enjoy ’em when you can.
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Well said, Tom.
I suppose I should have started the Easter ball rolling; it’s just that I’m a Sun worshipper as opposed to a Son worshipper, and I don’t think NZ is a Christian nation any longer (if it ever was).
There are quite a lot of cults operating out of churches, ex-commercial premises and warehouse-style buildings that seem to be devoted to worshipping flags, energy slaves, fiat currency and Mammon etc., with one well-known group dressing more or less exclusively in black and devoting much energy and fundraising to keeping their ‘bishop’ in the lifestyle he has become accustomed to (a couple of mansions, several new vehicles, yacht etc.). Awesome!
.
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http://utopiathecollapse.com/2014/04/19/shopping-malls-empty-in-venezuela-as-economic-woes-worsen/
Shopping malls empty in Venezuela, as economic woes worsen
April 2014 – VENEZUELA – Venezuelans, already struggling to find basics like milk and toilet paper at the super-market, are now confronted with empty appliance store windows and clothes racks at shopping centers. Malls have become deserted in the oil-rich country, with stores straining under government-imposed limits on profits, rents and access to hard currency. Venezuelans have always loved to shop, even under a socialist-inspired government that frequently lambasts capitalism and consumerism. But in many shopping centers, stores are closing and the shelves are nearly empty in those that remain open. “Shopping centers are like a window onto the country, and whoever comes to Venezuela will realize that from 2013 to how we are today, the sector has deteriorated. It is chaos,” said Claudia Itriago, director of the Venezuelan Chamber of Shopping Centers, or Cavececo. Itriago warns that the collapse of the sector — which provides work for some 586,000 people — would deliver a hard blow to an economy that is posting listless growth and saddled with 57 percent inflation. In recent weeks, representatives of malls and the footwear and textile sectors have met with President Nicolas Maduro, the populist heir to the late Hugo Chavez, and other officials in a bid to find ways to keep the shopping centers afloat. Shortages of some foodstuffs and basic goods are nothing new in Venezuela.
But shopping centers had remained bustling, with customers browsing and buying in stores full of merchandise, including well-known international brands and luxury goods. The big change started in November, after Maduro moved to regulate imports and ordered price cuts of as much as 70 percent on everything from appliances to hardware to shoes. As part of an “economic war,” a so-called “fair price law” was promulgated, which limited merchants’ profit margins to 30 percent. “With the discounts, we have ended up with nothing. We already displayed the last merchandise we had and we do not know when new garments will be shipped in,” said the manager of a Zara clothing shop, part of the popular Spanish-based chain. The store used to see women of all ages lining up with their arms full of clothes. Now, it has a few items over in one corner while employees — whose pay has dropped because their sales-based bonuses have taken a huge hit — kill time fiddling with their cell phones. Restocking merchandise is no easy task in Venezuela, which imports most of its consumer goods amid tight hard currency controls that makes dollars hard to come by. Complicating things is a system with three official exchange rates, which range from 6.3 to nearly 50 bolivars to the dollar. Then there is the illegal black market, where in mid-April the greenback was going for more than 60 bolivars. “In order to import, we ask for dollars. But they do not always authorize the amount we need,” said the manager of another store, who asked not to be identified. “Before, we would make up for this with dollars from the black market. But with the price controls, we cannot go on like this.” The “fair price law” is confusing to merchants, especially those who import goods and merchandise, says Profranquicias, which represents 500 companies and 12,800 outlets. “It is impossible to argue that someone who sells hamburgers is just as useful as a company that sells screws or clothes or shoes. The usefulness of a company has to do with many things, especially with inflation running so high,” said Profranquicias president Jose de Martin. –Yahoo News
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Apart from supplying people with the luxuries of civilised living (toilet paper, footwear, clothing and processed food etc.), the retail sector has become an important part of the global Ponzi scheme and the phony measure of prosperity called GDP.
