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Capitalism, Climate Change, Consumerism, Corporate State, Derrick Jensen, Environmental Collapse, Gross Inequality, Overconsumption, Overpopulation, Poverty, Social Unrest, Wage Slave, William Catton
Do citizens of industrialized, consumerist nations have the moral authority to lecture the world about overpopulation, singling it out as the root of all the world’s problems? William Catton coined the term Homo colossus to describe those living in the industrialized world whose consumption of resources is disproportionately greater than those in the so-called undeveloped world:
In his book Endgame, Derrick Jensen points out that the argument of overpopulation becomes rather meaningless unless it is framed within the context of consumption levels:
If we take a look at who is actually pushing the environment to collapse according to their consumption levels, it becomes clear by the numbers that the real planet destroyers are not the teeming masses of the Third World, but industrial civilization’s energy gluttons driving their SUV’s, checking their stock portfolios on the internet, and wagging their finger at the huddled masses who have been corralled into megacities because globalization wiped out their indigenous means of subsistence:
…What is immediately apparent from Chart 1[above] is that the 10 percent of the world’s population with the highest income, some 700 million people, are responsible for the overwhelmingly majority of the problem. It should be kept in mind that this is not just an issue of the rich countries. Very wealthy people live in almost all countries of the world—the wealthiest person in the world is Mexican, and there are more Asians than North Americans with net worth over $100 million. When looked at from a global perspective, the poor become essentially irrelevant to the problem of resource use and pollution. The poorest 40 percent of people on Earth are estimated to consume less than 5 percent of natural resources. The poorest 20 percent, about 1.4 billion people, use less than 2 percent of natural resources. If somehow the poorest billion people disappeared tomorrow, it would have a barely noticeable effect on global natural resource use and pollution. (It is the poor countries, with high population growth, that have low per capita greenhouse gas emissions.22) However, resource use and pollution could be cut in half if the richest 700 million lived at an average global standard of living.
Thus, we are forced to conclude that when considering global resource use and environmental degradation there really is a “population problem.” But it is not too many people—and certainly not too many poor people—but rather too many rich people living too “high on the hog” and consuming too much. Thus birth control programs in poor countries or other means to lower the population in these regions will do nothing to help deal with the great problems of global resource use and environmental destruction… – link
By far, the wealthy have the world’s largest environmental footprint :
The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the carbon footprint of the top quintile is over three times that of the bottom. Even in relatively egalitarian Canada, the top income decile has a mobility footprint nine times that of the lowest, a consumer goods footprint four times greater, and an overall ecological footprint two-and-a-half times larger. Air travel is frequently pegged as one of the most rapidly growing sources of carbon emissions, but it’s not simply because budget airlines have “democratized the skies”–rather, flying has truly exploded among the hyper-mobile affluent. Thus in Western Europe, the transportation footprint of the top income earners is 250 percent of that of the poor. And global carbon emissions are particularly uneven: the top five hundred million people by income, comprising about 8 percent of global population, are responsible for 50 percent of all emissions. It’s a truly global elite, with high emitters present in all countries of the world.
In the post Earth to Humans: “Get Off Your Merry-Go-Round Ride to Extinction”, I quoted a well-reasoned article by Devon G. Peña who explained the self-serving and hypocritical stance taken by the capitalist industrialized nations regarding the issue of overpopulation. The root causes driving mankind to extinction are completely sidestepped:
…In climate change debates, overpopulation arguments serve to delay making structural changes in North and South away from the extraction and use of fossil fuels; to explain the failure of carbon markets to tackle the problem; to justify increased and multiple interventions in the countries deemed to hold the surplus people; and to excuse those interventions when they cause further environmental degradation, migration or conflict.
As such, population theory is far more than a theory or a principle. It is above all a political strategy that obscures the relationships of power between different groups in societies, whether these be local, national, global, while at the same time justifying those political relationships that allow certain groups to dominate others structurally, be they men over women, property owners over commoners, or ‘us’ over ‘them’. The “too many” are hardly ever the speakers, they are always the Other.
This partially explains why those considered to be surplus are not those who profit from continued fossil fuel extraction but those most harmed by it and by climate change…
As was shown in the post The Biophysics of Civilization, Money = Energy, and the Inevitability of Collapse, GDP and money are tied to energy consumption and CO2 emissions. Climate change is the greatest threat to humanity and our economic model and profligate way of life are on a collision course with catastrophe. Realistic solutions require dealing with the root of the problem, not the symptoms. Geoengineering, carbon trading schemes, and GMO’s are technocapitalist solutions to climate change. Focusing on overpopulaion ignores the socio-economic system behind all the exploitation and destruction.
…It is not surprising, however, that a worsening climate situation is often attributed not to continued fossil fuel extraction but to too many people. Whenever global environmental crises, Third World poverty or world hunger are at issue, whenever conflict, migration or economic growth are discussed, economists, demographers, planners, corporate financiers and political pundits (at least in the North) frequently invoke overpopulation.
Over 200 years ago, at a time of immense social, political and economic upheavals and deprivation in England triggered by the enclosure of common lands and forests on which peasant livelihoods depended, free market economist Thomas Malthus wrote a story about how nature and humans interact. The punch line was his mathematical analogy for the disparity between human and food increases. Harnessing politics to mathematics, he provided a spuriously neutral set of arguments for promoting a new political correctness – one that denied the shared rights of everyone to subsistence, sanctioning instead the rights of the “deserving” over the “undeserving”, with the market as arbiter of entitlements. The poor were poor because they lacked restraint and discipline, not because of privatisation. This is the essence of the overpopulation argument.
Today, a range of industries use the same argument to colonise the future for their particular interests and to privatise commonally-held goods. In agriculture, for instance, the talk is of extra mouths in the South causing global famine — unless biotechnology companies have the right to patent and genetically-engineer seeds. With respect to water, growing numbers of thirsty slum dwellers are held to threaten water wars — unless water resources are handed over to private sector water companies. And in climate, the talk is of teeming Chinese and Indians causing whole cities to be lost to flooding through their greenhouse gas emissions — unless polluting companies are granted property rights in the atmosphere through carbon-trading schemes and carbon offsets. These are the tools of the main official approach to the climate crisis that aims to build a global carbon market worth trillions of dollars.
Two centuries ago, Malthus was compelled to admit that his mathematical and geometric series of increases in food and humans were not observable in any society. He acknowledged that his “power of number” was just an image — an admission demographers have since confirmed. And for over 200 years, his theory and arguments — that it is the number of people that cause resource scarcity — have been refuted endlessly by demonstrations that any problem attributed to human numbers can more convincingly be explained by social inequality, or that the statistical correlation is ambiguous. Malthus’s greatest achievement was in fact to obscure the roots of poverty, inequality and environmental deterioration. The “war-room” mentality generated by predictions of scarcity-driven apocalypse has always diverted attention away from the awkward social and environmental history of discredited policies and projects – a more important focus of study.
Frequently left out of discussions about tackling malnutrition, hunger, starvation and famine, for instance, are the maldistribution of the world’s food supplies, skewed access to land, trade policies, the hazards of devoting land to agrofuel or carbon offset production, unequal access to money to buy food, and commodity speculation.
If over one billion people do not have access to safe drinking water, it is because water, like food, flows to those with the most bargaining power: industry and bigger farmers first, richer consumers second, and the poor last, whose water is polluted by industrial effluent, exported in foodstuffs or poured down the drain through others’ wasteful consumption… – link
And of course we can always wash our hands of everything by saying humans, driven by base biological urges, are inherently aggressive, selfish, and hierarchical by nature. We can blame our fossil fuel consumption on the optimal foraging theory and the lethal mutation of higher intelligence. We can excuse our self-destructive behavior on account of evolutionary blind spots such as faulty human brain circuitry with its numerous cognitive biases and inability to perceive long-term threats like climate change. We can say that “complex global human systems” are beyond anyone’s control and therefore cannot be altered or stopped. In other words, we can rationalize inaction and put forth many reasons for why we are helpless as our manmade economic system speeds toward the cliff, but as the masses see the system for what it really is, the facade becomes harder and harder to maintain. The mantra of business-as-usual is becoming a curse for most, and if continued on for much longer will most certainly be a death sentence for all.
Reblogged this on Deep Green Resistance New York.
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RE: Peak Meat article….I am not able to post a comment on that thread, so I hope this is okay.
Mike, Sincerely this is an outstanding article but whenever I post ANY THING regarding the trifecta of animal consumption, I have this guy who spins it wildly. Do you have any feed back for this commentary or should I ignore him?
Carmine Leo: “There is such a mix of misconception, misunderstanding, factual error and truth in this that I barely even know where to begin. How about for starters, there is no correlation between red meat and heart disease. The lipid hypothesis has been thoroughly debunked – cholesterol and saturated fats have nothing to do with CVD or stroke. The cause of heart disease, stroke, high blood pressure and diabetes is eating sugar and starches, mostly grains and other carbs high on the glycemic index.
Secondly, these fools who raise beef, pork and other animals in feedlots by feeding them grains are destroying not only the health of the animals but are also wasting resources at phenomenal rates. Those animals are evolved to browse in woods and fields, to live on grass and other types of plants, not grains. And cutting forests to raise crops is just insane as it completely destroys the health and vitality of the soils.
Thirdly, the methane from animal farts is carbon neutral, well within the annual solar budget for planetary carbon exchange. There is not one molecule of difference between a cowgas the methane.” eating grass and farting methane, versus that grass rotting on its own in a field. In both cases the methanogenic bacteria go to town, have lunch and outgas the methane”
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“but as the masses see the system for what it really is, the facade becomes harder and harder to maintain.” Mike, I think you know that this is just not going to happen. The masses, and damn near everyone else will go to their graves still believing the bullshit they have been conditioned to believe. Indeed this is a main reason that we are all headed for an early collective grave, whether we are among the few who really see what is happening or not.
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I suppose it’s a race between enlightenment and self-extermination. I’ll leave you to calculate the odds on either outcome.
