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As China’s appetite for resources wanes with the bursting of its real estate bubble and America’s shale oil boom fueled by easy credit comes to an end, floundering petrostates are beginning to queue up for bail-outs. Financialization appears to have exacerbated the collapse in oil prices. Of course none of this capitalist boom-bust cycle negates the fundamentals of peak oil; prices will swing upwards again in a few years as marginal producers get weeded out. After all, the world still consumes nearly three million gallons of oil per minute, and only a relatively thin margin separates surplus from a shortage. Most of our energy usage does not involve electricity which is what alternative energies like wind and solar produce. Electricity comprises just 18% of the total global energy consumption of which alternatives make up a tiny sliver. 250 new human beings are added to the planet every minute; each born into a world of depleting resources and mounting pollution; each scrambling to secure the necessities of life. The black stuff will remain the primary fuel supporting this growing population of a globalized technological civilization.
A recent study estimates that if we are serious about implementing alternative energies to satisfy the goals of the Paris climate accord, then upwards of 12 trillion dollars will have to be spent over the next 25 years. This price tag is an investment that is 75% more than current growth projections. At a time when governments have spent their last ammo pumping more electronic money into the economy to try to stimulate economic growth, the prospects of decarbonizing the entire global energy system appears daunting, especially considering the many shortcomings of alternative energies. Time constraints on a planet indifferent to our energy needs are also bearing down on us:
As the Keeling curve creeps irreversibly higher and the gap between rhetoric and reality widens, pipe dreams like geoengineering and carbon sequestration will become desperate Hail Marys for a species whose time is running out. The New York Times editorial by Piers Sellers, a NASA Earth Sciences director who has terminal cancer, perfectly sums up this techno-fix mindset: “…it will be up to the engineers and industrialists of the world to save us.” Keep calm, keep shopping, and await further instructions; the elites have it all under control. Jeb Bush’s recent comment that we should pin our hopes on “someone in a garage” fixing climate change illustrates the widespread delusion that technological innovation, good ol’ entrepreneurial spirit, and capitalist market-based solutions will be our saviours. Ironically, Jeb belongs to the political party hell-bent on defunding public education, a policy that would seem to make those plucky garage inventors even more implausible.
We cannot possibly rely on a system that profits from the very disaster it has helped to create, yet that is the dead-end feedback loop we are locked into. Mexico is a good example of how landscapes and communities are being carved up for alternative energy farms and carbon trading schemes that benefit only large corporations. Even philanthrocapitalism promotes the convenient myth that market forces and the whims of billionaires will solve systemic problems. The precautionary principle has been thrown out the window in the pursuit of short-term profits and power. We have only a vague inkling of nature’s rich complexity and interdependence. The scale of our ignorance is frightening considering our oversized impact.
The truth of our predicament has been criminally concealed since the 1970s by the fossil fuel industry which all the while knew that an overheated Arctic would melt away, exposing fresh deposits of carbon for them to exploit. Unfortunately the bonanza they planned for has not materialized; melting permafrost wreaks havoc on infrastructure and exploration. The cryospheric regions of earth, key geographic features regulating the planet’s climate, were systematically dismantled within the geologic blink of an eye; such environmental changes are imperceptible to the real-time cognitive processing of humans, but in geological ‘deep time’ these events are cataclysmic and portend a dire future for humans. There are more signs that the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) is slowing down.
“We’re sitting on these planetary boundaries right now, argues Rockstrom, and if these systems flip from one stable state to another — if the Amazon tips into a savannah, if the Arctic loses its ice cover and instead of reflecting the sun’s rays starts absorbing them in water, if the glaciers all melt and cannot feed the rivers — nature will be fine, but we will not be.” ~ Johan Rockstrom, director of the Stockholm Resilience Center
The time to avoid critical tipping points in those decades has passed. The projections from the IPCC were downplayed and underestimated in order to continue the destructive business-as-usual:
“…new scientific findings were more than twenty times as likely to support the ASC perspective [that disruption through AGW may be far worse than the IPCC has suggested] than the usual framing of the issue in the U.S. mass media. The findings indicate that…if reporters wish to discuss ‘‘both sides’’ of the climate issue, the scientifically legitimate ‘‘other side’’ is that, if anything, global climate disruption may prove to be significantly worse than has been suggested in scientific consensus estimates to date”.