I, and a few other, have railed against the use of GDP for many years, with almost no impact, I now fully understand why there has been no success in even maintaining the discussion, let alone getting any action..
Charles Hugh Smith has finally joined us in condemning GDP.
‘If a steel mill produces pollution that then requires a cleanup, both the initial output (the steel) and the cost of addressing its byproduct (the cleanup) add to GDP. So, too, would the cost of health care for any workers or residents injured or sickened by the pollution. Conversely, if a company replaces its conventional light bulbs with long-lasting LED bulbs and, as a result, spends less on lighting and electricity, the efficiency gains would detract from GDP. Yet few would argue that the pollution example represents a positive development or that the lighting example constitutes a negative one.’
It’s now far too late of course, but nevertheless interesting to look at as the ‘we were right all along’ moments come thicker and faster..
‘It’s Time to Retire Gross Domestic Product (GDP) as a Measure of Prosperity (April 18, 2014)
http://www.oftwominds.com/blogapr14/GDP4-14.html
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Labor Action in China up 33% year-on-year. Forget GDP, this is the only statistic that means anything to me anymore.
http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2014/04/chinas-workforce-savvier-smaller-restless/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+chinadigitaltimes%2FbKzO+%28China+Digital+Times+%28CDT%29%29
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Most of us recognise the danger of monoculture.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/wheat-rust-the-fungal-disease-that-threatens-to-destroy-the-world-crop-9271485.html
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Be wary of shiny black things.
http://www.mediander.com/connects/18581082/tarantula/?utm_source=taboolaconnects
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Didn’t embed:
Giant Tarantula Vs. Wasp Fighting to Death
[youtube:www.youtube.com/watch?v=BDZrS_CapRs]
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http://www.buzzfeed.com/kellyoakes/this-fish-catching-a-bird-in-mid-air-is-a-bit-scary
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http://www.desdemonadespair.net/2014/04/japan-will-redesign-antarctic-whaling.html
Japan will ‘redesign’ Antarctic whaling program to make it more ‘scientific’ – ‘They intend to ignore the verdict of the International Court of Justice, and they intend to continue killing whales in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary’
Japan says it will redesign its controversial Antarctic whaling mission in a bid to make it more scientific, after a United Nations court ruled it was a commercial hunt masquerading as research.
The bullish response, which could see harpoon ships back in the Southern Ocean next year, sets Tokyo back on a collision course with environmentalists.
Campaigners had hailed the decision by the International Court of Justice, with hopes that it might herald the end of a practice they view as barbaric.
“We will carry out extensive studies in cooperation with ministries concerned to submit a new research program by this autumn to the International Whaling Commission (IWC), reflecting the criteria laid out in the verdict,” said Yoshimasa Hayashi, minister of agriculture, forestry and fisheries.
Japan, a member of the IWC, has hunted whales under a loophole allowing for lethal research. It has always maintained that it was intending to prove the whale population was large enough to sustain commercial hunting.
But it never hid the fact that the by-product of whale meat made its way onto menus.
“The verdict confirmed that the (IWC moratorium) is partly aimed at sustainable use of whale resources.
“Following this, our country will firmly maintain its basic policy of conducting whaling for research, on the basis of international law and scientific foundations, to collect scientific data necessary for the regulation of whale resources, and aim for resumption of commercial whaling.”
Hayashi, who had met with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe earlier on Friday, confirmed an earlier announcement that the 2014-15 hunt in the Southern Ocean would not go ahead. […]
An element of the court’s ruling was that the Japanese mission was catching far too many whales for it to be considered legitimate scientific research.
Some commentators had suggested that Tokyo might use the court decision as cover to retreat from an entrenched position in which it defended as vital cultural heritage a practice that costs a lot of taxpayers’ money and does not enjoy much public support.
Friday’s announcement will come as a blow to anti-whaling campaigners, who had urged Tokyo to follow the spirit of the court ruling and heed global public opinion, which they say is firmly against hunting whales.