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Nobody would welcome a widespread effective awakening more than I. But my own very long study and practice of what it takes to awaken tells me that our stupefied population is way short of what it takes to put up an ante in that game. Real awakening to and from our culture of make believe takes a lot of time, effort, luck, and good teachers – and even then there is no guarantee. It has taken everything I have and then some to stay seated at the table of tell the truth no matter what. I don’t think there is an easy or quick or painless way to wake up in this sense. If you know of one, I would be glad to hear it, and I’ll go out and try to get people involved if it sounds like it would work. But everything I have learned about this game of life tells me it won’t. Short cuts just can’t really get you to where we need to go – and time is getting very short…
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I won’t be putting up much of a fight with your argument because I have written from that very same perspective many times before. I’m afraid that by the time things degrade enough for any kind of mass awakening, it will be much too late. And if we take into account the lag time of CO2 and tipping points, then it already is too late without some miracle of mass cooperation and environmental remediation on a global scale.
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Sad but true Mike. The only gestures that can be made against these odds must inevitably appear absurd, even to the one(s) making them. But they must be made nevertheless, in order to uphold one’s authenticity and commitment to serve the truth at all costs. Journey on. I respect your gestures. They evidence the value of truth in spite of whatever may befall… Into the valley of death rode the…
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…which is why I think we in the West should lead the way on how to live (well) on two dollars a day. The thing I regard worthwhile regarding limiting (voluntarily and skillfully) one’s procreative capacity is that it admits that one cannot simply do anything one wants where consequences apply to the whole.
I think all ethics and goals should be voluntary, but to think we will have a peaceful, sustainable and non violent world without any commonly held ethics and goals I think is more in the realm of far right libertarians, not socialistic leftists. Soooo…..as always, I think, this issue will be ducked because ethics have a way of saying no (like saying no usury). And taking an ethical stand has a way of implying certain actions must be taken.
I think change will only occur when large groups lead the way with a new culture paradigm. The only substantial example I can think of are the Hutterites. Not because I agree totally with their cultural agreements, but because they represent something of the radical and independent change that must the place.
http://thecommunalsolution.info/
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“Earth provides enough to satisfy every man’s needs, but not every man’s greed.”
~ Mahatma Gandhi
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I agree that overpopulation/overshoot is not the root of the problem rather it’s industrialized civ. I also often argue with the politically obsessed who think all our problems are based in politics. Capitalism is merely a by product of industrialized civ. Now the point that I wanted to make is related to consumption and population, because once a population grows beyond the ability of its environment to provide it with the necessary resources, the population experiences die-off. That with Climate Change seals our fate.
And then on the consumption front, I believe that the CAFO issue is much greater than anyone gives credit. It’s contributing 40% of greenhouse gases….more than ALL transportation combined. Here’s where you discuss the rich and their cars…how bout the rich and everyone else, what they eat?
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Here are a couple of my blog posts that deal with the diet of the rich:
https://collapseofindustrialcivilization.com/2013/06/14/peak-meat-and-other-threats-to-the-worlds-food-supply/
https://collapseofindustrialcivilization.com/2012/06/12/hydro-colonialism/
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Thanks, I especially appreciated the Grain article which shows AFRICOM in full force. I should have known you’d have an amazing piece on animal consumption and food supply. It truly articulates the magnitude of my concerns AND you have the gas mask bee at the end (which I use for my fb cover photo!
I’ll be sharing the Peak Meat article widely. Thanks.
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so i looked up the Hutterites, you are correct that very few would agree with their religious way of life, especially in the narcissistic West.
most intentional communities i have looked up require a buy in, money, to get going, they also require a buy in, in the form of accepting their principles.
attempting to get people to live together while they still carry around the precepts of industrial civ in their minds is a tall order.
probably the few who would choose that type of isolation are those who have really become sickened by the rat race.
once people started to try intentional living they might find it less isolating, but that would be after a period of adjustment.
the other thing intentional communities would have to deal with, like the Hutterites, is the ruling societies opprobrium and harassment.
all in all, a long row to hoe.
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Thanks for another well-written (and illustrated) post, Mike.
Population, like any exponential growth function, has a few embedded problems hidden within when it is applied to humans (as opposed to grains of rice on a chess board). Primarily, as our numbers grow, even if everything is fairly distributed and there are no economic shenanigans or elite groups involved, more resources need to be made available to keep up. After a certain point, when numbers outstrip resources, we see the usual parabolic curve begin the downward trajectory. No matter what type of government or society (conceding that some are much more favorable to the common citizen than others) and factoring in medical care for all (again – this is a thought experiment), as the population reaches a critical point and begins to exceed the carrying capacity of the environment, the same type of collapse would happen.
Secondly, it isn’t just resources that’s the problem. Pollution begins to become unmanageable after a while. The energy needed to treat the waste of humanity so that it could theoretically be used in farming (returning it to the soil) becomes prohibitive beyond some number of people. When a country is made up primarily of subsistence farmers this is how it is dealt with, but when you reach the point where cities come in to play this is no longer feasible and other methods are used (which become unsustainable beyond some lower bound).
There are many other factors of course that impact how population grows: medicine (and dentistry) keep many alive far beyond their “productive” years (as if that’s the point to this wondrous life), peace as opposed to war, quality of food and methods of supplying it, etc.
Now I read the links from the last thread that you brought up and I agree that population isn’t the main or root cause of our problems – but it’s a very close second imho. With a Dunbar number population (like a tribe) you could have almost any government or type of society, but beyond a certain threshold it doesn’t matter what type is involved – it’s unsustainable no matter what because there are too many to deal with. Adding an ownership class, the whole idea of fiat money and fractional reserve banking on top of the complexity that computers and technology provide, it’s a wonder we got as far as we did!
http://utopiathecollapse.com/2014/04/22/is-the-u-s-preparing1-for-the-collapse-of-the-u-s-dollar/
Is the U.S. military preparing for the collapse of the U.S. dollar?
April 21, 2014 – WASHINGTON – It almost happened in 2008… but as this excerpt from Casey Research’s Meltdown America documentary notes, it appears the US military is preparing for the potential collapse of the US dollar. As Scott Taylor warns, “…if the carrot (of credit worthiness) is fading, and the stick (of military threat) is weak, that empire is going to come down in a hurry…” which leaves a serial economic mis-manager only one option to ‘secure’ the empire. To see what the consequences of economic mismanagement can be, and how stealthily disaster can creep up on you, watch the 30-minute documentary, Meltdown America. Witness the harrowing tales of three ordinary people who lived through a crisis, and how their experiences warn of the turmoil that could soon reach the US. –Zero Hedge
[see video Meltdown America which follows at the link]
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Good essay and very perceptive comment by you, Tom. There is a book ‘Feed or Feedback’ by Duncan Brown which is basically a more detailed explanation of the problems you mention re human waste in an industrial society. Apart from the energy problem, there is the problem of changing the cycling of nutrients(Phosphorous is the main limiting nutrient) into a linear system, from the phosphorous mines to the fields growing the crops, then to the city, then dispersed in the sea. Like many of the problems we face, you can get away with it for a while.
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david: thanks for the suggestion! i’ll look for it at the library.
Business as usual, with its assumed stratification of humanity, where the top 85 people have as much wealth as the bottom HALF of humanity (and after reading Catton’s book Overshoot) surely demonstrates xraymike’s thesis and I agree completely.
However, on a finite planet with limited resources, sustainability rapidly becomes impossible for an overpopulated world and our techno-fixes can only stretch things so far before they eventually run out (like clean water). At this point, pollution is another factor that might be tied for second with overpopulation as one of the main causes of our current dilemma (since it’s causing species die-off and habitat destruction through physical and chemical means).
Paul Beckwith and Guy McPherson had a 3 hour talk last week and today Beckwith (rambles around for 10 minutes before he, with too many “qualifications”) tries to answer McPherson’s near-term extinction time-frame with his take. He’s fuzzy and indirect (claiming on the one hand that a 10 degree temperature rise in a short period of time is possible, but stating that there “may be” strong negative feedbacks to counter the 31 and counting that we have now, and HOPING that humanity gets its act together soon and takes steps – like geo-engineering, which he advocates – to lessen the coming impact of our destructive actions (and i’m assuming he means) IN ORDER TO KEEP BUSINESS AS USUAL GOING!
Take a look and decide for yourself. I think McPherson is correct (based on the science), but you reach your own conclusions. The video is from Seemorerocks.
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Thanks for the info and video,Tom.We are on a 4Gb per month scheme at present,so I don’t watch many videos,but I am interested in having a look at this one.
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I have just watched the video,Tom.Not a lot there that we didn’t know already.A lot of the timing of the rapid temperature rise event will depend on the methane situation.Re geoengineering,if this civilisation is based on layers of insanity,as I think it is,geoengineering is adding another layer.If you haven’t read ‘Earthmasters’by Clive Hamilton,I would suggest placing it at the top of your ‘To read’ list.I feel as if I am living a schizophrenic existence at present.There is the reality of the seriousness of the climate and other environmental problems,then on the radio I have to listen to an interview with a top adviser to the Prime minister here(Australia) claiming that atmospheric CO2 has no effect on the climate.It is like living in a time warp.
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david higham; Good to hear you point out the problem of P. I noticed that the subject did come up previously on this blog. Abuse of P all by itself could lead to at lease major die-off when the mines run out. How many know where the P mines came from? How did it get concentrated in the first place? Why do crops need fertilizer yet the forests never do?
Trees go down deep and use acids to dissolve rock containing P. They shed leaves, die and rot. The P gets concentrated at the surface. Bugs, worms and berries are eaten by birds who tend to nest in certain areas where they poop a lot. These areas become “concentrated P mines”. This process probably takes millions of years. The mines in Florida were under water and now are above water. It will be gone in about 30 years.
If we had practiced the food cycle rather than the food chain, we could have retained the P. We are the only species that doesn’t practice the food cycle. We flushed it. Try to tell someone they shouldn’t flush. Things don’t grow without it.
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As has been said countless times before, we had a one time opportunity to use our natural resources in a wise manner. I think it’s obvious to all of us here that we really FUBAR’d that gift not only for ourselves but for any sentient being that would come after us.
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http://robinwestenra.blogspot.co.nz/2014/04/whats-wrong-with-world-1970.html
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Indeed – you get one chance as a species to adapt to your habitat. We thought we were so effing smart (naming ourselves inappropriately we now see) with our “big brains” misapplied math and science to overcome all obstacles to OUR growth while simultaneously disregarding all warnings by those same gifted humans (and thus filled our world-view with unbelievable hubris) that we went wide of the mark and are currently on the way down and out in short order.
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Mike,
One of your better essays! And your art (one artist to another) is terrific-as well as right on!
