Originally posted at Prayforcalamity.com
By TD0S
“We do not “come into” this world; we come out of it, as leaves from a tree. As the ocean “waves” the universe “peoples.” Every individual is an expression of the whole realm of nature, a unique action of the total universe. This fact is rarely, if ever, experienced by most individuals. Even those who know it to be true in theory do not sense or feel it, but continue to be aware of themselves as isolated “egos” inside bags of skin.”
– Alan Watts
—
Rains have come hard. Explosions of thunder pull me into a state of half dreaming amid the depths of night. Come dawn, the morning light is not blue, but a thin coffee brown as it fills our cabin. After making breakfast on the woodstove, the millions of rattling hooves racing across our steel roof begin to slow, and then peter out completely. I pull on my overalls and slip on my muck boots to head up to the front of our land where the chickens are no doubt waiting to be let loose into their yard. After gathering eggs, I walk to a back field to scatter our wood ash, and it is there that I pick the first oyster mushrooms of the year off of a wet tree stump.
Soon I am wandering about our land, drawn by the sprouting sea of trout lilies to venture into the pockets and corners where I rarely step. Water runs in the wet weather creeks. Toothwort flowers paint the ground with the faintest flecks of pink. A downed hickory branch has me taking high steps and bracing myself on a maple trunk. My hand feels the rough surface. I move to a shagbark hickory, and drag my fingers down his body. Shaped like tongues of fire, draped down the tree’s mass like plumage, for a moment I think of a rooster’s hackles. I wonder if bats are sleeping under the shagbark’s skin.
Mayapples have just barely begun to poke through the clay, and I look for the Sparassis mushroom which blooms in the same place every year, and looks like a cross between cauliflower and coral, but I am too early for her on this morning. Moisture hangs in the air, the slightest humidity, as I listen to the water in the creek and the songbirds and the wind. I find myself overwhelmed. Here in this moment I am surrounded by – no – interwoven in what I can only call truth. I feel sadness and euphoria and altogether present. All at once it becomes very clear to me that our salvation lies waiting for us in these fecund and wild places, and in the next moment, I think about just how many of them will be destroyed today. As the scent of moss centers me, in region after region the scent of diesel portends doom where bulldozers and feller-bunchers and generators are all rumbling into motion across the globe.
—
What does it mean to know a thing? So much of what we think we know boils down to a complex interaction between an onslaught of various symbols, each of those brought into being by human minds, and then let loose to transmute into an ever evolving web of concepts and ideas, each only as meaningful as would be allowed by the human mind receiving them.
There is a stark difference between what we perceive subjectively with our senses and what we can communicate with our words. My experience of walking through the forest this morning cannot be communicated no matter how much I try. Similee and metaphor offer attempts at emphasizing the color or form of that which I saw or touched, but without seeing or touching yourself there is no possible way for me to truly translate my experience to you. Words themselves are symbolic, and even though you may say “mountain” or “river” the picture that generates in my mind of a mountain or river will not be the picture you had in your head when you spoke. The picture in my head will almost certainly bear no resemblance to the mountain that you spent a month backpacking upon or the river that you went fishing in with your grandfather at age eleven.
Mountains and rivers are fairly fixed concepts too, so imagine the disparity in our minds’ interpretations of such notions as “republican,” “wealthy,” “patriotic,” “good,” “happy,” “sane,” or “environment.” It must be true that a great bulk of the time we are not even speaking of the same things when we are speaking of the same things.
The world is being killed. The living skin of the planet on which we reside is being killed. It is people doing the killing and they are doing it for reasons they often can’t really comprehend. They are told that they need to do what they are doing, and the words used to convince them are symbols and representations of concepts which are even murkier symbols and representations of…of what really? It doesn’t even matter. It is noise. Human noise. A cacophony of the howling mad all yelling in a disharmonic unison. It is a story that is just good enough to convince people to point guns at each other while they command those others to work.
It is a story that means nothing to forests, rivers, mountains, and oceans.
—
“Moloch whose mind is pure machinery! Moloch whose blood is running money!
Moloch whose fingers are ten armies! Moloch whose breast is a cannibal dynamo!
Moloch Whose ear is a smoking tomb!
…
“Moloch whose love is endless oil and stone! Moloch whose soul is electricity and banks! Moloch whose poverty is the specter of genius! Moloch whose fate is a cloud of sexless hydrogen! Moloch whose name is the mind!”
From Howl by Allen Ginsberg
—
Our delusion spins away from center caught in the centrifugal force of entropy. We are animals endowed with functions of body and brain to move through our environment successfully navigating the challenging and changing conditions before us. Somewhere along the way people began altering the environment instead of navigating it. Further along the way people began killing those who warned against the pitfalls of such behavior. Today we try to maintain sanity as we dance with a demon under carnival lights, pretending to be one thing then another then another with the different phases of the day, just hoping to placate the beast with every coin we drop into a parking meter, with every late fee we write a check to pay, with every punch of the time clock when we would rather be anywhere else.
Won’t someone please come and scatter the cinders of this hell? Our prayers are answered by an automated system. Press one to leave a message. Press two to hear these options again.