Environmental activist group Sea Shepherd, whose sometimes aggressive confrontations with Japanese whaling boats on the high seas saw them labelled “pirates” by a US judge, said earlier this month they expected Tokyo to try to work around the court ruling. [more]
[I guess it’s time to just sink these ships by any means necessary if we’re serious about protecting whales.]
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Our culture screams at us: DESIRE! ACQUIRE! COMPETE! DEFEAT! Where is love in all this?
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http://www.declineoftheempire.com/2014/04/the-progressive-dream-dies-hard.html
The Progressive Dream Dies Hard
Lately, here in the United States, we have witnessed an astonishing socio-economic trifecta which tells us where we stand. Unfortunately for progressive thought, we are not in a good place, to wit—
1. In the McCutcheon decision, wealthy campaign donors were given the go-ahead to buy political candidates and elections by the “conservative” majority on the Supreme Court. This decision follows on the heels of the Citizens United ruling, which got the ball rolling vis-a-vis dismantling the 1974 Federal Election Campaign Act. The court’s four liberal justices understood the consequences.
In their dissent, the court’s four liberal justices called their colleagues’ logic “faulty” and said it “misconstrues the nature of the competing constitutional interests at stake.” The dissent continues, “Taken together with Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, today’s decision eviscerates our Nation’s campaign finance laws, leaving a remnant incapable of dealing with the grave problems of democratic legitimacy that those laws were intended to resolve.”
Unfortunately for democratic legitimacy…
2. A Princeton/Northwestern study found that there isn’t any democratic legitimacy to defend in so far as “the preferences of the average American appear to have only a minuscule, near-zero, statistically non-significant impact upon public policy.” The study found that policy in the United States is created at the behest of an economic elite.
And we have recently learned just how elite that small group is…
3. The work of University of California-Berkeley economists Emmanuel Saez, Gabriel Zucman and others has recently come to the attention of our mainstream media. It turns out the Occupy folks got it wrong. It wasn’t the top 1% of earners which posed a problem for democratic legitimacy. It was the top 0.1%, and within that smaller group, the top 0.01% who received most of the income gains of the last 30 years. And with the publication Thomas Piketty’s Capital In The 21st Century, those paying attention have come to understand that the grotesque inequities of 19th century capitalism will likely be repeated in the 21st.
[read the rest]
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more and more it’s the nukes that worry me. maybe a bit off subject, but radiation will reach everywhere, once it’s in the atmosphere there’s nowhere to run.
http://www.atlantaprogressivenews.com/interspire/news/2014/01/11/higher-levels-of-radiation-found-in-us-post-fukushima.html
these are university studies, and are of course denied by public officials.
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I don’t know how this will be received, but I believe we are all responsible for Michael Ruppert’s early death. And he is hardly alone. I suspect everyday another who shares his (our) perspectives offs themselves. And mostly NOT out of depression but rather they have reached the end of this individualistic, everyone for themselves capitalistic system. Truly, what are one’s choices when the money runs out, one’s health is declining and you know there are few if any who wish to be burdened with one’s situation?
Micheal ended up where a lot of us started out 40 years ago and it is as deficient and dysfunctional now as it was then. It’s just when your are young and strong you have greater tolerance for the BS or you can simply pack your bags and head off to the next, whatever.
I believe there is a alternative to capitalism and industrial civilization that isn’t “deficient and dysfunctional” and not just a single alternative either. Mostly it would take intent, will and imagination. It requires the wisdom and resources of the elders and the enthusiasm and energy of the youth.
It is because of what happened to Micheal and the suffering of countless others that I believe we hardly need more reasons or motivation (as in NTE) to create real life, real time, GOOD alternatives…. NOW.
http://thecommunalsolution.info/
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Yes. But. As long as the masses don’t even recognise their predicament and ardently defend the system that has enslaved them (or do nothing) we continue on the collective journey down the drain.
As long as progress is perceived to be increasing numbers of wireless screens promulgating propaganda we are truly fucked, and so is practically every other vertebrate species on this planet. But everyone who regularly reads CoIC already knows all that.
