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6th Mass Extinction, Automation, Biological Diversity, Capitalism, Carl Sagan, Climate Change Denial, Conspiracy Theorists, Coral Die-Off, Corporatocracy, Cyber-Warfare, Deforestation, Donald Trump, Endocrine Disruptors, Fairness Doctrine, Fake News, Free Market Ideologues, Gary Kasparov, Gaslighting, Martin Luther King, Michael E. Mann, Micro-Plastic Pollution, Ocean Acidification, Overthrow Project, Peak Net Energy, Rush Limbaugh, Slave Labor, Techno-Fix, The Global Elite, The Trump Wall, Trumpocene, TV Sensationalism
“The point of modern propaganda isn’t only to misinform or push an agenda. It is to exhaust your critical thinking, to annihilate truth.” – Gary Kasparov
With each passing day, the mental stability of our narcissistic, megalomaniacal president is increasingly being called into question by those unnerved from his erratic behavior. The unhinged press conferences, comically embarrassing meetings with world leaders, and uncensored tweets reveal just how illiterate, delusional, and divisive America’s first reality TV president truly is, and the consequences won’t be confined to the imaginary world of a television screen. The irony is that the very news media networks whom the president disparages on a daily basis were instrumental in getting him elected, allowing Trump’s circus to hog the headlines in an ‘issues free’ campaign. Trump received $1.9 billion in free media coverage, 190 times as much as he paid for while the major networks made tons of revenue off Trump’s theatrics. Driving this symbiotic relationship is the fierce competition for ratings determining the advertising revenue and bottom line of these corporate-owned news networks. The media exploited Trump’s sensationalist behavior for profit, helping to drive his campaign to the top of this money-grubbing pyramid scheme. We are, as Neil Postman mused, amusing ourselves to death. Most of these networks are now busy trying to contain the monster they helped create. The other great irony is that America is getting a taste of its own medicine after having meddled in other country’s elections for decades; the CIA was one of the early developers of cyber warfare and is one of the world’s most ruthless practitioners of it.
Of the many Trump lies glossed over by corporate media, the most dangerous one is that anthropogenic climate change is a hoax. The Trump administration is riddled with like-minded Flat-Earthers bent on dismantling the EPA and stoking fossil fuel consumption. In Trumpland, alternative facts are as valid as any empirical evidence. Scientists are being muzzled and the masses are being gaslighted. Conspiracy theories, hearsay, and pure fantasy have replaced meaningful public discourse. We have a demagogue working to blind everyone to what scientists are telling us and our own eyes can see. A civilization which cannot discern the truth cannot make rational decisions for the future, let alone the present. Trump’s kleptocracy will flourish in such an environment while repeating the mantra, “It’s all about the American people.”
The dumbing down of American is most evident in the slow decay of substantive content in the enormously influential media, the 30 second sound bites (now down to 10 seconds or less), lowest common denominator programming, credulous presentations on pseudoscience and superstition, but especially a kind of celebration of ignorance” ~ Carl Sagan
The loss of the Fairness Doctrine in 1987 was an important milestone in America’s decline towards a “post-truth” culture, paving the way for the “outrage industry” and talk radio demagogues like Rush Limbaugh. Twitter is the new bully pulpit for a tyrant-aspiring charlatan, and his antics serve as a useful tool for distracting the public from the right-wing agenda of extreme deregulation and privatization, otherwise known as the Overthrow Project. The biggest danger of wealth inequality is capture of the political system by the elites. This has already happened in America and abroad to the extent that there is now a new globalized elite who have more fealty towards each other than their country of origin, completely lacking positive feelings and loyalty towards their own native lands. The existing oligarchy is being strengthened at the expense of an already polarized and economically disenfranchised society. The Trump regime is corporatism on steroids.