Mel
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now you’re getting down to the dirty little secrets about modern society that nobody wants to talk about.
i’ve noticed how these luminaries fly on jumbo jets to their various save the world conferences, and how the heads of state just must travel by jet airplane, i guess the train just takes too long for their busy schedules, what with their planning wars all the time, and having to be off to the next fundraiser.
i suspect that some of the bigwigs in the enviro movements travel in the same circles.
but it’s not just the first that looks down on the third, it’s the urban centers which look down on the poor benighted rednecks in flyover country.
cites are nothing but huge machines anymore, we know this, giant energy sinks that suck up resources and spit out excretions of all kinds. i suspect that the contempt the “mouthbreathers” are held in by the more refined among us is due to the sneaking suspicion that the poor simple working folk actually could hold them to hostage if it ever really came to it.
not to take anything away from the truth of the points made about first vs. third world. another thing that contributed to the degradation of some of these countries has been the pillaging of their lands by centuries of colonial exploitation.
here’s the thing, the most efficient use of the earth, and probably most sustainable very well may be hundreds of thousands of freeholds where people live their own lives and grow their own food, relying upon mass production for just simple tools to work the land, but then that wouldn’t lend itself to giant multi-nationals keeping entire populations in thrall, now would it?
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—A very perceptive comment which serves as a useful addendum to my blog post.
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Few can imagine a different world. Ask someone to describe what he’d like society to be without using the word “growth.” And for those of us who can imagine such a thing, how many can live lives that promote that utopia?
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Actually probably a few hundred thousand have latched onto the Ziegest Movement idea which is basically such a non growth society. So why doesn’t it happen? Because we are paternalistic, we either love or hate the leader, but refuse to think along with he or she. Peter Joseph is basically correct, but there are some errors. If people would take responsibility and think about it, I believe they’d realize it must start small and that success is not dependent on computers, robots or high tech cities. Something resembling Hutterite communes of a few or several hundred would be much more realistic and doable.
Also, why this (change everyone) all at once thing? Why not just those who see the advantages? It would be extremely easy and quick to do (IF) people could figure out (themselves) what ethics are important and what goals they wished to pursue.
And how many collective ethics and goals can there be? If one is direct and simple, surly only a few. It’s when there is no true intent that ambiguity sets in.
Food for thought….. the men might have to leave the women behind for a while, till the women got tired of being alone. On the other hand, men are notorious for their lone wolf mentality. Either way, ethics, freedom, community and yes, a degree of austerity has to be valued over continuing in the old comfortable or familiar uncomfortable way.
http://thecommunalsolution.info/
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Apart from the fact that Peter Joseph only understood half the problem and promoted unachievable fantasies -like constructing ‘eco-cities’-, the powers that be cannot and will allow any solution to the predicament to be implemented (or even discussed) because any solution, or even step in the right direction immediately threatens their Ponzi numerous schemes with collapse.
The fact that their Ponzi schemes are going to collapse anyway and that nobody is going to end up with the most toys still has not sunk in.
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Humans don’t have much sympathy for their cellular cousins in the ecosystem. It has been rather competitive for a very long time, even within the species where warfare and murder are common. The fact that humans evolved technology may have favored the survival of the most aggressive and violent of the species equipped with new tools of warfare and genocide. A peaceful, graceful ape equipped with a spiked flail would fare poorly against John McCain similarly equipped. An aggressive ape with a similar weapon could make the more peaceful sub-species go extinct. So now we have this militarized ape, eating the ecosystem to feed the need for ever more evolved tools of warfare. Lethal technology with aggressive ape is a winning combination, but eventually the only apes remaining are the aggressive type. Develop a superior technology, invade, kill the males, take their women and resources. Not only have we moved too far down the road in absolute levels of growth and ecocide, we have also moved too far down the road in our aggressive and competitive natures. It has never been in our nature to live in peace and harmony. On an individual level we lie, we cheat, we steal, we turn corrupt. We establish rules to impose upon others and then break them ourselves. We sign peace treaties and then we kill. Rumsfeld shakes hands with Bin Laden and Saddam one moment and then we assassinate and hang them the next. Even if we developed the Super Duper Fusion Power Plant, we would have to build the Super Duper Fusion Megabomb. The reason everyone wants a weapon of mass destruction is because a large proportion of the human population would revel in having power over their fellow men and use that power despotically. Kim Jong Un is a typical human and would thrash South Korea if he could somehow get his hands on superior weapons. And so it goes until the military economy completely trashes the ecosystem or the nukes go off and the ecosystem is completely trashed. Can’t we all just get along? What do you think?
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I realize you’re referring to, say, the past 10,000 years or so of (civilization?) but again and again, I hear it was largely cooperation, sharing and love that got us through our hunter gatherer period. And this propensity is surely still widespread in many of us today.
I think the question at hand is not are we victims of a few sociopaths, but why can’t we who purport healthy valves, why can’t we unite and create our own loving, cooperative and “sane societies” to quote Eric Fromm.
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I can always rely on you to throw the wet, cold towel of reality in my face when I peak my head out of my hole and whisper a little dream of hope.
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Millions watching aggressive sporting events in person or on television every week and screaming “get them, kill them, hit’em harder”. Or in every corporate office, “We have to destroy the competition.” We celebrate it, we enjoy it, we’re predatory. “Who gives a damn if we irradiate them, cover it up, our profits are more important.” I havn’t even hit you with the really cold fish yet. May everyone ascend the temporal hierarchy onto the heavenly plane.
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I continue to maintain that although aggressiveness is instinctual in humans it is not generally expressed until resources are in short supply, and even may not be.
What we do have is a sub-set of humans, call them psychotic sociopaths for want of a better name, who managed to hijack human society, commencing the Norman (Norsemen, Northmen, Vikings = pirates) invasion of England, (the Roman version of conquer and rule having imploded after a few centuries). Descendants of the Norman conquerors and others with similar traits have maintained their ruling position for nearly a thousand years.
Human behaviour follows a normal distribution curve, with a tiny fraction being ultra-passive and a tiny fraction being ultra-aggressive and most people being naturally non-aggressive and quite cooperative most of the time. it took only 25,000 Normans to subjugate around 1 million English folk because the Normans used extreme violence, (or the threat of extreme violence) to terrorise those who far outnumbered them.
The narrative of the Sea Venture I am familiar with indicates that the vast majority of forced migrants really did not want anything to do with schemes of the architects of colonisation and land theft, and given the opportunity many ran away to live with the ‘Indians’, Needless to say, the sociopaths of the time thought up cruel punishments for those they managed to recapture as an example to others of what to expect if they attempted to run away.
What we are witnessing now is the result of a very tiny fraction of the populace being foisted on the vast majority and held in place by systematic lying and threats of punishment, which is why I continue to attack the system whenever I can, especially at the local government level.
I conjecture that what happens in this province of 100,000 people is largely decided by fewer than 100 people who control the information flow and the purse strings. I suspect that practically everything that happens in NZ as far as governance is concerned is decided by few than 1000 people, many of them overseas.
At the Nuremberg trials Goring is reported to have said: .
‘Why, of course, the people don’t want war. Why would some poor slob on a farm want to risk his life in a war when the best that he can get out of it is to come back to his farm in one piece? Naturally, the common people don’t want war; neither in Russia nor in England nor in America, nor for that matter in Germany. That is understood. But, after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine the policy and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy or a fascist dictatorship or a Parliament or a Communist dictatorship.’
http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Hermann_Göring
Also:
‘After the United States gobbled up California and half of Mexico, and we were stripped down to nothing, territorial expansion suddenly becomes a crime. It’s been going on for centuries, and it will still go on.’
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See, I knew we weren’t all bad! 😉
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reminds me of an old SNL skit with John Belushi and Steve Martin where Belushi was swift and strong, but Martin was smart, which threatened the head cave mans (Belushi) status and position. Belushi waits for Martin to go to sleep, bashes in his head with a rock, turns to the camera and says, ” I am Ugh, i am swift, i am strong, and now i am smart.”
the people with the money and guns aren’t necessarily the smartest, they are just the most ruthless. being clever is a different thing than being smart, just as knowledge and wisdom are not the same thing
restating the obvious, i know, but it can’t hurt to remind ourselves of the basics.
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From:
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2014/04/22-4.
Fuck Earth Day.
No, really. Fuck Earth Day. Not the first one, forty-four years ago, the one of sepia-hued nostalgia, but everything the day has since come to be: the darkest, cruelest, most brutally self-satirizing spectacle of the year.
Fuck it. Let it end here.
End the dishonesty, the deception. Stop lying to yourselves, and to your children. Stop pretending that the crisis can be “solved,” that the planet can be “saved,” that business more-or-less as usual—what progressives and environmentalists have been doing for forty-odd years and more—is morally or intellectually tenable. Let go of the pretense that “environmentalism” as we know it—virtuous green consumerism, affluent low-carbon localism, head-in-the-sand conservationism, feel-good greenwashed capitalism—comes anywhere near the radical response our situation requires.
So, yeah, I’ve had it with Earth Day—and the culture of progressive green denial it represents.
And…….
Let me tell you who I am: I’m a human being. I’m the father of two young children, a 14-year-old son and a 10-year-old daughter, who face a deeply uncertain future on this planet. I’m a husband, a son, a brother—and a citizen. And, yes, I’m a journalist, and I’m an activist. And like more and more of us who are fighting for climate justice, I am engaged in a struggle—a struggle—for the fate of humanity and of life on Earth. Not a polite debate around the dinner table, or in a classroom, or an editorial meeting—or an Earth Day picnic. I’m talking about a struggle. A struggle for justice on a global scale. A struggle for human dignity and human rights for my fellow human beings, beginning with the poorest and most vulnerable, far and near. A struggle for my own children’s future—but not only my children, all of our children, everywhere. A life-and-death struggle for the survival of all that I love. Because that is what the climate fight and the fight for climate justice is. That’s what it is.
Because, I’m sorry, this is not a test. This is really happening. The Arctic and the glaciers are melting. The great forests are dying and burning. The oceans are rising and acidifying. The storms, the floods—the droughts and heat waves—are intensifying. The breadbaskets are parched and drying. And all of it faster and sooner than scientists predicted. The window in which to act is closing before our eyes.