The death-by-a-thousand-cuts continues, with the cuts gradually getting deeper and more frequent. The anaesthetised masses are only now starting to notice they are bleeding to death. And some are so anaesthetised they don’t notice anything.
If there is any way out of this mess in the short term it will be a consequence of a major confrontation between one unsustainable model -globalised western capitalistic industrialism – and other unsustainable models -semi-communistic globalised industrialism, state managed industrialism etc. That confrontation is underway, of course, and may erupt in a matter of a few months (it certainly won’t be more than 18).
The rallying call of the sociopaths in control, “Ponzi schemes forever,” is finally starting to have a hollow ring.
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,
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I guess I would say the “masses” simply need a different model to emulate, which I would say is our responsibility. But the point of my post was that we should do this to make life good for each other, not to save the world, or just to save the world. But we should look deeply into our hearts, for if we simply think survival is solely an individual affair, I would question the assertion that we are not, ourselves, those very “masses”; better informed maybe, but ultimately the same.
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Having tried leading by example and getting very few to follow (count on one hand the number I know of over a period of a decade who have made substantial changes) and having tried pointing out the dysfunctional nature of the arrangements they promote to those ‘in authority’, and having the message blocked by those in power, maybe you can suggest some new tactic I might try to try to reach to ‘the zombies’.
In a fairly recent interview in which Mike Ruppert had convinced himself the US and Israel were going to attack Iran in a matter of days (I saw through that ploy more than five years ago), he said he had given up talking to zombies.
I must admit, people who thought I was ‘extreme’ 5 years ago are starting to concede we are pretty much screwed unless drastic action is taken: they still have not caught up with the fact that we are pretty much screwed even if we do take drastic action.
Anyway, ball in your court; suggest what we should do.
In the meantime I continue to prepare as much as one can for the meltdown via reduced consumption, toughening up physically as much as a 63-year-old can, and continue to attempt to pull the half-awake out of the Matrix.
I’m not quite in the Mike Ruppert camp yet.
Crumbs video::
http://robinwestenra.blogspot.co.nz/2014/04/crumbs.html
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As for “what we should do”, I nearly always include my website url in my posts because it is what I think is one possibility. These answers or possibilities are both simple or complex depending on how deep one wishes to explore or analyize. But in the final analysis, I guess I’d say, individual action amounts to very little if anything; and the group should be at least 150 if not 300.
http://thecommunalsolution.info/
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Thanks for the link to “crumbs”. I watched it. I like a man with passion and speaks his truth, even if he isn’t necessarily 100% correct. “Occupy” should have occupied national forest land and started building self suffient communities. If they did that I would have been there in a heartbeat. Would the 99% have supported that? Unlikely, probably. Would the “movement” have had the vision to pull it off, even if….probably not.Which is why I think it will only happen if those who do have the vision lead the way. Now, if no one has any alternative vision, well, I guess we really are in a rather hopeless situation. In that case it would actually have to be pre set up, which is the situation I believe we find ourselves in.
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Pingback: A Time of Seamless Black | PNCAU
Another ‘mistake’ made in the 1950s that will haunt coming generations if they manage to get through the first bottleneck.
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/apr/20/choice-cumbria-nuclear-dump-mistake-environment-agency
Cumbrian nuclear dump ‘virtually certain’ to be eroded by rising sea levels
One million cubic metres of waste near Sellafield are housed at a site that was a mistake, admits Environment Agency
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I watched the entire vice doc about Micheal, Apocalypse, Man; what timing and a wonderful tribute to the man.
I also just finished listening to his final talk radio broadcast. And this I would say. I don’t mean any disrespect for Caroline Baker, she says some good and true things, but I was hearing that New Age, feel good, these are special times talk, well, I remember similar talk and writing 40 years ago.