As the famous saying goes, “There’s a sucker born every minute” and Trump is just the latest huckster to exploit them. His rhetoric appeals to people’s emotions and raises their dopamine levels, but facts have a tendency to get in the way of a good story. Trump’s base of supporters, however, appear immune to facts that contradict their leaders’s disinformation. One of his big campaign pledges was to bring back the manufacturing base of the U.S. and revive the Rust Belt, but this promise rings hollow in the age of techno-capitalism. Machines have taken over manufacturing and Trump’s protectionist policies will in all likelihood accelerate this process. AI promises to bring even more radical disruption to the job market:
At a time when the Trump administration is promising to make America great again by restoring old-school manufacturing jobs, AI researchers aren’t taking him too seriously. They know that these jobs are never coming back, thanks in no small part to their own research, which will eliminate so many other kinds of jobs in the years to come, as well…
In the US, the number of manufacturing jobs peaked in 1979 and has steadily decreased ever since. At the same time, manufacturing has steadily increased, with the US now producing more goods than any other country but China. Machines aren’t just taking the place of humans on the assembly line. They’re doing a better job. And all this before the coming wave of AI upends so many other sectors of the economy.
Trump’s fake stance on protecting American workers will not unwind decades of globalization, unrelenting automation, or the machinations of corporate capitalism. His promise to reignite the coal industry is yet more empty rhetoric; independent energy experts at BNEF dismantle his claim:
Coal power is just too costly and inflexible, explains BNEF: “Super-low-cost renewable power — what we are now calling ‘base-cost renewables’ — is going to force a revolution in the way power grids are designed, and the way they are regulated.”
When you add the revolution in cheap fracked gas — which Trump has pledged to double down on — it’s no surprise the country shut down over 40 gigawatts of coal-fired power stations since 2000…
It’s also being driven by a collapse in the export market, as countries from Europe to Asia also move away from coal because of its economic and human cost…
So Trump won’t be bringing back the domestic coal industry. And even if he could, he can’t bring back the jobs because it’s the coal industry itself that wiped out most of those jobs through productivity gains from “strip mines and machinery”…
Conveniently ignoring the harmful environmental impacts and the fact that illegal immigration has been on the decline for the past decade, the proposed Trump Wall is an expensive monument to xenophobia and misguided fears. No wall will prevent those determined to circumvent it, but if you listen to the engineers and experts who actually have experience working at the border, then it’s not a solid continuous wall(projected to take 16 years to complete) but a partial fence that would be more effective and feasible, and that’s if you believe that Americans will take the place of those millions of migrant farm workers who leave their homes every year to plant, cultivate, harvest, and pack America’s fruits, vegetables and nuts, in addition to the millions of other low-skilled and low-paying jobs that immigrants perform. Capitalism thrives on the back of cheap labor, but even these jobs are not safe from machines.
What kind of world is going to support all this labor-saving, hi-tech gadgetry when its creators are too short-sighted to maintain the habitability of the planet for their own descendants? There is no deus ex machina to prevent catastrophic collapse of the oceans nor is there one to stop catastrophic climate change. Industrial civilization is a one-hit wonder for which there are no solutions that scale up to the mountain of problems it has created. Dealing with the environmental costs of fossil fuels is the classic “prisoner’s dilemma” whereby the incentive to cheat for short-term economic gain prevents the cooperation needed by everyone. The economic, legal, and moral framework to tackle climate change simply does not exist. The invisible hand of the “free market” has turned into the boot of environmental catastrophe.
Primates, mankind’s closest biological cousins in the animal kingdom, are in steep decline because they have the “misfortune of being concentrated in areas rich in certain resources precious to their sapient but ravenous cousins.” Not even our fellow human beings can escape war and death when they live atop coveted resources, so what chance does any other species have?
“People have argued that we only have to worry about human-caused extinctions if we do something that causes the loss of 80 or 90 percent of species on the planet,” said UC Berkeley environmental scientist James W. Kirchner.
“Our analysis shows that even if the human impact is much smaller than that – 20 or 30 or even 50 percent of species – it’s still going to take 10 million years for the Earth to recover. That is well past the expected life span of the human species, or even of the genus Homo.” – Link
The study quoted above was from the year 2000 and has the usual hopeful spin:
“It is not preordained that high levels of human-caused extinction have to happen,” Kirchner said. “Our future depends on what we choose to do on a national and international level, as a society. Those decisions are critical because they will have very long-lasting consequences.”
