Tags
Addiction to Fossil Fuels, Capitalism, Climate Chaos, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Ecocide, Peak Oil, Peak Water, Police State, Poverty
Cross posted from Pray for Calmity
By TDoS
Despite the oddly warm weather that blew in today, we are in the depth of autumn. The days have been full of regular chores. Splitting firewood and stacking it on pallets outside the front door is something I tend to every third day or so, and I try to split in excess so that come the raw cold days of winter, I need not swing the maul. The gardens are almost all covered in a layer of horse manure, and the chicken coop is surrounded with straw bales in the hope that the next round of polar vortecies will not claim the lives of any of our birds. The quiet days spent fleshing deer hides and hauling gravel into the drainage trench around our house arouse my mind to thinking. Furious thinking about the state of the planet, the state of human beings within this culture, and just what the hell any of us should do with our time, our will, and our strength as we collectively are drawn into a decidedly more difficult future.
The bulk of my days this summer past were dedicated to the construction of our house. We have several acres of beautiful land in one of the forested pockets of North America, and through the heat and the rain I swung a framing hammer until at long last I now have a small, mostly finished cabin. It was not once lost on me, that building my house in a rural place as part of an attempt to alleviate myself of the necessity of the industrial capitalist system, I quite often had to lean heavily on that very system. “Using the grid to go off the grid,” my friend said. Despite having no wires or pipes running to my cabin, I know the truth of the matter: there is no escaping civilization. One can scoot to the edges, hang out near the lifeboats if you will, smoking a cigarette and waiting for the moment reality dawns on the crew and they cry “Abandon ship!” But no matter how far one goes, no matter how many comforts they shuck, the chemicals of industry still course through their blood. Catastrophic climate change will wipe out ways of life even in the remote, uncontacted jungles of the world. People who never drove a car or owned a cell phone will be subject to famine and cancer. Ironically, it is the poor who will likely suffer greatest as climatic change spurs droughts, floods, and mega storms. Worse yet, it is the non-human species who are being eradicated daily, never to return, for the hubris of petroleum man.
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I hate this civilization, this machine, this juggernaut, this sleepwalking hungry ghost, this pathological ideology, this imaginary cage that we cannot seem to imagine a key for no matter how deeply we come to resent our captivity. But I still wanted a steel roof so that I could collect rainwater. It was July when I screwed the roof down to the purlins, and on that day I asked myself, “What does a person do, when they simultaneously need a thing, and need to destroy it?” Such a double bind cannot possibly have a rational answer, because the rational is captured by society, trademarked and owned by the dominant culture. We can only know in our souls, in the still wild places of our being what must be done, but making the case with the words crafted in the forges of civilization will almost certainly always fail. Words and arguments are Trojan Horses, trap doors to counter arguments, to platitudes, to endless winding hallways of thought not designed to deliver you anywhere, but merely to sap you of your energy in the traveling.
We know what we must do, and we know that we will never be able to rationalize it to the denizens of civilization, because at its very core a rationalization is a request for permission. Those who benefit most from the demise of the natural world and from the agony of the global poor will never permit anyone to cut the lights on this cavalcade of compounding tragedies.
We know what we must do. We must burn down the house we have built, force ourselves back into the wild. And further, we must tell the story to all of our children explaining that the house made us weak, it made us sedentary, it turned us against our land and our kin who dwell on the land, it made us servile to its own needs even as it fell apart around us, off-gassing formaldehyde and leaching fire retardants into our blood. We must explain that the lure the comfort of the house provides is undeniable, and that a long many days from now, the children of our children’s children may forget the perils that the house presents. We must send strong words and songs far into the unseen future, so that those who come after us value the freedom of their life out of doors with only simple shelters, that they understand the impermanence of the tipi or the wigwam is not a failing, but a strength, as the nature of life on this Earth is that of impermanence. We must convey the futility of attempts to forever banish the cold, the rain, or the wind with immovable dwellings, and that such folly will forever chain those who build them to a lifetime of work while making enemies of their surroundings as they till more soil for crops, as they sink more mines for more metal, as they cut trees for more wood, and still lose their great battle against the ravages of weather and time.
It is a great house we have collectively built. Many will say there is no other way of being. They will say that despite the dangers the house presents to body, mind, and soul, that these dangers are nothing when weighed against the impossibility of life outside. There will be those who even acknowledge the limitations of this house, they will nod in agreement when you tell them that the roof is caving and the foundation buckling. They will say, “Yes, yes, I know” when you present the children afflicted with leukemia brought about by the toxicity of the house’s very construction, and they will fight you still when you suggest dismantling this place and creating something new.
The house is a prison, and the people within it have become institutionalized, domesticated. They have been subjugated in spirit and thought to think there is no life outside the walls. If it were possible merely to escape, to dig a mighty tunnel to the far reaches of the mortar and beyond, perhaps that would be the righteous choice. But there is no place left that the ravages cannot reach you. There are no lands across the sea where you will not be subject the dictates of the warden, where the poisons of industry will not claim your health and kill your landbase. The walls must go, by any means necessary, even if in the here and now, we rely upon them.