Any discussion of the situation must begin by acknowledging the science and the sheer lateness of the hour—that the chance for any smooth, gradual transition has passed, that without radical change the kind of livable and just future we all want is simply inconceivable. The international community has, of course, committed to keeping the global temperature from rising more than 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 F) above the preindustrial average—the level, we’re told, at which “catastrophic” warming can still be avoided (we’ve already raised it almost 1 degree, with still more “baked in” within coming decades). But there’s good reason to believe that 2 degrees will lead to catastrophic consequences. And of course, what’s “catastrophic” depends on where you live, and how poor you are, and more often than not the color of your skin. If you’re one of the billions of people who live in the poorest and most vulnerable places—from Bangladesh to Louisiana—even 1 degree can mean catastrophe.
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Trouble is, this writer, while I agree with him about our predicament, wants something that is not available. He wants a worldwide struggle by the masses against the system. Great. But there are no masses.
He may feel, like some on this blog, that many, many people see our predicament as we do.
The truth is, almost nobody does. The vast majority of people do not feel that our modern, industrial society is the problem. Most don’t even think about it. They are consumed with getting kids off to school, making money to pay the bills, worrying their money won’t pay the bills, worrying about losing their job, worrying about keeping their kids in school, off drugs, worrying about girls, or boys, or, well, a million things. And then there’s tv, and football. And fishing, hunting,cars, buying shoes or dresses, or new cabinets.
As things get worse, most people will direct their anger in the wrong places…..Muslims, atheists, gays, liberals, wingers, schools, churches, drugs, etc.
The media will help them direct their anger in ways that help to preserve the capitalist system. Those few who truly try to bring on the big struggle will end up in prison. Wasted energy.
Why? Because the masses just don’t know. And they don’t want to know. They cannot even fathom real facts, real truth…it is too scary for them. Like 9/11.
I live in this world of making money, wasting resources, supporting kids, driving, eating whatever. Everybody does. Except a very few hunter-gatherers. But at least I accept truth. I know I am part of the mess, but I accept it, and realize my lifestyle, and virtually everyone’s lifestyle on earth, particularly everyone reading this blog, is part of the destruction of the planet. So, what can we do? Suicide?
Maybe. Like Michael.
No, I accept it all, and I continue to live my life, working my balls off, helping my kids, wife, and 92 year old mother-in-law enjoy their lives. That’s enough for me. Oh, and my orchard, my goats and sheep and chickens, my vegetable garden. My part in the local Sierra Club, health dept. board, church choir, and going to an occasional 350.org rally, like next Saturday. Go ahead. Must we. Get pissed off about it, but I don’t see anyone here with a better idea about how to live. You all are so critical about others who go along living their lives…..fine….but why be critical when none of you have come up with a better idea for directing your lives.
Let me know if you come up with something.
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As Guy McPherson is fond of saying, “we(Americans) were born into captivity”, hence the conundrum of few being able to see outside their prison walls.
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Yes.
I see, and I’m glad I do. It doesn’t make it easy. And for the most part we live our lives in the same way as the other prisoners.
It is just that in our heads we are a bit different.
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Yesterday I spoke at length with an 85-year-old friend whom I visit occasionally. He grew up in Frisia (North Holland) and was 12 when the Nazis arrived. At 14 he became a slave labourer, living on three slices of bread and some cabbage soup a day. He managed to escape the slave-labour gang with the help of a farmer and use of a hay cart.
Later in the war the Nazis took what they could and stopped all food supplies entering much of Holland -the so-called hunger winter: hardly a rat or a sparrow survived. We didn’t talk about that.
He showed me the new bicycle he had bought.
He is not at all concerned with material possessions as such and says: “You must always be true to yourself.” Refusing to watch ‘the crap they out on television’ (having seen some on a friend’s television) he does not own a television, and spends time reading, studying and writing.
The problem for most Americans seems to be that they have never experienced hardship, Well, middle-class white Americans, that is.
It is much the same for many New Zealanders, especially non-migrants and those born after 1960.
One always has to wonder what is meant when someone mentions people enjoying themselves. This morning I delivered a copy of a file which contains an image of some people ‘enjoying themselves’: dressed predominantly in black and mostly overweight, (some to the point of being grossly obese) they were gathered outside a kiosk selling ice creams.
By the way, yesterday I also visited an 85-year-old I play bridge with to check his condition, as he had had an accident a couple of weeks ago and a mishap the day before my visit (the evening I partnered him). He has a wireless tablet to check bridge results and other stuff. I nearly forgot to mention: he had polio in 1937 and has spent the past 77 years getting round on crutches.
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Criminalizing poverty…
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Photo essay…
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‘We are out of time. There is no safe place left to be apathetic.’
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I know we should not take too much notice of weekly CO2 figures. Neither should we ignore them.
This is the biggest increase I know of, up over 4ppm year-on-year, in keeping with ever-faster planetary meltdown;
April 13 – 19 2014 401.54 ppm (last week)
April 13 – 19 2013 397.52 ppm (1 year ago)
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This gif definitely gives me something of the overview effect.

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The Rise Of The Fatty
A lot of their problems can be explained by the surge in cheap, hollow calories.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-04-22/rise-fatty
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That is a hardship of a different sort. Diseases of corporate capitalism.
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This article misses a lot of key points of which I list a few as I think of them.
First and foremost, everybody wants a decent quality of life which is why most if not all population growth in developed countries comes directly or indirectly from immigration from 3rd world countries.
The key to egalitarian democracies are smaller stable populations as demonstrated by the Nordic countries – the originators of democracy suggested city sizes of no more than 100,000 otherwise transparency of government is lost.
The rich make their money from mass consumerism as much in India as they do in the US and hence lobby to ensure a measured increase in population (primarily through immigration as fertility rates are primarily at or below replacement level in most developed countries – the US for instance, runs an immigration program of around 100,000 a month. Australia runs an immigration program that typically dwarfs it’s own population growth). Through this mechanism, growth is achieved – but this is wasteful growth i.e. it addicts the newer residents to the higher consumption lifestyles.
The US has an estimated 50 million living in poverty and is now regarded as a 3rd world country. There is much more similarity between the rich and governments in all countries than there is between the poorest and the rich in a country.
Studies by many scholars have demonstrated that no single factor gives a more marked improvement in economic function, reducing poverty/inequality, improving quality of life, improving ecological health etc than lowering fertility rates particularly as fertility rates drop below 3. In other words, a pre-requisite to lifting people out of poverty is to lower fertility levels – but it’s important to further understand that this is actually simply giving women a choice on when they have children, with whom and how many they have and also exposing them to the benefits of smaller families and delaying pregnancy. There are some 220 million women in predominantly the poorest countries crying out for access to family planning yet, articles like this often do a lot of damage by suggesting that population isn’t a problem if we just live 3rd world lifestyles. It is very much a problem for those living 3rd world lifestyles.
It is worth reviewing this short video to see an example of the above thinking in Tunsia and Botswana: http://www.prb.org/Multimedia/Video/2013/african-success-engage-short.aspx.
Note also, we are now at 7.2 billion and still growing at over 80 million a year while our bio-capacity and ability to feed the planet is declining very rapidly.
Perhaps the last point to consider is that our impact may be described by the formula:
I=PAT where I is impact, P is population, A is affluence and T is technology.
collectively, we are consuming at a rate of around 1.5 Earths a year but as mentioned, the overwhelming majority of people on the planet would prefer a better standard of living but this cannot be accommodated while we are still growing as pointed out above but to recap
a) Economicgrowth is primarily population growth now
b) Population growth is a pyramid scheme lobbied for primarily by the rich = more customers and cheaper labour.
So, the conversation on population and growth thereof needs to be had and I’d argue is the precursor to actually tackling consumption for only with a stable and/or declining population to per-capita cuts in consumption reduce our total impact and only through stable and/or declining populations do economic distortions (in no short part due to speculation) start to decline and economies re-balance.
This lastly gives rise to a solution as proposed by Herman Daly:
http://blog.environmentalresearchweb.org/2011/02/22/herman-dalys-10-policies-for-a/
finally, most of us who are aware are actually doing what we can to moderate our consumption. But selling ourselves for guilt is the language of religious fundamentalism and ultimately is counter-productive. But certainly, if you think there’s something more noble about living like a Bangladeshian, I’m sure you can find millions of Bangladeshians that would gladly trade places and wouldn’t look back.
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An essay from an essay, but there’s some good information here on the “pyramid scheme” of consumer capitalism. Thanks for your input.
By the way, I never said overpopulation was not a problem, just that it is not the root cause of the plethora of problems facing industrial civilization.
I imagine the “Sustainable Population Party” is all for industrial civ’s way-of-life, only with far fewer people.
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“I will go so far as to say that not only growth but capitalism itself may be in part dependent on a growing population,” Pacific Investment Management Co.’s Bill Gross wrote.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-07-28/gross-equates-spending-to-lift-consumption-with-flushing-money-down-toilet.html
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I think most of the demographic and economic concerns, as well as any reasonable expectations of technology or US style privilege are non-starters. I compiled this short list 2 years ago on New Years Day to encourage my own resolutions. I’m about 75% completed on this list. That means by Gresham’s law, all y’all first worlders are free to jump in and feej the lovely parts I’ve already dropped.
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Despite United States temperatures ranging from “obnoxiously cold” to “WTF this was supposed to be spring,” last month was in fact the fourth-warmest March since 1880 globally, and the 349th-straight month of global temperatures above the 20th-century average for that month.
“But I was so cold!” you might be saying. “How can this be, Al Gore?” Apparently the answer involves the fact that there are other countries in the world besides the United States:
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http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2014/04/empires-collapse.html
This Is How Empires Collapse [just hitting the highlights – read the article]
This is how empires collapse: one complicit participant at a time.
Before an empire collapses, it first erodes from within.
What are these processes of internal rot? Here are a few of the most pervasive and destructive forces of internal corrosion:
1. Each institution within the system loses sight of its original purpose of serving the populace and becomes self-serving.
2. The corrupt Status Quo corrupts every individual who works within the system.
3. Self-serving institutions select sociopathic leaders whose skills are not competency or leadership but conning others into believing the institution is functioning optimally when in reality it is faltering/failing.
4. The institutional memory rewards conserving the existing Status Quo and punishes innovation.
5. As the sunk costs of the subsystems increase, the institutional resistance to new technologies and processes increases accordingly.
6. Institutional memory and knowledge support “doing more of what worked in the past” even when it is clearly failing.
7. These dynamics of eroding accountability, effectiveness and purpose lead to systemic diminishing returns.
8. Incompetence is rewarded and competence punished.
9. As returns diminish and costs rise, systemic fragility increases.
10. Economies of scale no longer generate returns.
11. Redundancy is sacrificed to preserve a corrupt and failing core.
12. The feedback from those tasked with doing the real work of the Empire is ignored as Elites and vested interests dominate decision-making.
