Tags
6th Mass Extinction, Abrupt Climate Change, Antarctic Ice Melt, Anthropogenic Climate Disruption (ACD), Climate Change, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Corporate State, Corporatocracy, Davi Kopenawa, Eco-Apocalypse, Extinction of Man, Green Washing, Guy McPherson, Inverted Totalitarianism, Military Industrial Complex, Mr. Natural, Neoliberal Capitalism, Robert Crumb, Security and Surveillance State, Social Psychology and Theories of Consumer Culture: A Political Economy
Front Row Seat to the Eco-Apocalypse
“I fear their euphoria of merchandise will have no end and they will entangle themselves to the point of chaos. They do not seem concerned that they are making us all perish with the epidemic of fumes that escape from all these things…” ~ Davi Kopenawa, Yanomami leader and shaman
Another year has turned over on Earth, home to an exothermic, bipedal omnivore known as capitalist carbon man whose expanding numbers and army of fossil-fueled machinery spans the globe. There’s nothing subtle or restrained about his reign of terror. He pokes and prods the climate change beast while taking for granted the stability of the Holocene, a peculiar aberration in the paleoclimate record. Plotted on a graph, the history of Earth’s climate resembles the jagged teeth of a demonic monster, a volatile creature whose abrupt and catastrophic shifts have wiped landscapes clean of most life. The consequences of burning the equivalent of an olympic sized swimming pool of oil (300,000 liters) per second, year after year, into the atmosphere will ultimately prove lethal to the planet’s habitability. Recently, scientists were surprised to discover a “Delaware-sized methane cloud” hovering over the U.S. southwest, the remnant of “years of intentionally released and errantly leaked natural gas during fossil fuel drilling operations.” No less problematic to the Earth’s homeostasis are the many other destructive habits of capitalist carbon man such as moving ten times more dirt than all natural processes, fixing more nitrogen than all terrestrial bacteria, and producing more sulfate than all ocean phytoplankton.
The exponential melting of Earth’s cryospheric regions is a foreboding harbinger of devastating sea level rise, altering oceanic and jet stream circulation, changing hydrologic cycles, and wholesale disruption of the entire planet’s biospheric system. A brief retrospective of our unfolding environmental meltdown by a major news source concludes that “2014 will likely go down as the year that melting polar ice caps graduated from being a geographic abstraction to a symbol of the irreversible ways we’ve warped the planet.” News reports continue to grow more ominous with recent warnings that the oceans are on the verge of belching their decades of stored heat from human industrial activity. CIVILIZATION is in the process of going ‘poof’ as its leaders play monkey politics and the masses are drowned in a sea of consumerist images. As Dr. McPherson recently pointed out, gallows humor is the 6th stage of grief for coping with a civilization that is blind to its own demise.
“Going Green” is a Marketing Slogan and Inverted Totalitarianism is the Most Successful Form of Tyranny
The unsettling truth is that the slogan “going green” has become a marketing ploy to greenwash capitalism and keep business-as-usual going. The speeches of corporate and political leaders are sprinkled with conscious-soothing key words such as “sustainable”, “eco-friendly”, and “2°C climate goal”, but there’s nothing sustainable about globalized techno-capitalism and the target of limiting warming to 2°C is a cruel illusion. So-called “green energy” is severely limited by suitable geography and intermittency of power production. The behemoth Google learned from its own extensive research that “today’s renewable energy technologies won’t save us.” The top business firms appear to be having a problem squaring their green rhetoric with reality, and there seems to be no way to make automobiles truly sustainable. Germany, the poster child for a green economy, is now “burning more coal than at any point since 1990.“:
“We already are on the edge of what is possible,” Mr. Löllgen said in an interview at his Düsseldorf office. “Is it worth it if we as a country succeed in reaching our targets in reducing carbon emissions, but sacrifice good jobs and our industrial base?”
Another misleading headline I get tired of reading states that humans may be headed for a 6th mass extinction. Let’s clarify this statement once and for all by admitting emphatically that we are well in the throes of a mass extinction which will likely include ourselves within this century. By all rational evidence, industrial civilization with its billions of inhabitants cannot survive without fossil fuels. The only way capitalist carbon man will ever be sustainable is as fertilizer beneath the crumbled concrete and asphalt ruins of industrial civilization. Don’t expect any mea culpa from a culture which has been programmed to believe converting all of nature into inanimate symbols of wealth is “progress” and “development”. Not even the dire warnings of esteemed scientists and religious leaders can break the spell cast by capitalism and its definition of progress. Our institutions have become intransigent, petrified monoliths to which all will be sacrificed.
“I think the notions of free will and self-determination have the appearance of reality during a civilization’s gestation and expansion phases, when there is more opportunity and social mobility. As things calcify, instruments becoming institutions that serve their own ends, the facade is harder to maintain. Human existence has always been contingent and constrained by circumstances. These ‘free’ notions are illusions, narrow windows of perception with a limited range of influence during times of transient prosperity.” ~ BP
The term inverted totalitarianism, coined a decade ago by philosopher Sheldon Wolin, describes America’s brand of despotism in which “every natural resource and every living being is commodified and exploited to collapse as the citizenry is lulled and manipulated into surrendering their liberties and their participation in government through excess consumerism and sensationalism.” Opposition to this dominant consumer culture is systematically co-opted and suppressed by the marginalization and alienation of alternative thought. Neoliberal capitalism governs not only states and economies, but extends right down to an individual’s behavior and way of living:
One of the goals of neoliberalism is to foster a population of individuals who will play an active role in their own self-governance by interacting with the market and consumption through calculated acts and investments… sets of rules and conditions are established between institutions, economic and social practices, and patterns of behavior. They generally function outside of conscious awareness and they habitually influence social behavior. Examples of dominant consumer culture discourse include the political linking of consumer sovereignty and choice with freedom, the linking of citizenship and national pride with consumption, the work and spend treadmill that many people choose to pursue, the commercialization of childhood and adolescence, and the celebration of consumer values through the mass media and advertising.
– Social Psychology and Theories of Consumer Culture: A Political Economy
Who better to label people as “unpatriotic” if they acknowledge the reality of climate change than the host of TV’s quintessential symbol of capitalism, The Wheel of Fortune? Beneath this digital web of commercials and TV infotainment is the iron fist of militarized local police and the panopticon surveillance state which can quickly stomp out those troublesome malcontents who break free of the American hologram. What better way is there for controlling entire populations than to condition them to enjoy their chains of slavery? America’s form of tyranny, a blend of covert and overt oppression, is the most successful in the history of mankind.
None of This Can Really Be Happening, Can It?
With all the disjointed and delusional thinking out there, I feel compelled to write a blog post periodically to get the facts straight and assure myself that what I see and hear every day is really happening. Yes, we really are terraforming the Earth into a barren wasteland while convincing ourselves that it’s worth it for the sake of a cubicle job and life in cookie-cutter suburbia. Yes, we really are ruled by the Washington-Wall Street-Pentagon complex. No, you will never get the raw truth from mainstream news outlets. Yes, I’m getting older and need to exercise more because a sedentary lifestyle is as bad as smoking. Yes, industrial civilization is still on track to collapse within my lifetime. As Robert Crumb’s mystic guru Mr. Natural exclaimed, “The whole universe is completely insane!”
Very good essay, Mike. The omnivore with the omnicidal civilisation. Not to worry. Garden-variety growth has now morphed into ‘sustainable growth’ so if we continue following that path, I’m sure things will come good. The deputy premier of Queensland recently called those who are concerned about climate disruption ‘zealots’. The craziness never ends.
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This following story kills me. It shows how much of a Ponzi scheme our economy is, dependent upon perpetual, unsustainable growth and that there will be a sucker born every minute:
Miami’s climate catch-22: Building waterfront condos to pay for protection against the rising sea
…The more developers build here, the more taxes and fees the city collects to fund a $300-million storm water project to defend the shore against the rising sea. Approval of these luxury homes on what environmentalists warn is global warming quicksand amounts to a high-stakes bet that Miami Beach can, essentially, out-build climate change and protect its $27 billion worth of real estate…
…The ocean around South Florida, which sits on porous limestone, is expected to rise nearly three feet in the next 86 years, according to Florida State University research.
Beaches are already receding. The mayor attended a “sand sampling” last month before ordering replacement reserves: “We were passing bags all around,” Levine said. “I was saying, ‘Bring me that Bahamian white.’”
To compound the problem: Hurricanes may gain strength, researchers predict, and strike more often as average annual temperatures in the southeast heat as much as nine degrees.
Meanwhile, Miami Beach keeps growing. Last year, the city collected $128 million in property taxes, an increase from $117 million in 2013 and $114 million in 2012. Thirty-two new condo towers have been proposed since 2011, said Peter Zalewski, founder of condo consulting site CraneSpotters.com. Twelve are currently under construction. The average asking price for resale condos, he said, is about $1.1 million.
Many buyers come from South America, more concerned by currency instability in their home countries than encroaching saltwater: “They want somewhere safe to park their money,” said Zalewski, whose firm tracks applications. “A lot of buyers here never step foot in the condos. They’ll sell them before the water makes it to the bottom floor of their buildings, anyway.”…
…Most public improvements are initially financed with bonds, an alternative to higher-rate private loans. That’s only possible if Miami Beach continues to collect money, public works director Eric Carpenter said. Access to cheaper cash accelerates a process that, he said, “absolutely needs to happen, quickly and aggressively.”
Officials want to take advantage of the development spurt while it lasts. “The time to put away things for a rainy day is when it’s sunny outside,” Carpenter said. “If you wait until it’s raining, it’s too late.”…
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You’re getting sharper by the day, Mike, but you really do need to get out more – no sarcasm intended. It will result in you getting even more sharp and stand a better chance of seeing the pennies drop in people’s minds in one hell of a rush – thereby ensuring the collapse of civilisation will be earlier than scientists predict, which gives the rest of nature a bit more scope for recovering.
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Your’e getting sharper than ever, Mike. But you must get our more, no sarcasm intended.
This will help keep your mind sharp and increase your longevity so you may make it to when the pennies will drop in people’s minds because of what is happening all around them!
This will accelerate the collapse giving nature a better chance
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http://witsendnj.blogspot.com/2012/03/ringside-seats-at-finish-line.html?m=1
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“Steadily rising levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere may be affecting brain chemistry and contributing to the obesity epidemic, according to a new hypothesis, which still awaits rigorous testing and debate.”
“The idea proposes that breathing in extra CO2 makes blood more acidic, which in turn causes neurons that regulate appetite, sleep and metabolism to fire more frequently. As a result, we might be eating more, sleeping less and gaining more weight, partly as a result of the air we breathe.”
…interesting. That hypothesis was 2 years ago. I wonder what the status of it is now.
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Mike, you are doing a lot more than just being a passive spectator at this collapse of human civilization. You are an active and insightful commentator and analyst of this climactic process. And you do this in a passionate, measured, humorous, realistic manner that provides a valuable service to folks at all levels of awakening to the nightmare our deluded leaders and the unthinking masses they manipulate are perpetrating upon themselves and trillions of our fellow living beings. You are an excellent teacher of the subject you are expounding. If I had the power to do so, your voice would be on every tv set and in every classroom in the world. This message you are putting out trumps any other possible agenda or concern that folks might imagine they have. Keep it coming, I love it! Nothing matters more than truth….
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I agree, but brilliant people can be intimidating to the deluded leaders and the unthinking masses. Here is an interesting link: http://www.quora.com/Why-do-conservatives-deny-climate-change-What-has-climate-change-got-to-do-with-their-ideology
There are a lot more stupid people than smart people. How do you communicate with the unthinking masses?
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http://today.duke.edu/2014/11/solutionaversion
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You’re like a sculptor working with soft clay trying to create a likeness of mankind’s future. IMO you should throw the lump of clay against the wall, into a fan, or out the window and there will be revealed to you the final state of civilization. Should you warn the citizenry? Or not? I’m convinced “knowledge” will not move this beast one inch from its destructive path. Only when the “signs” become too great to ignore will complacency be replaced by panic and a mad rush to convert worthless paper assets into almost worthless fiat into the remaining real assets will commence. Humans fall apart without a steady flow of resources and energy and acquiring them and a surplus is man’s main concern. Even today, for those paying heed to the Cassandras, the main concern is in acquiring more wealth or preserving wealth, even as the ecosystem, the basis of all wealth, deteriorates from their efforts. Like odd prescient molecules in cancer cells we scream for a cessation to the insanity of infinite growth as the body wastes away, but it’s useless to try and stand between a human and their struggles to obtain their next dopamine high, a short-lived state of mind often confused with happiness. We will continue to believe in the miracles of technological progress and lovely after-death existences until all of our accomplishments are but an anomalous strata of sediment in a fossil record spanning billions of years.