We’re in the early throes of economic and ecological system failure; headlines grow more alarming each year:
Plastic is projected to outweigh fish in the world’s oceans by 2050. This may happen much sooner since it was just discovered the number of fish remaining in the ocean has been grossly overestimated. We only recycle 5-10% of plastics today and many are not recyclable. It’s cheaper for industry not to recycle and the quality of plastic is degraded when it is recycled. No international body exists that can hope to regulate dumping in the oceans. International ships dump freely without consequence. Unenforceable legislation is heroically passed in bodies of government from time to time, but it remains ineffective. Waste is also shipped across borders to more “business friendly” countries where waste can be cost-effectively dumped.
The warming Indian Ocean is becoming an ecological desert. According to new research, rising water temperatures over the last half century appear to have reduced phytoplankton numbers, threatening to cascade through the food chain and crash the ecosystem. Climate change has been implicated in a rash of recent animal die-offs across the planet. The changes are too abrupt for animals to adapt. Today’s build-up of atmospheric CO2 and other heat-trapping gases is much, much faster than past hyperthermal events. In fact, scientists now fear climate change is happening faster than it has in all of Earth’s history.
Hot days are occurring 145 times more often over the last 10 years than just a few decades ago. Unique World Heritage Sites are being destroyed by climate change. The latest one, an ancient Gondwana ecosystem in Tazmania, burned down to the ground from fires sparked by dry lightning strikes, a direct result of climate change. A warming planet is also providing a growing range of favorable places for mosquitoes, the bane of mankind, to spread pestilence and disease. Our interconnected world can fast-track their dissemination with the help of a single intercontinental plane flight. At the moment, the Zika virus is grabbing headlines with its explosive expansion. Scientists are on the verge of confirming that it has jumped to the common mosquito and the WHO recently declared it an international health emergency. Microcephaly appears to be just the tip of the iceberg for the fallout of this virus. Normal-appearing newborns are suffering ill effects as well. It is believed that the Zika virus was introduced into Brazil during the World Soccer Cup in 2014 when an influx of tourists visited cities throughout Brazil. The 2016 Olympics in Rio will provide a perfect vehicle for the worldwide distribution of Zika.
The refugees fleeing from the war-torn Middle East are only a foreshadowing of the mass exodus to come from regions racked by climate chaos. With ethnic, religious, racial and ideological tensions simmering, we can already see the welcome mats being pulled up in host countries. Recent studies have shown a loss of freedoms for citizens and rise in authoritarian governments around the world over the last decade; this trend tracks with our net energy descent, deregulation, rollback of environmental protection, and pursuit of corporate trade agreements. It also follows historic patterns:
“…history tells us that civilizations experiencing dramatic declines in their net energy uptake usually develop authoritarian political systems in an effort to stave off collapse, but then crash and disappear anyway.” ~Eric Zencey
Historically speaking, the elite are last to feel the effects of their hubristic decision-making, insulated as they are in their positions of wealth and power. Modern ideals and virtues of human rights, social justice, and a strong American middle class have all been aberrations of a civilization built atop a surfeit of energy.
The disparity between MSM news and real world problems like climate change, pollution, growing wealth inequality, the unraveling food chain, etc. are breathtaking. Wrecking the biosphere and bringing on a mass extinction leaves no one unscathed or in any position to survive long-term. Secret plans of survival by the “elite” are simply another myth. The wealthy may be buying up tracts of land in remote areas, but they are perhaps more delusional than anyone else because of how their wealth insulates them from hard realities. Without all those just-in-time supply chains operating seamlessly across a stable planet, no one gets out alive.
Pingback: No One Gets Out Alive | simply invested
Reblogged this on synthetic zero.
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It makes one wonder whether to pray for a quick demise for our species or a more drawn out agony. In either case I doubt if my wishes will have much impact on how it goes. So fasten your seat belts, or not, but this is going to be a hell of a ride down!
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awesome post mike, if you were me I’d love you.
https://lokisrevengeblog.wordpress.com/2016/01/24/no-soil-water-before-100-renwable-energy/
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Pres.Obama an Gov. Brown
Ban Fracking
Now is the Time for Feed in Tariff Clean Kilowatts, Home Owners and Commercial Business owners selling Renewable Energy, Wind and Solar to the Utility !
Dump Net Metering (Second Utility) Third Party Leasing.