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Some dreamy electronic music to counteract the negativity:
Jon Hopkins, A Drifting Up
enjoy
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Excellent.
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Dear PFGetty, thanks for being so open and honest about your situation. We are all in a hopelessly compromised position created by our insane culture/history. We struggle within the meshes of our civilizational web to get free enough to cut a few of it’s strands. And it really looks like a losing battle….but we fight on….what else can a person of awareness and conscience and compassion do? Your sharing makes me feel less alone.
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Or some would simply say the logic of humans…
by Stephanie McMillan
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A substantial portion of religionists forsee catastrophe as do scientists, but their takes on solutions have contrasts and are preplexing.
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At a ‘community conversation’ a couple of weeks ago held by our ‘new’ mayor (Andrew Judd, now into his fifth month of office) numerous matters were raised including ‘unfavourable demographics’, which was raised by Andrew himself: he suggested that the’ ageing population problem’ should be ‘solved’ by encouraging young people to move into the district.
Regular readers here would not be surprised that I immediately slammed that idea on the head, pointing out that [beyond a very low threshold] increasing population always increases problems (Albert Bartlett: none of the problems we face is in any way improved by having more people), and pointing out that encouraging young people to move from other locations results in greater demographic problems for other locations, and is therefore unethical. Land ‘developers’, builders, real estate agents, lawyers, supermarket owners, car salesmen etc. don’t see it that way, of course,
Perhaps I should not be hard on Andrew; after all, he has done something no other mayor attempted: going out and canvassing opinion in an informal setting. Whether it is just a public relations exercise will become very clear within 2 months,
In the meantime. something quite unusual happened a couple of days ago, The local newspaper ran an editorial which followed up on the Forbes unsustainability; report. The era of ‘we’re special, we’re different, we’re like no other, we’re invincible’ seems to be coming to a fairly abrupt end. Bearing in mind that the prime function of the media has been to promote business-as-usual, the suggestion that business-as-usual is not the way ahead suggests someone somewhere wants the general populace to know. Of course, mentioning the truth immediately puts the messenger into the ‘doom and gloom’ category. Nevertheless, there’s no smoke without fire, and suggesting politicians are all full of hot air and empty promises may be significant.
One friend suggested that the mere admission that business-as-usual may not be so good after all and that we have been misled might be an omen for something very bad arriving on our doorstep quite soon.
http://www.stuff.co.nz/taranaki-daily-news/opinion/9964974/Columns
Sustainability is this century’s buzz word.
We are told our climate is changing at a frightening pace, our resources are finite and the earth will not be able to feed the billions it already holds let alone the billions yet to be born.
For most of us this is rather too much to take in let alone worry about. It used to be that we were advised not to sweat the small stuff, but telling us to sweat the big stuff is not feasible. It’s difficult enough to focus on what affects us and ours without worrying about the entire world. If things are in the too-hard basket it pays to empty the basket into the rubbish bin.
This year is election year and the threats and promises have already started. One side says all is well, the other is adamant only they can save us from the looming disaster.
Yesterday’s Taranaki Daily News business pages featured an article on the growing business and consumer confidence in our economy. The New Zealand dollar is still high and while this is not good for exporters it does mean that consumers are benefiting from cheaper big-ticket goods. That, aligned with the prospect of wage rises, paints a very rosy picture – for most of us.
But just when we think we can start spending again, up comes another doom and gloom merchant.
The Forbes website has an article saying that New Zealand’s economic bubble is about to burst. Forbes.com is a respected website as opposed to the mindless ramblings of anyone who believes we are interested in what they think.
Economic analyst Jesse Colombo, one of the few experts to warn of the Global Financial Crisis last decade, writes in Forbes is that our “rock-star” economy is actually in dire trouble and he gives 12 reasons why this is so. Firstly, he quotes our low-interest rates, saying that these fuel credit and housing bubbles. Over- priced houses result in a mortgage debt bubble, with mortgages accounting for 60 per cent of bank lending. It’s starting to get familiar, folks, and very scary. But wait, there’s more:
“Though New Zealand is commonly thought to be an agriculture-based economy, this couldn’t be further from the truth. Agriculture accounts for only 5.1 per cent of New Zealand’s GDP, while the finance, insurance and business services sector is the country’s largest sector, contributing 28.8 per cent to the GDP. Furthermore, banks account for 80 per cent of the total assets of New Zealand’s financial system. Not only is New Zealand’s banking system dangerously exposed to the country’s property and credit bubble, but so is the entire economy.”
He goes on, but sensible people should stop reading. What is really needed is for our politicians to stop arguing and start thinking about the future. Promising to spend money when we don’t have it, or worse, spending money they hope they are going to get – and they are all guilty of that – is hardly sustainable policy.
Promising us the moon is a sure way to send us all to hell in a handbasket.
– © Fairfax NZ News
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‘The long slump and governments’ subsequent budget cuts have exposed the chasm between the fortunate – and sometimes undeserving – few who continue to thrive and the majority who are struggling. Many people have fallen far – not least the 26 million Europeans who are out of work, many of them for a long time. In Britain, real wages have fallen by nearly a tenth. A typical British household is no richer than a decade ago. Even the much-vaunted German escalator has stalled. The average German earns fractionally less than 15 years ago.
Some parts of Europe have been in freefall. In Greece, where national income has shrunk by a quarter, children scavenge through rubbish bins for food scraps while hospitals run short of medicine. In Spain, where more than one in four people are unemployed, suicide is now the top cause of death after natural causes. In Ireland, where house prices have halved, nearly one in five homeowners are in arrears on the mortgages on their depreciated homes, while the cost to Irish people of bailing out the banks that made all the bad mortgage loans comes to €14,000 (£11,600) each. In Italy, more than two in five young people are out of work; in Greece and Spain, it’s nearly three in five.
Across Europe, 15 million people below the age of 30 are neither in employment nor education. A lost generation is in the making. Is it any surprise that young Europeans are having even fewer babies since the crisis and that someone emigrates from Portugal every four minutes?’
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/philippe-legrain-the-eurozone-crisis-has-tipped-many-into-disillusionment-despair-and-extremism–we-need-a-european-spring-9278743.html
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The old adage: ‘Where there’s oil there’s trouble’, applies more than ever.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/angolas-new-import-tariffs-putting-the-squeeze-on-the-poorest-residents-in-one-of-the-worlds-most-expensive-cities-9278530.html
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I’ve been reading this blog for a few months now but have never commented. I just wanted to say thank you. Thank you for putting words to the mess that we are born into. Thank you for being the only voice that actually makes sense to me. Reading these articles are a relief to me to know others also feel the same way. And also surreal like I”m living in a shitty apocolaptic sci-fi movie… Now I just don’t know what the fuck to do with the rest of my life.
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Enjoy living cause it’s still cool even when we know what we know. I agree with your sentiments about this blog.
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There are those that live a life of concern,worry,depression & fear but there are those that remember that everyday that you wake up you get to open a new “present”.
There are many versions of Rare Earths- “I Just Want To Celebrate” on YouTube.
“Well, I can’t be bothered with sorrow
And I can’t be bothered with hate, no, no
I’m using up the time but feeling fine, every day”
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Unfortunately, people who live around where I am wake up to the same nightmarish living hell every day now. And the boot is kept on their neck by people in the wonderful “advanced” world who are enjoying their lovely presents.
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The bottom billions will be sacrificed for those sitting comfortably at the top of the pyramid scheme and enjoying their carbon-rich lifestyles.
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If one’s present is a boot on the neck,they always can return it to the Gifter with some “boot”. Life is full of options.
“When You Come to a Fork in the Road, Take It!”-Yogi Berra
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Live what you love (but be aware).
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The all-too-familiar response of those in power to those who challenge them:
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/apr/24/spain-restricting-protest-fines-harassment-excessive-force
Spain restricting people’s right to protest, Amnesty report finds
Report paints picture of heavy-handed government response to country’s growing social movements
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Great work Mike! made some posts in German some months ago based on the Riot for Austerity Blog on resilience.org …yes no reaction here in Austria. Will use some Parts for my new essay in the wiener Zeitung in Sunday.
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Watching this now…
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Hey Mike: thanks for sharing that movie – real eye-opener! Nice to see nature can make it without us.
People may misinterpret this as “a good sign” but there’s no doubt that the radiation has an effect on the DNA and mutates the species in some way that’s transferred genetically from then on. We must remember that radiation is bio-concentrated as it proceeds up the food chain and that increased radiation is cumulative. For humans, radiation isn’t cleared of the body beyond that which we’ve become adapted to (like that from bananas) through natural bodily systems – in fact specific types of radiation are attracted to certain areas like the marrow, liver or the lungs (dependent on method of ingestion too) but can appear and effect anywhere.
Nice to see wild nature and how it works just fine without the scourge of humanity.
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http://www.commondreams.org/view/2014/04/24
Video games usually provide you with multiple lives. If you step on a landmine or get hit by an assassin, you get another chance. Even if such virtual reincarnation is not built into the rules of the game, you can always reboot and start over again. You can try again hundreds of times until you get it right. This formula applies to first-person shooter games as well as simulation exercises like SimEarth.
The real Earth offers a similar kind of reboot. Catastrophe has hit our planet at least five times, as Elizabeth Kolbert explains in her new book, The Sixth Extinction. During each of these preceding wipeouts, the planet recovered, though many of the life forms residing in the seas or on land were not so fortunate (“many” is actually an understatement—more than 99 percent of all species died out in these cataclysms). As Kolbert points out, we are in the middle of a sixth such world-altering event, and this will be the first—and possibly the last—extinction that we will witness as human beings. The planet and its hardier denizens may soldier on, but for us it will be game over.
A subset of environmentalists is already preparing for the end game. In the latest New York Times Magazine, Paul Kingsnorth—the author of the manifesto Uncivilization—confesses that he has given up trying to save the planet. He rejects false hopes. “You look at every trend that environmentalists like me have been trying to stop for 50 years,” he says, “and every single thing had gotten worse.” He’s heading to the wilderness of Ireland to grow his own food, homeschool his kids, and prepare for the difficult days ahead.
Survivalism: it’s not just for right-wing wackos any more.