Not surprisingly, we have failed to heed that advice. Scientists say our rampant road building has dissected the Earth’s land into 600,000 fragments too small to support significant wildlife. A new study covering 130 countries finds deforestation rises with incomes in developing economies and never reverses. This is particularly troubling because Africa is a developing continent with some of the world’s largest tracts of remaining undisturbed forests and biodiversity hotspots. Biodiversity loss is an existential threat comparable to climate change. The glaring warning from all these studies is that the Western way of life exported across the entire planet has brought us to a point of cataclysmic overshoot. Business-as-usual only exacerbates the crisis:
Real-world CO2 emissions have tracked the high end of earlier [IPCC] emissions scenarios, and until the currently wealthy countries can produce a large decline in their own emissions per capita, it is dubious to project that emissions per capita in the less developed countries will not continue on a trajectory up to the levels of currently wealthy countries…[The top 10% of the economically wealthy in the world produce almost as much total GHG emissions as the bottom 90% combined]… – Link
Trump peddles the false hope of regaining material wealth for a collapsing middle class with his slogan “Make America great again”, but after being elected, is giving more power and riches to those who have created this environmental and social catastrophe. Capitalism is, as Martin Luther King observed, “socialism for the rich, rugged individualism for the poor.” Nonetheless, in the bigger scheme of modern civilization’s looming collapse, the ‘Trumpocene’ amounts to nothing more than polishing the brass on the Titanic.
A time is coming when what we do to Earth is completely overshadowed by what Earth does to us. We have already condemned the planet to an ice-free Arctic and no amount of techno-fixes will return it to its former state. Were humans to disappear today from the Earth, the after-effects of our massive fossil fuel binge would reverberate for aeons. The last time there was an ice-free Arctic was during the Eemian period 125,000 years ago at the height of the last major interglacial period, but the CO2 levels of today are much higher now and causing the climate to change at a rate that is 170 times that of natural forces with much more warming to come. According to a new study, manmade global warming is replicating conditions that triggered an abrupt sea level rise of several meters in the ocean around Antarctica some 15,000 years ago. The damage done is irreversible not only on a human timescale or a civilizational time scale, but a species timescale. The total global carbon dioxide emissions load from the onset of the industrial revolution is enough to push the next ice age back by 100,000 years and only deep geologic time will significantly remediate the chemistry of a CO2-spiked atmosphere. The same is true for ocean acidification. The natural process of continental rock weathering to neutralize all of the CO2 from human activity that is entering the oceans would take hundreds of thousands of years. Plankton blooms, a key part of the entire marine food web and the biological carbon pump, are being disrupted by warming, acidifying oceans. The Great Barrier Reef is expected to be completely dead within the next two decades and 98% of all reefs around the world gone by mid century. The latest research indicates ocean acidification is much worse for corals that previously thought.
Manmade persistent organic pollutants(POPs) such as PCBs and flame retardants can be found in the most remote places on Earth such as the 36,000-foot-deep Mariana Trench in the western Pacific Ocean where researchers tested crustaceans and found them to contain 50 times more POPs than crabs living in one of China’s most polluted rivers. Once these endocrine-disrupting compounds settle into the sediments, they can remain there for thousands of years before being disturbed and recirculated into the environment once again as a contaminant. Microplastics less than 5mm in size are ubiquitous in the environment, having been documented in the waters of both the Arctic and Antarctic and recently found on 73% of Britain’s beaches.
The irrational ramblings of a demagogue won’t change a shifting earth laying waste to a once rich ecosphere and grinding to dust the landmarks of modern man. Delusions and protestations have no bearing on the laws of chemistry and thermodynamics.
really lays it on the line
H
you’ll need to go to
https://collapseofindustrialcivilization.com/2017/02/22/the-trumpocene-darkness-gathers/
as the highlighted links in this text don’t work.
and some great images too…
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There is one cynical hope I cling to; Trump might bring down capitalism fast enough to reduce its impact on our planet.