Protect Our Communities with Solar Policies that keep the Money in the Wallets and Purses of Head of House Holds.
In Order to Ready Themselves for coming, Record Breaking Rain and Snow, Food Shortages, High Temps, Floods, Fire, Quakes, and Sea Level Rising 220 feet !
With Ca. Residential and Commercial Feed in Tariff
Help Protect Hard Working, Tax Paying, Voting, Citizens from our Fossil Fueled Energy and Water Policies !
Each 1C. Temp Rise, Atmospheric Moisture increases 7%
We have increased Temp 1.2C. and Climbing
1850 ppm Carbon 270
1980 ppm carbon 350
2015 ppm of Carbon 404 and Rising
What will the ppm of Carbon be when Greenland All Melts ?
Diablo Nuclear, San Onofre Fuel Rods, and All Nuclear needs to be relocated to 3000 feet above Sea Level
We must Stop This
Porter Ranch
San Bruno
Kern County Fracked Poison Drinking Water Wells
Santa Barbra Oil Spill 2015
Massive Sea Life Die Off on North Americas Coast !
Greenland is keeping North America Cool, Was Arctics job, waxing and waning for over 3 million years, now almost all Gone.
Pacific and Atlantic Oceans 4 – 16 degrees warmer than Normal
Greenland has 20 feet of Sea Level Rise
Antarctica has 200 feet of Sea Level Rise
Greenland is Melting an Calving, how long before it all Melts ? Arctic Region Warming Twice as fast as the rest of the planet !
Over 400 Nuclear Reactors at Sea Level Now !
Sign and Share for a Ca. Residential Feed in Tariff. Go to the youtube site, look six inches below video, click on Show More, then click on blue link to sign the petition.
Attachments area
Preview YouTube video We Need To Ban Fracking.
We Need To Ban Fracking.
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Nice summation of where we stand or should I say where we fall. I’ve been observing the election news like so many others and what strikes me recently is the emotional investment so many have made in seemingly questionable characters that will straight-out deny reality while promising a rebirth of America. Historically, the selection of a tribe leader or chief must have been about selecting a person with the skills necessary to lead the group away from danger and towards material wealth. Nothing seems to have changed in millions of years. The ecosystem damage is nearly invisible to most, but the evil tribe of ISIL must be dealt with immediately and with great force. In addition, growth and jobs, asset inflation and wages must go up. These genetic/cultural tendencies were fine when nature could pound us down, starve us, infect us and otherwise keep us under control, but we have evolved to create and utilize tools that have resulted in an uncontrollable malignant course.
However, even though we have evolved rapidly to use tools, other parts of our brains are still stuck in the past. We can’t react to the novel danger that surrounds us. Most of the human brain is still suited for pre-industrial and and even pre-tool existence. There are no mental governors to restrain our own self-destruction. In the end High Priest Cruz, Shaman Hillary, King Tuttentrumpen or their successors, will stand at the apices of a primitive stone pyramids, feather adorned with long obsidian knives glistening in the sun. They will promise a return of the rains and crops and healing of the ubiquitous cancerous lumps forming under the people’s skin. They will lie and blame failure on some other tribe (ISIL), the captives of which will be sacrificed for the greater good. And then multicellular organisms will disintegrate back to the microbial existence where neither good nor bad, pleasure nor pain, or party politics shall ever be known again.
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Amen. Beautifully written and a most accurate description of our stunted evolutionary development. Scary to think that the launch keys of nukes sit at the fingertips of an organism that still reacts to existential threats with a reptilian brain response.
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Reblogged this on Foodnstuff and commented:
Another excellent post from xraymike79 at Collapse of Industrial Civilisation blog.
So many people have no idea what’s ahead.
So many stupid, ignorant people in the world, actively facilitating this collapse.
The mind boggles.
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“Most of the human brain is still suited for pre-industrial and and even pre-tool existence”.
So why can some of us understand and see? Where have we come from? Are our brains wired differently from the masses?
Still searching for answers.
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You’re part of that small outlier group in evolution that has advanced beyond the majority.
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This is indeed decade zero. We have hit the hard vertical edge of the exponential curve, and have entered destabilized climate. 2016 is already shaping up to be a year of revelation, of sheepish confessions, and we must overcome the temptation to blame and condemn… Because that will not save us. It will take thousands of solutions, and we have but a few. The grid may soon collapse, and much chaos ensue. Being centered in a crashing world is key, because, amidst these great waves of change, we are also emerging into a greater community of worlds.