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Still waiting for your website. You’re welcome to post your essays here anytime. Just let me know.
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If I smoke my cigarettes while sitting at the computer all day surfing the DooomOsphere, don’t the negative effects cancel each other out? Does it even really fucking matter anymore? Do I need to stay fit so I can last longer in dystopian land? Won’t they send the fit looking one’s straight to the corporate gulag? On the other hand being plump will make one an irresistible target for the newly formed neighbourhood cannibal clan.
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It just goes to show you that even I have trouble internalizing this stark reality.
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Well said xraymike79.
Damn well said.
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Thanks for the complement. Coming from a fellow blogger, I’m even more appreciative.
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Perhaps the most frightening thing of all is that atmospheric CO2 is now growing super exponentially, so when we hit our “tipping points” we will be going at full speed and the technological races that we are trapped in mean that we are doomed to continue to go faster and faster. See http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Vortex-Violence-losing-climate-ebook/dp/B00PUNSI06
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Techno-capitalist Industrial Civ does not appear to have any breaks, does it? Speed kills…
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Here they go again down under. I know they have been preparing, but not sure how it will take. They just had their warmest year on record, so I imagine it is very dry. That record won’t last.
Tough conditions expected for firefighters battling bushfires in South Australia, Victoria
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-01-03/tough-conditions-expected-for-firefighters-in-sa-vic/5998194
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R. Crumb in the early 1970s opened my eyes to the rise and collapse of industrial civilization in all its demonic forms. An excellent retrospective of his inimitable commentary on America can be found here:
http://www.amazon.com/R-Crumbs-America-Robert-Crumb/dp/0867194308
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I like R. Crumb’s work, but I didn’t know he added three future scenario panels to his original “a short history of America” strip:
http://boingboing.net/2009/08/07/r-crumbs-short-histo.html
Of the three, the only one that looks like a continuation of the previous series is the “ecological disaster”
The “ecotopian solution” seems the least likely, it would require voluntarily demolishing a century of prior investment in fossil fueled infrastructure and replacing it with forests. Not to mention the question of where the food for billions of people comes from.
Interesting that he titled the techno-fix as the “fun” future. Fun for who? The elite few who can afford it?
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I think he pretty much settled the question about his view of America’s future when he left America with his wife and daughter to live in France.
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Actually, now that you mention it, I enjoyed watching the movie “Crumb” a few weeks back and one of the more poignant moments is when they are packing up their house in California. Maybe I missed something, but I had the the distinct impression that the move was all his wife’s idea and that he would have been content not changing anything.
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Anyway, I just wanted to make clear that I don’t think any of his future scenario panels were necessarily his view of the future, just his reflection on where various segments of the popular culture thinks the future is going. If nothing else Crumb is a master at holding up a mirror to our warped culture, warts and all.
In that respect he nails it, the three dominant views being:
unlimited technological progress
ecological catastrophe
ecological utopia
If you asked him what his view of the future is I wouldn’t be the least bit surprised if he snorted in derision and sneered “who cares?”
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…Crumb’s daughter was the main reason they now live in France. Her 2010 drawing album, Sophie Crumb: Evolution of a Crazy Artist, connects her American childhood with her French life.
“We wanted to take her out of California,” says Aline Crumb.
“We were afraid she might become some sort of Valley girl,” he adds.
http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/2014/11/29/tracking_down_elusive_comic_book_iconoclast_r_crumb.html
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Eco-boy Alex is swinging into full mental jacket denialism.
http://www.ecoshock.info/2014/12/green-illusions-ozzie-zehner.html
Check out Gail Tverberg’s take on Green Energy and her links.
http://www.ecoshock.info/2014/12/green-illusions-ozzie-zehner.html
Every energy source has unintended consequences.
http://www.solarindustrymag.com/issues/SI1309/FEAT_05_Hazardous_Materials_Used_In_Silicon_PV_Cell_Production_A_Primer.html
http://motherboard.vice.com/en_ca/blog/there-are-no-substitutes-for-the-metals-in-your-smartphone
http://e360.yale.edu/feature/boom_in_mining_rare_earths_poses_mounting_toxic_risks/2614/
http://spectrum.ieee.org/green-tech/solar/solar-energy-isnt-always-as-green-as-you-think
http://www.eike-klima-energie.eu/news-cache/solarstrom-in-deutschland-klimakiller-nummer-1/
http://www.shropshirestar.com/news/2014/09/01/letter-solar-power-is-not-the-clean-green-energy-as-promoted/
A comprehensive, albeit, slightly wasted attempt:
http://www.reddit.com/r/Permaculture/comments/2qdpuf/mass_extinction_vs_green_energy/
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Don’t give up Robert. You just can’t tell how many seeds of doom you are planting in the hopeful brains of young techno-utopians and permaculturists out in the vastness of the world wide web. Todays happy futurist may turn out to be tomorrows newest depressed doomer. Don’t give up. Just give it time to take root, grow and kill all hope. I hereby dub thee Johnny Doomer Seed
Oh, the Lord is good to me.
And so I thank the Lord
For giving me the things I need:
The web and the blogs and the high speed PC;
The Lord is good to me.
Oh, the earth is good to me.
And so I thank the earth,
For giving me the things I need:
The web and the blogs and the high speed PC;
The earth is good to me.
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my wife says you’re fucking hilarious .)
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I’ve often said to her, you can say anything you want about me, even that I’m lousy in bed, or anything else, but don’t ever say I’m not funny. Too bad gallows humor is the 6th stage of grief.
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Hey, I just saw this. Your wife is brilliant, brilliant I say!
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Decades ago when Wendell Berry wrote his opus “The Unsettling of America”, he famously said “Ours is a crisis of character”. It’s been a long time since I read that book, but the thought has stayed with me. And with the accumulated benefit of emotional maturity and further evidence, it rings truer than ever. And so it follows that we are not going to “think” our way out of it. Nor are we going to deploy further ingenuity, more innovation, or yet more cleverness to our singular predicament. We’re undergoing a very real metastasis of a species here. A “thing” has been built up in increments through the arc of history, and the “thing” exceeds any capacity of the human brain (singular or collective) to divine it’s nature. At it’s core is the master idea, always unspoken, of the “control imperative”.
I’m unsure that we were ever “meant” to think of things that the scope and scale of our dilemma now requires of us. I’m not all that sure either, how constructive any attempt to do so would be. And so there is a very real incongruity between our “situation” and our ability to wrap our minds around it. Which is why we see the spectrum of reactions that we do – from blithe indifference all the way to (appropriate) wide-eyed alarmism.
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Neo, thanks for reminding us of a great book, and its wise author. I still recall my 25 yr old idealism when I read this book in ’75, and had my first glimpse of the tragedy now being played out in full. On some inchoate level, I felt Berry was talking about forces we could hardly believe existed, having been born into this ‘Age of Koyyanasqatsi’……
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Nowadays, as the ante has been upped to to the point of no return, it seems to be fashionable to dismiss Berry as an unsophisticated bumpkin who never really did get it. Quite the contrary. He was one of those most articulate voices in the wilderness who was trying to raise the alarm when there was still a reasonable chance of averting disaster. As it now becomes clearer in certain quarters that the jig is up, I find an increasing level of neutered resignation sinking in.
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http://collapseofindustrialcivilization.tumblr.com/post/99077075097/in-the-early-1970s-ecologist-barry-commoner-wrote
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NDAA 2015 calls for mass fracking on all public land and fueling cars with shale gas. And Obama’s propaganda of being eco-friendly:
http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=767&Itemid=74&jumival=12911
HORN: …the NDAA of 2015, most people probably were paying attention to how it affects the Pentagon and how it affects things with the Islamic State and other things that the Pentagon’s doing around the world. And that is actually what was cited in the White House’s press release that it put out once President Obama signed it off into law after Congress passed it.
But included in that bill and less cited–definitely not cited by the White House, but it was cited by some of people in Congress–that’s how I found out about it, and I found out about it through industry press releases–were provisions to do two things: number one, expedite permitting of fracking on all public lands in the United States overseen by the Bureau of Land Management. That was one clause. There was a second clause to incentivize the manufacturing of vehicles that are powered by shale gas, euphemistically called alternative fuel vehicles. It’s a provision within the NDAA of 2015…
…So this speaks to broader industry trends and it speaks to–it is sort of a desperate, desperate thing for the industry. They need new land, they need new areas to drill, just to keep drilling rates flat. And that speaks to stuff that I’ve been reporting on all year about sort of the shale gas bubble and related issues. And I think that all of this can be seen in this one provision in the NDAA of 2015.
PERIES: So, Steve, let’s get back to this false dichotomy that has been created. The Obama administration has a very environmentally friendly image out there, painted as the enemy of the fossil fuel industry by the GOP. But what are the facts behind this media image, and what are some of the examples that has put this issue into question for you?
HORN: Well, I think the most telling example of the falseness of this narrative and why it’s more akin to propaganda than reality is really looking at what–again what’s been happening in the courts. And if you look at a case that was just settled over the summer, that was environmental groups versus the White House and its Council on Environmental Quality, basically the Council on Environmental Quality came out and said that it does not have to weigh climate change on every single energy project that its agencies produce or that permit. And so that is the environmental groups want that to be part of the NEPA process, the National Environmental Policy Act process, which is known, at least by environmental attorneys and practitioners, as the Magna Carta of environmental law. It’s sort of akin to the Constitution of the United States, how important it is in making decisions on energy projects and infrastructure projects, etc.
Well, what the White House was saying is that it shouldn’t have to consider climate change and it shouldn’t have to advise agencies to consider climate change on all of the permitting process processes. So, I mean, that is something that if it came from a Republican White House or the Bush administration, for example, it would be expected and there would be an extreme backlash by environmental groups over it. But there wasn’t much of any of a backlash or much of any of a reaction to this court decision which was handed down in August.
What White House has done since then is at the end of the year they issued new draft rules that pretty much do the same thing as they said they were going to the first time, which is do exactly that, consider climate change on all infrastructure projects. But now it goes through this whole new process once again that it already went through, which is a public commenting period, a chance for legal appeals, and that sort of thing. And so by the time it’s all said and done, this will be out of the hands of the Obama administration. It will go way past 2016. Someone else will be running the White House at that point. It was basically the Obama White House’s way of looking like they–at least making the appearance that they care about climate change and making the appearance like they care about sustainable energy systems, but in reality just continuing business as usual, knowing full well that this is a process, these type of rules take years to put in place.
They already had the chance once. This was actually a ball that get rolling under the Bush ministration originally. It was a challenge to the Bush administration Council on Environmental Quality. It moved into the Obama administration. And now it looks like it’s going to be basically more than a decade since or at least a decade since the original legal challenge by environmental groups until anything is done, and on such a basic issue that is considering climate change reviews or permitting processes for energy and infrastructure projects.
PERIES: Another such contradiction is really the image that they’re portraying internationally. Now, Obama actually went to China and made a commitment to reduce greenhouse gas effects by making all sorts of pledgers [sic]. And then you had Secretary of State Kerry making a very well received speech at the COP 20 summit in Lima, Peru. And so they’re saying one thing to the international audience and doing another thing here in the United States. What do you think of that contradiction?
HORN: Well, I think the State Department is just such a telling example of that contradiction in its split mission and really in the way that it delegates tasks in the State Department. It has an energy–Bureau of Energy Resources, and it has sort of another bureau that deals with climate change and goes to the United Nations summits and negotiates.
And so the–and, first of all, the negotiations back in 2009, under the Obama administration at Copenhagen, it’s well known at this point and it was revealed through the WikiLeaks documents that the United States delegation basically threw the whole agreement under the bus there. So it’s not as if the climate change team is sort of this noble actor that is acting benevolently at these conferences. It does give nice speeches, but its actions show something else.
But I think that even further than that, the State Department has his Bureau of Energy Resources that promotes all kinds of energy production around the world, technology /træns foʊr/ for teaching best practices of different energy sources. And the one that I’ve covered the most is the State Department’s Global Shale Gas Initiative, now known as the Unconventional Gas Technical Engagement Program. And so this was started under Secretary of State Hillary Clinton under the Obama administration, now lives on under John Kerry’s State Department. Basically, this is the United States acting as a global missionary force for fracking, going to other countries, bringing United States corporations with it, and trying to spread fracking technology around the world. It was covered really well in a fall article on Mother Jones magazine. And it’s also–and what they did was plumbed the WikiLeaks documents that are now online. And therein it really shows that–you know, so on one hand, you have the United States State Department going to these climate conferences, disingenuously saying that it cares about climate change, while it does mean it’s throwing agreements under the bus. But at the same time, you have the State Department actively out going around the world and really just doing the bidding of the oil and gas industry, the–you know, you’re probably looking broader than that, the coal industry, basically all industries. The State Department is acting as a middleman and a guarantor for opening up markets for all of these industries. And so that’s why they can say as much as they want about how they care about climate change, but even at the same time, the State Department is acting as a middleman for the very industries that are causing runaway climate change. I think that that says all that we need to know about what they’re doing.