Sleet is falling now outside of my window. It has been a long season of work, and as my body finds itself resting more, my mind grows agitated. There have been uprisings against police authority across the United States in recent weeks. The petroleum markets are in turmoil as global powers seek domination over their competitors. Experts are advising that the temperature of the planet will necessarily rise to one and a half degrees Celsius above baseline, and still the owner class seeks to exploit tar sand, deep-water oil, and coal.
What is a person to do? It seems that simultaneously, everything and nothing is possible. Action and inaction both appear to be dead ends. There are those who silently hope for a massive solar flare or a great pandemic, assuming the only way to break from this Mobius strip of horrors is if it is severed by some cataclysm delivered from above. This is praying for calamity, it is begging a still listening God for absolution, as if we have done anything to earn such favors.
As the winter sets in, I will be writing about our responsibilities in such times.
A good title and essay. I used the same title for a post about the mirage of Las Vegas:
https://collapseofindustrialcivilization.com/2013/02/02/burning-down-the-house/
Here’s an update on their water woes…
Water is nearly always the limiting factor of growth in the arid West, and Vegas drained its own local supply long ago, then put a straw in the Colorado River and sucked hard, getting 90% of its water from the river, or rather from Lake Mead, the reservoir penned in behind Hoover Dam — which is running dry. The reservoir is at its lowest level “in generations,” the Los Angeles Times reported in the spring of 2014.
Lake Mead’s water is dropping so dramatically that the city is drilling a billion-dollar intake tunnel through bedrock, well below the current intake pipelines, a new straw with which to drink from the reservoir. That, too, may before long be above waterline if drought, evaporation, and over-allocation of the river’s water continue. In the foreseeable future, the reservoir will likely reach “dead pool,” the point at which water no longer turns the turbines of the dam generators (though one desperate measure now being aired proposes abandoning Lake Powell and Glen Canyon Dam upstream on the Colorado River to salvage this complex). Clark County recently spent $200 million getting residents to remove their lawns, and at some point in the near future water rationing will begin.
Las Vegas has also been on a hunt for new water sources for the past 20 years. The preferred scheme is to drain the beautiful rural and wild lands of eastern Nevada into a 300-mile pipeline so that the golf courses stay green and the showers keep running. Eastern Nevadans regard this as a death warrant for their region’s ranches, small towns, and wildlife and have been fighting back, rural Davids against an urban Goliath. They won the most recent round in court, though Goliath is not giving up. Even so, someday Las Vegas will have to face, again, the fact that it is in the deep desert. In the meantime, the place is currently building monuments to the fantasy of being anywhere and everywhere else. – Link
The only solution to climate disruption that ‘modern’ man will allow is a ‘modern solution’, i.e. monetizing carbon pollution, geo-engineering the biosphere, genetically engineering crops, and attempting to technologize our way out of this mess. To think otherwise is to be viewed as an anachronistic troglodyte. I believe there are only a handful of civilizations that voluntarily simplified and wound down their overly complex societies in the face of resource scarcity. Capitalist Industrial Civilization won’t be one of them.
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A well written passionate plea but I fear an apocalyptic view is as pointless as encouraging others to belong to a ‘doomsday’ cult. I hear what you are saying and share your anger and frustration. It is all but impossible to even talk about modest changes to our lifestyles let alone a return to a pre-industrial age. I humbly suggest you engage your undoubted communication skills to preach to the masses somehow rather than just the ‘choir’.
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Indeed – how can you be a force for good when force itself is the problem?
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Prose from a poet, and just as moving as poetry itself.
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Reblogged this on There Are So Many Things Wrong With This.
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I lived off grid for 30 years, and never was truly disconnected from the fossil fuel supply system or the massive, global industrial infrastructure.
We will do anything and everything to maintain our present personal level of energy use and the comfort it affords us. We will do anything and everything to the earth, to other people and even to ourselves to continue on this path. And if we don’t have the energy level we see others have, we will do anything and everything to the earth, to other people and even to ourselves to attain that level. The proof of this assertion is simple; we are doing it.
From: The Curmudgeon Report
http://sunweber.blogspot.com/2011/02/curmudgeon-report.html
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water has singularly unique properties in some suspect our energy woes betide. a walk in the woods cures all what ails you. all the best.
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“While the underlying motive of catastrophism – and hopes for sweeping change embodied within it – is entirely understandable, neither fatalism nor voluntarism usefully serve a radical emancipatory project. On the contrary, they often do a great deal of harm to its prospects. No amount of fire and brimstone can substitute for the often-protracted, difficult, and frequently unrewarding work of building radical mass movements, even under situations of the utmost urgency. When they deploy catastrophic rhetoric, radicals overlook the diminishing returns and distorting effects it has on the forms of organizing that it does manage to inspire. Fear is corrosive. It is especially corrosive within the left. The right thrives on fear, while on the left if mobilizes only a core few. One need only think about the Revolutionary Communist Party slogan of the mid-1980s: “A horrible end, or an end to the horror?” Why bother joining a movement if the end is nigh? Radical mass movements typically grow because they offer hope for positive change, while fear demobilizes.
