• About

Collapse of Industrial Civilization

~ Finding the Truth behind the American Hologram

Collapse of Industrial Civilization

Author Archives: td0s

The Autumn Breathes

09 Monday Nov 2015

Posted by td0s in Capitalism, Climate Change, Ecological Overshoot, Empire, Inequality, Peak Oil

≈ 44 Comments

Tags

Climate Change, Collapse, forest fire, Industrial Civilization, refugee crisis, superstorm, yemen

By TD0S at PrayforCalamity.com
___

Deep in the hardwood forest I watch the first orange light crest over the eastern ridge as dawn unfolds casting its warmth on the surface of the yawning Earth. Poplar trunks stand firm above the gold and brown leaf cover that now mulches the hopeful seedlings while granting the white tail deer an auditory advantage over those who would stalk them through the hollers. At this time of year the forest exhales and retreats from the above ground toil of photosynthesis to a season of focus within the dense and teeming skin of the planet. Without the brush and laden bough, one can see for miles across the waves of ridge and ravine. Sound is without obstacle, and seems almost propelled by the chill wind when it punctures the otherwise heavy silence. The feeling is one of calm, of that restfulness that comes when one crawls into bed and their leg muscles finally release the day’s tension. Autumn contains a library of lessons, none of which can be learned until one is still, patient, and not fucking talking.

My year was not what I had planned for it to be. Many tasks remain undone. Our family was interfered with by a local government body, and we are now in the process of installing an overpriced septic system for our cabin. It is a headache, to be sure, dealing with puffed up bureaucrats and their ad hoc adherence to antiquated and at times contradictory laws. As is often the case in this society, compliance is cheaper and faster than justice. Proving to a judge my case that I should not be required to acquire such a system would find me spending more money, time, and personal energy than just going along with the racket that the good old boys and connected families have established in these parts. I have made my peace with the conflict, and am calmly dancing through the hoops laid out for me. When all is said and done, the cabin I built with my two hands will be a legal residence in the event that we ever decide to move and to sell our land. Property value and all that, right?

Here we are again, dear readers, staring down another winter in which we can together reflect on the state of the world, both the portion that modern humans point their attention at, as well as to the far larger portion where, as Cormac McCarthy wrote, “Storms blow and trees twist in the wind, and all of the animals that God has made go to and fro.” Despite a massive downturn in the global economy, money moves and the smokestacks belch their poison. To be sure, man’s world of markets and digital notations percolates. An event is brewing that portends itself in plummeting rig counts and commodity prices. What grand show this event will perform for people rich enough to have a stake in it is to be seen. The rest of us will scrape by like the peasants that we are until even scraping fails, and only bloodletting remains.

Superstorms and hurricanes ravage from Texas to Yemen. Starved and hopeless human beings are playing the only card they have and abandoning the sure death that awaits their children in the war ravaged and drought plagued middle eastern and north African regions. Rich white people who are to blame for such wars, droughts, and famines are bellowing from the America’s, clear across Europe, and down to Australia about the brown victims of centuries of Anglo-capitalism and how they are not supposed to do anything but suffer their circumstances in place. Where these white adherents to national boundary and culture were as the US, UK, and other global powers were setting about to wage war and destabilize governments in these now uninhabitable places, I’m not exactly sure.

This is the crisis unfolding. This is what it looks like. Real life plays out a lot more slowly than the Hollywood scripts that have to crunch collapse adventures into one hundred and twenty minute films complete with explosions, comeuppance, and a love story for the girls. Tracking the decline of global industrial civilization is seemingly gaining in popularity, and it is all too common for those new to such a curiosity to expect an impending grand finale in which all bets are off; the power grid fails, store shelves empty, gas pumps get bagged, and all hell breaks loose in suburban cul-de-sacs where soccer moms in body armor pump 7.62 into hordes of urbanites (read: blacks and latinos…OK, and maybe a few white guys with neck tattoos get plugged for good measure) who are scouring the once idyllic portions of America in search of condensed soup and cheerleaders for their rape rooms.

Instead another year grinds by in which forest fires destroyed more than they ever had in North america, heat waves killed thousands in Pakistan, sea levels continued their upward march, and political institutions seemed ever more and more inept in the face of all the compounding emergencies that industrial civilization faces. Even my own humble region was affected by unseasonable levels of rain this July which were punctuated by a night of flash flooding that tested my mettle and resolve as I spent hours trying to find an unblocked path home.

Of course, we know that there are no solutions, not for the major crises. There is no putting back what is broken, and limits to growth are not optional. They are not suggested daily values. Sustainability isn’t a lifestyle choice. That which cannot be sustained will not be. For us as individuals, families, tribes, and communities, there is only endurance. How do we get by, and not just with the calories in our gut to labor forth, but with the joy in our hearts to make us want to carry on? Times of decline are times of darkening in the human heart and soul. Atrocity follows shortage. A world of hunger, hate, and blood is a world in which human conscience is called upon to rise, to shield, to burn brightly, despite less and less obvious motivation to do so.

The year draws down and grants us all yet another season to breathe. Let us use the time wisely.

Share this:

  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • Tweet
  • Share on Tumblr
  • Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
Like Loading...

The Twilight of Our Tale: Part Three

16 Thursday Apr 2015

Posted by td0s in Peak Oil

≈ 64 Comments

Originally posted at Prayforcalamity.com
By TD0S

“We do not “come into” this world; we come out of it, as leaves from a tree. As the ocean “waves” the universe “peoples.” Every individual is an expression of the whole realm of nature, a unique action of the total universe. This fact is rarely, if ever, experienced by most individuals. Even those who know it to be true in theory do not sense or feel it, but continue to be aware of themselves as isolated “egos” inside bags of skin.”

– Alan Watts

—

Rains have come hard. Explosions of thunder pull me into a state of half dreaming amid the depths of night. Come dawn, the morning light is not blue, but a thin coffee brown as it fills our cabin. After making breakfast on the woodstove, the millions of rattling hooves racing across our steel roof begin to slow, and then peter out completely. I pull on my overalls and slip on my muck boots to head up to the front of our land where the chickens are no doubt waiting to be let loose into their yard. After gathering eggs, I walk to a back field to scatter our wood ash, and it is there that I pick the first oyster mushrooms of the year off of a wet tree stump.

Soon I am wandering about our land, drawn by the sprouting sea of trout lilies to venture into the pockets and corners where I rarely step. Water runs in the wet weather creeks. Toothwort flowers paint the ground with the faintest flecks of pink. A downed hickory branch has me taking high steps and bracing myself on a maple trunk. My hand feels the rough surface. I move to a shagbark hickory, and drag my fingers down his body. Shaped like tongues of fire, draped down the tree’s mass like plumage, for a moment I think of a rooster’s hackles. I wonder if bats are sleeping under the shagbark’s skin.