This delusional moron americans have elected as their president has been the most successfull recruiter for the anti capitatlist movement and he will be bringing us the next big crunch in no time.
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That was the hope with Reagan.
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In my social circles, one by one, our friends have been revealing they voted for Trump.
Each time it happens I tell them that I can understand that decision- but only if you’re intending to collapse things faster. If that’s the intent (and I do think it’s a perfectly reasonable position to take- one I can sympathize with and perhaps even support), I think a vote for Trump was probably a legitimate vote.
Of course, none of them voted with that intention. They all believe in Make America Great Again.
Don’t get me wrong, I didn’t vote for Hillary. I only vote for people who can’t win, so there’s never any blood on my hands when they turn out to be murdering psychopaths.
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Lets face it, what Bernie would have done, and what all social democrats have allways done, is to try to save capitalism from itself. I dont know if he would have succeeded, probably all that money in congress would have prevented him from doing anything, but he could have prolonged the inevitable end of capitalism for some time.
Trump will not. The concept of capitalism being in crisis alone is impossible to grasp for him. Capitalism for Trump and his fellow billionaires is doing fine, as long as the cash flows upward.
If you compare the circumstances today and right before the french revolution, the similarities are quite astounding. Financial crisis, piblic and private debt, disconnected elites, constant wars, …It only needed a hunger crisis driven by rising costs for bread to get the thing started and the heads rolling and do away with feudalism.
Trump is not only a moron and a sociopath, showing no sign of empathy or intelligence whatsoever, he is also very unimaginative. Only if you cant imagine that an angry mob might just lynch you at the next lantern post could make you do and say the things he says. I wonder what it will finally take to gather the mob.
There is a fascinating TED talk by one of the not so unimaginative fellow plutocrats, Nick Hanauer, called “Fellow billionaires beware, the pitchforks are coming”
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“It only needed a hunger crisis driven by rising costs for bread to get the thing started and the heads rolling and do away with feudalism.”
That hunger crisis — on edge for decades as it was — was kicked into overdrive by a localized climate change event; the eruption of an Icelandic volcano in 1783:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laki#Consequences_in_Europe
What we have now (obviously) is a rapidly approaching globalized, artificially manufactured climate change event. This will make Laki (or the Great Famine of 1315) look like a bountiful harvest by comparison:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Famine_of_1315%E2%80%9317
******
However, I must add to the ‘heads rolling’ image by saying that, as in most violent revolutions, when the blood was truly flowing in the streets during the height of the Reign of Terror, it was the Jacobins killing each other off that provided most of the vino. The same goes for the Russian Revolution (with the Reds and the Whites slaughtering each other) and the rise to power of Nazi Germany (during “the Night of the Long Knives”).
By comparable analogy, we can expect a purge of Republicans soon by the Trumpzis currently in power. [Although, to be fair, I would say that the most appropriate historical figure to The Donald isn’t Hitler or Stalin or Robespierre, but Cortez.]
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I would rather compare him to some of the late feudalists, like Wilhelm II of Germany, King George III of Britain or Louis XIV of France, but probably its a diffamation to all of them, as they were at least ambivalent characters. Wilhelm i.e. was a racist and antisemite, but he wanted to be “the King of beggars rather than the King of millionaires.” He was pretty crazy though.
Some of the rather crazy late leaders of socialism might do as well, Nicolae Ceaușescu comes to mind.
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Ha that’s the reason I voted for brexit! Supra-international organisations such as the EU are too energy intensive for the future. I would rather my area had greater reliance on the local region in place before things get worse, instead of sticking with a supra-international organisation and having little in place regionally when the international order fails. Having passed a lot of responsibilities from UK governance to EU. In the mean time I am not against international cooperation just international governance is unsustainable. Large international organisations and empires only last while the resource input is available to maintain it. Unfortunely people are not willing to reduce consumption and thus living standards, they have choosen a new car over having organisations like the UN in the future.
As Joesph Tainter put it “When increased complexity begins to have a net cost, then responding to new problems arising by further increasing complexity may be no longer viable. An economy becomes locked into established processes and infrastructures, but can no longer respond to shocks or adapt to change.”