“Navigating away from the stormy shoals of catastrophism, between the Scylla of voluntarism and the Charybdis of fatalism, requires a commitment to mass radical collective politics, in inauspicious times as well as auspicious ones. Tectonic upheavals can burst out of such endeavors, often quite unpredictably. It necessitates rejecting the heavy-handed politics of the chosen, and the quietist politics of the armchair determinist, waiting for the iron laws of history to bring an end to the capitalist order. If we are committed to the demise of capitalism, we should steer clear of catastrophism.”
– Lilley, McNally, Yuen and Davis, Catastrophism: The Apocalyptic Politics of Collapse and Rebirth (Oakland, California, PM Press, 2012), p. 76.
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Thanks td0s.
Been there done that.
Your post makes we want to do it again. And again.
Peace.
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Part 2 of Meltdown: Terror at the Top of the World, Video
(Part one is linked there as well)
http://insideclimatenews.org/news/20141203/video-meltdown-terror-top-world-part-2
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Abstract
For the past three years (2012-2014), California has experienced the most severe drought conditions in its last century. But how unusual is this event? Here we use two paleoclimate reconstructions of drought and precipitation for Central and Southern California to place this current event in the context of the last millennium. We demonstrate that while 3-year periods of persistent below-average soil moisture are not uncommon, the current event is the most severe drought in the last 1200 years, with single year (2014) and accumulated moisture deficits worse than any previous continuous span of dry years. Tree-ring chronologies extended through the 2014 growing season reveal that precipitation during the drought has been anomalously low but not outside the range of natural variability. The current California drought is exceptionally severe in the context of at least the last millennium and is driven by reduced though not unprecedented precipitation and record high temperatures.
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BIG NEWS…
CO2 max warming hits only 10 years after emission(NOT 40 YEARS), lasts centuries. ACTING NOW SAVES BIG, FAST!
http://iopscience.iop.org/1748-9326/9/12/124002/article
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“…Still, as daunting as the future Arctic looks to be, it may in fact be much worse. What we think we know about the future of the region may be grossly underestimated because scientists are uncomfortable talking about or putting pen to predictions that are not backed by 95 percent certainty.
Benjamin Abbott and University of Florida researcher Edward Schuur anonymously surveyed climate and fire experts in 2013, asking them how much boreal forest and tundra will burn in the future. Nearly all respondents painted a picture that is much worse than what most experts had publicly claimed. In a “business-as-usual” scenario, they predicted that emissions from boreal forest fires will increase 16 to 90 percent by 2040. Emissions from tundra fires will grow even more rapidly.
As much as we know and think we know about what the future Arctic might look like, it’s what we don’t know that worries scientists like Henry Huntington, co-chair of the National Research Council committee that recently examined emerging research questions in the Arctic. “Many of the questions we’ve been asking are ones we’ve been asking for some time,” says Huntington. “But more and more, there are new questions arising from insights that have been made only in recent years, or phenomena that have only begun to occur.”…
http://ensia.com/features/the-end-and-beginning-of-the-arctic/
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Capitalism is only resilient with a little help from governments and central banks.
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If there was a 2hr program on prime time TV explaining our multiply predicaments and everyone on the planet watched it, not one fucking thing would change. Lack of information is not the problem. Framing is not the problem. Catastrophism is not the problem. For humanity to survive there can be no industrial civilization. Every prior movement, revolt and revolution was about how the pie got sliced and eaten. Everyone wants pie. No one wants to diet. Thinking that people will come around if they just have the right information or policy or a spiritual awakening is arrogant, delusional. That’s what the religious believe and it’s why they keep proselytizing. They think the unbeliever will come around if they just have the right information. Not only are we not going to shut it down, we will fight for the last of it to the bitter end. Suggesting that anything a doomer says is going to have any bearing on human behavior is ridiculous and it’s also a form of hopium. It’s Eco-Brightsiding. If we could just silence that ngative nelly Guy McPherson and his 1000 followers we could get the other 7 Billion to act accordingly. Tell yourself.
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A well-read and intelligent doomer is the ultimate cynic, “watching the masses rearrange the deck chairs on the flagship of a failed species.”
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Can Climate Change Cure Capitalism?
Elizabeth Kolbert
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2014/dec/04/can-climate-change-cure-capitalism/
The Ethics of Climate Hope
A response to Elizabeth Kolbert’s recent review
by Naomi Klein
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2014/dec/04/can-climate-change-cure-capitalism/
Come one, come all. Cat Fight! Cat Fight! It’s like watching the actor Divine in “Female Trouble” or “Pink Flamingos.”
