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Antibiotic-Resistant Pathogens, Authoritarianism, Automation, Carrington Even, Climate Change, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Complexity Trap, Cyberwarfare, David Eagleman, Digital Dark Age, Donald Trump, Global Surveillance Network, Hyper-Nationalism, Jonathan Huebner, Joseph Tainter, Militarized Police Force, Net Energy and Societal Complexity, Peak Antibiotics, Peak Oil, Six Easy Steps to Avert the Collapse of Civilization
Six years ago David Eagleman, a neuroscientist and American writer, delivered a lecture entitled ‘Six Easy Steps to Avert the Collapse of Civilization’. I got the urge to review his advice and critique how well we have followed it. Below are his abbreviated steps along with my commentary on each one:
[1.] “Try not to cough on one another.”
Over the course of numerous microbe generations amounting to a small fraction of a single human lifetime, pathogens have mutated and adapted faster than the antibiotic defenses human’s have built. Through a combination of factors—medical, social and economic—our war on pathogens is being lost, and these superbugs could be the next global pandemic. The danger grows with mankind’s expanding ecological footprint: a rising world population, the widespread use of antibacterial drugs in humans and agriculture, the speed and intensity of an international transport system, and so on. As history has shown, pandemics have always been a consequence of humans breaking down the interface between man and Earth’s wilderness. A recent study highlights this fact:
Tackling antibiotic resistance on only one front is a waste of time because resistant genes are freely crossing environmental, agricultural and clinical boundaries, new research has shown.
Analysis of historic soil archives dating back to 1923 has revealed a clear parallel between the appearance of antibiotic resistance in medicine and similar antibiotic resistant genes detected over time in agricultural soils treated with animal manure…
…”Unless we reduce use and improve stewardship across all sectors — environmental, clinical and agricultural — we don’t stand a chance of reducing antibiotic resistance in the future.”
As of yet, humans are not heeding this advice in any coordinated manner as another new study reveals that antibiotic use and resistance is increasing globally while new antibiotics discoveries have nearly halted. China and India, for instance, have poor regulatory and environmental enforcement:
The NHS is buying drugs from pharmaceutical companies in India whose dirty production methods are fueling the rise of superbugs, write Andrew Wasley & Madlen Davies. There are no checks or regulations in place to stop this happening – even though the rapid growth in antibiotic resistant bacteria in India is spreading across the world, including to the UK and NHS hospitals… government-commissioned study found superbugs would kill more people than cancer by 2050 if no action is taken, and cited pollution in pharmaceutical supply chains as a major problem. – Link
“If you want to see where resistance is occurring in animals, look across the pond to China. They play by a whole different set of rules,” he[Dr. Larry Hollis] says. “Whenever a new antibiotic is developed, the Chinese see the patent filings, figure out how to make it, and without any regulatory structure, it goes straight to animals. By the time it’s available here, the antibiotic is already showing resistance.” – Link
India is a global center of antibiotic manufacture. 80% of the active pharmaceutical ingredients used by pharmaceutical companies worldwide, including the United States and Europe, are made in China. Following their manufacture, most of these ingredients are exported to India for processing and subsequent worldwide sale. The good manufacturing practices in China and India do not include environmental safeguards. “Unfortunately, environmental regulations are currently left up to national regulators, who are not inclined to do much. In India, the effluent discharge load of ciprofloxacin in 2007 was 45 kg per day – the amount consumed in Sweden, which has a population of 9 million, over 5 days,” said Dr. Gandra. – Link
Our hospitals can’t even keep track of how many people are dying from these superbugs. So it seems disease-carrying bacteria shall inherit the Earth, but truth be told, they have always been the dominant forms of life. A population of eight billion people provides a rich substrate for them to colonize and feed upon.
[2.] “Don’t lose things.”