Stop thinking this is the only world to pass through this crucible.
Stop thinking this is the only time you have ever experienced life manifest..
Stop thinking humanity is the pinnacle of creation.
Acknowledge there is a mental environment that can manipulate the undiscerning unprotected mind.
Awaken to deeper Knowledge, and allow your ancient memories to emerge.
ameg.me
newmessage.org/the-message
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“You’re part of that small outlier group in evolution that has advanced beyond the majority.”
The rest
Your brain won’t allow you to believe the apocalypse could actually happen
http://io9.gizmodo.com/5848857/your-brain-wont-allow-you-to-believe-the-apocalypse-could-actually-happen
How unrealistic optimism is maintained in the face of reality
How unrealistic optimism is maintained in the face of reality
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http://www.nature.com/neuro/journal/v14/n11/full/nn.2949.html
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I think the warmer oceans thing is very impacted by nuke meltdowns and secret nuke waste dumping into oceans and nuke plant runoff pipes that go (illegally) into the oceans.
On other theme –
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While nuclear plants can emit large plumes of thermal effluent from discharged coolant waters, it’s not enough to be a factor in the global warming of the oceans. Fossil fuels are the culprit for the warming and acidifying oceans. The oceans have absorbed 90% of the heat and 28% of the carbon from human consumption of fossil fuels:
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/climate-consensus-97-per-cent/2015/jul/02/new-study-warns-of-dangerous-climate-change-risks-to-the-earths-oceans
Illegal dumping of nuclear waste has definitely happened, but I think it pales in comparison to the effects of fossil fuels. Fly ash from coal is said to be 100 times more radioactive than nuclear plants:
http://physicsbuzz.physicscentral.com/2015/08/whats-more-radioactive-than-nuclear.html
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xraymike79.
Telling it like it is.
Thanks.
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Seems to me Paul Ehrlich predicted some equivalently scarey stuff some thirty years ago. His Armegadon was slated for about ten years ago. We’re still waiting. Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.
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Translation: “The more things change, the more they stay the same.”
Paul Ehrlich’s basic premise still holds true: “We have a finite planet with finite resources and in such a system you can’t have infinite population growth.” Humans are clever enough to artificially extend carrying capacity and will continue to try to do so until they run out of solutions, and there’s every indication that the problems of overshoot are becoming insurmountable. As they say in business, “Past performance does not ensure future results.”
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If Ehrlich’s basic neo-Malthusian premise still holds true then the most immediate and most serious problem humanity faces is the grotesque over-population of sub-Saharan Africa; which the UN projects to more than double, reaching nearly four billion(!!!) by the year 2050 under current growth rates. Even an immediate reduction to ZPG in this region would still yield a projected population of close to three billion due to what Nathan Kefitz characterized as the momentum of population growth. This is not based on any complex, highly unstable (look up the real meaning of “butterfly effect”), and unproven non-linear system dynamics climate model but basic demographic science supported by simple and proven mathematical modeling. Let’s solve this problem before we move on to less certain issues less amenable to human intervention.
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Ehrlich also said “When you reach a point where you realize further efforts will be futile, you may as well look after yourself and your friends and enjoy what little time you have left.”
That is my attitude, I’m afraid. I’m loosing too many friends by talking about peak oil, declining net energy profit, carrying capacity and how our industrial civilisation will be long gone by the end of the century etc. People can’t cope with the knowledge and prefer not to talk about it; so I’ve stopped.
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Paul admits the flaws in their analysis, mainly that they did not factor in global dimming from man made chemicals. So, we were spared a little time but face the reality that cleaning up our world will only make earth less accommodating for humans.
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This one sums it up nicely .
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What if the world’s leaders have actually decided not to tackle climate change and that it’s easier to deal with the impacts rather than the underlying causes… The Secure and the Dispossesed: How the Military and Corporations are Shaping a Climate-Changed World.
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Thanks. Some good points in this review. ‘Climate catastrophe’ is definitely a better term than ‘Climate change’. It drives me insane when complacent,ignorant slobs respond to discussions of climate with brain-dead replies such as ‘The climate has always changed.’