Kolbert is less of a flatliner than Klein, but watching Klein come out swinging just waving her arms all over the place without ever connecting is like a Three Stooges short.
Klein deludes herself over and over, coming close to calling Kolbert a doomster for saying exacty what you, Apeneaman have written. If Klein was a person who believed in the “really truly true” she’d shut her face and give herself a good hard look in the mirror (Mirror, mirror on the wall, who is as much a hypocrite as those I criticize). Standing there facing herself the real question she needs to ask is “Why didn’t I have my tubes tied? Why didn’t Avi go in for that vasectomy? Why didn’t we adopt one of the many, many, many children that needs a home and offer them one with a millionaire?” Questions, questions, questions. So many questions.
It’s like Jeckel and Hyde; once you’ve “birthed that baby” you’ll do anything to keep the game going no matter what the information or facts you are presented with. Once again Klein is back on her renewable, sustainable energy soap box pointing to small little spots around the world that are making “real” changes. Good for them, however how are they going to avoid the tsunami coming right at them caused by the others on the planet who aren’t going to ever give up as damn single thing. Is this woman supposed to be an example of human intellect? Guess so.
When the Andoreans come to our planet a few hundred years hence and find the writings of Klein while on their archeological digs they’ll be howls of laughter erupting around the old campfire while ingesting Delorean Brandy grown in the Andromedia galaxy.
According to Ursula LeGuin the hope for our future lies in the works of authors thinking outside the box to lead us to a world of new opportunities. Le Guin has had 3 children, no indication as to whether the offspring have continued having children or taken a stance of “the buck stops with me.” Sadly, Le Guin spoke for only a few minutes so it was impossible to tell,from this speech, if she understands the scope of the situation we’re facing, but she did rail against Capitalism, well kind of, sort of.
Ursula K. Le Guin accepts the National Book Foundation’s Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters at the 65th National Book Awards on November 19, 2014.
Mike,
I know you put up a video of Gore Vidal’s documentary a few posts back. I’m a fan of Vidal’s work, however that film (especially the shot Vidal takes at his biographer, Kaplan, at the start of the film is an indication of the self loathing and hatred Gore lived with all his life. The difference between a film and a book. “In Bed With Gore Vidal” is another good book on this complex man.
Vidal spent decades avoiding labeling himself as gay. Good for him I say to avoid being boxed in. Only for all the years he was with Howard, Gore behaved much like the mother he had so much vitriol for (she deserved it, as much as Shirley MacClaine does). It was only after Howard’s death that Gore displayed some deep emotion for the man he spent his life with.
The last decade of Gore’s live was like watching a train wreck in slow motion. Dementia. Drunkenness. Cruelty. Not keeping his word to the gentlemen who cared for him those last ten years. Losing his mind and acting out on the two Iraq war veterans who became his caretakers during the last days of Italy. Not leaving the house to his nephew as promised (I’m not sure he really needed it, but it’s the promise). Never having any of his neighbors to dinner in all the time he lived in that small village in Italy. His way of keeping the riff raff out and not having to allow them to know about his relationship with Howard.
What went on between Gore and Howard is his business to a certain extent. If Howard found his needs met all good and well. However it does put a different spin on the ideas and ideals Gore was always spouting. In the end he became what he so vehemently hated all his life, he became his mother.
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“I was taught that the human brain was the crowning glory of evolution so far, but I think it’s a very poor scheme for survival.” ~ Kurt Vonnegut
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I know Mike K has written about love being what we need to find. All you need is love, love. Catchy title for a song, isn’t it.
Only sadly, I don’t think we’ll be seeing much expression of that love this holiday season.
Courtesy of Wal-Mart. Christmas cheer. Hear those sleigh bells ring-a-ling. Materialism in motion.
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If they are like this just to save $50 on their third flat screen, what’s it going to be like when essentials are in short supply?
They have been trying Black Friday here in Canada for the past few years too. Canadians have been acting out of sorts as well. Apparently one guy was in such a rush that he did not hold the door open for an elderly lady and a teenage girl bumped into a man and forgot to say “excuse me”. The Horror!
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I haven’t seen people treat each other that savagely since I last visited the comments section at Nature Bats Last.
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Why hang out there, if you value your mental health? The themes at that site, like this one, are the most agonizing we doomed creatures have yet to face, and such a site must, as a matter of vital necessity, be run responsibly and thoughtfully. McPherson will take on a commenter usually only when he is personally attacked; for the rest he seems content to let people do great harm to each other. Geez, you can tear into someone and you won’t get called on it or banned. But just break the two-post rule and McPherson brings out the birch. Completely irresponsible, in my considered view.
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Your considered opinion is 100% CORRECT.
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It’s a rare day that I go to any department store. It’s actually been years. The most I can put up with is going to Strand Books in lower Manhattan and even there the crowds freak me out.