In modern times there has been a large decline in hard-copy forms of record-keeping with ever more material being transferred onto digital formats, especially news reports and visual/auditory records, but the ephemeral nature of our digital media makes it prone to disappearing. Virtually all of the most useful and important artifacts of our time are digital and very little of it is intended to survive. Much of the 20th Century and beyond will be a vast gaping historical black hole except for the plastics, radiation and soot entering the geological record:
Digital information itself has all kinds of advantages. It can be read by machines, sorted and analyzed in massive quantities, and disseminated instantaneously. “Except when it goes, it really goes,” said Jason Scott, an archivist and historian for the Internet Archive. “It’s gone gone. A piece of paper can burn and you can still kind of get something from it. With a hard drive or a URL, when it’s gone, there is just zero recourse.”…
…If a sprawling Pulitzer Prize-nominated feature in one of the nation’s oldest newspapers can disappear from the web, anything can. “There are now no passive means of preserving digital information,” said Abby Rumsey, a writer and digital historian. In other words if you want to save something online, you have to decide to save it. Ephemerality is built into the very architecture of the web, which was intended to be a messaging system, not a library… – Link
The slow creep of technological obsolescence or a sudden cosmic disaster like a Carrington Event could usher in a ‘Digital Dark Age’, making any historical electronic documents unreadable. Google’s Vint Cerf says we’ve grown complacent in how media is stored. He warns that we may find ourselves lost in a bit-rot future unable to access important media documents, scientific data, etc., but leaving behind any kind of record on an overheated world could be a moot point if there’s no one left to read it.
[3.] “Tell each other faster.”
Communication speed has increased exponentially with technology but the infrastructure that supports it is very vulnerable. Aside from the growing threat of cyber-attack, it’s been documented that the most common cause of communication failure is due to the destruction of physical infrastructures. Roughly 200 undersea fiber optic cables link the world’s telecommunications, but they are “poorly armored, rarely patrolled and only occasionally monitored.” The possibility of human saboteurs is ever-present for landlines as well. These systems are usually the first sites to be targeted in wars and crackdowns by authoritarian governments.
Telecommunication infrastructure is also threatened by natural disasters such as earthquakes, hurricanes, and severe weather which can sever cables and flood underground equipment. A study from a couple of years ago found an increase in severe weather has led to a doubling of major power outages across the country in the past decade.
Telling each other faster has not made one iota of a difference in preventing the unmitigated disaster of global warming and climate change. If after decades of climate conferences, libraries filled to the brim with studies and data, and now the imminent death of the largest organism on the planet—the Great Barrier Reef of Australia, we still cannot collectively take this existential threat seriously, then failure and death will be our just deserts.
[4.] “Mitigate tyranny.”
Hyper-nationalist movements are on the rise around the world, and they can be a precursor to authoritarianism. A country by country guide and analysis of fascism and the far right in Europe can be found here. Hyper-nationalism can lead to racism, vicious cycles of revenge, and genocide in which a segment of the population is scapegoated for society’s failures. With the appointment of Steven Bannon to Trumps’s presidential inner circle, the darkness of Trump’s worldview should be evident to most. Trump will soon have America’s militarized police forces at his behest and the world’s surveillance network at his fingertips, enabling him to act on his penchant for vindictiveness in far-reaching ways.
Trump won’t bring back coal because it would mean destroying the natural gas industry which has grown to displace the use of coal in recent years. Trump is going to learn how hard it is to change the dynamics of our energy system. Previous presidents have hit that same wall. Besides, automation is taking over all the blue-collar jobs of Trump’s supporters. All those “big league jobs” promised by Trump just went up in smoke:
…research shows that the automation of U.S. factories is a much bigger factor than foreign trade in the loss of factory jobs. A study at Ball State University’s Center for Business and Economic Research last year found that trade accounted for just 13 percent of America’s lost factory jobs. The vast majority of the lost jobs — 88 percent — were taken by robots and other homegrown factors that reduce factories’ need for human labor. – Link
[5.] “Get more brains involved in solving problems.”