Mayapples have just barely begun to poke through the clay, and I look for the Sparassis mushroom which blooms in the same place every year, and looks like a cross between cauliflower and coral, but I am too early for her on this morning. Moisture hangs in the air, the slightest humidity, as I listen to the water in the creek and the songbirds and the wind. I find myself overwhelmed. Here in this moment I am surrounded by – no – interwoven in what I can only call truth. I feel sadness and euphoria and altogether present. All at once it becomes very clear to me that our salvation lies waiting for us in these fecund and wild places, and in the next moment, I think about just how many of them will be destroyed today. As the scent of moss centers me, in region after region the scent of diesel portends doom where bulldozers and feller-bunchers and generators are all rumbling into motion across the globe.

—

What does it mean to know a thing? So much of what we think we know boils down to a complex interaction between an onslaught of various symbols, each of those brought into being by human minds, and then let loose to transmute into an ever evolving web of concepts and ideas, each only as meaningful as would be allowed by the human mind receiving them.

There is a stark difference between what we perceive subjectively with our senses and what we can communicate with our words. My experience of walking through the forest this morning cannot be communicated no matter how much I try. Similee and metaphor offer attempts at emphasizing the color or form of that which I saw or touched, but without seeing or touching yourself there is no possible way for me to truly translate my experience to you. Words themselves are symbolic, and even though you may say “mountain” or “river” the picture that generates in my mind of a mountain or river will not be the picture you had in your head when you spoke. The picture in my head will almost certainly bear no resemblance to the mountain that you spent a month backpacking upon or the river that you went fishing in with your grandfather at age eleven.

Mountains and rivers are fairly fixed concepts too, so imagine the disparity in our minds’ interpretations of such notions as “republican,” “wealthy,” “patriotic,” “good,” “happy,” “sane,” or “environment.” It must be true that a great bulk of the time we are not even speaking of the same things when we are speaking of the same things.

The world is being killed. The living skin of the planet on which we reside is being killed. It is people doing the killing and they are doing it for reasons they often can’t really comprehend. They are told that they need to do what they are doing, and the words used to convince them are symbols and representations of concepts which are even murkier symbols and representations of…of what really? It doesn’t even matter. It is noise. Human noise. A cacophony of the howling mad all yelling in a disharmonic unison. It is a story that is just good enough to convince people to point guns at each other while they command those others to work.

It is a story that means nothing to forests, rivers, mountains, and oceans.

—

“Moloch whose mind is pure machinery! Moloch whose blood is running money!
Moloch whose fingers are ten armies! Moloch whose breast is a cannibal dynamo!
Moloch Whose ear is a smoking tomb!

…

“Moloch whose love is endless oil and stone! Moloch whose soul is electricity and banks! Moloch whose poverty is the specter of genius! Moloch whose fate is a cloud of sexless hydrogen! Moloch whose name is the mind!”

From Howl by Allen Ginsberg

—

Our delusion spins away from center caught in the centrifugal force of entropy. We are animals endowed with functions of body and brain to move through our environment successfully navigating the challenging and changing conditions before us. Somewhere along the way people began altering the environment instead of navigating it. Further along the way people began killing those who warned against the pitfalls of such behavior. Today we try to maintain sanity as we dance with a demon under carnival lights, pretending to be one thing then another then another with the different phases of the day, just hoping to placate the beast with every coin we drop into a parking meter, with every late fee we write a check to pay, with every punch of the time clock when we would rather be anywhere else.

Won’t someone please come and scatter the cinders of this hell? Our prayers are answered by an automated system. Press one to leave a message. Press two to hear these options again.

—

We know that the system is insane, that it doesn’t care for us, that it is killing the planet, and that it grinds our spirits into meal along the way. So why retreat further into the isolation and alienation that is laid out for us like a deathbed? Why spend so much time logging on to forums and chat boards and reading the assessments of strangers? Are you are seeking a friend, or maybe a sage? Are you looking for someone to finally tell you that we all in unison are going to stop playing the game on the count of three?

Here is the best I can do for you: Log off. Sign out. Shut down the tablet, the phone, the laptop. Sell your television, or hell, just destroy it so it doesn’t poison the next person. I know that existing within this paradigm is painful. I know the weight and misery that dealing with all of the requirements forced upon you by other people, faceless and nameless and uncaring, can generate. But retreating into the wrinkles of the Leviathan’s pale smile is not the cure. We cannot rescue and resuscitate our spirits when our blood courses with alcohol, Prozac, and corn syrup. We cannot slay the loneliness in doors, tribeless, illuminated by the dim glow of a screen.

Further, you need to stop looking for a plan. Stop trying to figure out how to make the workable work or the unsustainable sustain. Society is the demon. Civilization is the leviathan. The wise of Middle Earth knew that no good purpose could be achieved with the dark lord’s ring, it had to be destroyed in the fires where it came into being. Society is not redeemable. It cannot be made good.

So let up a big Bronx cheer to all of the politicians and bureaucrats and high-minded engineers and NGO white collars who continually try to sell you their version of the scheme by which the demon can be bridled and made to do the bidding of the righteous. One moment’s glance at a news feed will turn up hundreds of these schemes, littered with plans for progressive taxation, solar panels, deregulation, and geo-engineering. They are wasting what precious little time might remain, and worse, they are convincing you that you are powerless and that they are powerful. The truth is that they are the overseers of this plantation, and you alone hold the key to your liberation.

So I toast to the scofflaws, the turnstyle jumpers, the shoplifters and the squatters. I raise my glass to the tribal warriors who set RCMP vehicles on fire while defending their homes and to the ELF ninjas who by night drive spikes into trees and pour concrete into bulldozer exhaust pipes. I sing “solidarity” to the black clad youth who set ATM’s on fire and to the white haired granny who flips the police the bird from the bus window as she makes her way to knitting group. If society is irredeemable, we must be anti-social, and breathe the liberated breath that comes with finally giving ourselves the permission to feel such things. We can choose how we manifest such feelings into action, and in no way do I expect anyone to do anything they deem inappropriate for their set of circumstances. Your individual resistance can be poetry, it can be stealing a box of pens from work, it can be the time-honored tradition of carving your anger into a bathroom wall. All that matters is that we never let the demon in, not completely, and that the part of us that we keep for ourselves remains wild and untouchable

But may I humbly suggest, that we need to touch the Earth. We need to sit in circles with our tribes. We need to experience the world subjectively through our many senses, and to know that our subjective experience of the land around us contains more truth and validity than all of the photographs and recordings humming away on spinning hard drives in an office tower somewhere. We have to value the direct experience of our individual lives and try however we might to cross the divides of time to remember that which the demon and his acolytes have beaten, and raped, and killed to make us forget.

We are the earth made animate, and our brothers and sisters, the animals and forests and rivers and stars, are crying out to us to stop. To please just stop.