I don’t plan to ever go into any department store again. It’s obscene the way we treat each other. And people seem to thrive of “enjoy” this.
What world does Naomi Klein live on if she’s never gone into a store and witness this.
How does she believe that we are even capable of treating each other with respect.
I’ve heard shares in DA (Debtor’s Anonymous) meetings of how proud people were that they did save that $50 on the flat screen TV which they put off buying. Of course when they didn’t just go on Craig’s list and get a real bargain is the question floating around my head. Oh! I’m sorry, am I telling tales out of school again? Am I being judgmental? Or am I just spouting my opinion as to watching the craziness others commenting here have been seeing unravel before their eyes.
When I was young and was attending George Gershwin Junior High School in the East New section of Brooklyn we had a race riot one day. If I was any kind of writer I could capture in words the sense of horror and terror I felt as I was swept up into a sea of human bodies; trapped despite my not wanting to go in the direction they were heading. A struggle to just stay upright, make sure I didn’t lose my balance and fall under the feet of the hundreds of people. Sadly, a friend mine did and wound up with severe injuries. And this is in the early 70’s;
I don’t believe we have not evolved into creatures of love here in USA since then and I don’t believe we ever will.
The two times I went to Times Square to witness the ball falling took every once of energy for me. (So, I can proudly say I had the experience. LOL). There is no way out. You are trapped and then trying to find a subway that is open, is unreal. The streets are blocked from through traffic. Walking about 20 blocks south and east got you out of the swarm and into more “peaceful” territory.
There is no way I’m ever going to be convinced that when food really starts to get scarce here in NYC that we are going to treat each other in any way other than what goes on during those Black Friday days.
For a short time I commented more frequently on NBL myself and then stopped. Then when others began to attack me instead of my comments I decided it just wasn’t worth getting into, especially on line.
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My dad grew up in Brooklyn. Went to PS99. Sadly, I don’t know the neighborhood. In any case, echoing the racial tensions you described, my father has a story of leaving Brooklyn. His time there, sometime from 37 to the early 70’s saw the community change dramatically from Italian and Jewish predominantly (he was the odd German/Swede) to heavily orthodox jewish and some african american. When he was getting ready to sell the house there, the orthodox community grouped together and underbid the asking price. A “decent african american man” (my father’s words) also visited the property. When word got out, the orthodox community staged a protest in front of the house! I suspect in the hope of getting my dad to cave. He held out and the orthodox offer was raised eventually.
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2014 set to be the hottest year on record.CO2 emmisions increasing each year.The Earth brimful of people anxious to consume as much as possible.Ecologically ignorant maniacs everywhere you turn.Religious lunatics who think their god will come to the rescue if things get TOO bad .80 million extra cancer cells added to the planet each year.The catholic church and other interest groups always on the alert to sabotage any conference that attempts to implement any measures to address the overpopulation problem.Governments infested with scientific illiterates.A magic wonderland of biodiversity being trashed by an unsustainable,insane civilisation.
Joanna and I built our cabin in the forest when I was 22,37 years ago,but there is no altering this trajectory of tragedy that we now have before us.
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Each and every day is becoming more difficult to survive in zombieland. Everybody around me, family, friends, colleagues, etc, are becoming more crazy, mad, deluded, by the day.
Every single objective parameter of life on planet earth is degrading exponentially right now as we speak. We are already living on an alien planet,…..
this madness comes from the abyss that divides peoples imagination with reality. 99,9% of people alive today still think we are living on a green, thrieving planet earth brimming with animal life, jungles, forests everywhere, rivers, lakes, and seas filled with fish, etc, etc, and on top of all that 7.2 billion highly evolved and intelligent species in full harmony with the environment and that after many thousands of years of slow and painful technological adaptation & breakthroughs is finally reaching the pedestal it allways belonged at the cusp of all life… this fake, unreal vision/imagination in most people’s minds couldn’t be more separate from reality: we are already living on a completely alien planet most of our grandfathers would have trouble recognizing: the vast majority of higher life forms are already dead, extinct, product of our overhunting, overfishing, agriculture, habitat destruction, etc; the delusion of thinking we can feed 7,2 billion & still have large tracts of the biosphere intact. Our children are already condemned to live on a dead planet in which the only place they will ever see animals are going to be the HD screens of our electronic devices… daddy, mommy, is it true that there was a time when all of those beautiful animals and birds were alive? Yes… and what happened? In any case, it won’t be for too long enough, as pretty soon the human extinction time bomb that is already armed and thicking, called climate change, will completely devastate and destroy most of what’s left: the few higher life forms still alive today will also perish and go extinct, and then the increased temperatures, droughts, floods, heat waves, storms, deluges, deserts, plagues, changing rainfall patters, etc etc etc, will bring truly epical & biblical devastation to all our cities, farms, etc as is already so obvious and evident to the few brave souls that pay at least a little attention to what is happening. I won’t go into any detail regarding specifics, thanks to efforts like x-ray mike’s blog, we can all see daily just what kind of catastrophic epical apocaliptic forces we have unleashed; extinction of man & all other higher life forms in the coming decades is all assured; no need to recount again the amount of carbon we put in the atmosphere & oceans, the millions of tons of venoms, poisons, toxics, radioactivity, etc etc etc…