—
We know that the system is insane, that it doesn’t care for us, that it is killing the planet, and that it grinds our spirits into meal along the way. So why retreat further into the isolation and alienation that is laid out for us like a deathbed? Why spend so much time logging on to forums and chat boards and reading the assessments of strangers? Are you are seeking a friend, or maybe a sage? Are you looking for someone to finally tell you that we all in unison are going to stop playing the game on the count of three?
Here is the best I can do for you: Log off. Sign out. Shut down the tablet, the phone, the laptop. Sell your television, or hell, just destroy it so it doesn’t poison the next person. I know that existing within this paradigm is painful. I know the weight and misery that dealing with all of the requirements forced upon you by other people, faceless and nameless and uncaring, can generate. But retreating into the wrinkles of the Leviathan’s pale smile is not the cure. We cannot rescue and resuscitate our spirits when our blood courses with alcohol, Prozac, and corn syrup. We cannot slay the loneliness in doors, tribeless, illuminated by the dim glow of a screen.
Further, you need to stop looking for a plan. Stop trying to figure out how to make the workable work or the unsustainable sustain. Society is the demon. Civilization is the leviathan. The wise of Middle Earth knew that no good purpose could be achieved with the dark lord’s ring, it had to be destroyed in the fires where it came into being. Society is not redeemable. It cannot be made good.
So let up a big Bronx cheer to all of the politicians and bureaucrats and high-minded engineers and NGO white collars who continually try to sell you their version of the scheme by which the demon can be bridled and made to do the bidding of the righteous. One moment’s glance at a news feed will turn up hundreds of these schemes, littered with plans for progressive taxation, solar panels, deregulation, and geo-engineering. They are wasting what precious little time might remain, and worse, they are convincing you that you are powerless and that they are powerful. The truth is that they are the overseers of this plantation, and you alone hold the key to your liberation.
So I toast to the scofflaws, the turnstyle jumpers, the shoplifters and the squatters. I raise my glass to the tribal warriors who set RCMP vehicles on fire while defending their homes and to the ELF ninjas who by night drive spikes into trees and pour concrete into bulldozer exhaust pipes. I sing “solidarity” to the black clad youth who set ATM’s on fire and to the white haired granny who flips the police the bird from the bus window as she makes her way to knitting group. If society is irredeemable, we must be anti-social, and breathe the liberated breath that comes with finally giving ourselves the permission to feel such things. We can choose how we manifest such feelings into action, and in no way do I expect anyone to do anything they deem inappropriate for their set of circumstances. Your individual resistance can be poetry, it can be stealing a box of pens from work, it can be the time-honored tradition of carving your anger into a bathroom wall. All that matters is that we never let the demon in, not completely, and that the part of us that we keep for ourselves remains wild and untouchable
But may I humbly suggest, that we need to touch the Earth. We need to sit in circles with our tribes. We need to experience the world subjectively through our many senses, and to know that our subjective experience of the land around us contains more truth and validity than all of the photographs and recordings humming away on spinning hard drives in an office tower somewhere. We have to value the direct experience of our individual lives and try however we might to cross the divides of time to remember that which the demon and his acolytes have beaten, and raped, and killed to make us forget.
We are the earth made animate, and our brothers and sisters, the animals and forests and rivers and stars, are crying out to us to stop. To please just stop.
I started my series of essays last fall asking, “What are we to do when we simultaneously need a thing and yet are destroyed by it?” The house, civilization, our domestication, the story that we were told and that we re-tell every day, all were supposed to be tools to serve us. It is clear beyond doubt that this is no longer the case if it ever was. We have become the tools of our tools. It is time to bury them. It is time for a new tale to explain who we are, and we are each one of us free to write that tale, and to sing it to our children.
This is me signing off. I have said what I have to say, and it has been hard on my body and spirit to do so. As I type these words the sun now shines down on the red buds and magnolia flowers opening at the tips of the tree branches outside my home. My daughter is playing and I am clicking at keys. The asymmetry of my bent body ignoring the wonders of life in this moment is glaring. Look at your world. Enter into it. For the love of God, go outside, be in the place where you are, and connect with it. Better still, See where it needs defending and defend it. On the count of three.
One. Two. Three…
—
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I always feel overwhelmed every time I visit the Arctic News site and read a Malcolm Light creation. Fucking crazy charts and graphs and zany maps reminds me of playing with that toy in the 1970’s – Sprial-Graph or a visiting a Jackson Pollock exhibit. The guy is talking about frying up methane with lasers……I feel like I ate a bunch of magic mushrooms and I’m listening to one of those bible code dudes……………I guess I should thank the guy.
http://arctic-news.blogspot.com.au/2015/04/north-siberian-arctic-permafrost-methane-eruption-vents.html
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http://peakoil.com/consumption/heinberg-the-great-burning
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I have mentioned the book ‘Poisoned Planet’ by Julian Cribb. It covers many different
facets of the chemical pollution problem. One is the synergistic effects of some of the chemicals entering the environment in the last couple of decades,interacting in ways that have not been tested or understood. There is good evidence that heavy metals and various other environmental contaminants are affecting the development of the brains of children,leading to a decrease in intelligence among the affected populations.All in all a rather depressing read..