I don’t want people to simply trash me or what I have to say, on the other hand, I’d be insincere not to invite respectful and constructive criticsm. But Carolyne’ s kind of physiological talk might well……. well it leaves me empty and frustrated. I know it’s popular. But it’s almost beyond questioning nature; itself, I find troubling. It’s like we can critic the system, but not our own authorities, so to speak
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Many would agree with your thoughts about Carolyn.
One thing he said many years ago still very much applies: “They’re not suffering enough yet.”
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http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-04-20/bnp-banker-his-wife-and-nephew-murdered-belgium
BNP Banker, His Wife And Nephew Murdered In Belgium
In the beginning it was banker suicides. Then about two weeks ago, suicides were replaced by outright murders after the execution-style killing of the CEO of a bank in otherwise sleepy (and tax evasive) Lichtenstein by a disgruntled client. Then on Friday news hit of another execution-type murder in just as sleepy, if not so tax evasive, Belgium, where in the city of Vise, a 37-year-old Director at BNP Paribas Fortis was murdered alongside his wife and a 9 year old nephew in a premeditated and orchestrated drive-by shooting. [read it if interested]
_________
http://www.forbes.com/sites/jamesconca/2014/04/20/its-final-corn-ethanol-is-of-no-use/?fb_action_ids=277355565775300&fb_action_types=news.publishes
It’s Final — Corn Ethanol Is Of No Use
OK, can we please stop pretending biofuel made from corn is helping the planet and the environment? With huge subsidies for ethanol in gasoline, with all States now selling gasoline having some ethanol blend, and a general misconception that these biofuels are green, corn ethanol has taken on a $30 billion/yr life of its own.
The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released two of its Working Group reports at the end of last month (WGI and WGIII), and their short discussion of biofuels has ignited a fierce debate as to whether they’re of any environmental benefit at all. [again, if interested continue reading]
The IPCC was quite diplomatic in its discussion, saying “Biofuels have direct, fuel‐cycle GHG emissions that are typically 30–90% lower than those for gasoline or diesel fuels. However, since for some biofuels indirect emissions—including from land use change—can lead to greater total emissions than when using petroleum products, policy support needs to be considered on a case by case basis” (IPCC 2014 Chapter 8).
The summary in the new report also states, “Increasing bioenergy crop cultivation poses risks to ecosystems and biodiversity” (WGIII).
The report lists many potential negative risks of development, such as direct conflicts between land for fuels and land for food, other land-use changes, water scarcity, loss of biodiversity and nitrogen pollution through the excessive use of fertilizers (Scientific American).
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http://www.ithacajournal.com/viewart/20140419/NEWS10/304190026/Some-bird-species-declining-Adirondacks
Some bird species declining in Adirondacks
SARANAC LAKE — A new study finds the populations of some bird species are declining in lowland wetlands in the Adirondacks.
Data collected from 2007 to 2011 on the boreal chickadee, olive-sided flycatcher and rusty blackbird “showed high extinction probabilities in Adirondack wetlands,” according to a Wildlife Conservation Society researcher’s findings, recently published in the journal Northeastern Naturalist.
Adding data collected since 2011, researcher Michale Glennon found that the number of wetlands occupied by the rusty blackbird, gray jay, yellow-bellied flycatcher, olive-sided flycatcher and black-backed woodpecker had declined by 15 percent or more since 2007, the Adirondack Daily Enterprise reported Saturday.
Of the eight bird species Glennon surveyed, only the yellow palm warbler was growing in numbers. Another bird, the Lincoln’s sparrow, saw its Adirondack wetland population swell from 2007 to 2011, but more recent data show a drop-off, the newspaper said.
Glennon has studied what are known as boreal birds since 2003. Besides playing an ecological role, the creatures are magnets for bird watchers. The Adirondack Park represents the birds’ southern range in eastern North America.
“You don’t find them once you get out of here” to the south, Glennon told the newspaper. “They’re not in the Southern Tier. They’re not in the Catskills.”
She found the birds were much more likely to disappear from smaller, isolated wetlands that are near human development.