Each and every direction you look, not a single thing left untouched by man, not a single thing sacred. What we lay our eyes upon, is left destroyed, polluted, all ecosystems on planet earth collapsing, arctic already melted, greenland melting, antarctic entering irreversible collapse, most glaciers melting, ocean acidification proceeding faster that at any rate in last 300 million years, all around the world not a single place where climate not setting records, wheather becoming crazy & virulent everywhere, even the most staunch climate change deniers are having trouble hiding the sun with their hands… I don’t want to go over and over again reharsing what is very well documented on CoIC every day… still, what surprises me even more than that, is the amount of brainwashed zombies all of humanity has become. I have increased troubles dealing with the amount of madness & insanity of all people around me, no matter where I go, no matter who I talk with, everybody is deluded. People still make plans for the future as if nothing is going on, as if everything is fine, nobody has time for the planet or the climate or the animals or ecosystems, or pollution or desertification or any other of the trillion problems we have, because, you see, everybody is busy working hard trying to raise money in this ‘difficult global economic situation’ to purchase a house or a car or a department or what have you, and wherever I mention somebody any of these issues they all look at me as if I’m some sort of stupid or mentally retarded or ‘green’ or ‘eco-terrorist’… it scares me, it’s as if everybody is living in the matrix and I’m the only sane person in a 30km radius, sometimes I even wonder, maybe it’s me after all, maybe everything is fine… but then I wake up and I go outside and realize that no, I’m right after all… many people marrying, many people having children, and when I mention how ugly is gonna be the ‘situation’ by the time this children born today are 15yo teenagers (by 2030) or how apocaliptic it’s gonna be by the time they are young people (25yo, by 2040), they look at me as if I’m some sort of evil person who wishes them bad, or they think I’m crazy; sometimes they think I’m depressed and wish them bad; but in all cases they look strange at me… and yet we all know what the predictions say about our planet and it’s climate and everything else by 2030, 2040, etc. chaos, apocalypse, death by the billions, a lot of pain, suffering, wars, famine, hunger, etc etc etc. so who is the one deluded, depressed, the messengers of bad news, or the 7.2 billion dead in life, brainwashed walking zombies?
ahh sorry for the long rant, allways reading your posts, keep up the superb job x-ray mike.
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Thanks for your rant. Even though I find it so hard to read paragraphs written as if by James Joyce yours was certainly worth the effort.
I can relate to everything you’ve written and also wonder “is it me?”
The young Hispanic lifeguard at the gym yesterday told me that he is the most educated person he knows. When I tried to talk to him about growing food he became most disinterested, after all he’s the best and brightest and doesn’t need food to live. He said it’s good for us if temperatures rise 2-4 degrees more so we can grow avocados in Canada. He’s a business major after all and they really know their stuff.
This conversation took place while a number of blocks north there was protestors in street displaying their displeasure at the current decision made by the Grand Jury on Staten (Satan) Island.
The lifeguard told me that he’s not black. Well technically, he’s not, but then really neither am I. I don’t look like the color that comes out of a bottle of white out.
Irony abounds all around us all the time.
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thanks for reply, yeah its completely pointless everything we say & everything we do, everybody is mad, deluded, so incredibly few people who actually see the big picture (ie climate arctic greenland co2 fossil fuels etc etc etc), anyway, better smile to eveybody hah and pretend its all good and well, once massive collapse & death starts then everybody will realize but will be way too late, ah well…
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“Youth is wasted on the young?”
We had the opportunity to critique the college essays of my cousin’s fraternal twins. One was awful and required lots of help. The other needed only a few tweaks and was fine. That second essay had the statement that his mission is to help make the human race interplanetary! I imagine Elon Musk must be his hero. I relate this only because I would like to give my cousin’s kids gifts at HS graduation. A book like Catton’s “Overshoot” seems perfect, but then a part of me says that would be a terrible idea. Is it better to live and let be and not destroy that youthful optimism? Or is better to encourage critical thinking about the limits of our environment? Then again, most youth, like your life guard, seem astride atop the world. Advice from relatives and elders is routinely discarded. Books end up on a shelf totally neglected. Perhaps the board game is a better idea.
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Remember a couple of weeks ago at the G20 when all the press could talk about was Abbot and Harper’s Putin dissing and then Putin leaving early? Well this is what they were up to. Sort of a distract and conquer move.
New Rules: Cyprus-style Bail-ins to Take Deposits and Pensions
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ellen-brown/new-g20-bailin-rules-now-_b_6244394.html
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Another doomer prediction right on schedule.