I started my series of essays last fall asking, “What are we to do when we simultaneously need a thing and yet are destroyed by it?” The house, civilization, our domestication, the story that we were told and that we re-tell every day, all were supposed to be tools to serve us. It is clear beyond doubt that this is no longer the case if it ever was. We have become the tools of our tools. It is time to bury them. It is time for a new tale to explain who we are, and we are each one of us free to write that tale, and to sing it to our children.

This is me signing off. I have said what I have to say, and it has been hard on my body and spirit to do so. As I type these words the sun now shines down on the red buds and magnolia flowers opening at the tips of the tree branches outside my home. My daughter is playing and I am clicking at keys. The asymmetry of my bent body ignoring the wonders of life in this moment is glaring. Look at your world. Enter into it. For the love of God, go outside, be in the place where you are, and connect with it. Better still, See where it needs defending and defend it. On the count of three.

One. Two. Three…

—

Share this:

  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • Tweet
  • Share on Tumblr
  • Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
Like Loading...

The Twilight of Our Tale: Part One

15 Sunday Mar 2015

Posted by td0s in Peak Oil

≈ 83 Comments

Originally posted at Prayforcalamity.com

by TD0S

Part 1

“Protect your spirit, for we are in the place where spirits get eaten.”

– John Trudell

Spring is moving in quickly, more quickly than I might necessarily want. My arms are worn enough to keep me from complaining about the break from hauling and splitting firewood, and sleeping the night through instead of waking up at three a.m. to stoke the embers and add more fuel to the stove is a welcome respite. I am quite concerned however, that the season for collecting maple sap may be cut abruptly short. For the best syrup season, night time temperatures need to drop below freezing, and day time temperatures need to rise to just shy of forty degrees Fahrenheit. A week ago, nights were just above zero and days didn’t creep past twenty. This week, nighttime lows hover in the high thirties and the days are approaching sixty. Of course, this could be a fluke, and I don’t want to scream “climate change” with every strange localized weather event, but the songbirds seem to be dropping anchor for the season, and I am recording the details of this winter’s drastic waning in the ledger book of such things in my mind.

The arrival of spring brings for me a surge of energy as I feel life return to the above ground world from the root-balls and burrows where it slumbered during the frigid and dark portion of the year. Spring also brings with it a workload beyond what I ever have time for, so the energy I feel running through my limbs as the sun shines down on my jacketless body is quite a gift. I mention such things because as the days lengthen and grow warmer, I have commitments in the garden and about the homestead that keep me from writing, so this will likely be my last piece for a good while. Such a hiatus comes none to soon, as I feel I am running short on things to say for the present time.

Why do we seek such writing anyway? If you’re like me, you are reading this very piece as you drink your morning coffee or tea. You are mustering the wakefulness required to go about your daily activity, but before you do, you are washing your mind in a bit of confirmation bias concerning the state of the world. Everything is going to hell, and on a daily basis you check in with the news feeds and blogger community to peruse the latest data points that confirm what you already know: climate change is accelerating as superstorms and droughts increase in ferocity. The people in power are still maniacs insistent on walling themselves off from the public with cordons of brutish and overly armed police. People without power are still being brutalized when they stand up for their dignity or merely exist between a capitalist and a resource. Some species went extinct. Some rainforest was clear-cut. Some stretch of ocean was overfished, or used as a radioactive dump-site, or both.

Rise and shine, the world is right where you left it when you went to sleep last night. Now go to work.

—

A few days ago I asked a young man I know who works as a dishwasher in a deli, “Why do you get up and go to work every day?” He answered, “To pay the bills.” I then asked, “What would happen if you didn’t pay your bills?” “I would be evicted eventually,” he replied. It quickly became evident that I was engaging in an exercise more than I was asking sincere questions, and he quite happily humored me as we ran through the entire sequence of events that would follow his not paying his bills. There are the police who would serve his eviction and the consequences they would face if they refused to do so, the police chief who would fire them, the mayor that would fire him if he didn’t terminate non-compliant police, and on, and on down the line. It wasn’t a new line of thought for him, and after playing the game of hypotheticals, I asked him what was behind this whole machination of human dominoes that forces people to work doing things they hate, like washing dishes in a deli.

He said, “Money. Greed.”

I offered a different possibility. “There is a demon behind all of this, manipulating us. It is an invisible and nameless demon that is trying to eat our souls.”

He laughed. I told him I was serious.

Perhaps you don’t believe in demons. It doesn’t really matter. The point is that no matter how much we know, individually and collectively, no matter how much anger we harbor, no matter how much we hate what it is our bodies and minds are engaged in for hours at a stretch every single day, we still go and do it. Minute by minute, hour by hour, no one is standing there making us do anything. It is all internalized. We are obedient. We are docile. We are domesticated.

Here is where you jump in and interject that bosses and landlords and police and judges all are waiting in the wings to punish disobedience. Of course they are. I don’t disagree. But remember, there are more bosses and landlords and police and judges all waiting behind the first set to make sure they keep to the rules and continue the game of civilization uninterrupted. Though this is obvious I point it out for a reason: there is no one to kill. There is no one person who if eliminated would provide for us the opening we need to stop the insanity of industrial civilization and to build something new, something sane, something with the potential for longevity.

Thinking of such things reminds me of “The Grapes of Wrath.” In the story, Steinbeck writes a scene in which the agents of the landowners come to tell the tenant farming families that they have to leave.

“Sure, cried the tenant men, but it’s our land. We measured it and broke it up. We were born on it, and we got killed on it, died on it. Even if it’s no good, it’s still ours. That’s what makes it ours – being born on it, working it, dying on it. That makes ownership, not a paper with numbers on it.

We’re sorry. It’s not us. It’s the monster. The bank isn’t like a man.

Yes, but the bank is only made of men.

No, you’re wrong there-quite wrong there. The bank is something else than men. It happens that every man in a bank hates what the bank does, and yet the bank does it. The bank is something more than men, I tell you. It’s the monster. Men made it, but they can’t control it.”

The tenant farmers are pushed to anger at the blamelessness and absurdity of their situation.

“We’ll get our guns, like Grampa when the Indians came. What then?

Well-first the sheriff, and then the troops. You’ll be stealing if you try to stay, you’ll be murderers if you kill to stay. The monster isn’t men, but it can make men do what it wants.”

Steinbeck does a masterful job outlining the maddening and perplexing nature of our conundrum; people comprise the system, people act out their roles within the system, but people are not the system. So what the hell is the system? It seems so innocuous. It is rules. It is expectations. It is a series of triggers by which one human action results in an automatic response by another human who is just doing their job, and if they weren’t doing it, someone else would be. Of course, I am not trying to absolve any single person of the responsibility they bear for the actions that they individually engage in. I am however, interested in exploring the construction of the invisible forces that keep all of us participating in a system that we know is toxic to us physically and spiritually, as well as to the living planet at large.