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That was in response to Froggman
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I always disliked Cheeto going back to the “Lifestyles of the Rich & famous” days, but he is just one more symptom of a corrupt and broken system in a failing nation. Many have predicted him or someone like him in the late/last stage. Cheeto and his cancer crew can certainly cause plenty of damage, but environmental wise we were fucked long before he got into politics. If he was never born we would still be right where we are….nearing the end. 8 years under Obama was the best 8 year run for US oil extraction and every metric (bad) kept climbing throughout his turn as manager. The corporate state runs the world not the POTUS. What’s the difference in the big picture between tribal chief left and tribal chief right? They just use different ideological language is all. Liberals were mostly just paying lip service to every overshoot predicament, and they and their counterparts, have been stringing folks along for decades. In some ways I see the right as being the most honest ones out there. What do they believe in? It’s all a hoax, gut the evil EPA, have another frack attack. He seems to be sticking to his plans as fucked as they are. The rollbacks will mostly hurt people on the local level who live near the cancer extraction projects. Won’t make one bit of difference to AGW and global overshoot. It’s 59th minute time and on this very blog a number of years ago, I predicted the enviro rollbacks would happen in desperate bid to kick the can a little farther. It’s happening. No brainer from my point of view. What are the chances the humans will make it through the fighting for the last of the resources without a nuke exchange?
Speaking of the “Lifestyles of the Rich & famous” days, here’s Charlie Brooker (creator of Black Mirror) with a great takedown of those early neoliberal infection days.
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Looks like we won’t have to wait even 10 years for the Great Barrier Reef to go belly up. And that accelerated timeline goes for all coral globally…
Worst-ever coral bleaching event goes into unprecedented 4th year: Sea surface temperatures are so high that Australia divers are already reporting new bleaching in the part of the Great Barrier Reef where last yr 1/2 of corals died.
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You have a point. That Trump does not care about the concept of fact based decisions jumps in you face. He has a 1 million strong intelligence service to provide him with facts to (theoretically) inform his decisions, but he gets his “facts” from twitter and the MSNBC morning show.
But how is he different in this than his predecessors? The facts about climate change, the ressource crisis and any other science about the abysmal state of our environment have been actively ignored by all administrations, all across the world for decades.
In this aera of system collapse, with have collectively left fact based decision making behind long ago,
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Reblogged this on Gaia will prevail.
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Trump is as bad as you say, if not worse, but he will end up taking the blame for so much that was already inevitable. Sad, sick, absolutely screwed made so much worse. On the climate side I had always thought Guy McPherson was way too pessimistic, looks like I was wrong.
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“Trump is as bad as you say, if not worse, but he will end up taking the blame for so much that was already inevitable.”
All it takes is a little time and some creative historical revisionism — again, like Reagan — and a lousy president can get carved into Mount Rushmore.
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Humbled, informed and grateful for this………..
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Russian military admits significant cyber-war effort: Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said that Russian “information troops” were involved in “intelligent, effective propaganda”
…”Unlike in Soviet times, disinformation from Moscow is primarily not selling Russia as an idea, or the Russian model as one to emulate.
“In addition, it is often not even seeking to be believed. Instead, it has as one aim undermining the notion of objective truth and reporting being possible at all,” he wrote.
…Keir Giles, an expert on the Russian military at the Chatham House think-tank, has warned that Russian “information warfare” occupies a wider sphere than the current Western focus on “cyber warriors” and hackers.
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“Emissions per capita” have to be reduced. Very funny. The correct answer is actually just “emissions.”
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“Nonetheless, in the bigger scheme of modern civilization’s looming collapse, the ‘Trumpocene’ amounts to nothing more than polishing the brass on the Titanic.”
Exactly, it seems every month a new study is out suggesting climate change is more rapid then initially predicted, by models that some organisation refuse to update with observational data.