Thanks for the excellent essay. I look forward to the next essay outlining how to change our trajectory in ten easy steps . (joke)
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I believe catastrophe is a more fitting term than the other I used as “crisis”. There are at least a few fine folks that can see what we actually face in the very near future. I have no children hence no stake in the Earth’s future. I think at least a few of us appreciate what a fantastic planet Earth is want to see a few deserving humans to survive. Lately though, I have my doubts as the current crop of clowns running for office seem more concerned with juvenile antics than addressing real problems. These can be solved with current technologies but I see no resolve by more than a few. Even J Hansen’s new report didn’t seem to garner much MSM attention. So I’ll enjoy my final years whilst the humans left will fight for scarcer resources and lament what a beautiful planet my species destroyed.
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A Columbia University report commissioned by the American Petroleum Institute in 1982 cautioned that global warming “can have serious consequences for man’s comfort and survival.”
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Most human long-term memories are encoded by the hippocampus of the temporal lobe. Stronger memories are those tinged with emotional content, especially rewarding events or painful events. When a thought pops into you mind, the hippocampus is again active, providing a memory in reverse, preferentially recalling rewarding situations. Most abstractions, or thinking unrelated to rewards or avoidance of pain. must compete in mind space against those thoughts that have a natural advantage. People are preoccupied with thinking about rewards and the actions that will get them the rewards. They’re not thinking about why the grass is green and the sky is blue, for the most part, and if they are it is to somehow manipulate that reality for economic advantage and reward. And if some potential reward does not pop into your head, the advertisers will make sure it does. So the typical human is preoccupied with getting a better job to get more money to acquire more rewards. The deteriorating environment which is a negative abstraction, does not make it into the thought queue. The brain naturally pulls up memories of rewards almost to the exclusion of all else. For a human to wake-up in the morning and think about how they’re going to eliminate rewards to help the environment is not conducive to happiness. Instead they’re thinking about where they’re going to eat, what they’ll buy at Wal-Mart, where they’ll go on vacation, what company they’ll invest in to get great returns, where they’ll go to church to get that ole time religion and so forth.
In terms of dieting I wonder which reward is most motivating, to become more sexy and fit into a bathing suit or to become more healthy? I would say being more attractive to the opposite sex is more likely to keep someone on a diet longer. Becoming healthy is too much of an abstraction. The diet industry revolving doors are a testament to the massive number of reward cues in the environment and the inability of humans to resist them for loftier long-term goals.
Most of the advertising is meant to repeatedly cue the reward pathways. Reminds me of car debuts where sexy girls are interspersed with the expensive new models. It’s not about the car, it’s about getting the sexy model.
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Hello James. Your reward/punishment formula for human behavior certainly describes much of what goes on in a large number of us. But not all of us all of the time. It is the aspects of human behavior and possibility that do not fit the rigid materialistic and deterministic pattern that give rise to our species having some hope of growing beyond the dead-end future of mindless machines destroying their environment and themselves. Our ability to act in ways counter to our early levels of adaptation – a form of learning from becoming self-aware and thus changing our behavior by understanding it, and choosing better options – is the key to becoming free agents to some extent from our historic conditioning.
I feel that your analysis of our behavior has much truth in it, but it underestimates the power of developing insight and the corollary freedom to change our inner decision making process in ways that transcend mechanical obedience to older evolutionary patterns. How to do this more efficiently and involve others in sufficient numbers in that movement towards sanity and survival is the difficult task facing us. I do not say this will be easy or guaranteed to succeed, but it is the only course I see open to us. Either we learn to make this evolutionary leap, or we perish.
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I hope that’s the case, but from what I’ve learned, most people cannot overcome the basic evolved wiring of the brain’s reward system through education. Most of their education is for obtaining more rewards. Even the religious education is for obtaining an ephemeral reward. Perhaps some soma or genetic engineering would work, but we’ve already spread everywhere and are trying to make inroads into a now less frozen Arctic. We’re so far down the road with pressure coming from behind that anything less than a wipe-out of billions of humans and their associated fossil fuel use will have any effect. And then, unless you get them all, a new technological/reward system will begin eating at the crippled ecosystem once again. Humans, like all other organisms are about obtaining energy and other resources in a competition for survival and if history is a guide and draconian laws limiting consumption are enforced, then those enforcing the laws will become corrupt and take for themselves an extra large portion of rewards.