The book ‘Collision Course ‘ includes a couple of quotes which I have read before,
maybe some haven’t .One is from Robert Solow, who won a Nobel Prize in Economics : ‘All in all,the world can get by without natural resources’ ,and another is from Julian Simon, who wrote ‘The Ultimate Resource’ ( the Ultimate Resource being the human brain ) : ‘Oil and Copper come out of our minds’
Bjorn Lomborg was greatly impressed by Simon.
The Danish government recently cut off funding to Lomborg’s think tank.He has now moved to the University of Western Australia,and Australia’s current imbecilic government has given Lomborg four million dollars to set up a think tank there.
You are probably on the right track,tdos.How’s that for a nice contradiction? Agreeing that I should be throwing this computer away,while typing my comment on it.
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I can imagine the human brain as a resource. Personally, I prefer white meat.
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The Solow quote should have begun with ‘In effect’,not ‘all in all’. Who needs magic mushrooms when there is a parallel universe out there,inhabited by mainstream economists?
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more like a circle jerk tank
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I’m constantly learning something new. It’s too bad it’s too late to stop extinction with any info.
http://www.wired.com/2015/04/volcanic-versus-anthropogenic-carbon-dioxide-addendum/
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In my corner of town the defiance of the System is heard in the gobbling of my turkey… which gets echoed back by many of the young people.
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I did as instructed and went out to the tiny parcel of land I tend. I looked at the shadows falling across the wildflowers I grow and noticed that, if I just move something, a group of light-starved plants will get more sun. I have been living here for seven years, and I hadn’t noticed before.
A lot of what we do seems to be about the quality of attention that we pay. Not just the degree of attentiveness, but also ways of seeing. I have heard it said that all that LSD does is mediate attention. I don’t have that good a grasp of what this means, exactly, but I am aware that attention is a worthy study in itself.
In my youth I spent lengthy periods hiking by myself in the climax forests of Africa. There, I forced myself to go slowly and look intently at everything, lest I be overcome by the compulsion to make progress and for everything to become a blur. This was never a landscape I could inhabit properly. I was always an interloper. But there I could obtain a tranquility, and a sense that my life and my many transgressions were at least forgivable, that is now lost to me because I can’t easily return.
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Is it unexpected that the human brain would fail to establish an emotional kinship with the natural world and the other cellular societies that slither, crawl and swim in the nourishing fluids of the ecosystem? Maybe, as an organism with an equal footing in the ecosystem, without advantage, we had no need to evolve any “love” of life. It may have been counterproductive for a predator to have strong negative feeling towards killing other organisms. Perhaps a little empathy spilled over, because after all, most other organisms resemble us quite closely, being bilaterally symmetrical, bleeding when cut, breathing, seeing and so on. But the evolved empathy was meant mostly for intra-tribal use, in caring for each other, and today, except for sporadic campaigns to save wildlife, we destroy and butcher without remorse.
The human brain, although evolved to entertain a systematic organization of information and tool-use, is largely incapable of seeing the need to curtail it’s predatory behavior. Most humans have no empathy for those they kill and the few that want to hug a tree are denigrated by a herd of insensitive, unrepentant killers brandishing chainsaws and drift nets. So, manifest destiny it is, until the bloody end, when tribe turns upon human tribe. There is about as much empathy between human tribes as there is between a tribe and the prey it kills. The animosity between the Hutus and Tutsis is instructive. I almost forgot about the nuclear weapons and the demonization of Vladamir Putin, tribal chief of the Russians. Unfortunately, even with civilization’s questionable achievements, nothing has really changed in the minds of humans.
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I find it fascinating that evolution, in a blink of an eye, managed to incorporate dogs into our tribes (for mutual benefit) by tweaking our empathy mechanisms and other chemical bonding signals. Like us, the dogs will love, cuddle and protect those in it’s tribe and then without hesitation rip the throat out of any threatening member of a competing group.
Oxytocin-gaze positive loop and the coevolution of human-dog bonds
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/348/6232/333
Another recent favorite – the human-animal version of butt sniffing upon meeting new individuals.
After handshakes, we sniff people’s scent on our hand
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn27070-after-handshakes-we-sniff-peoples-scent-on-our-hand.html#.VTKMF_AV2g5
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after i stop scratching myself
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Darkening ice speeds up Greenland melt, new research suggests
‘Decreasing albedo
The darkening ice sheet is predominantly caused by three factors, all of which are triggered by the melting caused by rising temperatures, Tedesco says. First, changes to the size of individual snow ‘grains’, which are very small crystals of snow:
“When you have new snow, it’s very bright. As you go through melting and refreezing cycles, the grains get bigger and bigger. This creates a reduction in albedo.”
This is actually invisible to the human eye, Tedesco says, so you couldn’t tell it was happening from just looking at the ice sheet.
Secondly, as more snow melts, it exposes the ice underneath, which has a lower albedo. New snow has an albedo of about 80% but for bare ice this is more like 30 or 40%, says Tedesco.
Lastly, snow on the ice sheet contains particles of dust and soot. When the snow on the surface of the ice sheet melts, the meltwater filters down through the snow leaving the particles on the surface, and making it darker. This can include particles from many years ago, Tedesco says:
“The more melting you have, the more impurities you deposit on the surface. Not because [there are more] coming from forest fires or the atmosphere, but because you have a cumulative effect of all the impurities that were stored in the snowpack over the previous years or decades being released because of the increased melting.” ‘
http://www.carbonbrief.org/blog/2015/04/darkening-ice-speeds-up-greenland-melt-new-research-suggests/
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If I am depleting or declining at 1% per year, when will I be 100% gone?