Energy is king! And unless we use less we are in trouble. It means a population drop and a drop in living standards, which march to the tune of energy use. Energy efficiency just leads to greater energy consumption and the environmental impacts of that. Thus increased population and living standards. If all we had were Ford model T cars now we would be using less energy, people wouldn’t be able to drive as far. However a drop in living standards will never be accepted politically as who will vote for that?..
My main question is, since humans first started making tools to be more efficient allowing greater energy use else where, was our fate sealed? Was this always going to be the outcome? Our fate sealed long before modern civilisation? Efficiency after efficiency leading to greater energy consumption at every step, eventually leading to environmental degradation. Our existence was never going to be that long? Is life just following the laws of thermodynamics?
https://archive.unews.utah.edu/news_releases/is-global-warming-unstoppable/
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2010/12/20/the-efficiency-dilemma
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Thanks for all of this–the analysis and the comments. The strange thing for me is that Drumpf is helping me integrate the notion that this entire species deserves to go extinct. Of course, that also means I have to rush to turn off the television if he comes on because I fear my head will explode. It is irony on so many levels. Also a great reason to stay home and spend as little money as possible. And I’m not even in America.
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Thanks for the brilliant commentary, ironically as depressing and painful as it is to contemplate our now inevitable demise as a species (unfortunately taking down most others in our wake) and headlong plunge to catastrophe, despite already being cognizant of most of the content I still excitedly await and relish your well researched posts for the impressive writing talent, the pithy and trenchant wit. Would be great to see these essays published in book form. Love the T-octopus painting !
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Capital is in a quandary. As predicted, the rate of profit is dropping and globalism’s usefulness to stem this inexorable down spiral has reached its expiry date.
Another set of measures must be put in palce to supplement this disintegration of profits, but first a narrative, an explanation must be offered for not just what went wrong, but what must be done to rectify these wrongs and make ‘Merica Great Again.’
Trump is a useful idiot in the twirling Paso Doble coupled with Steve Brannon, who is supposedly providing the intellectual fodder to prop up a tilting, wheezing narrative to underpin Capital’s latest move rightward.
The narrative consists of an embracing of economic nationalism, a double speak intended to distract while rampant deregulation occurs, privatization brought to all quarters to expand domestic “opportunity”, tax breaks for corporations, and a wholesale discrediting of the news media to allow this to occur under a fog of lies and Kelley Ann Conway-isms.
The explanation for what went wrong is focused on “global elitists”, the nonsensical “deep state” and of course, “the establishment” all consistent in their occupation as shadowy amorphous and abstract enemies that share a common trait- they are all unknowable.
The right is highly dependent on conspiracy theories for validation of their failed belief systems, they have raised the creation and circulation of these preposterous theories to high art, employing a network of AM talk radio, cable news channels, and various and sundry blowhards to propagate a consistent drum beat all blaming imaginary deep state actors, embedded establishment politicians and just about any crazy line of bunk one can imagine.
A sprinkling of tangibles must be added for touchstone relevance, for this we have immigrants and any religion not based on Christianity.
This unholy stew of unknowable enemies and convenient straw men is pushed forward as the explanation or how we got here.
And how we get out is much bloviating about the aforementioned atrocities, while reconstituting the regulatory structure and tax codes to favor Capital.
It’s just a good old fashioned power grab, with a bait and switch to appease Capital.
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Great rant. I totally agree.
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https://www.todayfm.com/Slowed-Down-Trump-Sounds-Like-A-Man-Ranting-In-A-Bar-At-3am
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David, this has saved my sanity tonight. This also sounds, sadly, like my father after 8 pm on a major holiday or his birthday. And I guess I’ve been in plenty of bars at 3 am in my day because I knew that voice, cadence, perspective, and idiocy like the back of my hand.
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You know who also sounds like that? People suffering from severe head trauma/aphasia.
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Pingback: February 28 Links! All the Links You Need for February 28 | Gerry Canavan
un-Denial
unmasking denial: creator and destroyer
https://un-denial.com/denial-2/theory-short/
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The increasingly Orwellian world we live in where water & air regulations are dismantled while saying they will fight to protect our health:
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IS THIS THE START OF RUNAWAY GLOBAL WARMING?