The Detroit blackout
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2014/12/04/pers-d04.html
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Looks like I’ll need another Mossberg semi-automatic 12 gauge and another case of PDX-1 ammo or I’ll just hand-out food and blankets at the front door. I imagine most people will starve to death clutching their shotguns as their last can of beans lays empty beside them on the floor. Of course people won’t listen, they’re living that “Maximum Power Principle” and always will, just like all the other organisms on the planet. That’s why we spend trillions on defense, because our competitors will try to maximize their advantage at our expense, just as we maximize our welfare at their cost. Did any of you ever go to college and see the assholes passing around old tests, cheating as best they could? Competition comes in a better shade of lipstick. What’s that saying, “All’s fair in love and war.” This means that in life you might as well throw away the concept of fairness and fight for your advantage, which is exactly what you see at the stores on Black Friday. Jostle, shove, break in line, run, hurl a few epithets. You’ll never see those people again, f’em. As Apneaman says, it’s hard to make anyone go on a diet, go against the MPP, so the politicians don’t even try, they’ll lie to the good citizens until society collapses and at the same time they’ll be fulfilling their own MPP by filling their pockets with loot.
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This grade 9 dropout attended exactly 1 semester of college a few years ago after passing the “mature student” entrance exam. Some of the kids seemed genuinely curious, but after many conversations out at the “smoke pit” it was obvious that many just considered it as a necessary evil for their employment prospects. I have no idea as to the extent of the cheating, but one young lady in my “International Relations” class got caught and was booted. Where ever do these kids learn such behavior?
CBC Doc Zone Faking the Grade
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They even get caught at the “honor code” schools like West Point, Annapolis, and the Air Force Academy. It’s just a part of “human nature”. Their schooling prepares them for making long-term treaties to disarm indigenous peoples before they eradicate them.
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I guess the trailer will have to suffice. That video is not yet available in America.
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I thought it would only do that if you tried to watch it directly from the CBC. I get the same deal at PBS online for many videos (newer). There are apps or add-ons to work around that.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/proxmate/?src=cb-dl-mostpopular
http://www.softpedia.com/get/Internet/Internet-Applications-Addons/Chrome-Extensions/ProxMate-for-Chrome.shtml
For you high end Mac people 😉
http://mac.softpedia.com/get/Internet-Utilities/ProxMate.shtml
There are a bunch of others for watching region restricted videos. Some times one works where another doesn’t and only the Cyber gods know why. Try searching for “not available in your country” and going from there. May the gods be on your side.
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Thank you for supplying that fix so I could watch the video.
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Stuff White People Like
#134 The TED Conference
http://stuffwhitepeoplelike.com/2010/09/08/134-the-ted-conference/
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http://collapseofindustrialcivilization.tumblr.com/post/104392304387/heres-an-update-on-the-water-woes-of-las-vegas
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I generally have a visceral dislike of intellectualism, it strikes me as pretentious, egotistical and elitist. If that makes me a beer-swilling troglodyte, well, then so be it. Anyway, if you can get past the sticky feeling that these are little more than mental masturbations, this marxist rag has some interesting articles on apocalypse, both as a fetish and as a tool of the capitalist oppressor.
Evangelical Individualism
http://theoccupiedtimes.org/?p=13491
Apocalypse Then
http://theoccupiedtimes.org/?p=13490
The Project of Making History
http://theoccupiedtimes.org/?p=13489
Fetishisms of Apocalypse
http://theoccupiedtimes.org/?p=13488
From the Ruins
http://theoccupiedtimes.org/?p=13486
Gone Before The Wave
http://theoccupiedtimes.org/?p=13487
Disaster Communism
http://theoccupiedtimes.org/?p=13485
No Future
http://theoccupiedtimes.org/?p=13483
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Thanks for the sources. Reminds me of a Nietzsche quote:
“Passive nihilism is a disgusting extension of the fear engendered by the capitalist system.”
I’ve been rather busy lately with things around the house. Still reading ‘Techno-Fix’ when I find the time.
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Thanks Mike, I like the quote. I think that’s what really struck me about these writings, they understand nihilism as a natural response to the ecocidal depravity of the capitalist system, but they still struggle to find relevance and / or meaning in the face of global ecological collapse and mass extinction.
Throw in a healthy dose of the eternal hope held by marxists everywhere that capitalism’s self destruction will lead to a socialist utopia and you get a whole new generation of anarchists who are “praying for calamity”. So to speak.
Anyway, good luck explaining “post-nihilist praxis” to me, pretty much guaranteed to instantly make my eyes glaze over…
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I like Tom Lewis and I enjoy his mini podcasts.