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“In other words, near-term extinction of humans was already guaranteed, to the knowledge of Obama and his administration (i.e., the Central Intelligence Agency, which runs the United States and controls presidential power). Even before the dire feedbacks were reported by the scientific community, the administration abandoned climate change as a significant issue because it knew we were done as early as 2009. Rather than shoulder the unenviable task of truth-teller, Obama did as his imperial higher-ups demanded: He lied about collapse, and he lied about climate change. And he still does.”
Guy McPherson – Climate-Change Summary and Update
http://guymcpherson.com/2013/01/climate-change-summary-and-update/
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Pingback from http://www.BLCKBRD.com:
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Something else to “spectate upon”: Atmospheric CO2 at Mauna Loa reading > 400 ppm on January 1, 2015:
https://scripps.ucsd.edu/programs/keelingcurve/
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The Scripps people took a break on Dec 23 and I was wondering when they’d return to work.
I was stunned, well not really. There was every possibility, but highly unlikely that we could drop and remain at 398 or 399 for a while.
So a year ago it seemed that we were at 397 so it seems we’re rapidly approaching a doubling effect here. If we stay at or above 400 it would mean we’re 3 months ahead of what occurred last year. That puts us into >400 for 6 months of the year when we were >400 for 3 months of 2014. It’s possible that we could be completely above 400 by the end of 2015.
Not that the 400ppm number really has any inherent meaning in this deal. It’s just that we could be heading for 450 ppm much earlier than we’re being told.
Again as I’m so often reminded the ppm for Carbon Dixode that Scripps reports does not include all the other green house gases that probably have pushed us well into the stratosphere.
It will be interesting to see if the Arctic gets close to ice free this year.
I shared with the people at my aqua zumba class tonight the fact that Germany was colder than the Norwegiann polar circle. Well, all the woman (I’m the only man in the class) were just a bunch of wusses and started to scream, cry and hyperventilate that I thought the instructor would have to call 911 and get paramedics to the scene.
No that’s not how it happened, although I wish it did, then I’d know that most of them were alive and not zombies from The Walking Dead. They all just looked at me with a blank and disinterested expression on their faces. I wondered if any of them even knew where either Germany or Norway is. They certainly didn’t get why the news was important. Hey, got to get going on those New Years resolutions and get in shape for the season out in the Hamptons.
That’s okay, I was talking in the locker room about how Columbus committed genocide on about 40 million indigenous people. One guy changing behind me turned around and let me know that was just not possible. It was all a bunch of bullshit. I wondered myself if I had inflated the figure just to be dramatic, but was pretty certain I was close. I suggested he pick up a copy of 1492, but let him know that the vast majority of Americans don’t even read a book a year and I had no illusions.
At some point I get the feeling that the management at the club is going to ask me to keep my mouth shut or some well educated privileged member is going to attack me for speaking about America in such critical ways. Hey remember, “America, Love it or leave it.”
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13 species we might have to say goodbye to in 2015
We have only ourselves to blame.
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/science/wildlife-news/141231/13-species-we-might-have-say-goodbye-2015
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Robert Crumb on technology, the possibility of revolution in the ’60’s & ’70’s, and American culture:
[excerpts]
SR: I remember that some years ago you were still resisting computers and cell phones, but are they slowly crawling into your world?
Crumb: Yes, it’s like the telephone, you know – in the 1910’s you could choose not to have a telephone, because the older methods of communication were still in use, like to send messengers – if you were in business in a big city like New York, you would give the message on paper to a messenger boy, who would run and deliver it. But then the telephones became so common that the world became dependent on them and it would be very hard not to have one… That’s the same now with computers. Computers have become so pervasive, and if you don’t have an email it’s difficult to do a lot of transactions – the world becomes dependent on that stuff! So I use emails and I order books through the internet, you can find now almost any book that you need on a computer. Incredible! So, if I’m interested in some book I say to the secretary – please find this for me, she usually finds it and it’s cheap. It all made old books less expensive because they’re so easy to find now. In the old days, you would hunt around for years to find the book you were looking for. Now you can find even the most obscure old book, and it’s not expensive, amazing! Information is so much available, you can become your own private investigator, you can become a detective, if you are interested in some aspect of society that you have suspicion that there’s underlying conspiracy – I am completely obsessed with all kind of conspiracies, and you can look this all up, you can do your investigation, and find up amazing stuff, gather evidences…I have files and archives against corporations, and medical science and politics…
SR: Do you think that big business eventually took over this culture, this way or another?
Crumb: To a great degree, yes… In recent America everything is about making money, and the hippies resisted that, but there were a lot of people who cashed in on hippy culture, took advantage on that, and music and the whole hippy culture became commercialized…All these businessmen figured how to repackage it and sell it and that was one of the things that ruined it. On the other hand, there was too much drug taking around. People on drugs just could not see things clearly…Then people became paranoid of each other, it was awful! And also the politics, people that I knew in 1970/1971 were talking about the revolution as if it was around the corner! As if it’s going to happen any day! These people didn’t have the idea of this solid power we were up against. And of course it is good that it didn’t happen, because people that were the most well known, the main spokesmen of pushing this leftist “revolution” in America, if they had gained power they would have been very dangerous, Abbie Hoffman and these people – I’m sure that they would have start putting their enemies in prison camps…It was just too immature. My generation would not pull off any kind of social change, but at the same time they had huge influence on America.
SR: Now that you live in a small town in France, do you miss the chaos and the vibration of the big American towns?
Crumb: No! Most of my life I lived in a small town in the country, outside of big cities. I left San Francisco in late 1969,and I’ve never lived in the big city since. Big cities make me feel I’m being run over, I don’t think that I even miss the American culture, I carried my culture with me. The things that I like about American culture I have all here in my room… Old music, old comics, the books, I have it all here… When I go to America, it just breaks my heart to see how they’ve ruined the country. In the last two decades that I lived there, in the 70s and 80s, I watched this process of destroying everything I liked about it. Everything I loved about America was being destroyed in front of my eyes! Especially in California, where real estate development was the name of the game…
http://rishaproject.org/int17.html
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Thanks for the link to that interview. Many, if not all comics seem to be done on computer these days. It’s definite that original artwork doesn’t even leave the artist’s possession any longer. It’s merely sent over in a digital format to the publisher.
All very, very, very sad. If only we could have a nation wide blackout for a while. Oh, of course we do have a blackout of a sorts each and every day when it comes to MSM. Well, at least NYC is at the top of the list of places to expect blackouts, the electrical kind, to arrive.
Major U.S. Cities Face More Blackouts under Climate Change
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/major-u-s-cities-face-more-blackouts-under-climate-change/
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Chilling account of how climate change is already adding to problems of conflict & social breakdown in fragile states
http://www.climatenewsnetwork.net/climate-change-increasing-stresses-fragile-states/
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Is this as weird and scary as I think? Opinions are welcome.
http://arctic-news.blogspot.com/
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Scary? Yes. Weird? Nah just physics. Feels weird though. Here is some more stuff to ponder.
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/331/6016/450.abstract?sid=f1f07fa6-dae7-4a15-a38f-58f77793b7a1
Supporting Online Material for
Enhanced Modern Heat Transfer to
the Arctic by Warm Atlantic Water
Click to access Spielhagen.SOM.pdf
http://neven1.typepad.com/blog/fram-strait/
The only thing worse than extreme weather, is no weather at all. We will be long gone before then, but we get to suffer the first steps of that journey. Pay close attention from min 3 to 4.
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Sulfurous Hades, no wind power and a big stink. I was also thinking that once the various forests die from extreme temperatures we’ll have incredible wildfires followed perhaps by unprecedented storms and rainfall that erode the barren soils. Maybe Monsanto can engineer a pioneer “heat weed” that can quickly stabilize vulnerable areas, if survival of the financial fittest doesn’t eliminate them first. And tomorrow we’ll all wake up and roll the dice one more time in the game called Extinction and the token will move one space closer to “game over – you lose.”
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Oh you are correct about that; but we won’t have to wait for extreme temperatures to do it. Trees of all species are already dying just from absorbing air pollution. Ozone is invisible but highly toxic to plants, including annual crops. Wildfires are unprecedented as is the number of trees and branches falling on houses, powerlines, cars and unsuspecting people. It’s pretty obvious if you look at them that they all exhibit symptoms of fatal decline such as cankers, holes, splitting bark and withered foliage and needles. http://scienceblogs.com/gregladen/2013/01/29/whispers-from-the-ghosting-trees/
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Pingback: Spectating at the End of the World |
Why do I know we will fail? Watch these videos and you will have your answer.
Guesstimates on the top 6 traded commodities in the world.
1) oil
2) food
3) sex
4) drugs
5) guns
6) junks
http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/counter-intelligence/
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The Protestant work ethic never falters when working to deny reality. These are the descendants of the “Pilgrims”. The only people ever to go on a pilgrimage and stay.
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Wow! McPherson has gone ULTRA-DOOMER for the new year with his new “edge of extinction” podcast:
http://guymcpherson.com/2015/01/premiere-episode-edge-of-extinction/
Collapse of industrial civilization, global nuclear meltdown, super abrupt climate change, and total human extinction pretty much guaranteed sometime in the next 2 to 20 years!
I won’t comment on the many wildly pessimistic assumptions he has to make to get there…
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Yes, speed kills…
Brutus critiques Nafeez Ahmed’s latest article:
End of the End?
“At a fundamental level, the biophysical conditions for life on earth are changing from the relative steady state of the last 200,000 years or so that humans have existed, or more broadly, the 65 million years since the last major extinction event. The current rate of change is far too rapid for evolution and culture to adapt. New ways of managing information, economics, and human social structures simply cannot keep up.
All that said, well, sure, let’s get going and do what can be done. I just don’t want to pretend that we’re anywhere close to a new dawn.”
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LOL Dave Cohen makes mincemeat: http://www.declineoftheempire.com/2015/01/2015-will-be-another-big-year-in-flatland.html
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Nafeez’s is another Doomer who has backed tracked recently. His brain has changed his mind me thinks.
In the first minute of Nafeez’s informative cut&paste movie, “The Crisis of Civilization” he claims the biggest problem is that the experts and everyone else are looking at everything in isolation; not holistically. You know, like tunnel vision thinking economists who think that rearranged economies, due to unprecedented social attitudes, will fix our host of predicaments. I thought Nafeez was past listening to privileged over educated white guys. I think this is just another crisis cult forming. We should see many more as the great unraveling continues and the panicked and desperate masses cling to any and all hope.
Last line in the essay:
“So welcome to 2015: a year when our choices could determine the future of the planet.”
We already made our choices and there is no escaping the worst of the consequences of the laws of physics, chemistry and biology.
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You might enjoy the exchange here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/306488669449557/permalink/698819203549833/
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awesome tree pics
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H/T Jay Hanson:
FREE, NAKED, AND ALONE
“78-year-old Masafumi Nagasaki is the sole resident of a tropical island located at the southern tip of Okinawa, Japan. He would rather obey the demands of nature than of another person, which is what led him to escape civilization and live on Sotobanari Island. We decided to go and find out exactly what kind of lifestyle he’s leading, and why he chooses not to wear clothes.”
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Charlie Brooker, writer and creator of Channel 4’s Black Mirror, explains the inspiration behind the series, what the title means and how close the stories get to real life.
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My Bad. I meant for that to be at the bottom of the thread.
BTW most, maybe all, episodes of Black Mirror can be found on youtube.
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Australians battle worst bushfire for 30 years
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/australasia/australians-battle-worst-bushfire-for-30-years-9955734.html
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Perhaps this sums up the end times for humans:
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50 Doomiest Charts of 2014
“If these trends continue – and there’s no reason to expect that they won’t – the next 40 years will see almost all vertebrate species extirpated.”
Commented on at Reddit:

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great links you guys, you are like salt and prepper. When you write for a living meant to be read by a large audience, you always end your story with, “and they lived happily ever after.”
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1-3-2015
Aviation Industry Set to Triple Its Global Greenhouse Gas Emissions by 2050
The aviation industry is growing so quickly that its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are expected on present trends to triple globally by 2050. The industry itself is committed to reducing its emissions, but technological and political constraints are hindering rapid progress.