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Today is ANZAC Day, the day when a failed attempt to invade southern Turkey and take control of the Dardanelles in 1915 is remembered. The conditions endured by the French, British, and particularly Australian and New Zealand troops were amongst the most horrific ever endured by humans engaged in conflict, including rationing of water, A fiasco from the start which was compounded by almost every kind of error ‘leaders’ could make, the campaign was abandoned when it was finally clear that no progress would be made.
Also remembered are the deaths of tens of thousands of people killed in other conflicts promoted by empires, the majority of the casualties being in the age range 17 to 30.
Less well known is the disgraceful manner in which returned servicemen (and a few women) were treated by the NZ government, which led to the establishment of the Returned Services Association, an organisation devoted to the welfare of those whom their country had used, abused and then abandoned,
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Mike, you’re a exceptional, gifted writer who is able to craft logical and illustrative essays, but I’m going to have to challenge your base assumptions with respect to symptoms and causes.
I understand I’m not going to be able to convince you otherwise, but as a general critique that may influence others, I believe capitalism is merely the current label du jour attached to generic human behavior, which in itself, is no different than any other organic life form.
The competition for scarce resources manifests itself in every activity undertaken by yeast and men. Since all are governed by basic physical properties, we would expect to see results follow established patterns given different environmental conditions. The Pareto principle posits that roughly 80% of the effects come from 20% of the causes. Also known as the 80/20 rule, it describes recurring instances where 20% of any given population is accredited with 80% of the rewards … or failures.
Another angle of attack is the glorification of those ‘less able’ ie nature’s losers. The Gaussian function aka “Bell Curve” describes perfectly the distribution of capabilities for any given environmental test, whether it is strength, size, cunning, or intelligence. The sad fact is that the regions exhibiting the highest population densities and lowest standards of living also conform to IQ levels falling below 100. As it turns out, 100 is around the baseline for literacy, which in itself is a litmus test for the ability to understand abstract concepts, such as planning for future events and the necessity of impulse control to reach certain (deferred) goals.
Your essay uses a broad brush to paint capitalist societies as some kind of evil incarnate, when in reality all they are exhibiting is the ultimate expression of resource acquisition, consumption and waste. To ascribe some kind of noble dignity to those who “would if they could”, but cannot due to competitive weaknesses, misses the point that we are all struggling yeast on this little ball in the sky.
One last point: the key aspect of overpopulation is food. Agriculture is completely and utterly 100% dependent on chemical fertilizers in order to achieve established yields. The three key components are NPK, of which nitrogen (N) is derived from natural gas feedstocks; phosphorus (P) from phosphate rock; and potassium (K) mined from potash deposits.
Both P & K are experiencing their own peak resource difficulties, but their availability has practically nothing to do with Western carbon based lifestyles, other than the ability to mine, transport, process and deliver. An argument could be made that our extravagant lifestyles are consuming natural gas at such an alarming rate that N might experience shortages, but that is probably a stretch.
So, food production isn’t really being compromised by Western consumption habits, unless one can link global warming to diminished yields, which I think would be difficult to prove at this point. Rather, whether or not we drive huge SUVs, agricultural output will begin to diminish based on other shortages, all of which will manifest itself as starvation in regions effected by overpopulation.
Are we consuming more than “our fair share” of the world’s resources? You bet we are. Is capitalism the reason we are driven to consume beyond our base requirements? It’s seems you believe so, but I’m not convinced. If the tables were reversed, would today’s poor gladly assume the role of oppressors if given the chance? I think “yes” is a pretty clear answer.
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Or not.
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Tell yourself whatever you need to dog.
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B9K9: I agree. Variation and selection is what I do for a living. I farm. (and so do the big banks)
Life has been happening for 4,500 million years. For 99.99999% of that time, energy was scarce. Making a profit, a positive EROEI, was critical for survival. Every tree, blade of grass, bacteria and bug had to accomplish that almost daily. I’m amazed that seeds can stay alive for 30 years with a negative EROEI and many plants and animals hibernate through the winter going negative, but we can’t do either. Having more free energy than we need has just ruined everything because making a profit is what living things always had to do and it’s what we still are programed to do. Kind of like playing football with 10 balls at once. I think all of us really like this situation of excess energy and wouldn’t want to lose it.
And it happened so fast; over a period of 0.00001% of life on earth. Is it likely that we would change during this short period?
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You obviously do not understand EROEI. Indeed, I wonder whether you even understand energy at all.
Seeds cannot have a negative EROEI during storage because they have no energy input during storage and are simply consuming stored chemical energy at an incredibly slow rate.
In natural systems there are no energy profits: there is simply conversion of energy which is ultimately derived from the Sun into other forms of energy, or using energy derived from the Sun to drive chemical processes (other than organisms that derive energy from geothermal/geochemical systems).
Contrary to what you cay, there has been an abundance of energy on Earth for billions of years. The obstacle organisms had to overcome was capturing some of that abundant energy, either as ‘producers’ (plants) consumers (animals) or decomposers (bacteria, fungi etc.) For hundreds of ,millions of years there has been near-perfect energy balance, and when some major disturbance to the system occurred (like an asteroid impacting) the system responded tor restore energy balance.
Note that mammals are incredibly inefficient users of energy. However, their high body temperature has allowed them to dominate ecosystems because the high body temperature (maintained by constantly breaking down carbohydrates, proteins and lipids) has provided speed, agility, sustained high-level energy use, adaptations to otherwise inhospitable conditions etc. that have given them reproductive advantages and ‘fitness’ advantages over organisms that do not operate at a high temperature.
Birds, operating at similarly high temperatures, have similarly established themselves near the top or at the top of food chains. Penguins living on or near Antarctica must be one of the finest examples, demonstrating the advantage to be gained from operating a high-temperature metabolism: any ‘cold-blooded’ organism would freeze solid within minutes in the winter.
The problem for mammals and birds is to maintain the high rate of energy conversion by acquiring sufficient stored energy on a more or less continuous basis (a shrew is said to eat its own mass in ‘high-energy’ food every day; a cow spends most of days eating ‘low-value’ food, so low it requires the assistance of bacteria to release the usable substances).
Humans got into the present pickle by learning to use fossil fuels maintain their body temperatures, to expend less energy acquiring food, and expend less energy moving from place to place. And now, having generated excessive amounts of ‘free time’ to keep themselves amused.
Just for the record, today I purchased $40 worth of concentrated chemical energy (petro) for one of my energy slaves and used some of that energy to transport stores of chemical energy (food) to my home. Depending on factors I cannot be certain about, I expect the petrol to last me 2 or 3 months.
.
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Nice to have a erudite commenter on board.
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Kevin,
An accurate concise comment.For anyone with an interest in the subject of energy in industrial society,and in particular how neoclassical economics has largely misunderstood and underestimated its fundamental importance,I can highly recommend the book’Energy and the wealth of nations’by Hall and Klitgaard.Some readers will be able to skim read some sections that explain fairly basic science,but the authors have done a fine job in writing an important book in a format that readers of this blog will find quite accessible.I find the subject very interesting,but unfortunately it is now really irrelevant to the situation we are in.Our population is an order of magnitude too large,the juggernaut of industrial civilisation cannot be changed,governments across the world are advised by economists trained in a discipline that fundamentally misunderstands the bbiophysics of the earth,as this book explains,a large percentage of the population are clueless or uninterested,etc.
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Fears Mount That Russia Could Face Another Summer Of Deadly Forest Fires
http://www.rferl.org/content/fears_mount_russia_another_summer_deadly_fires/24208108.html
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The belief gene knows no political, religious or scientific barriers. You either have it or you don’t. The belief that omnipotent boogiemen are the source of society’s ills is no different than faith in a vengeful sky god who will smite those who don’t pay tribute.
Passive weaklings are evolutionary mistakes; we are all pitiless thugs given the chance. The only thing preventing the masses from executing their fondest wishes is simple: they can’t. I love the old English proverb “If wishes were horses, the poor would ride.”
Everyone is replaceable – mere cogs in the machine. If Kevin was made PM tomorrow, he’d sound no different than the current political leader of NZ simply due to the uproar from people – just like himself – who need the system continuing to operate today AS IS if they are to survive.
The reason for so much grief and frustration is the conviction that someone, some thing, is responsible for our present predicament. Once you realize we would have reached this state regardless of economic system, consumption levels, political organization, etc, then you’ll have finally reached a state of being able to clearly assess the situation without any emotional baggage.
From that point on, it’s all clear sailing. Marlowe (not the Stratford man) said it so well: (life) is but a walking shadow; a poor player, that struts and frets his hour upon the stage … We get one chance – my advice is to live it to its fullest.
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‘If Kevin was made PM tomorrow, he’d sound no different than the current political leader of NZ simply due to the uproar from people – just like himself – who need the system continuing to operate today AS IS if they are to survive.’
May I suggest you try reading comments before adding your own, and particularly before slamming onto people you obviously know almost nothing about.
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I’m going to have to post an essay dispelling the myth that humans are inherently selfish and violent.
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Intra-tribally humans can be very sweet and cooperative, but inter-tribally they can be ruthless and murderous. Technological weapons give the possessor great leverage in their ability to destroy competing tribes. However, the information surrounding new technology tends to diffuse into competing tribes and advantage is eventually lost. The U.S. developed an atomic bomb and immediately put it to use in smashing the Japanese tribe into submission. Tribal encroachment on lebensraum tends to make the fangs come out, as occurred in Germany.
If you have moved several standard deviations farther towards the truth than the average citizen, it becomes almost essential that you become a pretender with no hope of edifying the immovable masses. They are captive to optimism bias (dopamine reinforced belief in the most positive possible outcome), religious herding behavior, the mantra of capitalism (dopamine carrots), and many are unmotivated to educate themselves, turning rather to the immediately gratifying (dopamine, adrenalin) rewards of entertainment including comedy, music, video, sex, sports and violence. What is to like about this dopey terminal cancer? All I can say is “pretend”, go about your secret life and offer those you meet a “God bless”, and listen to their Vegas trip stories, or who won this game or that or how hot Kim Kardashian is. It really is pretty putrid and vapid, especially since the whole ball of tumor cells is destroying itself and the exquisite biological forms of the ecosystem in exchange for a bucket full of toxic shit.
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Sounds like your milk of human kindness might be getting sour. You might try finding a place within yourself to keep it cool and fresh. Never know when it may come in handy. You might even have some to share with the supposedly benign dog; his supply has really gone south….