It is so easy to blame the system. It’s just a word, and it is a stand in for the pieces and the whole of everything we see that is wrong with the way human society is behaving. Poverty? Blame the system. War? The system. Racism? The system. But what is the system? If it is just rules, expectations, and essentially stories that we tell each other, then why is the system so hard to change? Why is it so seemingly immutable? Why are we so damn helpless and ineffective at altering something so fragile, so simple, so made up? Could all of us really be so captured by something invented, something spoken into being and jotted down on flimsy pieces of paper? It’s as though we all began playing a game, only to realize that the game was playing us, and once begun there was no way to stop playing, even as we watched our movements destroy the world.

Maybe there is a demon after all. Maybe ignoring the demon, pretending it is not there endangers us further. Maybe the demon is an eater of souls, and its strategy is to diminish our power and our will through mindless labor, through a dulled existence of symbols and static, flashing lights and loud noises, addiction and poisonous food. Maybe for millennia, this demon has been slowly at work, gaining strength and refining its strategy, inserting its desires and ploys into our lives as politics, as capitalism, as war, as revolution, as status, as sex, as culture, as normal, as human nature.

Is it so hard to believe? Look around. Walk through a gas station. Look at the racks full of five hour energy bottles, E Cigarettes, scratch and win lottery tickets, chili cheese flavored corn chips, male enhancement pills, and thirty two ounce aluminum cans full of Monster and malt liquor. Step outside and see the fifty-foot glowing signs advertising Arby’s, Taco Bell, and some nameless pornography and sex toy megastore. Each establishment is serving up a small slice of death, of slavery, of misery. Each storefront and corporate logo is masking a sweatshop, a slaughterhouse, a slave, an oil spill, as another species gone from the Earth forever.

But we don’t believe in demons. We are too rational for that, too objective, too advanced. At least, that is the story we tell ourselves. But then I look around at the tortured landscape and the careless people moving through it who don’t seem to notice that they are traversing a spiritual wasteland, and I have to wonder.

—

Maybe when we go to the internet in the morning and look for the daily headlines and editorials, we are really looking for a friend, someone of like mind to join us in our knowledge and our fear of the events taking shape all around us that individually we are just too damn small to do anything about. Like office workers who jumped from the upper floors of the burning World Trade Center, we want someone with whom we can hold hands as we take the plunge into a future that has no good outcomes.

Or maybe, we are looking for hope, logging on and scrolling past link, after, link, after link until we find what we have been waiting for; a set of instructions. No more data points, no more statistics and measurements confirming what we already know, but a plan. For God’s sake, the catastrophe is spelled out in neon lights and it howls from a megaphone all day, every day. I have more awareness than my mind can bear, but what the hell am I, are you, supposed to do about it? We are so small. We are just one person. We are already late for work.

Step one: Protect your spirit, for you are in a place where spirits get eaten.

Share this:

  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • Tweet
  • Share on Tumblr
  • Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
Like Loading...

There Will Be Blood

10 Tuesday Feb 2015

Posted by td0s in Peak Oil

≈ 190 Comments

By TDoS
Cross posted from Prayforcalamity.com
—

“He said that men believe the blood of the slain to be of no consequence but that the wolf knows better. He said that the wolf is a being of great order and that it knows what men do not: that there is no order in this world save that which death has put there.”
― Cormac McCarthy, The Crossing

In Theodore Kacynski’s manifesto, “Industrial Society and Its Future,” he lays out many premises concerning the existence of man in relation to technology and technological societies. One of these premises is that modern people in technological societies are afraid of death because they have never lived. They have not used their bodies, minds, and souls to their full potential, and thus even in old age, feel like they are yet to begin. Kacynski writes about the primitive man who in his sixties, having seen the successful life of his child and feeling the weariness in his muscles and bones, does not fear, but welcomes his turn to sleep. Where these intuitions were passed on, cultures of indigenous peoples were able to form warrior societies whose success rested on the fact that individual braves had no fear of death. They viewed themselves as one with their people and their land, both of which were timeless, granting them strength of conviction when the situation called for it.

When we hear of people dying in our culture, such news is often quickly followed with statements about the unfairness of one dying so young. Even a fifty-year-old heart attack victim will generally be granted laments and declarations that their passing was too early. While of course the loss of a loved one is saddening, there does appear to be a trend throughout this culture that seems to speak of death as if it is not the ultimate outcome of every life. Death, like the environment, is but another inconvenience to be conquered by our cleverness.

In this culture, there is language of “rights” concerning life. It is said that individuals have a “right” to life, meaning then that death is some violation against the individual. There are even those who would like to extend such rights to animals. No one, according to modern people enculturated by the dominant dogmas, is supposed to die. Ever.

Of course, every living being is only so for a limited time. Death and birth are two phases in the same biological process, and where there is the latter, inevitably we will come to the former. What I find so maddening, is that this culture, so lacking in its ability to confront death, let alone to create and support the psychological and emotional infrastructure to deal with death, is such an efficient bringer of death. How a people so vocally dedicated to peace and the preservation of life can then unflinchingly create nuclear and biological weapons, institute economic castes which immiserate the majority to establish the privilege of the minority, and daily exterminate upwards of two hundred species is possibly the grand irony of our time.

The mind reels.

—

When just last month, the study “Planetary Boundaries: Guiding Human Development on a Changing Planet,” was released, it got a lot of traction across the internet. The study, prepared by eighteen scientists from various international universities, grabbed headlines by claiming that human civilization had crossed four of nine environmental boundaries.

Of course such studies digitally shared from hard drive, to hard drive, to hard drive have never served to accomplish much in the way of real world action towards deindustrialization, and likely this one was and will remain no different. The trend seems to be that alarming data confirming that human industrial civilization is driving the global ecology to ruin, likely even to the near term detriment of this very civilization, only ends up spurring on those who believe that human industrial civilization can be done in a less harmful way, perhaps with the addition of more solar panels or the subtraction of capitalist motives.

Those who dare argue that civilization, and industrial civilization in particular, is the root cause of the destructive habits which are bringing all living beings to a point of potential collapse or extinction, are routinely dismissed as extreme. Such critics, before dismissal, are reminded of the dominant culture’s primary directive; “We cannot go backwards.” Suggestions that we must, in order to maintain a survivable habitat, drastically reduce reliance on industrial methods, products, and infrastructure are waved off as impossible, insane, or even genocidal. Defenders of the dominant culture and systems of industrial civilization claim that such reductions in technological application will axiomatically mean reductions in human population, and thus are off the table. These claimants are either oblivious to the fact that “going forward” with the methods and practices of the dominant culture would be at least equally genocidal, if not more so, or they harbor a quasi religious belief that human invention will save us from every single problem caused by previous scores of human invention. Always ignored is the clear fact that so called “going forward” will mean an increase in human population before the ecosystems which support them collapse, meaning there will be more humans to die when drought, famine, sea level rise, resource scarcity, and every other calamity currently rising to crescendo ultimately manifest in a symphony of systemic failures that existing political, technological, and economic structures are incapable of mitigating.