If commercial aviation were a country, it would rank seventh in global greenhouse gas emissions according to a recent report by the International Council on Clean Transportation (ICCT)…
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H/T David Lysak at America2.0
A dark, but accurate cartoon depiction of human life in an age of eco-apocalypse:

http://roachinstallations.wordpress.com/2012/11/03/a-to-z/
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A wind-power company wants to withhold information on how many bird deaths they cause each year because keeping the info secret keeps communication public channels open. Then the so-called greenies go ape shit in comments about how many other things kill birds besides windturbines as if that exonerates them. It’s fucking unreal.
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/nov/17/windfarm-company-pacificorp-sues-us-government-bird-deaths
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Arctic influence on jet stream keeps rains from Central Coast
http://www.sanluisobispo.com/2015/01/03/3425153/arctic-influence-on-jet-stream.html
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Don’t miss Part II – http://survivalacres.com/blog/the-human-condition/
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Looks like a picto-essay tour de force!
Will have to really delve into it when I have more time.
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Good find! I especially like this:
Wetiko: The mental disorder we NEED to hear more about
http://blackology101.com/2013/08/17/wetiko-the-mental-disorder-we-need-to-hear-more-about/
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LOL and I just finished writing to the SA Admin – You must have put a huge amount of work into collecting and sorting the images. It’s a powerful commentary and what can we do but witness and catelogue?
Although – I’m sure you won’t be surprised to know that I disagree with the characterization of earlier tribal societies. They were pretty brutal too, from what I read. The Wetiko thing for instance did not originate as a critique of European colonizers, it was a mythical spirit the Iroquois nation used to discourage cannibalism which, along with extensive warfare, slavery, and truly barbaric torture techniques characterized those tribes pre-contact. They invented scalping long before they met Europeans. Heh.
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Agreed, no such thing as the “noble savage”. That does not change the fact that the concept gets at the very heart of our predicament.
Are humans barbaric warlike cannibals by nature, are we fated to destroy all life including ourselves no matter what, or can Wetiko Psychosis be treated as just that, a psychopathy that deserves to be stamped out of the human experience, if at all possible.
That is the question.
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Well, it wasn’t all that long ago that I very much believed humanity was making progress in terms of behaving more decently towards each other and the rest of the planet…but the trends as reported by Des for example caused me to re-examine that and upon closer inspection it would seem we simply became more clever at masking the destruction to the environment and violence towards our fellow humans, largely thanks to the potency of fossil fuels. When that is stripped away we will revert to more overt forms of exploitation. If history and pre-history are any guide, humans are indeed a plague species and we can no more remove that aspect of our makeup than we can remove the urge for sex. Just try suggesting that at some point, any point, people should have less sex to control population and see how seriously that is taken, ha! We are governed by our instincts whether we like to admit it or not.
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Brilliant stuff:
COLUMBUS AND OTHER CANNIBALS: HISTORY AND PROPHECY FOR THE 2000’S
https://web.archive.org/web/20110719221929/http://nas.ucdavis.edu/Forbes/CANNIBALS.html
The Greatest Epidemic Sickness Known to Humanity
http://realitysandwich.com/75652/greatest_epidemic/
Vampire Squid Economics: A Case Study in Full-Blown Wetiko Disease
http://realitysandwich.com/80488/vampire_squid_economics_wetiko_disease/
This concept of “Wetiko” psychosis is resonating with me because, purely by coincidence, I tossed off this train of thought a few minutes before at PeakOil.com in response to this article (cross posted from Automatic Earth):
Oil, Power, And Psychopaths
http://peakoil.com/publicpolicy/oil-power-and-psychopaths
My comment:
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Oh for cryin’ out loud. It was tribal hunter-gatherers who drove dozens of species of megafauna extinct between 6 and 15,000 years ago, every continent and island where humans migrated. And human slavery was a global habit not even questioned until bad bad civilization turned against it. The industrial era will drive us to extinction along with most else, one way and another, but the human urge to grow is integral to our nature and THAT is the underlying fatal trait – not modern capitalism. Consumerism as an expression of status is a fetish that dates back to the days of shell beads and feathers.
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Oh dear, I seem to have invoked the wrath of the white liberal super-mom from New Jersey. I guess I’ll shut up now.
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LOL. I must be an oddball because I could care less about material symbols of status and I don’t believe this sort of behavior is inherent.
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Haha! COID is a status symbol. You “own” a blog. THAT is a status symbol masquerading as a not-status symbol. That’s why I got fed up with California. It was a constant refrain of – I’m more laid-back than you, so I’m superior. I’m more radical than you, I’m more Buddhist than you, I own less than you etc etc…so I’m superior.
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Well – the fish never recognizes the water it swims in, right?
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Oh really? You really think I need this blog?
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Of course not! Why should you have an ego? Shut it down.
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You strike me as a bitter person who can’t entertain the possibility that they may be wrong about a few things.
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I’m used to such defensive insults – I’m actually a mirthful person who can see – and appreciate – the absurdity of life. Not bitter, at all. Amused, rather.
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You would be wise to just state your case without emoting.
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How dare you call me liberal?
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There are many examples of hunter-gatherer societies which were sustainable,and which existed and thrived for 50,000,years or more.An excellent book on this is ‘The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Hunters and Gatherers.’
Industrial civilisation and Agricultural civilisation have many unavoidable systemic flaws which did not exist under a Hunter Gatherer system.Jared Diamond is correct when he states that Agriculture is the biggest mistake our species ever made.
Of course,the unstoppable juggernaut of industrial civilisation has obliterated or rendered unviable by habitat destruction,etc,most of the societies in the book above.
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The book above has an excellent chapter by John Gowdy:’Hunter -Gatherers and the mythology of the market,’ Well worth reading.
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I possess the truth!!! No, I do!!! Do not! Yes I do! You’re mother is a…
Glad I have nothing to defend! Carry on…
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I guess we hope that a groundswell of support will go rippling through human society, behaviors will change, people will no longer feel the need to reproduce profligately or greedily acquire wealth. Why would we think that? Has any society ever adopted self-control as a strategy in the past when decimation was an annual event? It may have taken greedy, cooperative, profligate behaviors just to stay even with nature. Everyone thinks we can cooperate to limit ourselves, but I don’t think so. We can cooperate to further our collective goals of successful reproduction and acquisition of wealth as in a capitalistic society, and that will be the extent of our cooperation. If you come to me and say you want to form a cooperative that limits my reproductive freedom and “pursuit of happiness”, then I will no longer be very cooperative. As in the old Soviet Union, I will officially pretend to work while you officially pretend to pay me, and I’ll spend most of my time on the black market trying to enrich myself and the six kids I have at home. If you tried to enforce limits you would get warfare and mental depression that results from being unable to pursue goals that supply adequate dopamine.
As the collapse ensues the dopamine of consumerism will once again be overcome by the dopamine of spirituality (no great intellectual awakening of the masses) and the clergy will likely pursue the heretics and sacrifice them to appease the Gods that have unleashed economic and environmental horrors upon the faithful peoples of the earth. For a while new limits will more than decimate the population until only the most greedy, cooperative and profligate tribes remain to be in balance again with the natural and unnatural forces arrayed against them. ISIS seems to embody that “give it a go” spirit that just may find success against the “this is the way it theoretically could be” tribes of Europe and the United States.
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If you were wondering why some people insist on trying to change the course of the Titanic, here it is:
“Mike,
Your dark vision is not something I will dispute. On the contrary, I believe you are really at the kernel of things.
But rather than chronicle our stupidity, hubris, and where our collective greed, self-interest, and ability to delude ourselves has gotten us, I prefer to try and focus on doing anything that may improve the chances that some of life on Earth may survive… perhaps even some human life. Neither of those is assured…”
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It’s a nice sentiment on the part of the writer and commendable; sadly it’s delusional and I wonder when people following that logic will break down.
Another of my personal stories to add some texture here, a short one I promise this time. I was in my 20’s when my parents were diagnosed with cancer. I got the “pleasure” performing tasks that most people even today won’t ever do as they’ll shove those old folks into “homes” out of sight and mind as they deteriorate and shrivel up.
So without being too description image talking care of your parents in the way they took care of you in those first few years of life. It’s just a part of the life/death cycle, unfortunately it’s tasks that would turn the stomachs of most people merely thinking about it let alone trying to picture themselves doing them.
So I wonder how long can people do those “anythings” and hold onto their sanity as they begin to realize banging their heads against the wall only results in pain and suffering.
I did those “anythings’ the writer mentions for far too long and daily I’m aware of how screwed we are and how worthless any and all of those efforts were. Just on a day to day basis interacting, speaking and getting to observe people (the blessings of public transportation) I’d say that the overwhelming majority of people in our “civilized” world are not interested or desire to even consider making any changes to our lives.
The author of the graphic novel “Climated Changed” says exactly that in his book. He’d have to live like a person in the third world in order to produce a small level of carbon and you know what he doesn’t want to do that as he likes what IC has to offer. I’d still recommend the book to anyone though as it was worth the read.
Hey, know that NYC has put wireless in the subway it’s an unbelievable sight to watch all the people sitting and standing completely connected to their phones which now ring. Yesterday it was like a Busby Berkley musical in it’s own perverse way.
So, with my astral body separated from my physical form I observe that IC is ground zero and ripples outwards in great waves much like those old films used to show the destructive force of those bombs we used to test in the South West. To keep the center going we’ll keep reaching out further and further and destroy everything in site.
Check this out, especially at 4:50.
And yes I too agree that consumerism is the replacement for religion. Anyone watching those shopping videos on youtube post Thanksgiving should have not even have to question that statement.
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I agree James once consumerism is gone only religion can come close to replacing the lost Super Hyper stimuli.
Andy Thomson has been working on a theory of religion for a number of years. One of his more interesting points is how corporations through consumerism hijack the same neural processes as religions. Specifically, he compares the psychology of the Big Mac meal to the psychology of religion, but it applies to all consumerist products and experiences. (Min 9 for Big Mac comparison) Notice the youtube users handle. He will be among the first sacrifices – me too Lol
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An appropriate line from a Grateful Dead song (The Wheel):
“You can’t go back and you can’t stand still
If the thunder don’t get you then the lightnin’ will.”
Even if we tried to “make right” any part of our existing civilization (with what we have left), at this point, unwinding it to any lower state would cause calamity, and incremental steps would be overcome by rapid increases in entropy. It’s full speed or bust – and full speed just gets us to bust faster!
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Dead right.A tangled web of unsustainable institutions and activities.
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The dude is still alive:
“Capitalism is destructive because it has to eliminate the kind of customs, mores, political values, even institutions that present any kind of credible threat to the autonomy of the economy…–that’s where the battle lies. Capitalism wants an autonomous economy. They want a political order subservient to the needs of the economy.”
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WOLIN: … I think if you go back way to the Athenian democracy, one of the things you notice about it is that it paid citizens to participate. In other words, they would be relieved from a certain amount of economic insecurity in order to engage actively in politics. Well, when we get to our times and modern times, that kind of guarantee doesn’t exist in any form whatsoever. We barely can manage to have an election day that isn’t where we suspend work and other obligations to give citizens an opportunity to vote. They have to cram a vote into a busy, normal day, so that the relationship between economic structures and institutions and political institutions of democracy are just really in tension now, in which the requirements of the one are being undercut by the operations of the other. And I don’t see any easy solution to it, because the forces that control the economy control to a large extent public opinion, modes of publication, and so on, and make it very difficult to mount counter-views.
HEDGES: Well, in fact, to engage in real participatory democracy or political activity is to put yourself in a more precarious position vis-à-vis your work, your status within the society.
WOLIN: There’s no question about it. And that’s true of, I think, virtually every activity. It’s now certainly frowned upon in academic work, and certainly in public education it’s frowned on. And there’s no effort made to really make it a bit easier for people to participate. And the intensity that economic survival requires today leaves most people exhausted. There’s–and understandably. They don’t have much, if any, time for politics. So we’re in a really difficult situation, where the requirements of democracy are such that they’re being undermined by the realities of a kind of economy and society that we’ve developed.
HEDGES: Which you point out Hobbes foresaw.
WOLIN: He did. He did indeed. And his solution was you surrender your political rights.
http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=12557
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He fails to mention that Athenian democracy was the privileged domain of an exclusive artistocratic male minority whose leisure to ruminate was afforded on the surplus of a slave working class. If you aren’t directly procuring the necessities of life, some embodied energy, whether in the form of the living or the dead, is doing the work for you. This would be sobering but for its opacity.
I enjoyed Wolin’s work. He concludes in ‘Vision’ that democracy cannot exist on these large scales. I would go one step further: it has never existed but in an abstract form, much like the idea of the free market itself The irony of this social construction of freedom is it manifests itself most readily when there is a decided lack thereof, when there is a large enough surplus borne on the backs of a majority slaving away on their “superiors'” behalf to free a select group from the existential hardships of life, so that these fortunate parasitical few can engage in an existential crisis. The crisis would evaporate if they were to be physically active in securing sustenance. False dichotomies like Cartesian dualism would melt away. Holism is rooted in hardship and connection.