A decline/decrease of anything at a rate of 1%/yr will result in
49.98% of it remaining after 70yrs. Then…
after 139 years, 24.98% remains,
after 231 years, 9.91% remains,
after 300 years, 4.95% remains,
after 460 years, 0.99% remains.
Finally, after 918 years only 0.00994% remains.
Mathematically, the value of the remaining amount will never be zero,
Canada and Russia kill 30% of the world’s trees each year.
Collapse Data Cheat Sheet:
http://www.reddit.com/r/collapse/comments/311m7d/collapse_data_cheat_sheet/
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Yes, I got the same result using the exponential rate of decay formula. If the rate of decay is 1%, then, after 100 years, 36.60% of what you started with remains, in rounded-up figures.
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whoops i meant kill 30% of all trees that are killed.
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sao paulo is not doing well recently
http://www.euronews.com/2015/04/17/floods-hit-sao-paulo-in-midst-of-brazil-drought/
but who cares, Apple just opens up FIRST EVER outlet in Sao Paulo
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http://arctic-news.blogspot.co.nz/2015/04/the-great-unraveling.html
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http://abc7.com/news/300-homes-threatened-as-prado-dam-fire-spreads/669013/
in the meantime california is burning.
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Generally I do not care for children’s singing or choirs but this really gives one that apocalypse chill. I think the Russian helps with the effect. See scribbler for context.
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The brain evolved as an accessory to the gut, the primitive alimentary canal, to enable discrimination between food particles more or less likely to provide nourishment. All behaviors evolved since then are an elaborations on that theme. It shouldn’t be surprising that those with the strongest competitive drives and greediest dispositions would find it most difficult to resist their instinct. The most successful are the least likely to question their own behaviors and motives. Secondary to the goal of satisfying the alimentary canal (land animals must also contend with thirst), there is the drive to introduce semen into the vaginal canal which has resulted in all kinds of competitive and courtship behaviors from which we greatly suffer today. The behaviors of man seem to be no more under his control than the beat of his heart. Man’s senses reach no further into the future than the gustatory organs of a nematode. What’s for supper?
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Thank you for this thoughtful, heartfelt site. I hope you’ll consider continuing to post now and then, if the spirit moves. I appreciate your perspective and your eloquence. It’s so hard to live in this world as a parent: to simultaneously support our kids in their optimism and joy and grieve at the crazy ever-accelerating destruction of the planet. Thanks to TR who posted Marvin Gaye’s “mercy mercy me” = it came out over 40 years ago, and it’s even more poignant today. I hope you might write here again sometime. It’s fine to say, “log off, sign out” – but I don’t have a single real-life friend who’s aware of our predicament, or who wants to discuss it. Your essays have made me feel less alone. Thank you & best wishes.
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Youre welcome, and thank you for reading. I will probably sit and write again towards the end of the year when the weather turns and I am inside more. I also just dont want to be a broken record, so I should think a while so I actually have something of value to say.
Again, thank you.
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Stay frosty td0s.
foggysunset-kat, the rest of will still be around (maybe), if only to document and mock the absurdity. I only have one single real-life friend who’s aware of our predicament, or who wants to discuss it and he only knows part of it. He had a little girl less that a year ago, so when I provide him with something too dire, I usually don’t hear from him for awhile. After I sent him this link about one of our provinces (BC) retiring scientists, I did not hear from him for almost two months.
Web of life unravelling, wildlife biologist says
http://www.oceansidestar.com/news/web-of-life-unravelling-wildlife-biologist-says-1.605499
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that’s a powerful article, apneaman – very evocative. also, dire. no wonder your friend needed a couple of months break from you! as a parent, i exist in a constant state of cognitive dissonance. the web of life is unraveling (i know); we can plan for a bright & meaningful future (my kids know). two perceived realities, intermixing daily. if i’d really understood then what i understand now, would i have had kids? i think probably not. yet now they’re here, two teens full of confidence & hope despite their awareness of many problems in the world; two teens who make my own small life much better. what a predicament without resolution. there’s no way out but through.
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Ironically sad and funny to those of us with a dark side to humor.
How’s it going to feel if you outlive them and watch them go? It’s really not such an outlandish thought.
Even thought we weren’t supposed see Climate Refugees for decades (there’s that arbitrary date of 2100 again putting it just far enough away that we could “believe” there is still time to do something. How outlandish to think such thoughts) and despite Time magazine’s claim that all those “boat people” trying to get to Europe are looking for “good jobs” (maybe “green jobs”) the truth is that the number of people being effected by Climate Change is now large enough that the story can’t be ignored any longer, therefore it has to be managed so we’ll keep believing what your offspring believe, that the iPhone is the best thing to happen since slice bread. Only we can’t take the truth (the vast majority of us) so we’ve got to couch the story in an absurd umbrella of needing jobs instead of escaping rising sea level, spreading drought, and lack of access to water.
Hey, that’s great that the two disconnected kids make your life worth living. I just can’t help but laugh at the number of people that choose to have kids over the last 44 years when all the information was at their fingertips. That’s why when Hugo Bardi at this blog recently raved about how bright and smart people are in the USA were, I had to challenge him and found him as wanting in brains as Robert Scribbler. And this is one of the authors of “Limits to Growth” no less.