Physicist Jonathan Huebner says in his study that rates of global innovations judged significant to human beings have been declining in recent decades, in fact it’s halved in the past hundred years. Joseph Tainter in his own study has come to a similar conclusion:
Over the last 40 years, the number of patents per inventor has decreased by 20% and the number of inventors per patent has increased by almost 50%. Although the quality of patents is unknown (it can not be measured quantitatively), it seems we nowadays get less bang for the buck compared to half a century ago. Larger, interdisciplinary research teams cost a lot more money as they need the support of administrative personnel and formal institutions. This decrease in productivity has been masked by the fact that the whole enterprise (research & development) has grown in absolute terms (i.e. more scientists and more money being poured into R&D). – Link
This decline in innovation is directly related to diminishing EROI of our energy resources and the limits of complexity. As Jonathan Miles said in Want Not, “This is our condition. We do not solve problems. We replace them with other problems.” The myriad of crises bearing down on us defies comprehension and certainly won’t be solved by applying more of the same techno-fix thinking.
[6.] “Try not to run out of energy.”
The EROI of fossil fuels, the master resource of industrial civilization, has been in decline for some time and a recent report sheds light on this:
A new peer-reviewed study led by the Institute of Physics at the National Autonomous University of Mexico has undertaken a comparative review of the EROI of all the major sources of energy that currently underpin industrial civilization—namely oil, gas, coal, and uranium.
Published in the journal Perspectives on Global Development and Technology, the scientists note that the EROI for fossil fuels has inexorably declined over a relatively short period of time: “Nowadays, the world average value EROI for hydrocarbons in the world has gone from a value of 35 to a value of 15 between 1960 and 1980.”
In other words, in just two decades, the total value of the energy being produced via fossil fuel extraction has plummeted by more than half. And it continues to decline… – Link
No other energy source has the energy density of fossil fuels and the existing alternative or “renewable” energy sources won’t power our current set of living arrangements. Although technology is extending the Fossil Fuel Age, running out of economically recoverable fossil fuels means a radical change in society, if such a thing as ‘society’ can persist in the aftermath of biospheric collapse. I suppose a seventh bullet point is in order and would say something along the lines of, “It’s an ill bird that fouls its own nest.”
Reblogged this on Industrial Civilization – A Cult of Death and commented:
Another brilliant blog by Xraymike
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Very true xraymike !
RE: “[4.] Mitigate tyranny.”
Some strange military events are on the climate change horizon according to once State Department deputy Col. Wilkerson explained in a short video (The Authoritarianism of Climate Change – 2).
He uses the phrase “end of the Republic.”
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Where will the “glass is half full” folks be when the glass is shattered?
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A “shattered glass” is what it will take:

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At least one good thing has come out of Trump’s election: it’s got XRAYMIKE79 blogging again!
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amen
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Although we must leave large scale future results to forces beyond our control, what xraymike does here is to make real world true information available. This is a crucial service that he renders with no immediate reward beyond telling truths that need to be told. I am grateful that he performs this function, and does so beautifully. Let all who love this world harken to the truths that he brings.
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He does a great job indeed! However, 99% of the population does not care about anything but the next paycheck.
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With the constant flood of BS we are exposed to from birth, it really is a miracle that a few people fight their way clear to discern some obvious truths. The gap between those few and the mass of brainwashed folks is one of our major problems. I am not sure that ways can be found to wake people up in time to prevent our onrushing extinction.
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There is, of course, no way out of what we face, far less an easy one. And with all due respect to darbikrash, his dialectical materialist analysis will no more resurrect our dying world than the Right’s messiah of a president-elect will. All we can do now is continue to love the wild with all our heart, strength and might, weep for her. and stand for her in our own family and community. We can denounce and renounce the values of the dominant culture; we can speak the counternarrative of truth. And we can die with our personal integrity intact.That may be as heroic as any of us can ever hope to be. Zeo! The earth WILL win in the end. And if the only ones who inherit the earth are the human-hostile bacteria, I sure the hell wish them well.
Flaine
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When we got tired of eating fruits and leaves up in the trees, and spent more time on the ground, we learned some tricks to get different food, expand our numbers and territory, and finally how to destroy our habitat and cause the extinction of many species, before dying at our own hands. (A Short History of Humankind)
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F, Elaine Anderson.