Rage Against the Dying of the Lights
http://www.dailyimpact.net/?powerpress_pinw=2571-podcast
Exergy and the City: The Technology and Sociology of Power (Failure)
Abstract (The rest is paywall)
Blackouts—the total loss of electrical power—serve as a reminder of how dependent the modern world and particularly urban areas have become on electricity and the appliances it powers. To understand them we consider the critical nature of electrical infrastructure. In order to provide general patterns from specific cases, a large number of blackouts have been analyzed. Irrespective of cause, they display similar effects. These include measurable economic losses and less easily quantified social costs. We discuss financial damage, food safety, crime, transport, and problems caused by diesel generators. This is more than just a record of past failures; blackouts are dress rehearsals for the future in which they will appear with greater frequency and severity. While energy cannot be destroyed, exergy—the available energy within a system—can be. Exergy is concerned with energy within an “environment;” in this case a city. The bottom line is simple: no matter how “smart” a city may be, it becomes “dumb” when the power goes out.
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How I was censored by The Guardian for writing about Israel’s war for Gaza’s gas
View at Medium.com
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View at Medium.com
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I recommend reading Alf Hornborg for a transdisciplinary look at the world system. Marxist critique of capitalism was always insightful; it paired it with utopian vision in large part because the critique was unpalatable.The critique was always accurate; what came after was a fetish of the machine. In Hornborg, you’ll get the critique and well-reasoned responses to the dilemma we face.
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https://collapseofindustrialcivilization.com/tag/alf-hornborg/
I just don’t understand how otherwise intelligent and well-read people can say such monumentally stupid things. I’m not saying he is wrong, his overall analysis is spot on, although he should give more credit to ecologist H. T. Odum for laying the conceptual framework of unequal exchange as measured by embodied energy.
I just don’t see how he can rattle off numerous examples of civilizations that have utterly failed to “reorganize for the long term good” and then in the same breath suggest with a seemingly complete and profound ignorance that strategy as a realistic (or even remotely likely) course of action in the face of our many and manifest failures.
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c.f. Hornborg for a critique of Odum’s concept of ’emergy.’ He provides a better grounding for ‘unequal exchange’ in his latest book.
Society won’t reorganize voluntarily. The guy is engaged in wishful thinking, an easy temptation. I don’t blame him. Hell, he just wants to save humanity.
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At the risk of sounding trite:
Jesus saves. Buddha invests.
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In his latest book, Hornborg offers a dual currency system to break the inherently distructive logic of money. Before passing judgement, I’d read the book. Nevertheless, I don’t think it will be implemented on any large scale. His arguments are complex and summarizing them don’t do them justice. Like all his writing, it takes a lot of effort on the part of the reader.
Hornborg writes that leaders wouldn’t get elected if they advocated a curtailment of consumption (i.e., expansion). Refer also to Quigley’s views on institutionalism.
As for your sound byte – both religions arose out of internal proletariats in universal states. (c.f. Toynbee, volume 6). They are responses to times of trouble and unsettling dislocation.
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David Fridley – Green Dreams: Future or Fantasy?
Published on Nov 21, 2014
David Fridley has been a staff scientist at the Energy Analysis Program at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory since 1995 and is a fellow at the Post Carbon Institute.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jCcMifK9-rE
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This link is to a press briefing in Lima, Peru where smart folk are conferring on our fate. Everyone’s favorite nerdy Canadian scientists, Paul Beckwith makes an appearance and he is in fine form as usual. I bet the Harper gang just loves that man. Stay Frosty Paul.
[26:39 min]
http://unfccc6.meta-fusion.com/cop20/events/2014-12-04-12-30-abibimman-foundation-united-planet-faith-science-initiative/abibimman-foundation-united-planet-faith-science-initiative-2
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Second video from them…
http://unfccc6.meta-fusion.com/cop20/events/2014-12-06-12-00-abibimman-foundation-arctic-methane-emergency
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Fuel for fools: having the neighbour’s swimming-pool filter-pump go like it has emphysema, day & night, then having multiple lawnmower forays about me on the same day [ Sunday], I do wonder what some folk would do, if they were not able to drown out their Inner Voice.This atop the rest of the daily racket that “civilisation” must make, n order to assert its hegemony. Blast their ears! I have a framed copy of the Duke’s speech,from Shakespeare’s As You Like It,Act II, Scene !, on my wall. It gives me strength. “Sweet are the uses of adversity,Which like the toad, ugly & venomous, Wears yet a precious jewel in his head…” There comes a change in the tides of men_ Brutus
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I think that is a big reason smart phones with the ear piece are so popular. They make it possible to drown out one’s inner voice and civilizations racket simultaneously. I live in the city and travel by transit and 70-80% of riders do this. From up high I see many drivers doing it too. I stopped using my cell 3 months ago. I’m like an observant ghost hovering around the edges; only participating enough to sustain myself.
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Here is a well meaning engineer who clearly understands overshoot and believes cooperation, innovation and the right technologies can cushion the fall.
The end of global development as we know it
“There are so many options for innovation, creativity, hopefulness, improvement of our quality of life and community building once people start to seriously consider and embrace the limits to business as usual.”
https://www.engineeringforchange.org/news/2014/11/04/the_end_of_global_development_as_we_know_it.html
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