Although Dave Cohen recently went off the rails again, something he has done over the years whenever the topic gets too rough for him to digest, his flatland essays still have some value. Appears you’re having a flatland moment of your own here regarding those kids of yours. Why oh why can’t parents manage to be parents to young people they breed instead of friends. Isn’t a parent’s job to guide children and not offer them a fantasy of what they have to exist in. Imagine if hunters and gathers only offered their offspring dreams instead of the ability to feed themselves.
Adoption. Vasectomies. Tubes tied. I’m taking Pray for Calamity at his word that he’s done and has nothing left to say. I’ve been reading the same stuff from Dave Cohen for years. It’s like those endless Bob Hope specials the talentless kept doing which was supposed to be his last performance.
I’m not a fan of Prays. He drags us through the mud then drags out his offspring like a Hallmark, Lifetime movie so we all go, “Ooooh”, how cute. I would have been impressed by Pray had he taken steps to offer a home to a child born, but with no home. Can’t the guy and his wife offer as much love to something not of his DNA? Sharon Astak seems to have managed to do this.
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Sharon Astyk’s foster-parenting is incredibly commendable; unfortunately, she also chose to bring 4 biological sons into this dying world.
Here’s a short clip of the brilliant UK show “Utopia” that is most gratifying for us non-breeders:
“His birth was a selfish act. It was brutal.”
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Climate plans put world on track for warming above agreed limits
http://www.trust.org/item/20150417153806-kqwv3/?source=fiOtherNews2
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World’s mountain of electrical waste reaches new peak of 42m tonnes
The biggest per-capita tallies were in countries known for green awareness, such as Norway and Denmark, with Britain fifth and US ninth on the UN report’s list
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/apr/19/worlds-mountain-of-electrical-waste-reaches-new-peak-of-42m-tonnes
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i think you sourced much of my data cheat sheet so thanx great work
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A man places pistol to his head and pulls the trigger. The copper-coated lead projectile begins its trajectory down the short barrel. Just as the trigger is pulled there are regrets, but no time to stop what is about to happen, the splattering of brain tissue onto a near wall and sudden system failure. Civilization is like this, having put the fossil fuel/technological gun to its head years ago and having pulled the trigger, the bullet is on its way and there’s no time to change the outcome. It’s just going to happen and it’s going to be a mess. Sudden system failure, no more glucose for what remains of the brain, no more electric for NSA spy centers, no more gasoline to circulate metabolites along the roads and rails. Sudden stop…………. and then the radioactive rot begins. If you are at the far end of the system, like a small insignificant inhabitant of a cell in the large toe, you will know that death has occurred when the distribution stops, the stuff you need to live, and it doesn’t start up again. Then, if you’re lucky you will be the equivalent of a single-celled organism again, using what tools you have around the house to grow food or collect rainwater. Look again, straight ahead, there’s something coming down the barrel at industrial civilization.
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Unsilent Spring
——————–
This Spring the bird calls will be a deafening roar as our servers hum heavily while we churn out millions of tweets about saving earth but, if wishes were fishes, then our hopes would be 90% gone. Most of you don’t understand that your tweeting is killing the earth. I am the anti-hero of the greenwash movement, I’m not a leprechaun who farts rainbows of hope and inspiration. I am a green troll who tries to show you how weak the bridge is that you are travelling on. Like the little boy who never takes out the garbage, I just keep piling fact upon fact until we stand ineffectually small before the sheer edifice of factual waste. Fact, after fact, after fact. If you are looking for hope, you came to the wrong place. Look upon me, for I am death, destroyer of worlds.
Get your Collapse Data Cheat Sheet here:
http://www.reddit.com/r/collapse/comments/311m7d/collapse_data_cheat_sheet/
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https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=faYiz9XOAAA
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Used planet for sale: Great home for heat-loving organisms.
Disclosure: Severe damage from infestation of techno-based, exothermic creatures, but extermination will soon be complete.
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Life’s too short to even care at all, oh
I’m losing my mind, losing my mind, losing control
These fishes in the sea, they’re staring at me, Oh oh
A wet world aches for a beat of a drum, Oh
If I could find a way to see this straight
I’d run away
To some fortune that I,
I should have found by now
I’m waiting for this cough syrup
to come down, come down
Life’s too short to even care at all, oh
I’m coming up now, coming up now
out of the blue, oh
These zombies in the park,
they’re looking for my heart, oh oh
A dark world aches for a splash of the sun, oh oh…
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I just watched the ‘Shrinking Farms’ video Mike posted in the last thread.I was amused at the enthusiasm of the presenter for the ‘Vertical Farms’ enterprise. It would be interesting to see the energy calculations. Assuming the electricity supplying the light for photosynthesis is from a fossil fuel powered source,they have succeeded in producing food entirely without direct solar energy input. A techno-optimist’s dream come true.