Yet again you say exactly what ‘s in my heart.
Every time your name appears I read what you wrote it resounds in my deepest being. I too wish the most “lowly” (& I use that word with respect to them) creature the best of luck.
i feel so much despair for any non-human having to endure this neon lit holocaust we have unleashed upon them.
Thank you F, Elaine Anderson.
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What amazes me is that the majority of people are completely unaware of the problem, despite the fact that the quality of life deteriorates every year. According to research our modern fruit and vegetables contain only 15% of nutrients they used to contain 40 years ago. Our clothing becomes more and more plastic as we clearly lack enough wool and cotton to manufacture clothing from natural materials. In less developed countries it is nearly impossible to buy anything natural, a cotton T-shirt is a rare find. Yet, the majority of people do not perceive the deterioration of their quality of life as a global problem. There is always something else to blame, any serious analysis of the situation never makes it to general public and any attempt to raise this issue encounters vehement denial. The biggest problem of modern civilization is the denial that it even exists.
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1.From the day they were discovered, the end of antibiotics was an inevitability. Just maybe we could have got a few centuries, but misuse has reduced that to less than one. Learn how to use a poultice, those little scratches from gardening you will need to clean thoroughly and quickly. What have been minor inconveniences will again be deadly.
2.3 Our electronic infrastructure is far more vulnerable than it should be and we are now so utterly dependent upon it. There are no backup ways of doing things
4 Hopium, the tyranny is the scared response of the few. They know they are going down. The tyranny will get much worse. It is happening all around the world.
5. We already know the problems and what needs to be done, knowledge is not the problem. We lack the will, we are in denial about pretty much everything. We are willfully blind.
6. Ha ha. we are running out of energy and we resist even the simplest, easiest ways of making it go much further.
As you note the biosphere is collapsing at a very rapid rate. While it is the polar bears and the wales that get all the attention, phytoplankton and insects that matter more and their disappearance is hardly noticed. Our own extinction is no longer just a possibility, but rather a probability and soon an inevitability.
Civilization has gone past savable The numbers are inescapable.
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The insect crisis we can’t ignore
“Humanity spends a lot of money searching for life in space, but we have not described one-tenth of the species on Earth.”
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Alternate musical accompaniment
Your new posts are welcome indeed
Thanks
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When my wife and I moved to live in the forest forty years ago, there were insects all over the ground and in the air. Bees, butterflies, dragonflies, beetles, ants, praying mantis, etc. Today it is very much depleted. We used to have the gravel road to our place covered with frogs when it rained; now we almost never see a single frog or lizard. Even the birds who we feed are much fewer. It used to be they created quite a racket when we were getting up mornings. Now it’s pretty quiet. Silent spring eh? Our species is the greatest killer by far that this planet has ever seen. That’s our hallmark, our unique achievement.
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Nov 24 Thanksgiving day. John’s son David is a preacher without a clue about anything. The whole celebration was an enactment of the cluelessness of humankind. Business as usual in all it’s insipid, boring, fatal ignorance. My quest is forever separate from all of that empty pretence. I am severed from this human created repetitious nightmare and the zombies going through ritualized nonsense in a slow motion dance of death.
Pity is more appropriate for these sleepers than contempt. After all, what do they have to wake up to? Only the long tragedy of their lives. No wonder they refuse to awaken. I wish I had something consoling to offer them, but I have only the bitter medicine of accepting their failure, and admitting defeat. Their refusal to drink this healing draught seals them in their lives of hidden despair, until death mercifully releases them from their torment.
Those who struggle to awaken from the collective nightmare must do so mostly alone, unless they are fortunate enough to find some benighted companions like themselves. They will most often be disappointed by their failure to enlist others in their quixotic quest. They will need to learn to let go of the pain this engenders, and use it instead as a bracing reminder of the lonely nature of their strivings. We must find ways to gird ourselves against the misunderstanding of our fellows, and carry on against the odds that are so stacked against us.