It is little wonder that the later Athenian elite wouldn’t relinquish their adherence to a rational and ‘mind-based’ epistemology even when mathematical proof demonstrated reality to be a continuum and thus irrational. They abhorred change. They can be forgiven. There are few among us who would willingly surrender the ease, comfort and advantages of an exploitative relationship once we’ve gained a taste and grown accustomed to its narcotic ambrosia. This is why the privileged western industrialized society will stay its course to the bitter end.
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No free lunch for a life of leisure.
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WOLIN: Well, I think it’s important to grasp that superpower includes as one of its two main elements the modern economy. And the modern economy, with its foundations in not only economic activity but scientific research, is always a dynamic economy and always constantly seeking to expand, to get new markets, to be able to produce new goods, and so on. So the superpower’s dynamism becomes a kind of counterpart to the character of the modern economy, which has become so dominant that it defines the political forms.
I mean, the first person to really recognize this–which we always are embarrassed to say–was Karl Marx, who did understand that economic forms shape political forms, that economic forms are the way people make a living, they’re the way goods and services are produced, and they determine the nature of society, so that any kind of government which is responsive to society is going to reflect that kind of structure and in itself be undemocratic, be elitist in a fundamental sense, and have consumers as citizens.
HEDGES: And Marx would also argue that it also defines ideology.
WOLIN: It does. It does define ideology. Marx was really the first to see that ideology had become a kind of–although there are antecedents, had become a kind of preconceived package of ideas and centered around the notion of control, that it represented something new in the world because you now had the resources to disseminate it, to impose it, and to generally make certain that a society became, so to speak, educated in precisely the kind of ideas you wanted them to be educated in. And that became all the more important when societies entered the stage of relatively advanced capitalism, where the emphasis was upon work, getting a job, keeping your job, holding it in insecure times. And when you’ve got that kind of situation, everybody wants to put their political beliefs on hold. They don’t want to have to agonize over them while they’re agonizing over the search for work or worrying about the insecurity of their position. They’re understandably preoccupied with survival. And at that point, democracy becomes at best a luxury and at worst simply an afterthought, so that its future becomes very seriously compromised, I think.
HEDGES: And when the ruling ideology is determined by capitalism–corporate capitalism; you’re right–we have an upending of traditional democratic values, because capitalist values are about expansion, exploitation, profit, the cult of the self, and you stop even asking questions that can bring you into democratic or participatory democracy.
WOLIN: I think that’s true to an extent. But I would amend that to say that once the kind of supremacy of the capitalist regime becomes assured, and where it’s evident to everyone that it’s not got a real alternative in confronting it, that I think its genius is it sees that a certain relaxation is not only possible, but even desirable, because it gives the impression that the regime is being supported by public debate and supported by people who were arguing with other people, who were allowed to speak their minds, and so on. And I think it’s when you reach that stage–as I think we have–that the problematic relationship between capitalism and democracy become more and more acute.
HEDGES: And yet we don’t have anyone within the mainstream who questions either superpower or capitalism.
WOLIN: No, they don’t. And I don’t think it’s–it may be a question of weakness, but I think–the problem is really, I think, more sort of quixotic. That is, capitalism–unlike earlier forms of economic organization, capitalism thrives on change. It presents itself as the dynamic form of society, with new inventions, new discoveries, new forms of wealth, so that it doesn’t appear like the old regime–as sort of an encrusted old fogey type of society. And I think that makes a great deal of difference, because in a certain sense you almost get roles reversed. That is, in the old regime, the dominant powers, aristocracy and so on, want to keep the lid on, and the insurgent democracy, the liberalizing powers, wanted to take the lid off.
But now I think you get it–as I say, I think you get it kind of reversed, that democracy, it now wants–in its form of being sort of the public philosophy, now wants to keep the lid on and becomes, I think, increasingly less–more adverse to examining in a–through self-examination, and becomes increasingly, I would say, even intolerant of views which question its own assumptions, and above all question its consequences, because I think that’s where the real issues lie is not so much with the assumptions of democracy but with the consequences and trying to figure out how we’ve managed to get a political system that preaches equality and an economic system which thrives on inequality and produces inequality as a matter of course.
http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=12561
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An excerpt from Gowdy’s essay that I mentioned above:
‘The hunter-gatherer literature shows that ‘economic rationality’ is peculiar to market capitalism and is an embedded set of cultural beliefs, not an objective universal law of nature. There are many other, equally rational, ways of behaving which do not conform to the laws of market exchange. The myth of economic man explains the organising principle of contemporary capitalism,nothing more or less. It is no more rational than the myths which drive Hadza, Aborigine, or !Kung society. In industrial societies, however, the myth of economic man justifies the appropriation by a few of the human material culture which has evolved over millennia, and also the appropriation and destruction of the world’s physical and biological resources.
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Thanks for mentioning this author. It appears homo economicus has been trained like an obedient servant to not ask questions or think outside of the (TV) box, and we can even see that mentality here in people who should know better. I guess they didn’t bother to read this link that was in the essay and are unfamilar with the term white privilege:
“…The term denotes both obvious and less obvious passive advantages that white persons may not recognize they have, which distinguishes it from overt bias or prejudice.[2] These include cultural affirmations of one’s own worth; presumed greater social status; and freedom to move, buy, work, play, and speak freely.[1] The effects can be seen in professional, educational, and personal contexts.[3] The concept of white privilege also implies the right to assume the universality of one’s own experiences, marking others as different or exceptional while perceiving oneself as normal.[4][5]…”
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That’s a fairly accurate description of most of the white people I know and many Asians (Indians, Chinese) around here. They still maintain a vestige of their culture; holidays, food and temples, but in every other aspect they are westernized capitalists. Trapped in the never ending misery of the produce-consume cycle and think it’s the height of civilization.
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Good links, vids from you on the consumer culture. Thanks much.
Yes, white privilege would extend to all who have been subsumed into the capitalist consumer culture.
It’s been well documented that indigenous people, such as in Africa and Latin America, have been ravaged by alcohol and drugs when they are uprooted from their native culture and forced into the global capitalist scheme. Native peoples of North America as well.
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Not only ravaged, but actually addicted and deluded into participating in it.
Having grown up in a Housing Project in the East New York Section of Brooklyn I’ve always been part of integrated neighborhoods. It was always stunning as I grew up to meet white people (from all over the country and who come to NYC for fame, fortune, success and sex (mucho sex) and had never, and I mean never had any interaction with people who weren’t white.
As such I have very little fear of Blacks, Hispanics, etc and am always stunned at how they seem to have embraced the trappings of IC and believe they have the same opportunities as whites.
The Blacks I ride the occasional express with are as enmeshed in the system as whites and for the most part enjoy being plugged in their iPods, iPhones, etc. It’s amazing to look as I get on and off the bus how most of them are actually watching television or playing video games. I can’t remember the last time I’ve seen an actual book being read.
And regarding the ever present presence of White Privilege.
A few weeks ago at Betty’s Bakery on Atlantic Ave in Brooklyn I went to pick up a few of the home made Ring-Dings and Twinkies they make (the taste is so much more and better than what I remember those copyrighted items from Drake tasting like when i was a kid, more like food than like oil). Well a white guy was raging at one of the workers. All the workers are either Black or Hispanic (just like at the New York Health and Racquet Club all lower level jobs are held by non-white).
The white guy, exuding that pheromone of white privilege all over the store. He was venom at the young woman who explained she needed a few more minutes to putting the writing on the birthday cake he ordered. Well, he would have none of it, he paid $90 for the cake and wanted it now. I mean you had to be there, and I hope some of the people reading this blog have actually witnessed scenes like this instead of living via a computer, to be stunned at how his tone was full of condescension and arrogance that seemed like reading any of those fiction books depicting slavery.
As usual I wanted to say and do something, yet had I done anything it was likely I could have cost the servers their jobs and created more chaos as sometimes happens when interfering in such explosive situations. So, while standing behind the guy and getting the eye of the woman he was screaming at and the women behind the counter I just kept shaking my head and rolling my eyes up in disbelief.
He walked out in a huff. And while I was being served none of the woman (and they wonder why the woman accusing the Cos of rape hadn’t wanted to come forth (money and power know no color boundaries)). I waited and waited and finally I just said, I can’t believe the way whites use their privilege to treat others in such a disgraceful manner. The energy of the store just shifted, as all the woman said they never heard any white person ever say anything like that. They all saw me as a friend and not an enemy.
One of the young woman was majoring communication and was transferring from Manhattan Commmunity College to North Carolina. She said the only person who ever talked about such topics was her communication professor. During the interchange I asked if she had ever heard of Morris Berman. She had via that professor, who strongly urged the student to read him, but the young woman hadn’t gotten around to it.
As much as little interchanges like this would give others hope for the future (and me at one point in the past) it does nothing of the kind for me. I highly doubt this young woman will get to around to Berman or so many others unless it’s required reading for college. She believed that she was going to change the world via her major in communications.
Sadly, I held back the tug of the horses always in my head bringing up the vast array of things this young woman was never going to have the future she envisioned due to so many factors most especially Climate Change and Peak Oil.
By the way Betty is for the upscale, wealthy whites who have gentrified the neighborhood their parents fled, actually running screaming to Staten Island and Long Island, back in the late fifties and sixties when non-whites started to move into the neighborhood.
Did anyone notice that a few weeks ago when California finally received some rain the “professionals” at the weather channel were positively orgasmic when relating the events of those massive rain storms. They led the viewers to believe that those few days of rain were going to make some difference to the current drought. Bollocks as the article that reported trillions of gallons of water would be needed to make a dent.
An opportunity to educate on the real facts regarding the drought, but it gets twisted into another report of how everything can be manipulated to being something good.
Hey, the war between the police and our Mayor continues. I’m still wondering why the police feel so strongly about one of their own getting killed and it’s murder, but when the victim is a black it’s referred to as preventing a crime in process.
And then there is Michael Grimm out in Staten Island who at first declined to resign after being convicted of Tax Evasion and changed his mind.
NYC coming apart at the seams, but Mayor DeBlasio’s food maven Nancy Romer, a fully pensioned Brooklyn College Professor still deludes people into believing the five boroughs can feed itself will not ever read this blog or Guy’s Climate Change piece.
Remember everyone go out and get your flu shot as it’s spreading. What the heck is happening at Fukishima and with Ebola?
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Reblogged this on The Rise and Fall of the Human Empire and commented:
Lucid, accurate, concise yet thorough.
xraymike79 is not only one of the few who really understands what’s happening. He also has great skill at sharing that understanding with others.
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Why am I doing this…
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I was not familiar with Thomas J. Goreau’s work. His credentials appear to be stellar.
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Pyrolysis addresses carbon emissions, but it is crop and pasture lands that cause 80% of extinctions. There are ways to address biodiversity on pasture lands, but to affect carbon emissions and biodiversity together means we have to co-ordinate a plethora of massive actions. Such a massive co-ordination of multiple efforts flies in the face of geo-political reality. Excellent video.
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“Where is the Asteroid coming from?”…White Privilege:
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Just noticed the old date on this article…
Currently: “14% of all UK electricity being produced by wind”
http://www.edie.net/news/6/Record-renewable-production-in-Scotland-sets-example-for-UK-Government/
Engineer Stephen Latham twittered me his rebuttal:
http://www.entrans.co.uk/david%20mackay%27s%20book,%20sustainability%20without%20the%20hot%20air.html
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good one, though it won’t overcome other inherent limitations.
http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/v2/n6/full/nclimate1451.html?WT.ec_id=NCLIMATE-201206
• Wind power. According to the American Wind Energy Association, the 5,700 turbines installed in the United States in 2009 required approximately 36,000 miles of steel rebar and 1.7 million cubic yards of concrete (enough to pave a four-foot-wide, 7,630-mile-long sidewalk). The gearbox of a two-megawatt wind turbine contains about 800 pounds of neodymium and 130 pounds of dysprosium — rare earth metals that are rare because they’re found in scattered deposits, rather than in concentrated ores, and are difficult to extract.
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/renewable-energys-hidden-costs/
Wind power requires 10X as much nickel as fossil power. Peak nickel may hit by 2025.
http://www.roperld.com/science/minerals/nickel.htm
Smithsonian Institute calculate wind turbine bird deaths.