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The evolution, the growth, the churning in this industrial civilization will not go on. The entire system is dependent upon easily accessible, energy dense fuels that can be used very rapidly. Rapid use and flow is a necessary condition. There’s not a round two in this process. The energy flow necessary to maintain the infrastructure and metabolism of our large-scale organism is unprecedented, singular, and has passed its peak. Normalcy bias is the norm, tomorrow won’t be much different than yesterday, last week, last year, and this, along with economist’s bubble vision and financial legerdemain will guarantee that normalcy bias is supported until a sudden jolt brings the ape to its senses and panic ensues. Sinister is the fact that in keeping BAU going as long as possible, the door to adaptation and response is being closed as remaining wealth is siphoned away to the central organs of a dying cancerous teratoma. Those in control of this evolutionary freak show will maintain their wealth and privilege, a little core of healthy tissue, even as the remaining structures turn black and gangrenous and the unemployed and homeless humans stew in the necrotic juices of their decaying surroundings.
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Get a load of this…
Planning for the Future: Florida Power & Light has applied for permits to add 2 nuclear reactors to the Turkey Point site (Turkey Point —- it is located at only 1 foot above sea level)
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Are You Ready for the Biggest Environmental Catastrophe of Our Lifetime?
…The team at VICE spent time in Antarctica with glaciologist Dr. Eric Rignot from University of California at Irvine. Here are some key points taken from their visit:
– Glacial retreat is not limited to just Antarctica. Southern Chile is also seeing glacial retreat that is not part of the natural cycle. In the last 10 to 20 years glaciers are retreating more than in the last century. It’s like changing the speed limit on the freeway from 55 mph to 550 mph.
– What is happening in Southern Chile is a precursor to what is going to happen on the Antarctic peninsula. We are in for some big trouble and big-time sea level rise according to Dr. Rignot. Extreme weather is taking hold in Southern Chile, too. A rain event categorized as “14 years of rain in one day” took place last month.
– There are constant NASA flights over Antarctica to measure ice volume and thickness with highly sensitive optical instruments, lasers, ice penetrating radar and more for data collection and ice mapping so changes can be tracked over time. Results from this massive amount of data collection over the years show rapid ice loss. Since 1992 ice has been retreating rapidly along with surface elevation.
– The westerly wind patterns in Antarctica in the last 40 years are stronger than in the past thousand years. The winds are circulating faster. And this pushes the subsurface warm water closer to the glaciers and closer to Antarctica. The end result, you push more ocean heat toward the glaciers thus the glaciers will retreat faster and faster which then turns into sea level rise.
– The glacier retreat rate in WA over the last 10 years has tripled their melt rates; some of the swiftest glacier retreat compared to any ice melt in the world. A kilometer per year. We are too far along to stop the WA sea ice retreat. It is going to fall apart, no matter what.
– There will be a one meter sea level rise in West Antarctic trouble spots like Pine Island Glacier, Thwaites, Haynes, Pope, Smith and Koehler Glaciers. That is just a start. If these areas retreat as predicted, it will mean the rest of Western Antarctica will follow, which would translate to 3-5 meter sea level rise: roughly 6-15 feet. One meter would be a global catastrophic event. This is something humanity is not ready for on a global scale, and it’s about to happen, says Dr. Rignot.
– Atmospheric temps have risen 3 degrees Celsius since the 1950s in West Antarctica. It is one of the fastest growing temp areas on the planet, according to the British Antarctic Survey.
Dr. Andrew Clark of the British Antarctic Survey, Palmer Station Antarctica, concurs:
– Where climate change may not be obvious to us in the U.S. and Britain yet, you can come to Antarctica and see the changes before your eyes.
– For generations to come there is no stopping this trend. It will continue.
– Everyone will be impacted, but especially low-lying countries and land masses near the sea…
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New book asks: Can civilization survive unprecedented climate crisis?
The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that human-caused climate change is already responsible for 150,000 deaths annually. If we continue our current trajectories of “business as usual” as our response to climate change, the WHO expects that between 2030 and 2050 climate change will cause approximately 250,000 additional deaths per year.
According to the WHO, the yearly death rate will include, “38 000 due to heat exposure in elderly people, 48 000 due to diarrhoea, 60 000 due to malaria, and 95 000 due to childhood under nutrition.”
Once “tipping points” occur, non-linear changes will emerge, and the death toll will be much higher.
As author David Ray Griffin demonstrates in his book, Unprecedented: Can Civilization Survive The CO2 Crisis?, we are facing a constellation of unprecedented, intersecting threats that are leading humanity to increasingly severe catastrophes, and possibly even extinction.
The unprecedented, lethal threats identified by Griffin are these:
…
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High mountains warming faster than expected
http://phys.org/news/2015-04-high-mountains-faster.html
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I’ve decided to embrace the apocalypse and move down to the desert.
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At the senile age of 95, James Lovelock embraces techtopia…
At age 95, he has just released a new book—a poignant bit of timing, given that SimEarth just came to an end. A Rough Ride to the Future is part autobiography, part a continuation of his philosophy of Gaia. In it, Lovelock suggests a period of “accelerated evolution”—literally a million times faster than Darwinian evolution—began in 1712 with the invention of the steam engine. That’s brought amazing technological progress (like video games) alongside unprecedented uncertainty about the future of humanity. The catch is, as Lovelock writes, “we are not yet evolved enough to regulate ourselves.” Lovelock says that’ll change in the coming decades with the advent of superintelligent artificial intelligence, a transition that he says humans should embrace because it will help us to bring about a great future and spread throughout the galaxy. – Link
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If “it” can find the energy it will bring control to every aspect of your life, not greater freedoms. Just look at molecular interactions inside metazoan cells to get a clue as to what awaits something in our position. When you’re born, what you do, when you die, decisions made by the system with the wonderful incarcerating and controlling tools you provided it, and this will be known as progress.