Again and again we will ask ourselves, why do I choose to continue consciously to face the grim reality of our situation? The only answer that comes back is, I must – it is too late to turn back. I cannot unsee what I have seen. To attempt to do so would be to betray the sacred truth of my life. If I must be the ghost at the banquet – so be it. I would not have it be otherwise.
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OLE HENDRICKSON, a retired forest ecologist and a founding member of the Ottawa River Institute, says:
How bad could it get? Scientists aren’t talking about complete human extinction, are they?
Sorry, but they are indeed. This may be the first you’ve heard of “euxinia” (pronounced “yuke-zenia”), but basically, this involves a planet devoid of higher life forms that depend on oxygen, oceans choked with rotting organic matter and bacteria spewing out toxic hydrogen sulfide. This happened during past mass extinctions, notably the biggest of all at the end of the Permian Period, 252 million years ago.
One study published this year says “exacerbation of anoxic “dead” zones is already progressing in modern oceanic environments, and this is likely to increase…” Another study says “[g]lobal warming triggered by the massive release of carbon dioxide may be catastrophic, but the release of methane from hydrate may be apocalyptic.” Authors of the latter study add that “[t]he end Permian holds an important lesson for humanity regarding the issue it faces today with greenhouse gas emissions, global warming, and climate change.”
Can we avoid a worst-case mass extinction scenario? Analyses of burned boned fragments from a South African cave by University of Toronto professor Michael Chazan and co-workers indicate that our ancestors learned to use fire at least one million years ago. This served us well through numerous glacial cycles. But we now seem to have lost the ability to control fire (in the form of burning fossil fuels). This may be our downfall.
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Everything living was born from fire. In the beginning was fire – the incredibly hot moment of the Big Bang. (Or the Great Flowering as I prefer to call it.) That was the birthday of all life, all form – striving to create and maintain some order within the fiery crucible of wild energies. We were destined, blessed, doomed to be players in this ongoing dance with death, our Ancient Mother threatening to devour us back into her flaming maw at any moment.
When humans gained the Promethean Power to manipulate the primal force that nourished them, but could also destroy them, the challenge of life entered a new and dangerous phase. Eventually we even learned to release the hidden fire at the heart of every solid bit of matter. That Genie which had temporarily been more or less safely hidden, was now becoming free to wreak it’s deadly power on all living things on Earth. The fruits of human greed and ignorance and violence were now enabled to play deadly games with their new toys.
So here we are today. Will we follow paths of renunciation, simplicity, surrender to cosmic reality – or will our addiction to unbridled hubris destroy us? Beyond all the surface games we play, we are beginning to realize that how we play the game with energy will determine our fate in the not too distant future.
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Sure lets play with fire . What else you want to do, run around naked or climb back up the trees? Where will that end and why would you do that? We have been there already and it is not doable anyway. So let’s play the game until the end.
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Extinction is the end game if you’re OK with that.
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Some good points made here by Monbiot. Incomplete,of course. Some additional
points:
14.The world population still increasing by around 80 million each year.
15. An economic system which requires ever-continuing economic and population growth to function properly. Is there any prospect of changing this? Not that I can see.
16.A ‘Bubble ‘population of 7.4 billion which can only be fed by industrial agriculture,which itself can only function by burning fossil fuels. Stop using fossil fuels,and over 5 billion people would be dead within months. Continue using fossil fuels,and Anthropogenic Climate Disruption becomes increasingly severe.
17.Many aquifers which supply the water for industrial agriculture are ‘Fossil’ aquifers,and the rate of extraction is far greater than the replenishment rate.This will become an increasingly serious problem.