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/how-many-birds-do-wind-turbines-really-kill-180948154/?no-ist
New study on bat deaths due to turbines
http://www.climatenewsnetwork.net/wind-turbines-may-lure-bats-into-fatal-errors/
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Great interview at NakedCapitalism…
The Real Cause Of Low Oil Prices: Interview With Arthur Berman
“…Of course, natural gas and renewable energy go hand-in-hand. Since renewable energy—primarily solar and wind—are intermittent, natural gas backup or base-load is necessary. I think that extreme views on either side of the renewable energy issue will have to moderate. On the one hand, renewable advocates are unrealistic about how quickly and easily the world can get off of fossil fuels. On the other hand, fossil fuel advocates ignore the fact that government is already on board with renewables and that, despite the economic issues that they raise, renewables are going to move forward albeit at considerable cost.
Time is rarely considered adequately. Renewable energy accounts for a little more than 2% of U.S. total energy consumption. No matter how much people want to replace fossil fuel with renewable energy, we cannot go from 2% to 20% or 30% in less than a decade no matter how aggressively we support or even mandate its use. In order to get to 50% or more of primary energy supply from renewable sources it will take decades.
I appreciate the urgency felt by those concerned with climate change. I think, however, that those who advocate a more-or-less immediate abandonment of fossil fuels fail to understand how a rapid transition might affect the quality of life and the global economy. Much of the climate change debate has centered on who is to blame for the problem. Little attention has been given to what comes next namely, how will we make that change without extreme economic and social dislocation?…”
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Excellent video: Confronting Anthropocentrism
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fuck the ism’s an old 80’s punk meme
thx xraymike for your work http://peakaustria.tumblr.com/image/107133670978
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The Age of the Anthropocene where today’s CO2 levels are same as that of the mid-Miocene period(15 million years ago) when sea level were 25–40 meters higher and global mean temperatures were 3–6°C hotter.

Balls of Steel or just plain stupid?
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Both!
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The thermodynamic and chemical forces on this planet created us. Yes, we’re greedy and competitive. What else would you expect? Lion to lay down with lamb? Talking about white privilege and indigenous peoples sustainability does what? The Yanomamo man said they were far more respectful of the environment than the white man and with a little “arrowing” now and then, with a childbirth infection thrown in, could live sustainably. Sure, we’ve taken “arrowing” to a whole new level, a level so horrendous that we dare not arrow each other any longer, thereby ensuring our own demise from overpopulation and overconsumption. It’s too late to become indigenous again and spend the next thousand years making biochar. The entire human cancer needs to be snuffed out without delay, but the ancillary damage to the environment, just like the damage occurring to a body from chemo and radiation therapies, would destroy the ecosystem too. Even the Yanomamo are somewhat disgusting in their superstition, arrowing and associated behaviors. I wouldn’t want to emulate them. If truth be known the entire ecosystem is not a harmonious whole, but rather a non-stop killing field where new structures feed upon the bodies of the fallen. Technological organization supported by fossil fuels allows for military and police enforcement of “nice” behavior with aggression and competitive impulses shunted to the local stadium for a weekend bloodletting. The die is cast, the methane is leaking, there’s no going back in an orderly way.
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Homo Colossus rules!!!
UK loaned £1.7bn to foreign fossil fuel projects despite pledge
1-6-2015
The UK government has provided well over a billion pounds in loans to fossil fuel projects around the world despite a pledge to withdraw financial support from such schemes, an analysis of loans made by the UK’s export credit agency has revealed…
…The UK Export Finance (UKEF) deals appear to fly in the face of the 2010 coalition agreement, where the Conservatives and Lib Dems pledged to clamp down on funding for fossil fuel operations abroad…
…Just days after taking office, prime minister David Cameron promised he would lead the “greenest government ever”. UKEF is a ministerial department that reports to Vince Cable, the business secretary….
…The rate of funding for fossil fuel projects around the world appears to have speeded up in the last financial year, with around £1bn given to such operations in the 2013-14 financial year. At home, the government has come under fire for overseeing a boom in fossil fuel investment and a decline in clean energy investment.
Coal-mining, petrochemical complexes, and oil and gas exploration and infrastructure are among the industries benefiting from the loans and guarantees, which cover projects in countries including Slovakia, Russia, Brazil, India, Germany, Norway, Vietnam, the Phillipines and Saudi Arabia…
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Our anthropocentrism is killing us. Capitalist carbon man’s way of living is nonnegotiable. This means it will never be “sustainable”, “eco-friendly”, or “green.” These words are just self-delusional claptrap. The following comment typifies the mindset:
“In the interests of providing environmentally friendly electricity, does it really matter that much if a few basking sharks get killed? We all have to make sacrifices if we are going to achieve green energy from wind, including the birds, bats and marine life.” – link
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In the interests of saving the village, does it really matter that much if a few peasants get killed? We all have to make sacrifices if we are going to achieve victory, including the village men, women and children.
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Scorched earth policies and “destroying the village in order to save it” are how I would characterize efforts to “green” the capitalist economy. Have you seen any fundamental rethink in the real world on how “modern” man conducts his way of life?
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The best advice I’ve encountered about the collapse is Tim Kreider’s cartoon and artist’s statement:
http://www.thepaincomics.com/weekly080423a.htm
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The Gulf states’ oil price challenge
…Yet there is trouble building up for the future: the oil prices at which government budgets break even have on average increased by more than three times since the early 2000s as spending commitments have risen.
According to IMF estimates, break-even now lies above current oil prices for Bahrain, Oman, Saudi Arabia and the UAE, with even Kuwait and Qatar now touching it at the current price…
…Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait and Qatar have substantial overseas reserves that are equivalent to several annual budgets, giving them considerable leeway to incur deficits without debt. Bahrain and Oman, both of whom have only small overseas reserves, have less room for fiscal manoeuvre. Bahrain in particular already has government debt of more than 40% of GDP. It has already taken some austerity measures, being the only country among the group in which estimated 2013 spending lay below that for 2012.
Yet governments across the region are well aware that the rapid spending growth of the last decade cannot continue. This approach could see financial reserves exhausted within as little as a decade in the case of Saudi Arabia and between one and two decades for the others…
…In sum, the current oil price drop does not pose an immediate threat to the stability of the Gulf. Even in the case of Bahrain and Oman, their richer neighbours could prevent a politically undesirable economic collapse through grants and loans. And when their overseas reserves are exhausted, they will still be able to delay the inevitable by issuing debt that they can strong-arm local banks to accept.
Yet eventually state spending and economic growth will slow and even reverse. The focus of policy will gradually shift towards more painful but necessary reforms, which could nevertheless be too little too late to stave off a fiscal crisis. And as reality finally begins to catch up with this part of the world, its regional and global power looks likely to decline…
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I think Saudi Arabia has many problems that the empire does not wish to be known. How might the junkie plebs react if they thought their main dealer might get rubbed out by the Islamic Fundie cartel? Sure there are other dealers, but can they afford them? Do they want to go hat in hand to the Russians or Iranians? Blow back comes in many forms.
Reporting Saudi Arabia’s hidden uprising
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-27619309
Middle East Time Bomb: The Real Aim of ISIS Is to Replace the Saud Family as the New Emirs of Arabia
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alastair-crooke/isis-aim-saudi-arabia_b_5748744.html
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You’re forgetting the House of Saud is backed by the U.S. MIC.
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Tomgram: Engelhardt, A Record of Unparalleled Failure
http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/175854/tomgram%3A_engelhardt,_a_record_of_unparalleled_failure/
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The author failed to mention that the MIC has become a business, war for profit. Thus, our military no longer serves strictly as national defense, but as a means to generate profit for the arms industry. Yes, Uncle Sam is a hardcore weapons trafficker and a warmonger.
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I don’t have any reason to believe the American Military was ever used exclusively for the defense of the nation from invading hordes. As far back as the late 19th and early 20th century the American Military was used for the defense of the corporate entities that were expanding all over the globe to gain access to natural resources and new markets.
A read of Smedley Butlers’ “War Is A Racket” or Jules Archer’s “The Plot to Seize the White House” will inform most people how the military was at the beck and call of corporate leaders to aid them in their destructive, abusive policies that left nothing but blood and bones in their wake. People’s lives were crushed under the heel of this brutal force.
I’m a believer in what Butler had to say and how he behaved with dignity and respect towards those who served under him. He was always willing to roll up his sleeves and work alongside his men which lead to his being a beloved leader and engendering great loyalty from those who knew him.
When I hear Derrick Jensen speak about bringing down IC I can’t really see him as a leader of the stature of Butler. Jensen seems intent on sending others out to do the things he wouldn’t do himself. Perhaps that is one of the reasons he and Aric McBay wound up going in different directions as well as Jensen’s disgraceful lack of support for the Trans segment of the GLBT community.
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True about War being a racket. The business of war has just gotten bigger and more powerful.
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“Rivers are key links in the global hydrologic cycle, are important networks for biogeochemistry and ecology, and are vital resources for human civilization.” Behold the Amazon, the largest river of them all by far:
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Climate change study says most of Canada’s oil reserves should be left underground
Fully exploiting oilsands would contribute to catastrophic warming, scientists say
http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/climate-change-study-says-most-of-canada-s-oil-reserves-should-be-left-underground-1.2893013
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And here is pretty well the only thing most over privileged Canadians care about. The Calgary Herald is the Tar Sands bought and paid for mouth piece. Note the ever hopeful predictions of a quick turn around by the fully ordained econopriest. Such faith.
ATB forecast predicts oil prices will cut Alberta’s growth in half for 2015
http://calgaryherald.com/business/energy/alberta-economic-growth-slashed-by-half-in-2015?__lsa=dd22-4c58
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The cancer of techno-capitalist carbon man will soon die off as its host reconfigures biospheric conditions to the exlusion of most multi-cellular organisms.
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Peter Ward: “Engineering our way out is our only hope, that I can see, but engineering our way out will only work if we recognize the limitations of engineering our way out…that we have to take dire steps soon or it will be too late.”
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Worth watching as well…
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Help me out since I don’t have time to watch this. What do they suggest we DO about it. I know the problem. What are the interventions they are offering?
I am going to Stockholm the day after tomorrow to pursue the Nobel Prize, as in my video, for Dr. Herman Daly. That is just one of the interventions I am onto.
The saying has never been truer that if you are not being part of the solution then you are only being part of the problem (I’ve varied that saying a bit here). We are all consumers. How many of us are giving back? You are. You did when you promoted my briefing. I’d like to get you to help it go viral. We need to reach a ‘social tipping point’ before we reach the runaway climate tipping point.
My reply…
I’ve posted the video to Reddit in a few places to a response of deadening silence. The problem is that nothing can be done without the leadership and power of government institutions. And therein lies the problem because governments have become handmaidens to corporations. Everything is greenwashed and alternative thought is disparaged and ignored. The masses have been conditioned to be nonthinking consumers. They don’t think and simply parrot soundbites they’ve heard from TV. Without complete honesty and strong action and policies from government leaders about our dire situtation, nothing will be done and the human race will continue stampeding toward extinction. I just read that Brazil appointed a climate change denier as their science minister. There’s no end to the insanity.
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OK people, I’m done with this asswipe Robert Scribbler (AKA Robert Marston Fanney). I posted at his site the video above that includes interviews with Peter Ward and Guy McPherson, and here’s the response from Scribbler, aka ‘Fantasy Scribe’:
My measured response which was deleted:
“Peter Ward is not promoting geoengineering in order to extend the burning of fossil fuels. You throw scorn at people without having full knowledge. Scientists like Ward are advising that such methods are likely needed to stop the catastrophic melting of the poles which is already well underway. Playing with renewable energy is not going to prevent this from happening, and attempting to convert industrial economies to run solely on renewables over the next half century without making radical changes to our growth-dependent economy and energy-intensive way of living is not a feasible solution, as Germany is learning:
“Germany is burning more coal than at any point since 1990.“:
“We already are on the edge of what is possible,” Mr. Löllgen said in an interview at his Düsseldorf office. “Is it worth it if we as a country succeed in reaching our targets in reducing carbon emissions, but sacrifice good jobs and our industrial base?”
Notice that Ward said “we have to take dire steps soon…” This means that we have to make big sacrifices in the way we live and not cling to the current system which is unsustainable.”
Scribbler further commented:
My response which was also deleted:
“McPherson is stating a simple fact when he says that oil has been a master fuel for industrial civilization. I don’t know of any expert in any field who would discount that statement. Again, you heap scorn on people without understanding them or what they said. Your blanket acceptance that “renewable energy” will replace fossil fuels for industrial civilization is naive and not supported by the facts of the real world. It’s well documented that corporations use investments in renewable energy to greenwash and cover up their environmentally damaging practices.”
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Scribbler is the typical latte liberal who refuses to admit that industrial civilization will be coming down. No amount of fantasies about powering this monster with “renewable energies” is going to stop the collapse.