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My “milk of human kindness” has turned to black bile which I intend to use productively.
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Mike, your first image of gross overconsumption reminds me of this:
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which is followed by this:
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Trimalchio’s Dinner…
(Fellini Satyricon..1969)
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http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-04-23/60-chinas-water-too-polluted-drink?utm_content=bufferce5dc&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer
60% Of China’s Water “Too Polluted To Drink”
Forget bank-runs, the water run has begun in China. Residents of the western city of Lanzhou rushed to buy mineral water earlier this month after local tap water was found to contain excessive levels of the toxic chemical benzene. But that is the tip of what is a massive problem facing the Chinese people. Not only do they suffer choking smog day after day, but, as The Business Times reports, sixty per cent of underground water in China which is officially monitored is too polluted to drink directly, state media have reported, underlining the country’s grave environmental problems.
As The Business Times reports,
Sixty per cent of underground water in China which is officially monitored is too polluted to drink directly, state media have reported, underlining the country’s grave environmental problems.
Water quality measured in 203 cities across the country last year rated “very poor” or “relatively poor” in an annual survey released by the Ministry of Land and Resources, the official Xinhua news agency said late Tuesday.
Water rated “relatively” poor quality cannot be used for drinking without prior treatment, while water of “very” poor quality cannot be used as a source of drinking water, the report said.
The proportion of water not suitable for direct drinking rose from 57.4 per cent from 2012, it said.
As we noted previously, The World Bank’s Ismail Serageldin puts it succinctly: “The wars of the 21st century will be fought over water.” [there’s more]
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I’ll be working on an essay to discuss some of the ideas brought up in this comments section, but for the next couple of days I will be converting a new author’s essay from a PDF file into a wordpress blog post. The author is Hans Zandvliet who lives in La Paz, Bolivia. If you like math and peak oil, then this essay is for you.
I hope to have it published by this Sunday.
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Can’t wait xraymike!
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2612671/How-farmers-took-world-Hunter-gatherers-fell-agricultural-rivals-new-DNA-study-finds.html
How farmers took over the world: Hunter-gatherers fell for their agricultural rivals, new DNA study finds
Expanding Stone-age farmers assimilated local hunter-gatherers in Swedish study
Sheds new light on the transition between a hunting-gathering lifestyle and a farming way of life
Humans began to change the way they live when hunter gatherers fell for farmers, new DNA research has suggested.
A genomic analysis of eleven Stone-Age human remains from Scandinavia revealed that expanding Stone-age farmers assimilated local hunter-gatherers into their community, but that the traffic was one way.
The discovery sheds new light on the transition between a hunting-gathering lifestyle and a farming lifestyle, which has been debated for a century.
‘We see clear evidence that people from hunter-gatherer groups were incorporated into farming groups as they expanded across Europe’, says Pontus Skoglund at Uppsala University in Sweden.
‘This might be clues towards something that happened also when agriculture spread in other parts of the world.
‘The asymmetric gene-flow shows that the farming groups assimilated hunter-gatherer groups, at least partly’, says Mattias Jakobsson, who also worked on the study.
‘When we compare Scandinavian to central European farming groups that lived at about the same time, we see greater levels of hunter-gatherer gene-flow into the Scandinavian farming groups.’
DNA analysis also showed that the farmers and hunter-gatherers descended from distinct genetic lineages.
‘It is quite clear that the two groups are very different,’ says Skoglund.
Comparisons with the genes of modern populations revealed them to be more distinct that the genomes of modern Scandinavians and Italians.
Uppsala University in Sweden and his colleagues sequenced the DNA from 11 early hunter-gatherers and farmers dating back to between 5000 and 7000 years ago.
Four were associated with late Stone Age farming settlements; seven were identified as coastal hunter-gatherers.
The transition between a hunting-gathering lifestyle and a farming lifestyle has been debated for a century.
‘We have generated genomic data from the largest number of ancient individuals’ says Dr. Helena Malmström of Uppsala University and one of the lead authors.
‘The eleven Stone-Age human remains were between 5,000 and 7,000 years old and associated with hunter-gatherer or farmer life-styles’ says Helena Malmström.
Anders Götherström, who led the Stockholm University team, is satisfied with the amount of DNA that they could retrieve.
‘Not only were we able to generate DNA from several individuals, but we did get a lot of it. In some cases we got the equivalent of draft genomes.
‘A population genomic study on this level with a material of this age has never been done before as far as I know.’
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When I make comments on this blog I am making them from the perspective of having grown up in a country that had a just gone through a devastating war in which co-operation had seen the people through, and had established a National Health Service and a system of almost free university education, a nation that had experienced austerity and was not caught up in consumerism, a nation that generally accepted migrants of other colours and religions etc.
I do realise that many commenters are American and that Edward Bernays’ and his devotees’ manipulation of society has progressed much further in the US than elsewhere, which may account for some of the comments indicating that humans are mostly selfish, greedy pilferers with a tendency to murder when they don’t get what they want.
For the moment I am going to maintain the stance that the bulk of the populace of western nations have been misled, and that the system they endure has been deliberately foisted on them -for example the buying up of tramway systems and the deliberate closing of them by corporations interested in promoting automobile transport- and has tapped into the baser of the instincts for the benefit of a tiny minority at the top who are selfish and greedy pilferers with a tendency to murder when they don’t get what they want. I may be proven wrong.
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Having lived 35 years of my most formative years in the N.Amer madhouse, and 12 years now outside, I can tell you that the worst forms of social pathology have been well normalized in N.Amer. and are even seen as virtuous by many. Frankly, you would not believe what I see coming out of my family, former friends, acquaintances and the general public. Every person in my family and too many of my friends are on some form of psych-happy medication. Self-reflection, social analysis and dissent are all but illegal. From my perspective the social environment is now so toxic and trauma-inducing that I can not at this point ever see wanting to return or be involved in what it pretends to be in any way. The failure of potentialities that existed in the 60s and 70s, and the triumph of business psychology is nearly total and absolute.
I recommend a dry but horrifying Univ of Illinois academic study of post WWII of US business organizations like National Association of Manufacturers called “Selling Free Enterprise: The Business Assault on Labor and Liberalism, 1945-60 (History of Communication)” by Elizabeth Fones-Wolf. This seemed like a throwaway when I read it back in the 90s, but in retrospect, it is the epitaph of America, if not the world.
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We mostly medicate them now or simply leave them on the streets, but back in the days of One Flew Over the Coo Coo’s Nest:
…By the late 1940s, there were more than a million mental cases in hospitals or asylums. More than 55 percent of all patients in American hospitals were mental cases. One study reported that the population of mental patients in American hospitals was growing by 80 percent a year.
“There was no real treatment for these people. They were often drugged, shackled, kept in straitjackets or locked in rubber rooms. Doctors were able to keep them from harming themselves or others, but they had a cure rate of about zero. Besides, keeping them in hospitals was expensive. Freeman offered a solution. His motto was, ‘Lobotomy gets them home!’ Directors of mental institutions heard that loud and clear. One of Freeman’s colleagues said that a procedure that would send 10 percent of mental patients home would save the American taxpayer $1 million a day. Freeman claimed a success rate well above 10 percent. Most hospitals and institutions welcomed him and his lobotomy.”…
http://www.delanceyplace.com/view_sresults.php?2504
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If the maniacs at the top were not destroying everything it would be hilarious.
John Kerry – “a hairstyle in search of a brain”
—James Howard Kunstler
http://robinwestenra.blogspot.co.nz/
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Is This The Calm Before The Storm?
by Zen Gardner
There’s been quite a lull in major events of late, despite all the garish noise and typical bravado of global figureheads and their complicit media. Sure, there are skirmishes worldwide and economies continue to tumble, but the urgency of many regarding our ongoing situation is apparently suspended in some sort of strange holding pattern.
While it’s encouraging that the awakening is keeping TPTB’s machinations at bay and forcing them to change directions and tactics, I find it nonetheless a bit foreboding. It’s clearly not a time to let our guards down.
If you think back to 9/11, there were no warnings as to the vast dimension of what was about to transpire on the world stage. That particular sudden shift in the collective consciousness and the subsequent restructuring of society within that emotionally charged atmosphere were unprecedented. Surely the beginnings of the World Wars and the false flag events that were used to justify them as well as draw in US participation such as the sinking of the Maine, the Lusitania and then the infamous Pearl Harbor set up, were traumatic for their day.
But in this modern era of instantaneous communication and media dominance, the 9/11 events were exponentially more drastic.
The Russian Gambit
Since the Muslim terrorism meme seems to be running out of steam, especially now that it’s clear the West is again using these same elements they groomed from the start to foment their wars, they’ve now resurrected the Russian demon. Russia and the US have been working in close cooperation for decades on many levels, especially after the West imploded their economy and their previous Union was drastically dispersed. Russia has needed outside help to get back on her feet.
Over time the tables have turned somewhat as they’ve gained more economic independence and exploited their vast natural resources, something the West has had their eye on all along. Ukraine is one such gem of natural wealth, as outlined in globalist architect Zbigniew Brzezinski’s book The Grand Chessboard in 1997 where the allusion to the need for a new Pearl Harbor was first coined and where he also names the countries and states of that entire region as the prize the West should strive to control.
Don’t discount the fact that this entire play we’re witnessing is fully staged. At the very least it is being carefully manipulated to create just the atmosphere that will take the New World Order plan to its next level. Similar to the global economic take down to bring about a one world digital currency, the hidden powers behind the scenes know exactly what they’re doing, despite any setbacks their interim plans may have taken.
nuclear_explosion_atomic_bomb-ww3-at_the_doors
The Doors for Major Events Are Wide Open
Unfortunately a variety of options are now available as lynch-pins they can yank out at any moment that would make the wheels fall off of our current societal structure and drastically change humanity’s course. Not only could this orchestrated cold war simulation burst into some kind of military conflagration, whether limited or an all out nuclear war thus changing the course of humanity profoundly, but the undermining of Syria continues to simmer, as does the pugnacious Israeli hate for Iran that apparently cannot be satisfied, just to name a few.
Add to that the descent of the United States into a totalitarian 3rd world state with a first world military and the potential for another major false flag event, not just to distract from domestic issues and the clearly seen unraveling at hand, but to galvanize the mass American mind into the next level of hysterical jingoism. In that climate the US machine can go after any named culprit it wants, having saturated the Middle East and Eastern Europe with military installations, especially over the past 14 years.