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Giant Waves Quickly Destroy Arctic Ocean Ice and Ecosystems
The biggest waves seen in northern sea ice show how this vital cover can be crushed much faster than expected
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/giant-waves-quickly-destroy-arctic-ocean-ice-and-ecosystems1/
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Pre-collapse or post-collapse, is a stateless society a utopian dream?
Excerpt from Julian Young’s The Death of God and the Meaning of Life
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It seems to me that humans would not only have to be stateless but also tribeless to achieve some peace of mind. Whenever humans get together they seem to compete, gossip, form alliances, climb in the hierarchy, and so on. This is a good enough reason to seek relative isolation. If you add in the pervasive insanity and mental handicaps found in most collections of humans, you have another good reason to limit your contact. Basically, society is a matrix of hominid tools involved in a suicidal project of technological evolution. Their common morals and values are those that maintain an order that maximizes the flow of energy and resources, which is not very nice or moral at all, but on the whole rather nasty. Life (including the technological variety) is a process of creating infrastructure through which energy and resources flow, with those having the most flow getting to have the most representation in the system. Starbucks is a good example of expansion due to success in obtaining energy by appealing to the dopamine-fed brain of its human customers. Another good example is BP with fueling stations in every town and technological siphons in the Gulf of Mexico that can go bad and spew black death across vast expanses of the ecosystem. In the ecosystem, trilobites were quite successful, lots of infrastructure, things didn’t work out and they went extinct. Most of the energy processing infrastructure of technological civilization will go extinct too, when the fossil fuels are gone.
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Watch The Birth Of A 17-Mile Iceberg
http://gizmodo.com/watch-the-birth-of-a-17-mile-iceberg-1700342154
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Took a long time for the apes to unlock the fossil fuels – So if the industrial revolution started in 1750 then we have been at it for 265 years. Even if it lasts another 35 years for an even 300 – that’s 3.3 million years of tool making leading to a world ending 300 year party (for some). Damn Dirty Apes indeed
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Stone tools now 3.3 million years old
“That is to say, humans have elaborated upon a technical ability that is latent among all the apes. This technical ability rests upon social learning skills that are necessary in chimpanzee societies, and early hominin societies inherited those skills from the common ancestors of humans and chimpanzees. After millions of years of exploring this technical space, some experiments led to the manufacture of stone flakes and choppers. Possibly one or more experiments led to the manufacture of bone points or piercers, as evidenced at Swartkrans and Kromdraai, and often attributed to robust australopithecines. ”
http://johnhawks.net/weblog/reviews/archaeology/lower/harmand-lomekwi-tools-balter-2015.html
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Stateless, egalitarian, non-hierarchical nomadic hunter-gatherer bands have existed for most of our evolutionary history. Not a pipe dream. We went down the sedentism track and look where we landed. We blew it.
There are so many examples of deluded thinking it is rather pointless to single out examples, but a current essay on the ‘conversation’ irritated me. Titled ‘The future of food’, written by three CSIRO scientists and an associate professor, it discusses strategies for feeding 12 billion people by the end of this century.
There are a list of reasons as long as your arm why we won’t have 12 billion people
alive at the end of this century. Are any of them mentioned? Don’t want to burst that bubble, do we?
I briefly considered posting a comment there,but couldn’t be bothered. Plus there would then be replies by troglodytes who don’t even accept that climate disruption is occurring.
Clive Hamilton at clivehamilton.com has posted a new essay yesterday. I think it is worth reading.
I guess’ egalitarian, non-hierarchical ‘ is a tautology. Never mind.
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I briefly considered posting a comment there, but couldn’t be bothered.
Who can blame you? Domesticated primates, ever mindful of their place on the totem-pole, use status as a guide to determining the value of information. As a commenter, your status is always deemed low; thus, what you have to say will usually be filtered out. If what you say too closely aligns with uncomfortable truths, it will be attacked.
That the perceived status of the speaker is a poor guide to the validity of what is spoken is never considered.
‘They must find it difficult, those who have taken authority as the truth, rather than truth as the authority.’
— Gerald Massey
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Fireworks: Up like a rocket, down like a stick.
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Techno Ghost Dance
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The Technofix Is In: A critique of “An Ecomodernist Manifesto”
“For the ecomoderns, the story of the past and the story of the future revolve around one thing: “Meaningful climate mitigation is fundamentally a technological challenge.” It’s an entire historiography in which the human relationship to the natural world depends essentially on human ingenuity and entrepreneurship. It is not kings, presidents, proletarians or generals who make history — but rather scientists, inventors and engineers, and it is they who will save us.