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Scribbler quickly posts, “Denmark Kicking Fossil Fuels Addiction With Record 39 Percent (and Growing) Wind Generation”
Once you take your “greenwash” blinders off, you realize the following:
But there’s a major caveat afoot here, as well. Wind may have powered nearly half of Denmark’s electricity demands, but The Local points out it’s still a tiny amount of the country’s overall energy usage:
But while wind power accounted for nearly 40 percent of Denmark’s electricity in 2014, wind only covers about five percent of the nation’s total energy use. According to the Danish Energy Association, electricity only makes up one tenth of Denmark’s total energy usage and the use of fossil fuels like oil, coal and natural gas still accounts for about three fourths of Denmark’s total energy use.
So while a new world record for wind power is great, Denmark—and the rest of us behind it—still have a long, long way to go when it comes to weening ourselves off carbon-heavy energy sources. [Think Progress]
http://gizmodo.com/denmark-just-set-a-major-world-record-for-wind-energy-1678092048
…What about the much-heralded renewable transition of Denmark? There coal use is falling and around 21 percent of total energy is sourced from renewables. Denmark holds the world record for wind energy capacity compared to population size. Unlike many other countries where wind energy is firmly controlled by large energy companies, Denmark has seen strong support for locally owned wind energy cooperatives, widely considered an inspiring example of clean, community-controlled energy. Nonetheless, wind energy in Denmark accounted for just 3.8 percent of Denmark’s total energy use in 2010.
Bioenergy accounts for a far greater percentage of Denmark’s “renewable energy” than does wind – and indeed for a greater share in the country’s overall energy mix than is the case in any other European country. As in Germany, Denmark’s bioenergy includes biofuels for transport, which studies show tend to be worse for the climate than equivalent quantities of oil once all the direct and indirect emissions from deforestation, peatland destruction and other land use change associated with them are accounted for. And it includes wood pellets, with Denmark being the EU’s, and likely the world’s, second biggest pellet importer after the United Kingdom. Most of those pellets come from the Baltic states and Russia, from countries where clear-cutting of highly biodiverse forests is rampant. Studies show that burning wood from whole trees can be worse for the climate than burning coal over a period of decades or even centuries….
http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/27392-abundant-clean-renewables-think-again
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Renewables have become a crisis cult. Providing contrary evidence makes you a heretic to the climate cause in the eyes of the faithful. Basically Scribbler accused you of being in a league with the Devil “Sorry Mike, we won’t have any more fossil fuel company and billionaire-based geoengineering promotion here.” and banished you from the flock in one sentence That’s how the religious do it (I know you were not part of his flock). For the latte liberal being unplugged/disconnected is unthinkable. Their faith is no different than the denier or nuclear energy to the rescue cults. None of the faithful will believe it until they are walking among the ruins of industrial civilization. The wizard Greer had similar observations in his post yesterday:
” Still, I suspect the next big energy bubble is probably going to come from the green end of things. Over the last few years, there’s been no shortage of claims that renewable resources can pick right up where fossil fuels leave off and keep the lifestyles of today’s privileged middle classes intact. Those claims tend to be long on enthusiasm and cooked numbers and short on meaningful assessment, but then that same habit didn’t slow the fracking boom any; we can expect to see a renewed flurry of claims that solar power must be sustainable because the sticker price has gone down, and similar logical non sequiturs. (By the same logic, the internet must be sustainable if you can pay your monthly ISP bill by selling cute kitten photos on eBay. In both cases, the sprawling and almost entirely fossil-fueled infrastructure of mines, factories, supply chains, power grids, and the like, has been left out of the equation, as though those don’t have to be accounted for: typical of the blindness to whole systems that pervades so much of contemporary culture.)”
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Scribblehead has put himself in the same conspiracy camp as the geoengineeringwatch-chemtrail knuckleheads.
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Scribblehead sayz…
The big business/big oil strategy seems to be
1. Depress and demoralize people about renewable energy and other sustainability solutions as much as possible.
2. Which keeps people hooked on the same old crap (fossil fuels, bad practices) if they buy it.
3. Which allows cynical pricks to capitalize on disasters and … Wait for it…
4. Make billions selling geo-engineering ‘solutions’ that probably won’t work.
Hello pure oil company energy gamesmanship. It’s not just a race to the bottom. It’s a race to the evil.
It’s as if cigarette companies had a stake in lung cancer treatments that would ultimately be more profitable with the most extreme risk of patient death.
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Scribbler has totally jumped the shark. Now he’s painting Denmark as some wind utopia.
http://theenergycollective.com/robertwilson190/344771/can-you-make-wind-turbine-without-fossil-fuels
I guess this is why they need to make a scramble for the arctic as well:
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2015/01/07/arct-j07.html
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Actions speak louder than rhetoric:
Denmark is the European Union’s (EU) only net exporter of oil. The Nordic state’s oil exports totaled approximately 13.7 million barrels of oil equivalent in 2013…
…Based on current trends, DW predict Denmark’s ongoing issues with North Sea developments will see it become a net importer of oil by 2021. By this time, oil production will likely have waned to around 130 kb/d – the country’s lowest daily output in 30 years.
http://www.douglas-westwood.com/news/info.php?refnum=919
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Thanks for posting this link and the followups.
http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/27392-abundant-clean-renewables-think-again
A few weeks before Almuth Ernsting wrote that piece, I had emailed her my anti-green energy rant. I saw in her article a few sentences that were almost word for word what I sent her, very gratifying. Thanks to Apneaman for suggesting I stop preaching to the choir and reach out to a wider audience. Keep up the good work folks.
The reason there is so much renewable energy propaganda is because GE and the mining consortiums love the extractive resource intensity renewables offer. I posted a comment on today’s truthout.
http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/28447-why-carbon-should-be-left-in-the-ground
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Hey Robert. I read your story on NBL, but I no longer comment there. Good for you for finding someone who helped make you happy. Of course that kind of life changing transformation brought about by love is considered wrong in the rational scientific progress pop-physcologly mindset of today. You must be a fully functioning, baggage free, happy, well adjusted member of society with strong career and financial goals and a well laid out life plan to your last breath before thinking about attempting a relationship. In other words, you must become a “brand” before putting yourself on “the market”. I can’t tell you how many people I hear parroting all that relationship tripe as if it is gospel. I think a 50% plus divorce rate, and all time high of people living by themselves in the west confirms that their “healthy relationship” strategy is just another never ending consumer product. Go to any dating site and see the people list their requirements for a partner just like they are ordering extras on a new car or vacation package; everybody wants an all inclusive partner/deal. Corporate consumerists mentality is ubiquitous in every realm of life. I have known a number of men who were on the highway to hell and/or rudderless and changed for the better after meeting the right lady. It happens. Apparently, humans need to be with and around other humans and to care for each other to thrive and that can’t be packaged bought and sold.
Glad to hear you found an audience in need of catching up on reality. Your doom seeds will probably help awaken some person(s) to take steps to prepare and lessen their suffering. That is about one of the only choices we have left ourselves.
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I like the Inuit solution, simple but effective. How that scales up to 7-billion-going-on-9-billion people is hard to say. Throw in trillions of dollars in military spending by the “kunlangeta” and we have a real problem.
What “Psychopath” Means
It is not quite what you may think
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/what-psychopath-means/
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Activists Plastered the Tube with Posters Telling People Their Jobs Are Bullshit
http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/david-graeber-pointless-jobs-tube-poster-interview-912
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Ozzie Zehner:
“I would say that the environmental movement has relegated itself to cheerleading and mindless chants and that it’s time for us to step away from the pom-poms. I encounter a boundless enthusiasm for creating positive change when holding dialogues with environmental groups. Unfortunately, the mainstream environmental movement is channeling that energy into an increasingly corporatist, and what I call a “productivist,” set of priorities.
Now I admit, it’s difficult to say we’ve ever had a truly transformational environmental movement, but if you go back 50 years, activists were at least on a far better path. Prominent environmentalists were living modestly, challenging dominant economic assumptions, and imagining durable strategies for human prosperity that were more in tune with the non-human planet. That humility has largely eroded.
The modern environmental movement has rolled over to become an outlet for loggers, energy firms and car companies to plug into. It is now primarily a social media platform for consumerism, growth and energy production – an institutionalized philanderer of green illusions. If you need evidence, just go to any climate rally and you’ll see a strip mall of stands for green products, green jobs and green energy. These will do nothing to solve the crisis we face, which is not an energy crisis but rather a crisis of consumption.
There is an impression that we have a choice between fossil fuels and clean energy technologies such as solar cells and wind turbines. That choice is an illusion. Alternative energy technologies rely on fossil fuels through every stage of their life. Alternative energy technologies rely on fossil fuels for mining operations, fabrication plants, installation, ongoing maintenance and decommissioning. Also, due to the irregular output of wind and solar, these technologies require fossil fuel plants to be running alongside them at all times. Most significantly, alternative energy financing relies on the kind of growth that fossil fuels drive….”
http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/15588-power-shift-away-from-green-illusions
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A friendly “Be Careful” alert.
Oil-Qaeda’s new strategy is to point out the futility of alternative, renewable, “green” energy.
It is a massive propaganda campaign (Agnotology: The Surge – 14).
How do we discern them from us?
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Because they won’t entertain any criticism of capitalism or the Washington-Wall Street-Pentagon complex or American Empire.
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And of course they will claim climate change since rhe industrial revolution is just part of a natural cycle.
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Hi Mike. I saw your comments on ourfiniteworld and I’ve shared your indignation in the past. Unfortunately, the system is on autopilot now. It’s coasting on its own bloated mass and blighted short-sightedness. Homo Colossus will have fun,fun,fun, ’till Nature takes the T-Bird aWAYeeeay.
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Homo Colossus! good one.
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It’s from Catton, Jr. The title of Mike’s essay is revealing: we are spectators. Impotent. This leviathon has metastized beyond any individual’s ability to cope. Someone once said capitalism creates the conditions for its own demise. It is self-annhilating. Enjoy the show.
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I wrote this a while back:
https://collapseofindustrialcivilization.com/2014/04/20/overpopulated-by-homo-colossus/
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True, there is no awakening the man who is asleep even while he is awake.
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And many of those people on her site, including Tverberg, are really clueless about the severity of manmade climate change.
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Even the climate simulations have consistently underestimated the severity. Then there are a whole slew of deniers who will always find some other explanation even if you threw them into a furnace. I think it was Colbert who chided their triumphant citation of the latest blizzard as disconfirming evidence with the parallel in faulty logic: ‘there’s no hunger in the world because I just ate.’ These are the same people who celebrate humanity’s accomplishments with the hackneyed expression, “you can accomplish anything if you put your mind to it’ forever on their lips. Apparently, accomplishing climate change isn’t one of them. One must remember, ‘always think good thoughts.’ Only people divorced from reality and whole systems could manufacture such whimsical nonsense as New Age spirituality. Apparently, there’s a group of folks who are under the impression they are plants. They believe they can live on air and sunshine alone. By all means, please carry on with this delusion. Sartre was only half right: Hell is a certain order of other people and Nietzsche had cause to lament the common man.
Greer had a piece awhile back on how ‘global warming’ was a misnomer tantamount to bad PR. It would have been better to call it ‘global exergy exacerbation.’ Unfortunately, this rhymes with masturbation – the likeliest association people with sharp black and white world views would make. I’m convinced the biggest contribution most people will make toward mitigating carbon footprinting is when they are dead.
Speaking of Greer, he’s moved beyond repeating posts to repeating whole sections within the same essay. Perhaps it’s owing to a new and enlarged audience, but his promised response to the crisis was already dealt with in his green wizardry project a few years ago. If he didn’t have to drum up new purchases of his books, he could simply provide a link. Oh well, capitalism isn’t dead yet.
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good comment. I read Greer’s blog for a while, but there were too many instances of scientific ignorance for me to keep going. Also his embracing homeopathy aggravated me, Did you here about the homeopath who decided to commit suicide? Took an underdose.
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Gail is a nice lady and does much fine work, but her final paragraph shows how strange human think is.
“We don’t have much time to fix our problems. In the timeframe we are looking at, the only other solution would seem to be a religious one. I don’t know exactly what it would be; I am not a believer in The Rapture. There is great order underlying our current system. If the universe was formed in a big bang, there was no doubt a plan behind it. We don’t know exactly what the plan for the future is. Perhaps what we are encountering is some sort of change or transformation that is in the best interests of mankind and the planet. More reading of religious scriptures might be in order. We truly live in interesting times!”
Why would any higher being create such a wonderful gift as the earth just so we could shit all over it and each other? The single thing that is in the best interest of the planet would be for mankind to go away forever, yet in spite of the fact that we are clearly destroyers, it somehow is always about us. I guess that crisis cult thinking is to be expected in these interesting times and the record shows that it is the common response to failing societies.
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Maybe she should turn to Matt Savinar for an Astrology reading.