And then there are the non-human genotypes that most defenders of the dominant culture refuse to ever enter into their calculations.

When someone refuses to acknowledge a solution to a problem because it will indirectly involve death – even when the solution in question is attempting to select fewer deaths sooner as opposed to a great many more deaths later – this person is inserting hidden premises into the discussion, the most obvious of which is that people alive now have the right to exhaust the health of the land which people not yet born will need to rely on in the future. If upon the suggestion that we must globally act to deindustrialize in order to prevent overwhelming climate catastrophe, a person floats the counter argument that such deindustrialization will result in a reduction of currently available medical technologies, and is therefore an unacceptable proposition, this person is inserting into the discussion a premise that the lives of those who would no longer have access to the medical technologies they require are more valuable – this is to say, they have more of a right to survival – than the lives that will be lost – human and non – when industrial civilization fails and brings down with it the functioning ecology of the planet.

Such premises, to me, seem insane. A patent refusal to acknowledge the bare reality that all life, including human life, requires as a foundation a healthy and viable habitat is either obstinacy or a shameful level of ignorance. Claiming that one group of humans has more of a right to survival than others, or that humans have more of a right to survival than the rest of the web of life, is doubly insane.

At the end of it all, defenders of the status quo are not defending life, they are defending lifestyle. Proponents of the dominant culture and its myths of progress are really arguing for their own comfort, of both body and mind. Changing nothing presents no difficult ethical questions or messy physical conflicts. Going forward is the easy choice. This fact alone should ring alarm bells.

—

Why is death so unacceptable? If we cannot come to grips with death, then we will find ourselves collectively at an impasse where no necessary action will be taken, and industrial civilization will continue unimpeded on its course devouring forests, wiping out species after species, washing away topsoil, and rendering the oceans a lifeless acidic soup of plastics in various stages of photo decay. Somewhere buried in all of this is yet another premise; that to elect the death of even one is unacceptable, but to remain passive while existing systems dole out death to many is forgivable. Human agency seems to be the determining factor. The people who own and operate chemical plants that cause regional cancer clusters in children are forgiven. The death of one million pinpricks is too diffuse to assign blame. On the other hand, to intentionally kill the CEO of such a chemical company would be an outrage. It would be a tragedy. People on TV would say he died too young.

The dominant culture not only protects those high on its hierarchy, blurring lines of responsibility for the actions they take in the name of progress, but it also blinds every day people from the realities of just how it is they come to have the things that they do. Major systems of production and distribution that segregate individuals from the sources of their food, their clothing, the materials that built their homes, the fuels that power their cars and gadgets, create an illusory sense of existence. If a person perceives that food comes from a grocery store, gasoline from a pump, shoes from an online retailer, it is reasonable to believe then that this person’s perceptions have been skewed into believing that nothing must ever die for us to consume whatever we want in whatever quantities we desire. As long as the blood is on someone else’s hands in some other land far from sight, then there is no blood at all. It is this willful blindness to the day to day functioning of industrial civilization on the part of the world’s wealthier populations that allows a people draped in slave made textiles who are kept fed by the mechanistic rape of stolen land powered by stolen oil to stare up with their doe eyes and without a hint of irony ask, “But why do they hate us?”

So it is that so often we hear the claims of “green” capitalists who declare we can have our planet and kill it too. We are to shut our eyes and believe that solar panels, electric cars, fair trade mocha lattes, soy burgers, iPads, internet service, and all of the pills and processes in a modern hospital all just manifest from the ether. The rainforests clear cut, the oceanic dead zones caused by agricultural run off, the open pit mines, the oil spills, the nitro-tri-fluoride and other greenhouse gasses, and all of the whips and prods physical and not that herd about the masses of humans who do all the lifting, stitching, assembling, dismembering, and dying to bring such wonders to our shopping carts just don’t add up to dry shit.

That is how the dominant culture deals with death. It hides it. And when it can’t hide it any longer, it calls it “business.”

—

Various indigenous tribes have been able to maintain steady populations. In fact, for millennia, a handful of commonplace practices aided in keeping a tribe or band’s numbers in check. Breastfeeding infants until they were four years old helped prevent mother’s menstrual cycles from resurging, thereby keeping birth numbers down. The use of abortifactant herbs also helped women in the event of untimely pregnancies. When a group’s population was at a point where another child would bring great hardship, some tribal people would turn to infanticide. Picture the heartbreaking scene, as a mother lays a newborn infant on a cold hillside to freeze as the sun sets on a winter day. On the other end, tribes would at times decide not to work to heal ailing elderly members, and instead would begin ceremonial death rites when an older person fell ill.

This is the cultural imperative I am interested in. The ability of a people to confront the hard reality of their lives, and to make the soul wrenching choices that they must make in order to survive is not present in the civilized paradigm, not when it comes to allowing death. This is a delicate topic, to be sure, but one of necessary import as the world now hosts almost eight billion people, while conversely non-renewable resources are consumed at increasing rates, and the ecology is pushed beyond the breaking point.

Cultures that accept the inevitability of death create ceremonies and social forms for processing death. This is not to suggest that these people do not feel the pain of loss when a loved one passes, but rather to highlight that they develop a maturity surrounding death. They can talk about it. They can incorporate it into their survival strategies. They do not treat it as a cosmic betrayal of the individual’s right to exist for seventy-five years before a midnight expiration in a beach condo in Florida. Most importantly, cultures that make room for death do not become locked into a suicidal social paradigm, refusing to veer in their direction because doing so would result in the death of some, even when going forward would result in the death of all.

In my last essay I spoke of needing a new cultural ethos in order to prevent the wanton annihilation of the Earth’s life giving systems. This psychological and spiritual evolution must include maturity in the matters of death. Culturally, we must not shun death from our view, for when we do, we push his presence beyond sight, but not beyond efficiency. Beyond the hedge where death lurks ignored by modern man, he does his work still, and he plots against those who believe they have banished him with their cleverness. He plans a great party indeed.

—

My daughter is nearly a year old. She is my connection to the future, as my parents and ancestors are my connection to the past. I love her to my core, each cell in my body resonating with an urge to guard her, protect her, and to see to her survival. I think about the emptiness that would devour me if she were to die, so I do have a sense of the gravity concerning that which I have written. I look at my little girl, and the truth of life comes to me plain as the new day: we cannot banish sorrow. Heartache is the handmaiden of joy. The history of our species is the history of finding the strength to endure when it seems that all is lost, and when we see no reason to go on, feeling that the ground holds us still.