It’s a Silicon Valley view of the world, one of heroic inventors like Steve Jobs, who disrupt the old and bring in the new to improve our lives. This position is a defense of the status quo and is the same one argued by those who have resisted all climate protection legislation that would disrupt the structure of power, not least in the coal lobby’s appeal to the pipe dream of “clean coal.””
http://clivehamilton.com/the-technofix-is-in-a-critique-of-an-ecomodernist-manifesto/
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More Fatal Earthquakes to Come, Warn Climate Change Scientists
“Evidence from the end of the last Ice Age has already shown that the planet’s uneasy web of seismic faults – cracks in the crust like the one that runs along the Himalayas – are very sensitive to the small pressure changes brought by change in the climate. And a sensitive volcano or seismic faultline is a very dangerous one.”
http://www.newsweek.com/nepal-earthquake-could-have-been-manmade-disaster-climate-change-brings-326017.html?piano_t=1
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You all intuitively know this stuff…
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Well that’s all true, but he forgot to mention that minor detail about the annual multi billion dollar propaganda doubt campaign that uses the latest research in advertizing, neuroscience, PSYOP, evolutionary psychology, behavior economics and every trick refined by religion since it’s invention. All combined and fire hosed at the citizenry 24/7 through every medium available to keep BAU unhindered. Yeah, if it weren’t for that minor quibble that is guaranteeing our doom at the fastest speed possible, I guess I’d be all golly gee willikers too about the whole deal. Maybe I’m just being fussy.
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That’s not science, that’s propaganda which was not the focus of his discussion(The Science of Why People Don’t Believe in Climate Science). People believe what they want anyhow and the propaganda just allows them a crutch for what they have already decided.
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I think that most in the herd have decided that humans are exceptional, separate from the rest of the beasts and destined to live with Gods in the sky and enjoy the fruits of technology resulting from our dominion of the earth. To find out that technological civilization is just another biological event, and a pathological one at that, would shatter the optimistic underpinnings of their minds. The specialness of technology reinforces the specialness of having a God interested only in humans and the reverse, the Godly specialness of humans is what endowed us with our technology.
They don’t realize that by nullifying previous population limiting factors with technology, we have set ourselves up for either killing the planet, incarcerating ourselves within technological quasi-speciated freaks that will simply put species competition on a higher level, or abandoning the information and tools that brought us to this point, which is unlikely since our brains are evolved to seek advantage through innovation of new tools. In the meantime our subconscious brains have us breed like rabbits, especially if we haven’t been distracted by technological existence, and the need for new, more effective tools to plunder the planet are urgently called for as previous wonders of technology leak radiation into the fluids that constitute our bodies..
What’s a simple monkey that just wants to have a good time supposed to do? Ignore all of the above and have a good time, until it’s not possible.
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Just mention your concern for the environment a few times around a business group and you will be ejected or at least shunned. I know this by experience. Environmental concern means more regulation that cuts into business profit and that makes you the enemy. Better just paint things green and get on with business.
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positive feedback – I’m seeing this term used more often now.
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Study: Arctic Warming Will Snowball
Phytoplankton in the Arctic Ocean could amplify warming near the North Pole.
By Jef Akst | April 28, 2015
“We believe that, given the inseparable connection of the Arctic and global climate, the positive feedback in Arctic warming triggered by phytoplankton and their biological heating is a crucial factor that must be taken into consideration when projecting future climate changes,” coauthor Jong-Seong Kug of Pohang University of Science and Technology in South Korea said in a press release.”
http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/42845/title/Study–Arctic-Warming-Will-Snowball/
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We are hitting resource limits, the resource gradients are degraded and it’s becoming more difficult to find easily extractable, concentrated material to feed into the cancer’s distribution system. Their will be further efforts to expand roads, pipelines, etc., into marginal areas, but the food/energy obtained in these areas will be less than the cost of the infrastructure. Of course the infrastructure was payed for with borrowed funds promising a return on investment in the future, a return that will never come. Perhaps the investors will repo the roads and electrical lines that will be entirely worthless. And as the net energy diminishes society becomes anemic and even less able to provide funds to lend for further investment in net negative investments. Lots of growth and no net return sounds like cancer too, at least healthy cells contribute to the organism gaining food, while tumors just eat and diminish the health and functionality of the organism. Let’s just call it unproductive growth, similar in pattern to other healthy growth, but unable to provide an adequate return on investment.
And what happens when growth stops? Can you get your money out? You have to have a buyer, and when everyone is selling, there may be no way to get liquid digits in your bank account or gold in your pocket. You’re stuck with Frack City municipal bonds and no one wants to give you cash or other consideration for them. Your escape to greener pastures has been stymied, cut-off, foiled. You were a millionaire and now you’re nowhere. There won’t be any more chances to build wealth, not a chance, you’re done. Join the rioting masses as they burn and loot, demanding that the bankrupt government ease their burdens. Watch those with any productive real asset in possession bring out the AR-15s to prevent the mobs from stealing anything they have left. All of this brought to you by the wise and sagacious leaders that thought growth could go on forever and that there was a technological rainbow around every corner.
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Gravity data show that Antarctic ice sheet is melting increasingly faster
“The fact that West Antarctic ice-melt is still accelerating is a big deal because it’s increasing its contribution to sea-level rise,” Harig said. “It really has potential to be a runaway problem. It has come to the point that if we continue losing mass in those areas, the loss can generate a self-reinforcing feedback whereby we will be losing more and more ice, ultimately raising sea levels by tens of feet.”
http://www.princeton.edu/main/news/archive/S43/04/11E77/index.xml?section=topstories
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