This paper was written by Dr. Bill Hall. His background can be found here: https://findanexpert.unimelb.edu.au/display/person142685.
Final Conclusion:
My conclusion from what appears to be undeniable evidence is that we have already passed the tipping point where we had any hope of stopping warming at 2 or even 3 °C, and urgently need to focus on greatly improving our scientific understanding and learning how to live with and survive decades of rapid heating, and to develop global geoengineering tools to actively remove greenhouse gases from the atmosphere before most life on the planet (including ourselves) is exterminated by heat stroke and starvation in collapsing ecosystems.
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Same conclusion as Guy McPherson except we have decades rather than a decade! 😦 😦 Really there’s no way we can arrest this now, sadly. 😦
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Pingback: The Trumpocene: Darkness Gathers | syndax vuzz
I am late getting this post. Excellent analysis as usual. I need to hear from people like yourself mike, who know how bad it really is. The few friends I share my thoughts with think I am daft. I need to know there are others that see what I see. Our human world is entering it’s final act, when the karmic seeds that have been sown are ripening. It will be horrific beyond what most folks can imagine.
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Donald Trump is a very powerful, very evil person. We must remain fully aware of this at all times. His gaining the presidency is an enormous disaster at this critical time in the world’s history. Those henchmen he has gathered around him are determined to end the last vestiges of democracy in this country and in the world. These people must be stopped. We must put this at the top of our list of things we need to do to have a better world. If we fail to depose these forces, then whatever we may put our hands and hearts to will be for naught.
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Do not be fooled because Trump is foolish and ignorant and a buffoon. This evil man and his henchmen will kill and injure millions, if not billions unless he is stopped.
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Reblogged to nature Bats Last forum. 🙂
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The insanity of the human species is not an occasional or accidental phenomenon, it is the lawful result of what has distinguished our species from all others on Earth. The access to great power that we have developed has resulted in an unprecedented and out of control violence and destruction of life that is truly horrible. There is no noble or sane accomplishment of our species that can in any way atone for the evil that we have wreaked and continue to wreak. Our elimination from this planet would be an unmixed and huge blessing for all other beings living here.
I am not a proponent of “my species right or wrong.” If our wrong is so enormous and continuing, then my feeling is that we should leave this planet to such peace as it can find in our absence. Actually there is little I can or need to do to influence this outcome – we seem to be engineering our extinction quite well without any extra help. Do I feel good about our planetary demise? Of course not. But some things are beyond our control, and acceptance of our limitations is an aspect of the wisdom that might have saved us, if we had been willing to develop that. We were not willing to do so. So be it.
PS – Does this mean I will just sit on my hands doing nothing as this great extinction proceeds? No, I will continue to try to do small acts of love and caring as I am able – but without any false expectation that I am saving us from our well deserved extinction. I spent most of my life trying to stop the flow of history, and now I am old and tired of trying to hold back the flood. I will find some rest on the bank, and maybe now and then manage to save some creature from being swept away…….
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It appears that evolution favors the greedy over the enlightened intellectual. Maybe there is some meaning to all this insanity.
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This is what life might look like In the future if anyone survives this insanity: https://webs.bcp.org/sites/vcleary/modernworldhistorytextbook/industrialrevolution/PreIndus.html
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This is what life might look like In the future if anyone survives this insanity: https://webs.bcp.org/sites/vcleary/modernworldhistorytextbook/industrialrevolution/PreIndus.html
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An initiation is a challenge that must be passed in order to go on. From time to time the evolution of life in the Universe poses these essential tests. At this time in Earth history the challenge is whether we can learn to live together in peace with all living beings. If we cannot, and so far we aren’t, we will be eliminated and the possibility of our spreading our madness beyond Earth will be eliminated. In this way cosmic evolution disposes of cancerous species which might endanger it’s overall progress. It’s like a cosmic immune system to deal with out of control (cancerous) cells (species) within it’s vast body. We may have to die so that others may live. Unless we overcome our growing insanity, this will be the best outcome for our species and for all the other lives on Earth that we are in danger of extinguishing.
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