18. Our industrial civilisation has converted cyclic nutrient systems into linear systems. This will become increasingly problematic as Phosphate deposits become
depleted. (Peak Phosphorus) (see ‘Feed or Feedback’ by Duncan Brown)
19.The problems caused by the pollution of ecosystems with the products and waste
of industry are severe,and varied.(see ‘Poisoned Planet’ by Julian Cribb)
20.Over -exploitation of the oceans,combined with Ocean acidification and heating,
is changing the ocean ecosystem into an unproductive,jellyfish-dominated system,which will be devoid of coral reefs in the near future. (see ‘Stung!’by
Lisa-Ann Gershwin)
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The Monbiot link:
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/nov/25/13-crises-we-face-trump-soil-loss-global-collapse
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Americans of all classes are becoming suspicious of politicians, priests of all kinds, science, media, each other….. And with good reason in all cases. We are a culture of liars, ignoramuses, delusionals, spin doctors, con men and women, pill heads, neurotics, fanatics, cowards, egoists.……. who can you trust anymore? I blame everybody and forgive everybody in this madhouse human culture we have mindlessly lurched into. It was going full blast when I was born in 1931, and it’s getting crazier by the minute, and is on course to blow itself to smithereens any day now. This underlying unease has very real bases, and gives rise to a lot of the otherwise inexplicable behaviors so common in these times.
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“Sordid things, for the most part, are what make human beings, my father included, move. That’s what it is to be human, I’m afraid.”
― Kurt Vonnegut, Player Piano
We’ve created quite a dehumanizing and alienating culture: 24/7 news cycles and commercials selling or hawking something, politicians and institutions worried more about “optics” and PR effectiveness than their supposed “missions”, corporations pulling the strings on every facet of society… It’s all become a house of mirrors with the TRUTH being some abstract and malleable concept that no one can agree on. All the while, there is a gnawing feeling that something dreadful is just around the corner.
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Memory is the foundation for the first lie, the illusion that realities not immediately present to our experience can be stored in one’s mind and called up when no longer physically present. The development of language permitted an even more artificial, symbolic reality in the mind that could be made up of things never experienced directly, but merely the result of juggling the store of symbols (words) now stored as a vocabulary, a dictionary of tokens divorced from immediate concrete experience.
And so we came to live in a consciousness constantly selected and interpreted by the presence of this vast apparatus of thought. I recommend Iain McGilchrist’s The Master and His Emissary for clarification of this situation and it’s profound impact on the modern world.
What is meditation such as Zen practice but an attempt to slip out of the straitjacket of thought to experience an unmediated reality which we long ago became detached from? And so we are living in and suffering from a human world created by our minds which are out of contact with basic realities and on an insane course that threatens to destroy all of us.
Those who have begun to awaken from this dangerous mental trance find themselves confronted by a public which is totally unaware of their situation and actually resistant to being told about it. These deluded souls will end up telling you that you are the one suffering from delusions, and that they are just fine just as they are – and please stop bothering us with your nonsense!
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There is a tacit agreement among people to not bring up vital problems and tortured emotions that threaten to erupt into open consciousness. Anyone who dares to do so becomes an enemy to those hanging on with quiet desperation to the myths that tell us everything is really OK. Our flimsy house of cards we call reality is too fragile to risk playing with matches or checking out the foundations. On the edge of the precipice we counsel each other to keep dancing faster, and above all DO NOT LOOK DOWN!
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Dec 5 Bullies have taken over the world. There have always been bullies throughout the long story of the human presence on Earth. But now the process by which these ugly types dominate culture has been raised to a pinnacle of vicious mastery. Their ability to create a dystopian nightmare is now fully evolved and the vast destructive powers in their hands threaten the very existence of human life everywhere.
It must be understood that these folks are dangerously insane and evil. They are fully capable of destroying themselves and everyone in pursuit of their sick dreams of world domination. That most of the population has been lulled to sleep by their skillful propaganda and confusing masks and manipulations, makes it likely that we will perish unaware of the evil agents that are sealing our fate, while they play the charade of being only interested in serving the good of all people. They always pretend that their destructive wars are only meant to serve the highest ideals, and that the onerous austerities that they engineer to impoverish the people are the operation of impersonal laws they have no power to soften.
Unless these evil people are somehow deposed, our world will be destroyed by them. There are madmen at the helm, and rocks dead ahead! There is no time and no use reasoning with them, it is too late for that. What can we do? In these circumstances, answering this question is the only thing that matters.