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Yes. Your forecast for our species would indicate that in the competition of higher motivations and lower drives, the lower will win out insuring our extinction. And that is a real possibility. But it is not a certainty. And whatever the odds favoring one set of variables over the other, we still have the choice of which forces we will choose to work for – those of a growing enlightened consciousness or those trapping us into a grinding descent into self-destructive barbarism.
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Great comment, James, and very well put.
Sometime in the future (by the end of this century for sure in my view and probably much much earlier in Mike’s view I imagine) industrial civilisation will cease because the Net fossil energy profit will have declined to a level that will simply not support it. The human race will contract to a very small fraction of it’s current number (with appalling suffering/war no doubt) and we’ll be back to an essentially wood burning society with the same living standards as in the Middle ages.
This is inevitable in my view for the very reasons you have put and I’ve come to terms with it. I don’t believe we will become totally extinct though and Earth will recover in the long term.
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Have you read ‘Six degrees’ by Mark Lynas? Once we trigger positive feedbacks from the release of the enormous quantities of methane in sea floor clathrates and CO2 from peat deposits in northern latitudes, the planet is not going to be nearly as benign as you seem to think. Well worth reading. We are on track to trigger those feedbacks.
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I have, David, it’s on my bookcase. I sill don’t believe Earth will be totally uninhabitable for Humans even under the worst warming. In geological time the Earth will recover, no problem.
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Humans were not consciously complicit in the forces of evolution that pulled them towards technology, a new set of information and tools that unlocked previously inaccessible resources. We were, more or less, putty in the hands of an evolutionary process that leaves no stone unturned in the search for energy. Most humans, even today, are not aware that humans are not responsible for their own technological civilization. It is more reasonable to say that physics is responsible for our brief and spectacular divergence from the slowly co-evolving ecosystem. Like a warm current flowing into colder seas, humans opened the spill gate on fossil fuels, released to seek their equilibrium and with this flow of energy built his societies and structures. But instead of an ever circulating current, the human species will end up at the end of some clade as the species that burned everything in sight and then burned-out. To maintain structure we must continuously find something to degrade, to turn into entropic waste with the liberation of heat and we’re doing it so very well with our evolving tools. But when the resources are gone, the once mighty, rapidly growing infrastructure will degrade. Nature has made finding energy rich resources a feel good experience, both for the lizard eating the cricket and for the man slicing through an old growth forest or accessing a massive seam of coal.
Also unrecognized is the fact that man functions in an evolving technological system like RNA functions in the cellular system. Immersed in his new technological system, he seems not to recognize his dependence upon the health of the ecosystem that he believes he has exited. He will never exit until perhaps he designs and builds his own technological replacements to increase efficacy and efficiency in some sort of strange self-defeating effort. But Homo sapiens is still not aware and functions according to the dictates of thermodynamics moving towards an energetic dead-end that cannot be avoided.
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James, I get the feeling you will not rest until you reduce every aspect of the vague, messy, uncertain, mysterious situation of humans in the universe to a set of simple exact equations that will explain and predict everything that can ever occur. Reminds me of (theoretical physicist) Max Tegmark’s contention that the universe is not just describable by a set of equations – it IS all mathematics. Of course I disagree, but I can’t prove my contention, but then again neither can he!
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Math and equations would put my thoughts even further out of reach. Math is a human invention, a matrix placed upon an indivisible reality to facilitate its manipulation. Mystical, magical, emotional thought has been around a long time and has done little but to smooth the way for civilization. Everyone is playing by the rules to get a share of the spoils, earthly and heavenly.
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How big oil spent $10m to defeat CA climate change legislation targeting biz-friendly Democrats to kill key sections
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Q: What did universities learn from the financial crash? A: Nothing
…few have asked what role finance education and research played in the crash, and what influence they could have in the future. These questions are particularly pertinent now, as the possibility of another global financial crisis
The answers are damning. Most finance academics have continued as before, spinning theories (which really are ideologies) of the importance of greed, profit, wealth maximisation and free markets for efficiency and risk-hedging. There is virtually no teaching about history, culture or ethics. Accounting and finance are researched and taught as if they are acultural, apolitical and ahistorical technical disciplines.
The reasons for this go back to the neo-liberal origins of the discipline, and the ways its research is controlled by a conservative elite suite of journals, whose ideology is based on extreme capitalism and wealth creation…
…In his book Debt: The First 5,000 Years, Professor David Graeber of the London School of Economics explores the human history of finance and finds that it is a cultural construct, grounded in social relationships and exchange.