The complex problems we face require sober, adult analysis, but here and now we lack the methods and ceremonies necessary to act as a mature culture. Our unwillingness at all levels to confront uncomfortable realities has made dangerous adolescents of us, as our orgy of consumption and self aggrandizement has pushed the planet to the brink. There are tasks which demand our collective attention, and undertaking them, while necessary, will not be without consequence. There are few good options on the table before us. Meeting such difficult questions head on, with humility and grace, is the mark of greatness.

It is time to ask, “who are we?” and “who do we want to be?” As we stand right now, we are a belligerent cult of ego, drunk on the self, screaming our greatness as we charge forth trampling everything underfoot. We have a lot of work to do, and not nearly enough time to do it. Death rides whether we call for him or not.

Share this:

  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • Tweet
  • Share on Tumblr
  • Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
Like Loading...

Forbidden Thoughts and Sacred Obligations

12 Monday Jan 2015

Posted by td0s in Peak Oil

≈ 54 Comments

Tags

Afghanistan, Anarchism, antarctic ice sheet, Anti-civ, Climate Change, Coal, cormac mccarthy, Depleted Uranium, ethos, extinction, ferguson, indigenous, Industrial Civilization, Iraq, police, species loss, terrence mckenna, the wolf

By TDoS
Originally posted at Prayforcalamity.com
—

When I was a younger man, I very much wanted to be taken seriously. To be taken seriously was to be asked your opinion. It was to be allowed a seat at the grown-up’s table in politics, economy, and all other matters that intelligent individuals busied themselves with. I wanted to be considered smart by other people who were considered smart. This meant that I had to be skeptical of any claims not supported by the dominant culture, shucking anything deemed mystical or superstitious. To be considered smart meant carrying an attitude of superiority, even open hostility towards anyone who claimed any truth not stamped with approval by the science of the dominant culture. Now I talk to trees.

My younger self would ridicule my present self, haughtily proclaiming the superiority of his well founded, reasonable ideologies. My present self would pity my younger self, and exit the conversation, too tired to expend what little communicative energy I have on someone so seemingly bereft of the ability to even momentarily entertain an idea that ran contrary to their set of inherited cultural dogma.

It is easy now to see that I was in a trap back then. As most young people are, I was attempting to make my way in a culture of accumulation, and thus I had to look and sound the part if I wanted to be accepted into the fold of “productive society.” Since abandoning any ambitions for career I have taken on various forms of employment to get by, and this has meant a lot of work in bars and restaurants. Briefly, I worked in a breakfast cafe in a college town that was home to a popular business school. Working there I would see students, mostly young white men, sitting at tables wearing ties and speaking in the language they were being conditioned to speak. It was strange to witness. I would wonder exactly where the break happened when these young men decided that they wanted to be just like their fathers. They probably wanted to be called “successful” by other people. They probably wanted to be considered smart. This would mean dressing, speaking, acting, thinking and even at their very core believing as their predecessors had initiated them to. They wanted to be taken seriously.

—

The year two thousand and fourteen was the hottest year ever recorded on planet Earth. Over the course of the year we were bombarded with statistics highlighting the peril of our time: Fifty percent of animal life has been killed over the last forty years, the Antarctic ice sheet melt has passed the point of no return, and coal use is still on the rise globally. Even the timid, watered down, almost entirely feckless mainstream US environmental movement is starting to make a tiny bit of sense, in noting that capitalism has got to go if we are to survive. Of course, much of what these liberal environmentalists are seeking is capitalist reform, but I digress.

The truth of the matter is that of course capitalism has to go in order to preserve the habitability of the planet. That’s just the beginning. All of industrial civilization must go, but because this is a forbidden concept amongst the serious folk who attend conferences, do media junkets, or – I don’t know – hold a senate seat, it will never even reach the table to be laughed at. The maintenance of the dominant culture requires that certain ideas are forbidden. Such restriction of thought is achieved in a myriad of ways, including by what Noam Chomsky termed, the “manufacturing of consent.” By and large, forbidden ideas are boxed out of public discourse by professionals who frame debate very narrowly, permitting only officially acceptable viewpoints, which then filter down to the masses.

We saw this recently with the uprisings in Ferguson, Missouri. The people of that city fought the police, and many of them had no problem declaring complete and utter disdain for the police as an institution. Despite the nearly five hundred Americans killed by police every year, and the untold number of assaults, robberies, frame ups, false arrests, and rapes committed by uniformed police officers, the dialog of so-called serious people is forbidden to ever move to a discussion of self defense against these villains, let alone abolishing them from civic life. Peter Gelderloos mentions this in his quinessential three part essay, Learning from Ferguson.

To allow people to fight back against the police, or to allow discussion of eliminating the police is forbidden because the police are a necessary component of a society of haves and have nots. In fact, I would be willing to bet there is a strong correlation between people who adamantly and unquestioningly support the police, and personal wealth, for the obvious reason that the more you have the more you have to lose. That means being happy that the taxpayers subsidize the jackboots who prevent even a public forum that might hint at discussing a redistribution of wealth.

After the Vietnam War, the propaganda ministers in the state realized that showing dead bodies on TV and in magazines had a demoralizing effect on the general public. Apparently the American population had some level of functioning empathy for other human beings, so broadcasting the corpses of dead US servicemen and even half burnt Vietnamese children soured their taste for carnage. Since realizing this, the US has locked out media that isn’t “embedded” from war zones, and despite the over a million dead in Iraq and Afghanistan, ten years of war haven’t found themselves plastered on the nightly news in any unbecoming fashion, despite the plentiful material. The children born deformed due to depleted uranium poisoning caused by US munitions should have been enough to wrench even the blood thirstiest of hawk bellies in the US, but their visages were never given a chance.

Forbidding an image and forbidding an idea are both attempted for the same reason; control. If you control what people think, you can control how they act. Even the most ardent critics of US policy will proclaim up and down their patriotism, less they be banished from serious forums. Sit and think for a few moments and I imagine you could come up with your own short list of forbidden ideas, never to be discussed, not by serious people. Civilization and its dominant culture have been practicing this tactic of control since inception, and there is an idea that has been so terrifying to the rulers of the civilized world that stamping it out has been an ongoing and bloody task for over ten thousand years. The most forbidden of ideas, is that the Earth is alive.

—

Serious people are concerned with objectivity. They perceive the universe to be a clockwork machine governed by laws and made of various inert bric-a-brac that can be manipulated to serve their purposes. Whether this manifests as a logging company cutting down a forest for timber, a meat packing concern quickening the rate at which they slaughter cows, or bulldozers scraping away layers of Earth in order to access the bitumen deposits beneath, the source of the thinking is the same.  The land is dead.  Inert.  It is raw material waiting to be put to purpose by human hands.  Further, knowledge and understanding of the universe and its lifeless bodies is to be achieved only through the application of western scientific principles. Anything that cannot be observed and quantified with the five human senses does not exist.