This may be stating the obvious but this is our real time predicament. And we must be prepared for any eventuality. We won’t be warned. The value of just such a drastic manipulated event is in the emotional impact, massively supported by government propaganda via their mainstream media mouthpieces, dutifully filling in the blanks as to whodunnit and why we need more war and domestic controls. This scenario then bleeds into the NATO countries the fastest and travels the world in new restrictions and mind traps, all based on fear.
The Walking Dead
These are not very pleasant scenarios, but if we can’t see the handwriting on the wall by now we’re in even worse shape already.
Despite the sabre-rattling and economic, military and police crackdowns, most think the world will just keep trundling on with little adjustments here and there, but all will be fine. Their faith and reliance on authority refuses to be shaken. The consequences of such thinking may require individual action and that option was engineered to be discarded in most cases since birth.
If anyone isn’t aware of the grand plan to institute global governance they are seriously hindered from connecting the dots of this worldwide meltdown. Once you understand the plan, everything from the Agenda 21 driven BLM land grab, gun control and the plethora of other One World driven programs, to the deliberate evisceration of the world’s food and water supply while toxifying anything that brings life to the planet and its inhabitants come into focus.
Depopulation, disempowerment and gulag type city incarceration are plainly stated plans of these megalomaniacs. The slightest bit of open minded research will prove that to anyone willing to investigate.
Spiritually It’s Anything But Calm
Many are experiencing very trying times as this transition continues. As I’ve said repeatedly, for those not spiritually prepared, the next major storm is going to hit very hard and turn their worlds upside down in a moment. For those aware of the forces at work and sensitive to spiritual conditions the great war is already here and well under way. Is is already World War 3 by the technical definition of world wars.
When the ocean comes to life and the waves and currents become tumultuous, everything in and on the sea is greatly affected. Perhaps the deeper levels under the sea feel the impact less immediately, but everything is part of the whole experience. Similarly, as the waves of global tension rise and manifest in all walks of life, so our spirits sense the deeper changes working behind the scenes both causing and reacting to these pressures and disruptions.
I know I and many others have been experiencing such changes. Perhaps it’s difficult to concentrate, your sleep pattern is disrupted, or waves of emotion and questions pass through seemingly without reason, even to the point of anxiety and depression. If you’ve been on a boat in rough seas it’s not easy to do much of anything, be it writing, eating or hardly any normal activity while being tossed by a storm. This is what many are experiencing.
So before you get all introspective and down on yourself, remember almost all of this is being brought on by external influences. Know, too, that you are not alone in much of what you are experiencing. We’re all in this turbulent bathtub together. There are some very dark forces, both earthly and spiritual, deliberately trying to make things confusing and conducive to fear, a very suggestible state to be in.
This is why the media is pounding on the tropes they’ve embedded into the mass mind harder than ever – humanity is very susceptible in times like these.
barakflag
Abandon Their Stinking, Sinking Ship
A story was recently told of how the passengers of a sinking ferry boat were told to put on their life jackets but stay where they were. Do not jump off the ship, even as it was listing they were told. 302 people died needlessly as a result, while those who did abandon ship, following their basic instincts, were rescued from the water. Those who didn’t, died in their mind-frozen, authority-obeying seats, if you will, holding on to their so-called life jackets, a token gesture of care from rulers who don’t give a damn for who dies or how many. They only want to preserve a semblance of order as long as they can while their perfidy in perpetrated.
Don’t fall for the life jacket ploy. It’s like waiting for FEMA to come to your rescue. It’s all a sham to keep you quiet and staying in the boat. And just waiting for them to take the initiative.
When people wake up to the reality that today’s authorities do not have mankind’s well being or even survival at heart, and are in fact working feverishly for its demise into controllable factions of vastly reduced number, they start to approach the point of taking action.
This begs the question: will such activation be in time to thwart their Machiavellian plan?
The Sleepy Sound of the Alluring Sirens
The Sirens of Greek mythology were beautiful, singing bird-like maidens said to put unwary sailors to sleep as they lured their ships onto the reefs and their destruction. There couldn’t be a more fitting illustration of the shallow, mind numbing spewings of the likes of of Obama, Cameron, Harper and a host of other puppeteered so-called first world leaders. It’s all essentially a sleep inducing lie with a very disturbing, destructive motive, dressed in syrupy sing song platitudes.
It seems the more they lie the more people believe them. As the adage goes, tell a big enough lie and everyone will believe it. That apparently applies to quantity of lies as well.
History bears this out. Yet do we learn from it? Does anyone know any history? Is the history that they have been taught the truth, as in real, true history? These questions come front and center as individuals proceed through the wake up process.
Steady As She Goes
Spiritual disciplines and communing with nature are very healing, comforting and strengthening in times like these. As is drawing close to those you love and who love you, as well as forming community with other awakened souls in whatever form we can. Remembering that most of these strange phenomena are outside spiritual attacks and influences will help clear the mind and heart from confusion. This is also why alternative information must include the so-called “bad” news with the good; it’s important to keep track of these trends, as well as continue to expose them to the unwary.
Our accumulated voice is rescuing and empowering people by the day. Never ever let that be minimized in your mind and heart.
Do your best to be “steady as she goes” as we all traverse this next phase. A major event is on the horizon in some shape or form. It’s their trump card, having worked so well in the past. They even brag about this fact. As David Rockefeller infamously stated years ago, “All we need is the right major crisis and the nations will accept the new world order.”
They cannot control us all, especially as the awakened grow in strength and numbers. They’re aware of this, which is why they’ve become somewhat slipshod in their execution of their plans of late. They know time is of the essence, which, as I said, may be why they moved straight for the Russia confrontation, temporarily bypassing their thwarted efforts to go after Syria and Iran as was their admitted original plan. But they’re still in play.
Stay alert and prepared – physically, mentally and spiritually. And do your best to help prepare those around you, and inspire even more to get prepared.
The storm that’s coming following this relative lull will be earth-shattering. The US would gladly nuke one of its own cities if it has to. Insane Israel would be happy to attack and nuke anyone or everyone to push their self-serving genocidal program. These self proclaimed controllers are all psychopaths, so never expect anything to make sense or follow any sort of path of reason, as much as they try to create scenarios to justify their actions.
Don’t be lulled into complacency by contrived rhetoric. It’s all a lie.
Very strange dark powers are at work. Stay supple, stay sharp, but keep your dukes up.
Much love, Zen
ZenGardner.com
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Surprised…and pleased…to find something by Zen posted here. i’ve found that his site has much of value for the, let’s say, Metaphysically inclined.
In 2011, Zen wrote “You Are the Battlefield” which was then crafted into a beautiful video by Patrick Willis…
http://www.zengardner.com/you-are-the-battlefield/
Thanks
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Damn…better if it embeds…one more try
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Marvellous expression there: …’to justify living as a comfortable, selfish, lazy, brain-donor to the system’….
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/24/net-neutrality_n_5206510.html
Everything You Need To Know About The End Of Net Neutrality
It may be the end of the Internet as we know it.
That was the reaction from consumer advocates and some websites after the Federal Communications Commission announced new rules governing Internet service on Thursday. The rules effectively put an end to net neutrality, or the idea that all web traffic should be treated equally.
“Definitely, consumers are the losers,” said Todd O’Boyle, a program director at Common Cause, a left-leaning public interest lobbying group. “The sites they rely on on a daily basis may not work in a way they’ve come to rely on.”
The FCC insists, however, that the new rules would not harm Internet users. In a blog post Thursday, FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler said there had been “a great deal of misinformation” about the proposal, which he said would not permit “behavior harmful to consumers or competition by limiting the openness of the Internet.”
Here are some key points to understand regarding the changes:
What is net neutrality and why is this happening?
Net neutrality is the idea that your Internet provider must treat all Web traffic equally. A court decision in January struck down FCC rules meant to ensure that Internet providers do not discriminate by blocking or slowing certain content.
That decision opened the door for Internet providers like Comcast and Verizon to cut deals with content providers, which would pay to stream their content in an Internet “fast lane.”
After the ruling, the FCC said it would revise its rules. That’s what happened Thursday.
What do the new rules say?
The new rules would allow companies like Netflix to pay Internet providers to stream their videos and other content more quickly. That could create two lanes on the Internet, fast super-highways that big tech companies can afford and a bumpy backroad where less fortunate websites dwell, consumer advocates say.
Verizon, which sued the FCC for the right to cut such deals, said Thursday that it had no intention of preventing customers from viewing certain sites.
Verizon and other Internet providers “have always made clear that we support an open Internet and we have publicly committed to ensuring that customers can access the Internet content they want, when they want and how they want,” the company said in a statement.
The FCC said these deals would still be fair because Internet providers would be required to reveal how they handle traffic, how much they charge companies for access to fast lanes, and whether they’ve given preferential treatment to their own content.
That last part could become especially important as Internet providers are increasingly becoming entertainment companies. AT&T said this week it plans to launch a new online video service. Comcast owns NBC Universal, which includes 30 cable networks, 26 local TV stations and part of the streaming service Hulu.
Internet providers would be required to act in a “commercially reasonable manner,” according to the FCC, which will vote on the proposed rules later this year.
What could that mean for me, in English, please?
First off, the web could get more expensive. The impact on the average Internet user will likely not be felt right away. But over time, websites would probably pass on to consumers the costs of paying for high-speed access, according to Harold Feld, a senior vice president at the consumer group Public Knowledge.
In addition, it could become difficult to view certain websites owned by companies that can’t afford to pay for access to an Internet fast lane, Feld said.
On top of Internet users potentially paying more, they would also be more confused, Feld said. Under the proposed rules, people would need to make sense of a fragmented Internet landscape where the time it takes to load an online video would depend on whether that website paid extra to their Internet provider. Consumers may start choosing their Internet providers based on which websites they like to visit.
Feld compared the situation to the exclusive deals that AT&T and Apple once made that only allowed AT&T subscribers to purchase the iPhone.
This sounds pretty frustrating.
It would be. Under the FCC’s proposed rules, the quality of online streaming services like Netflix or HBO Go would depend on whether those services are paying your Internet provider or not, Feld said.
“It will become more fragmented and more frustrating,” he added.
The proposed rules could affect not just entertainment, but also education. If schools use an online curriculum made by a company that cut a deal with Verizon, students who subscribe to Verizon’s Internet service at home would have an advantage over other students who subscribe to another provider, Feld said.
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