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What do you think about Trump’s meeting with Al Gore? What about the Pope and Steven Hawkins on climate change?
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It is a natural response to a growing awareness of our serious difficulties to look for some hopeful signs of a turn-around to our fatal course. Nevertheless we should understand that the deeply embedded psychological conditionings and addictions that have brought us to this fatal crisis are resisting any changes to our thinking and lifestyle choices that would be necessary for walking back from the brink we are now teetering on. As xraymike has pointed out, there is no easy way out of our probably terminal predicament. And we refuse to engage the hard ways necessary for real solutions.
In the preamble to the 12 steps of AA it says, “We thought we could find an easier, softer way. But we could not.” In our addictive frenzy we are desperately embracing the very things that are destroying us. There is potentially a way out, but we are blind to our real problems, and unwilling to do the difficult work of resolving them. We have therefore become our own executioners.
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Makes me think about the Allman Bros., “Leave your mind alone, just get high”. Most people get high on something, religion, consumerism, work, food, drugs, to avoid facing the truth. Plus the truth is too complicated for the masses. Average folk don’t trust the intellectuals who understand the scientific truth of climate change, because they see them as over educated elites who feel superior and have nothing in common with them. One reason we are in the mess we are in, is the need to feel superior, which leads to greed. Could be that our civilization is just dying a natural death.
We need more people like Noam Chomsky; https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=NwXLC9xY-xQ
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Our educational system is designed to make people useful to our rulers, and stupid about everything else. Where are the courses on how to overthrow the greedy rulers who are turning most of us into disposable slaves? That’s what we really need to learn….
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Is it delusions of grandeur to believe we can overcome our tribal instincts? Maybe 10% of the population can think abstractly, but the majority believe the propaganda the greedy rulers use to take advantage of their disposable slaves. I know many with people with successful careers that may be intelligent, but definitely not intellectual. I know a local neurosurgeon that is a staunch Trump supporter. I have had a feeling about the Trump campaign, maybe some kind of experiment. I never felt Trump believed what he was saying. Maybe the 2016 Campaign is just a symptom of our diseased and dying civilization. Let’s hope the rulers don’t block internet access.
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These Systems are failing https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Og42ldefVc
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I’m gonna have to use that on my text post.
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Can’t wait, love this site!
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If we look on life as a game, actually there are a whole set of games being played simultaneously – individually and collectively. And within any individual or collectivity there are a huge number of games that might be played, and an even greater number of combinations of those games. So this affair is not really a closed or rigidly limited system, quite the contrary. Or as Sherlock might have said, “The games (plural) are afoot!”
To become aware of the games afoot gives us a chance to solve some mysteries, and move on to reveal and deal with greater mysteries. There is no preordained end in sight for all of this ultra complex activity, and that makes it intriguing, and gives us a reason to go on in our exploring, discovering, and creating. There really is no finality in this cosmic affair – at least none we are wise enough to discern. There are probabilities but no real certainties until we know everything – and I don’t think any of us will be around to celebrate that improbable event.
However we may strive for some certainty by crushing hope absolutely, it always seems to find a way to slip through our grasping fingers….
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How can we act in ways totally contrary to other beliefs that we hold? Psychologists would call it “splitting” which is holding ideas in non-communicating compartments, so that they can act without awareness of the dissonance with other ideas. Biblically, we could say that the left hand can act without knowledge of the right hand.
Another factor here is that beliefs are much weaker than deeply rooted understandings. Beliefs not based on deep understanding can be treated as disposable when inconvenient. Wisdom is much more than superficial beliefs, and holds firm in spite of circumstances or feelings of discomfort and inconvenience.
With the constant flood of BS we are exposed to from birth, it really is a miracle that a few people fight there way clear to discern some obvious truths. The gap between those few and the mass of brainwashed folks is one of our major problems. I am not sure that ways can be found to wake people up in time to prevent our onrushing extinction.
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