Even things that are alive, like trees and animals can be reduced with a trick of thinking into nothing but their component pieces. Trees don’t have brains, so they cannot think or feel or experience, so they are worthless except as corpses.  Animals may have brains, but those brains lack significant cortex or numbers of neurons, and so they cannot think or feel or experience, so they are worthless except as corpses.  Throughout the history of civilization this rationale has been applied to humans as well.  Whenever anyone is in the way of some expectation of power or wealth, they are reduced to nothingness, just a fleshy sum of their cells with a measly few watts of current surging through them.  Not sophisticated, not refined; much like animals really, and animals are worthless except as corpses, so let the homicide begin.  This mental twisting is the death rite of civilization.  It is the lullaby people in business suits sing so they can stay focused on the cash while they order another chimpanzee vivisected, purchase a new gas lease, or sign off on limited airstrikes over a civilian population.

In my life I have walked through forests clear cut for oil pipelines.  I have driven through the shale plays of West Texas.  I have seen copper mines, and coal mines, and all sorts of other massive holes blasted and scraped into the face of the planet.  Many people have seen these things.  Of course, many people work in these places and on these projects.  The difference is that upon the witnessing I feel something very somber that nags at me from the inside.  It is the feeling that gripped you as a child when you saw someone joyfully inflict pain upon someone helpless or weak while you were powerless to interfere. Because of this feeling I could never participate in ecologically destructive activities.  It would feel wrong, like treachery, like stabbing my mother in the gut for a paycheck.

And I think this feeling matters.  This feeling is part of the foundation of my personal ethos from which my principles blossom.  In short, my feelings of connectivity with the living world create in me a sense of responsibility to protect her, and a refusal to accept harming her for personal gain.  Often I wonder why so few people feel this particular empathy, but then I know the answer.  People have been trained by the dominant culture to think of all of these environmentally degrading activities as harmless.  They have been raised since childhood by people themselves raised since childhood to believe that the Earth is dead.  They have been told by respectable people to believe that forests are not alive and that plants do not feel and that at the end of the day, everything is arbitrary and meaningless.  There is an undercoat of nihilism which makes progress possible.

For generations people have been bullied into believing that the nagging in their conscience is an illusion caused by the brain.  When a forest makes you feel good, it is you fooling yourself. When you feel deep love for a place or for other living beings, it is an illusion, merely a sudden influx of serotonin in some receptor in your gray matter.  And who are you anyway?  Just some cells, some neurons, some electricity.  What is your love?  Your desire?  Your fear?  They are nothing.  Reflexes.  Chemicals.  The aimless, endless spinning of molecules through space and time.  Reduce it all down, break it into pieces.  Scatter them until you feel nothing at all. Now go make some money.  Be productive.  For Christ’s sake, be serious.

—

My friend is indigenous to the land now called Canada.  I ask him what it means to be a warrior, to have as a component of one’s culture a warrior society.  He points me to talks given by other first nations people which elucidate that in various indigenous languages the word “warrior” is understood differently than it is in English.  It isn’t aggressive, on the offense, macho, seeking to conquer.  To be a warrior is to be a shield bearer, a person who takes very seriously their sacred obligation to maintain the health of the land so that it can be passed on for many generations to come.  The ethos of such people forms their worldview, and this worldview informs their actions.  The end result is a relationship with one’s home that is not about domination and taking, but acting with reciprocity. Such a mindset is a barrier against excess and greed and wanton destruction of the land.

Under the dominant culture, there are no sacred obligations.  We are told from birth that work, production, and the pursuit of material wealth is the path taken by serious people.  Those who rebuff their instruction to accumulate for the sake of accumulation are losers and bums.  If one wants to defend their home, such intuitions are bent to the cause of imperial full spectrum dominance.  Home is converted to country, and the battlefield is determined by a board of directors.  This is not an ethos with a future.  It is a toxic set of ideas and myths that will guide human minds to the edge of the world and then over.  This idea is a parasite, and its hosts are pushing the ecosystems of the Earth to the brink.

My friend tells me about the deal the wolf made with mother Earth:

“The wolf signed a contract with Mother Earth. The contract is this. The wolf may compete with all other life for survival. The wolf may not force other life into extinction for the purpose of eliminating competition. The wolf may not damage habitat to eliminate competition. The wolf may not wage war to prevent other life from feeding on the wolf. If the wolf abides by these laws and is able to compete, the wolf will survive in brotherhood with all other life. All life signs this contract, except for a group of humans. Until those people sign on the dotted line they will be doomed. They may already be doomed.”

What strikes me about this is that to make a contract with another is to stand as equals.  Speaking of other beings or of the living planet herself as even able to enter into a contract is to grant to them the deference that they exist as you do; alive, dignified, valuable.

The dominant culture never seeks to stand equal with anything.  It seeks only to dominate.  It never presents obligations to its acolytes to defend other beings or the land.  It makes demands of the land.  The stark differences between these two perspectives is striking.  One asks you to be a warrior and to take up a shield in defense of your mother. The other commands you to take up a sword – or a plow, or an axe, or a bulldozer – and to plunge it into her breast.

I am not in any way suggesting that non-native people need to appropriate native culture.  What I am suggesting is that if the ethos of civilization goes unchallenged, then no matter how much awareness is raised and no matter how much people try to convert modern industrial society into a sustainable twin of itself, they will find only failure.  After all, as Terrence McKenna said and I have oft quoted, culture is our operating system, and the dominant culture has a starting point where the land is already dead, so how then can it take us anywhere but to a future where this founding principle is materialized?  Garbage in, garbage out.

How we go about changing the ethics, myths, and founding truths of people trapped in the cage of industrial civilization is not something I have a prescription for.  In “The Road” Cormac McCarthy wrote:

“Where you’ve nothing else construct ceremonies out of the air and breathe upon them.”

So I walk my land and I talk to the trees. Maybe they can hear me and maybe they can’t.  All of the serious people will laugh at my wasted breath.  Smart people will try to convince me that I am only talking to myself.  And maybe they are right.  Maybe I am a madman babbling over hill and holler.  But I can tell you this much for certain; I will never cut these trees down, and neither will my daughter.  So in the end, who gives a damn?

Share this:

  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • Tweet
  • Share on Tumblr
  • Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
Like Loading...

Finding True North

22 Monday Dec 2014

Posted by td0s in Peak Oil

≈ 120 Comments

Tags

6th Mass Extinction, Antarctic Ice Melt, Anthropogenic Climate Disruption (ACD), Capitalism, Ocean Acidification

By TD0S
Cross Posted from Prayforcalamity.com

—–

One of the great dangers of the life indoors, is the anesthetizing affect it has on a person. When we aren’t out in the world, we aren’t present to watch the dying. Attempting to talk about this via an electronic medium, even via the written word at all, is near futile because it requires the symbolic recreation of the tragedy unfolding around us, and the recreation will never carry the weight or the pain of the real thing.