“None of these plots we are in are particularly close to development, but obviously, it’s close enough to have some influence on them,” Glennon said, noting that moose, spruce grouse and some other animals also live in the lowland wetlands and travel between them.
“If we can maintain some of the connections of those habitats and try to buffer those wetlands and keep disturbance out of them, I think that can help maintain this larger network of population,” she said.
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Re: Communal Solution Question: What is to be done: There are examples. “We” do not necessarily need to single handedly envision a new paradigm and design a new architecture of human existence on “our” laptops in our “free time”.
I would look first to the labor movement, which, according to US/Western business propaganda is equivalent to Satan, as it compromises holy and sacred private profit. The history here is rich and philosophically deep, and I am not just talking about Marx and Commie-ism. So you’ll need to go deeper.
Second, American Indian philosophy. If you want specifics, look at Vine DeLoria Jr.’s “God Is Red”. And then go deeper.
For practical applications, you can look at upcountry Lao villagers who have lived sustainably for centuries, if not millennia. Oh, so they have dull.boring, tedious lives according to the dull, boring and tedious Westerners. American Fred Branfman calls the Lao: Renaissance People.
For economic organization, you can look at Michael Albert’s Participatory economics as an outline. Other forms of Indigenous organizations (not talking here about casinos), pot-latches and government, as well as certain forms of Anarchist economics philosophical structures.
So there are 4 places to begin. Coincidentally, all 4 have been labled fringe and deviant by the modern industrial religion-of-thanatos that is going to bury everything and everyone alive and light it all on fire with radioactive gasoline.
There’s some people that have already done the homework. Cheers
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http://theextinctionprotocol.wordpress.com/2014/04/21/saudi-arabia-announces-spike-in-mers-cases-20-new-infections/
Saudi Arabia announces spike in MERS cases – 20 new infections
April 2014 – SAUDI ARABIA – Saudi Arabia confirmed 20 new cases of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) on Saturday and Sunday, adding up to 49 infections in six days, a sudden increase of a disease that kills about a third of the people infected and has no cure. MERS, a SARS-like novel coronavirus that emerged in Saudi Arabia two years ago, has infected 244 people in the kingdom, of whom 76 have died, the Health Ministry said on its website. However, Health Minister Abdullah al-Rabia on Sunday told reporters there was no scientific evidence yet to justify ordering additional preventative measures such as travel restrictions. He said he did not know why there had been a surge of cases in Jeddah but said it might be part of a seasonal pattern since there was also a big rise in infections last April and May. Another cluster of cases has been detected in the United Arab Emirates and a Malaysian who was recently in the Gulf has been confirmed as infected, his country said. MERS has no vaccine or anti-viral treatment, but international and Saudi health authorities say the disease, which originated in camels, does not transmit easily between people and may simply die out. Health experts have warned, however, that MERS has the potential to mutate eventually. The number of officially confirmed Saudi cases has jumped suddenly over the past two weeks. Saudi authorities last week issued several statements aimed at reassuring the public that there was no immediate cause for concern at the latest outbreak and that it had not met international definitions of an epidemic.
Rabia said the ministry had invited five European and North American companies to work with it in developing a vaccine and that some of the companies would soon visit the kingdom. audi Arabia, the birthplace of Islam, is expected to receive a surge of pilgrims in July during the faith’s annual fasting month of Ramadan, followed by millions more in early October for the Haj. Last week Malaysian health authorities said a Malaysian citizen had been confirmed as having the disease after he returned from pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia. Rumors of unreported cases have circulated on Saudi social media feeds in recent weeks. Last week, the kingdom’s cabinet asked Saudi news organizations to report only those cases that are officially confirmed by the Health Ministry. Most of the new infections are in Saudi Arabia’s port city of Jeddah, where 37 people have been infected since Monday, seven of them fatally. Another 10 new cases, one of them fatal so far, were discovered in the capital Riyadh. There were also new cases confirmed in Najran Province and the city of Medina. Last week, another cluster of cases was discovered in the neighboring United Arab Emirates, and Yemen reported its first case. -Reuters
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It seems to me that Ruppert was trying to make a living as a Cassandra, but the people weren’t buying. He reached the end of his rope. The information was invaluable but also unacceptable. Didn’t the LATOC guy eventually give up “warning” people in favor of reading palms. Now that’s more on the cerebral level of the typical citizen. You’re not going to make money “warning” people unless somehow your information helps them protect “wealth”. Buy silver, buy gold. Ha, ha, ha. Humans are a selfish lot. They’re munching and crunching their way to their eternal desserts even as we speak. If you can obtain 50,000 dopamine tickets (dollars) per year without any painful consequences (more CO2 in the air is not painful) then what decision is the typical human brain going to make? Dopamine all the way to hell.