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I had to look that dude up. Lol cognitive compartmentalization is both fascinating and disturbing. Astrology is as equally effective as praying….and animal sacrifices.
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I would guess that the behavior of 98% of people is dominated by social and emotional areas in the brain and that adept ass-kissing and technological knowledge go hand-in-hand in successful self-promotion. The intellect, which must be built over long periods of time, is either missing or is captured by technological education. Most would rather let a gut feeling (a subconscious decision) guide their behavior, and many simply cannot deviate from making an emotional or ill-informed choice. Next presidential election we’re going to have a choice between Hillary and Jeb and what’s your gut feeling about that? Makes me want to puke. Most people won’t do anything reasonable based upon an honest appraisal of reality, their subconscious and social minds must be snake-charmed into going along with the program and the program must be sold to their social minds, not their stunted intellects, which could reject the desired program. Can’t sell it reasonably, then make it impossible to say no by fabricating moral atrocities like was done in Kuwait during the Gulf War. Babies being removed from incubators and left to die? The simple moral mind is outraged and manipulated into action. Unfortunately, our leaders follow their subconscious desires towards the power and money while constructing lame and well-worn rationals like “I’m here to help the people.” Rather, in truth they should say, “I’m here to help the corporations and the corporations are here to enrich me. But don’t be forlorn little mindless man, the corporations will also help you with $10.00 an hour jobs by the bucketfull and all the tasty frankenfood you can eat. I promise.”
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Hillary or Jeb
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http://srsroccoreport.com/germany-death-of-renewable-energy-bring-on-the-dirty-coal-monsters/germany-death-of-renewable-energy-bring-on-the-dirty-coal-monsters/
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Interesting interview mainly about abrupt climate change:
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Alarm over Kara Sea permafrost thawing
“Remember the big sinkhole on Yamal Peninsula discovered last summer? Scientists have now discovered leaking methane gas from the shelf west of Yamal. That is where Gazprom will drill.”
http://barentsobserver.com/en/arctic/2015/01/alarm-over-kara-sea-permafrost-thawing-09-01#.VLA1Oh25ebY.facebook
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The terror attack in France was bad, but the propaganda is over the top. There were probably ten people murdered in Chicago last night and four were gunned down in San Francisco while Air Force drones are blasting “radicals” in the Middle East from the skies. But the news from within the tribe is never reported and magnified as much as attacks coming from “radical Islam.” Why not a sensational report about how 80% of Americans will soon be unemployed and be completely unable to “adapt” to an ecosystem killing climate change? No, no, no, we have to report for days on end about a few terrorists in France. Why? Undoubtedly they’re trying to soften us up for the next round of meddling in the Middle East and the necessary controls to be implemented in das Heimatland. In reality, the whole thing is ape-shit insane.
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Good observation. Capitalist carbon man cannot let a few malcontents ruin the party of global resource extraction and maximum energy consumption. It’s a distracting sideshow that keeps the masses in fear while the corporations clamp down even further by lumping any sort of dissent as “hate speech” and “terrorism” which interferes with their plunder of the planet.
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The most disturbing thing to me is how, in many of the press reports, they have started using the term “Islamist” as shorthand for “radical militant terrorist”. The removal of any qualifier, such as “radical Islamist” or “militant Islamist”, is a subtle but monumental change as it paints all 1.6 Billion followers of that particular religion as being “the enemy” thus setting us up for a truly global clash of civilizations. A world class psy-op if there ever was one.
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All the bullshit about freedom of speech, the pen is mightier than the sword, etc.etc.
So I think, why not publish a picture of Jesus kissing a man and see what happens?
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We are the asteroid…
Some say the end is near.
Some say we’ll see Armageddon soon.
I certainly hope we will.
I sure could use a vacation from this
Bullshit three ring circus sideshow of freaks…
Some say a comet will fall from the sky.
Followed by meteor showers and tidal waves.
Followed by fault lines that cannot sit still.
Followed by millions of dumbfounded dip shits…
Mom’s gonna fix it all soon.
Mom’s comin’ round to put it back the way it ought to be…
…I’m praying for rain
And I’m praying for tidal waves
I wanna see the ground give way.
I wanna watch it all go down.
Mom, please flush it all away.
I wanna see it go right in and down.
I wanna watch it go right in.
Watch you flush it all away.
Time to bring it down again.
Don’t just call me pessimist.
Try and read between the lines.
I can’t imagine why you wouldn’t
Welcome any change, my friend.
I wanna see it all come down.
Bring it down
Suck it down.
Flush it down.
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Human cognition is trapped between the cellular technological system of which it has little control and the macro scale technological system of which it has little control. Human eukaryotic cells gave us shape and behavior through regulation of growth, ontological regulation so that we would fit somewhere in the ecosystem. The technological system is an anomalous growth which has put the greedy human ape at the helm of an technologically evolving system that is incapable of creating the tools to control itself. The ecosystem was complete and co-evolved. The human technological growth is an outlier, something that will never “fit” within the framework of biological life. It can only grow to satisfy the needs and desires of ever increasing numbers of humans that believe they are escaping boredom, suffering and death, when they are actually creating their own death trap and forever destroying the natural complexity surrounding them.
We seem to be as blind as a bacterial or fungal colony in a petri dish. I like to read the peak oil blogs where they discuss how we can use such and such new technology to suck that much more nutrition out of the ground, even as the waste that increasingly permeates their surroundings will eventually terminate them. A bacterial colony would do the same, switching to new more expensive enzymatic tools to take advantage of lower EROEI resources, even as the wastes continue to build. And meanwhile, faint communications from within the cells warn of an impending collapse and a terminal destination (that’s us). But it doesn’t matter, it’s equivalent to speaking to your own cancer cells to slow down, stop growing, you’re going to ruin the whole damned body. We are capable of battling a growing cancer within our own bodies with limited effectiveness, but when anyone suggests limiting our own cancerous growth within the ecosystem, the greedy, dopamine-loving brain says “No way!”, and searches for a technology to suppress the externalities resulting from our growth while at the same time it tries to create new technologies to open up as yet untapped resources gradients. Thorium, that’ll do it. Sure it will. And neither will a sound currency allow a continuation of slow and steady growth. They think we’re going back to some previous condition of steady advancement, but we’re on a one way trip. We trade priceless species that require billions of years to evolve in exchange for little squirts of dopamine for consumers and a little ego inflation for capitalists. Putting humans, or any species in charge of a second-order technological system is lethal.
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Beautifully written. I recently had a reminder of how dependent the city dweller is to the trappings of modern life. If the plumbing to your house clogs up and the pump inside your Maytag washer goes kaput, you are pretty much dead in the water, literally. Modern man is completely removed from any sort of beneficial symbiotic relationship with nature. We have tipped the scales against planetary homeostasis with our techno-capitalist waste and will drown in its excrement.
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I know how most shit works, own plenty of tools and have repaired much of it as a means of self employment and as a stubborn and frugal, I don’t need/trust anyone DIYer over the years. Doesn’t matter all that much once the grid comes down No power=no pressure=no plumbing. Having practical skills may provide people like me with some advantage in a de-industrialized world, but even guys like me have never learned how to make everyday things 100% by hand; w/o supply chains. We just do the maintenance for industrial civ. I have built lots of furniture and crafts over the years. Once I have decided on the project, it’s jump in the truck and off to one or more of the airplane hanger sized, building supply temples, then back home to create my masterpiece using an assortment of grid powered tools designed and refined over the last hundred years or so. Lay out, some sanding, staining and painting are about the only things I really do without being plugged in….except for the lights.
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Nothing fixes overshoot except collapse.
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W/O power, how many of us could survive more than a few weeks or months? My husband and I have a tree farm with several ponds, a garden, pet chickens, freezer full of deer meat and a generator, but the generator needs gasoline. If something happened to the grid, gasoline will be hard to come by. If the grid goes, what happens to the government and who stop your land from being seized?
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From http://cluborlov.blogspot.kr/2012/10/in-praise-of-anarchy-part-iii.html
…” animals obey a certain power law: their metabolic cost scales with their mass, and the scaling factor is less than one, meaning that the larger the animal, the more effective its resource use and, in essence, the more effective the animal—up to a certain optimum size for each animal. The growth of every animal is characterized by a bounded, sigmoidal curve: growth accelerates at first, then slows down, reaching a steady state as the animal matures.
What Prof. West was able to discover is a small set of general laws—formulated as algebraic equations about as simple and general as the laws of Newtonian mechanics—that have been validated using data on trees, animals, colonies of bacteria—all manner of living things, and that provide amazingly precise predictions. As the size of the organism increases, its metabolic cost, heart rate and so on scales as m-1/4 while its lifetime scales as m1/4 (where m is the animal’s mass). The ¼-power comes from the three dimensions plus a third fractal dimension. This is because all living systems are fractal-like, and all networks, from the nervous system to the circulatory system, to the system of tunnels in a termite colony, exhibit fractal-like properties where a similarly organized subsystem can be found by zooming in to a smaller scale. That is, within any fractal network there are four degrees of freedom: up/down, left/right, forward/back and zoom in/zoom out.
Prof. West then turned his attention to cities, and discovered that they can be characterized by similar power laws by which they too accrue greater benefits from increased size, through increased economies of scale, up to a point, but with two very important caveats. First, whereas with living systems an increase in size causes the internal clock to slow down—the larger the size the slower the metabolism, the slower the heart rate and the longer the lifespan—with cities the effect of greater size is the opposite: the larger the city, the larger is the metabolic cost and the energy expenditure per unit size, and the more hectic is the pace of life. To keep pace with the metabolic requirements of a growing socioeconomic system, socioeconomic time must continuously accelerate.
Second, whereas all living systems exhibit bounded growth up to an optimum size, socioeconomic systems such as cities exhibit unbounded, superexponential growth. These two differences added together imply that cities must reach a point where they must move infinitely fast in order to maintain their homeostatic equilibrium: a singularity. But it is inevitable that they reach natural limits well before they reach the singularity, and collapse.”
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Fractals are damn freaking awesome. Sometimes when I watch a fractal zoom video, I can feel the dopamine drip. This Doc is a great primer.
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From the documentary…
“…art is actually really close to mathematics and they’re just using different language.”
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In other words, cities exhibit the same out-of-control growth as cancer cells.
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Excerpt from Techno-Fix: Why Technology Won’t Save Us Or the Environment
By Michael Huesemann, Joyce Huesemann
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Another Excerpt from Techno-Fix: Why Technology Won’t Save Us Or the Environment
By Michael Huesemann, Joyce Huesemann
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The second comming?
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The Singularity
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And as the technogasm reaches a climax the earth lets loose a methane mega-burp. The end.
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And Man created God, or what came first, Man or God?
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Methinks man has a god complex…
Mankind’s God Complex
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I haven’t read any of the books specifically discussing the biochar ‘solution’, mentioned in a video Mike posted earlier, but it would seem to fit into the ‘Tech-no -fix’ delusion category. With 8 billion tons of extra carbon entering the atmosphere each year, this quantity of biochar would need to be produced each year just to prevent any further increase of atmospheric CO2..With the soils currently producing food for our grotesquely inflated population needed for that purpose into the indefinite future as the population increases about 80 million each year, where is the biomass needed to produce that quantity of biochar going to come from?
No doubt we will see a movement develop claiming that more forests will have to be sacrificed to produce biochar to ‘save’ us. The insanity of industrial civilisation is exquisite. Assiduously unearthing naturally sequestered carbon at one end of the machine, while the other end wanting to expend enormous effort to resequester that released carbon, in order to prevent the deleterious effects of that carbon, and to restore the structure and fertility of the soils which were in excellent condition before agriculture developed and soil erosion, salinization and structural deterioration became the serious problems they are now.
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I like that twist on techno-fix = “tech-no-fix”.
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The balmy islands of Seychelles couldn’t feel farther from Antarctica, but their fossil corals could reveal much about the fate of polar ice sheets.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/01/150108162437.htm
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Important…
Dutton found evidence that global mean sea level during that period peaked at 20 to 30 feet above current levels. Dutton’s team of international researchers concluded that rapid retreat of an unstable part of the Antarctic ice sheet was a major contributor to that sea-level rise.
“This occurred during a time when the average global temperature was only slightly warmer than at present,” Dutton said…
…”Following a rapid transition to high sea levels when the last interglacial period began, sea level continued rising steadily,” Dutton said. “The collapse of Antarctic ice occurred when the polar regions were a few degrees warmer than they are now — temperatures that we are likely to reach within a matter of decades.”
Several recent studies by other researchers suggest that process may have already started.
“We could be poised for another partial collapse of the Antarctic ice sheet,” Dutton said.
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Have not had time to read this yet, but looks interesting…
Energetic Limits to Economic Growth
Click to access 19.full.pdf
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