It is only in the past 35 years that finance lost this grounding and become a tsunami which, although shaped by humans through the creation of markets and institutions, is now out of control, and is controlling ordinary people instead. Graeber argues that states have lost the power or the will to shelter their people from high finance and its slavery. They have lost the language and means to resist, as the technical complexity is too much for them…
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I’d like to hear someone weigh in on that which no one wants to ask for fear of ridicule: what about the ET presence? Is there an aspect of their presence here that is having an impact on us? Are we unwittingly participating in a pacification program? How can we sit here and pretend humans are the pinnacle of intelligence, basing our assumptions on only that which we have witnessed in this world? That we have more power in the mental environment (not so much) than our visitors? It seems to me, at some point, you might have to go there.
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I don’t think we need ET’s to shoot ourselves in the feet – we are plenty capable of doing that for ourselves without any extraterrestial help.
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No, but perhaps they are riding the wave we created.
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This reminds me that
Mulder and Scully are returning tonight.
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Who you gonna call? Ghostbusters!!
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Lol. Yes it’s fun to make jokes about what is beyond our comprehension. I wasn’t thinking along Hollywood lines, though. The nature of it borders on paranormal, and that goes beyond the scope of this post, or does it? I mean, it’s fun to be erudite and exquisitely nuanced about our impending demise. The fact remains that we are going to have to do some real soul searching. I don’t want to have to end other people to survive, now that I have awakened and accepted that this is not my first trip here. But spiritual awakening doesn’t mean we can just phone it in and order a shiny new planet, like it says in certain religious doctrines, compete with saviours. We have to redeem ourselves by saving the planet, and one another, and ourselves. We have to heal the planet. I don’t know how this is going to work, but I know there are forces at work that are beyond our comprehension. I know there is help if we want to go there. But we have to be very… Aware and discerning of what is going on around us. This takes slowing down, and allowing our innate inner knowing to emerge.
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Capitalism has only know fossil energy expansion, No one really knows what happens when it starts to contract. My view, for what it’s worth, is that there will be huge currency devaluation to realign debt levels, saving and liabilities back in line with the underlying resource/energy base at some point in the future.
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The question is: which will kill us off first, the methane bomb or the nuclear bomb?
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” Unique World Heritage Sites are being destroyed by climate change. The latest one, an ancient Gondwana ecosystem in Tazmania, burned down to the ground from fires sparked by dry lightning strikes, a direct result of climate change. ” Should read Tasmania. Great article revealing our dire situation which the majority can only deny to maintain their comfortable delusions.
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Pure carbon
Is not life
But simply
Darkness
Life is impurity
An impertinence
To a sterile
Perfection.
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Pingback: Outside in - Involvements with reality » Blog Archive » Chaos Patch (#101)
The sobriety of truth is a higher form of intoxication. The satisfaction I feel in Chris Hedges debunking any idea that Bernie Sanders represents the slightest possibility of any real change is a kind of deep thrill of satisfaction that hearing and knowing the truth gives me. That there is an element of sadness and disappointment in this elation is part of the truth and reality of sobriety. Shallow exaltations lack this grounding element of realism. Wisdom is the willingness to know the whole truth, not just the aspects that appeal to us.
Being able to bear the bitter aspect of truth without looking away or softening its sharp edge is the gateway to freedom from fear and entry into clear vision of Reality in all it’s shades of darkness and light, rejecting or distorting none of it. It is the gate to Universal Unqualified Love of Everything. That Kiss of Truth and Acceptance is the only solution to the menace of Evil. The kiss of Christ that undid the Grand Inquisitor. Tout comprendre c’est tout pardonner. “Resist not evil.” Love those who persecute you. Love transcends the trap of hating evil. Amore per Tutti!
Mental health involves shaking hands with the Universe. But why stop there, let’s merge with it ALL in a whole-hearted embrace! Perhaps our mistaken divorce from everything into a not so splendid isolation is a root source of all our illnesses? In that case, a deep gesture of Love and Acceptance is essential to regaining our sanity. Maybe the crazy give-away of pure love is the way beyond the trap of our supposed reasonableness…..
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/bernie_sanders_phantom_movement_20160214
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I read the piece with Sellers of NASA. I guess we have odd balls everywhere because I cannot see him speaking for NASA. The Challenger day are not forgotten.
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