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LOL. ‘Nuff said.
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The typical person wants to find a comfy little spot in one of the cells that fossil fuels built, produce some shit that people don’t really need, and collect as much dopamine as possible. Trips, consumer goods, power, status. All of their dreams and aspirations are commingled in a giant growing cancer that delivers the goods by autophagy. The ecosystem becomes emaciated and still the cancer cannot stop eating and they will never stop because there is no satisfaction, no sating of the appetite. It is a behavioral repetitive loop of “wealth” accumulation that will not stop until it self-destructs.
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You are describing the addiction process, James. This is a basic dynamic that is destroying the world. Humans are not in control of their lives, They have sold out to their addictive processes. This obsession trumps all other activities and intentions, even self-preservation. There is a path out of this insanity, but few are willing to walk it. The first step is to look at oneself and one’s world with unflinching honesty. From there a slim hope beckons that there exists a power (knowledge, truth, help) which might restore one to sanity; and even open a path for many to find their authentic selves that were so long buried under all the lies of a culture that gave up its soul…
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Instead of precipitating a rash of suicides by popping the top on reality, maybe we should ask for a sizable donation of “hush” money. The top has not yet been popped on reality but eventually it will be, unless it’s already buried in obscure academic journals. Imagine, by purchasing this enlightenment, the medical savings to be had on botched suicides. But, then again, if by elucidating reality one creates substantial damage, is this considered terrorism? Perhaps the intellectual’s reward for this unprecedented knowledge is a first class ticket to an immune system lymph node (GITMO) for water boarding, probing and specific antibody production. I was joking with my family last night that all we had to do to beat Putin in the Ukraine was to send Biden over there, Putin would give up just to get him out of there. Well, what do I see this morning, Biden is going to the Ukraine. 🙂 This is not a well-honed system, its just smart enough to keep the industrial metabolism going and the lights on, for now.
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For everyone’s notebook:
Videos from various websites that can be embedded here (and how to do it)….
http://en.support.wordpress.com/videos/
Emoticons that can be used on this site (and how to do it)…
http://en.support.wordpress.com/smilies/
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Doesn’t seem to work in the comments section.
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We’ll end this thread with ‘Say Hello to Heaven’ for Mike Ruppert.
No more comments please.
Please, mother mercy
Take me from this place
And the long winded curses
I keep hearing in my head
Words never listen
And teachers never learn
Now I’m warm from the candle
But I feel too cold to burn
He came from an island
And he died from the street
He hurt so bad like a soul breaking
But he never said nothing to me
So say hello to heaven
New like a baby
Lost like a prayer
The sky was your playground
But the cold ground was your bed
Poor stargazer
She’s got no tears in her eyes
Smooth like whisper
She knows that love heals all wounds with time
Now it seems like too much love
Is never enough, you better seek out
Another road ’cause this one has
Ended abrupt, say hello to heaven
I never wanted
To write these words down for you
With the pages of phrases
Of things we’ll never do
So I blow out the candle, and
I put you to bed
Since you can’t say to me
Now how the dogs broke your bone
There’s just one thing left to be said
Say hello to heaven
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