So it comes down to data points. In essays past and in daily editorials available across the electronic press, we are fed the data points. Topsoil loss, species die off, the toxicity of the oceans, the acceleration of climate change; I can rattle off the data, but who cares? We are inside. Climate controlled. Masters of hundreds of energy slaves all whipped up to provide us with on demand entertainment, comfort, and snack food. We think we are safe inside our house, but the house is an illusion. There is no indoor, outdoor dichotomy. There is a temporary delusion blinding us to the reality of the storm bearing down.

In my previous essay I wrote that we must burn down the collective house that is civilization. We must demolish it thoroughly before the floors buckle and the roof caves in, despite the very real dependence we have developed upon this edifice. A conundrum indeed, but this conundrum is itself the question of our time, and it calls to all of us whether we are ready to square off with its implications or not.

Industrial civilization is destroying the living skin of the planet. Industrial civilization is rendering life on Earth impossible. This is inarguable. The only question then, is what to do. Where do our responsibilities lie, and how can we meet them with dignity, grace, and courage?

—

What do you value? What do you value the most in this world as you experience it? I think it is imperative that we start with this question because the answer will determine how we perceive our responsibilities as living beings. I refer to this as finding one’s polestar; their true north. Finding our pole star is essential because it is very easy to get entangled in the complexity of our culture, our socialization, our class status, and all of the other baggage we carry from lifetime after lifetime of trauma inflicted by the dominant culture. When we need reorientation, we come about to our true north, and keep from running wayward into the noise and distraction intentionally laid to ensnare the passionate.

My pole star is the healthy, fecund forest. I live in a wooded region, and when I look out my front door I see tree covered ravines. Beech, hickory, oak, maple, all stand stoically about me, their leaves blanketing and feeding the soil. I never feel so honest, so at home, so centered as when I stand in the deep blue dark of night, jacketed in the electric stillness of winter, staring up to the stars that peak through the tangled black fingers of the naked tree boughs. In those moments I feel whole, because I feel like part of a whole. My ancestors call to me from the past as they most certainly stood in the same pose of supplication, lost in wonder, and gratitude, and mystery.

This is where I go when I seek an ethical thread to follow through the spiritual and psychological quagmire of modern industrial civilization. When I look at the activities of humans, I ask what they mean for the forests. Not just my forest home, but for the forest homes of people and beings across the Earth. I ask if new technologies, or policies, or commercial activities will benefit these havens of life and solitude, or if they threaten them. I imagine the creeks and rivers that run through this region like blood in my veins, and usually the answer comes back to me that, no, the grand schemes of civilized man offer nothing good. They seek only to take, never to give back. They promise to dominate and ruin, and that is what they do.

When concrete is laid over what was once a field so that suburbanites can park their vehicles at a new strip of retail stores, the deep roots of plants do not surrender. Look to any patch of asphalt and you will find the rebellion under way. Grass, dock, wild onion, dandelion; they slowly crack and push through the rubble and road surface above them until they find their place in the sunlight once again. When under attack, these plants merely do what they must do to go about the business of living.

What fascinates me is that when hundreds or thousands of enraged people burn down the corporate chain stores that encircle them like army wagons on the frontier, these rioters are condemned. Spokespeople for the status quo feign innocent stupidity and ask, “Why are they burning down their own communities?” as if the concrete that is laid over the poor and working class is somehow their kin. Setting police cruisers and corporate chain stores alight is merely what these people must do to go about the business of living, whether this is consciously perceived or not.

The hierarchy of power that exists in this social paradigm attempts to mystify the public with language of togetherness when it suits them. They speak down to the lower orders as if we are one unit, one family, one tribe, each of us working together for the equal betterment of all. The actions of the powerful betray the truth, that those lower on the social hierarchy will labor, toil, suffer, and die for the comfort, power, and privilege of those at the top.

This is the framework by which responsibility is discussed within our society. If a man robs a store and is sent to prison for it, it is said that he is there to “pay his debt to society.” There are several implications in this statement surrounding the notion that this man was ever part of society to begin with, or that he desires to remain so. Of course, if he was robbing a store to pay his rent, keep the heat on, or feed his family, there will never be statements from the powerful to the effect that society failed this man, this valuable member of our collective, and forced him through circumstance to his act. Society will never pay its debt to this man, or to any man of his social rank. The idea that we are all daily electing to be in one cooperative social structure together is a pure fabrication.

As so often happens, officers of the state apparatus commit egregious violence, whether as police or soldiers, and their personal responsibility is almost never called into question. The only time an individual police officer or soldier is made to fall on their sword, is when their crime is so blatant, so heinous, and so public, that to not punish them would crack the façade of the entire control apparatus. By and large, these officers of the state do violence as a mode of day to day operations, all for the acquisition and maintenance of wealth and power as it exists and is distributed.

However, any actions deemed antagonistic to the structure of power and wealth will be vociferously condemned, and the perpetrators will be held liable for all knock on effects of these actions. For instance, if in an attempt to preserve the health and sanctity of one’s home, a person destroys the power sub station that operates the pumps for a tar sand pipeline that runs under their land, and this outage causes a cascade black out to follow suit, the state will likely hold responsible this person for any deaths or injuries that occur due to the lack of electricity that has resulted. If an old woman on a hospital respirator dies, the person who knocked out the sub station will likely be charged with manslaughter, if not murder. They will be called a terrorist. Anyone whose ideologies are even remotely similar to this person’s will also be labeled a terrorist, worthy of suspicion.

In short, this is the Law. People speak of the Law in moralistic terms, as if the volumes of clumsy codes and commands cobbled together by and for the wealthy were gifted to us by a choir of angels designed on building for us a just and balanced world. Of course, the Law is nothing of the sort. The Law has nothing to do with morals or ethics, as the bulk of the weight of the laws as they exist purpose to extort and exploit the poor for the powerful. Leaning on the law as an ethical or moral litmus is such a high form of laziness and ignorance as to be shameful.

This is the wall that encircles those of us who wish to see an end to the current order of power. We will be held to the highest account for the slightest ill that comes from any of our deeds, and the Law will be invoked in punishing even the most tepid of social activists. Meanwhile, an Airforce technician in a bunker will kill families thousands of miles away with hellfire missiles, and we will never know this person’s name. They will never be condemned for the deaths they directly and intentionally cause. In fact, they will be heralded and rewarded. Their efforts furthered the efforts of the machine of industrial civilization. They are on the team. Doctors designed torture programs for the CIA. Scientists design weaponized viruses. Capitalists pour heavy metals into rivers and continue cutting boreal forest to extract tar sand despite the globally acknowledged threat of climate catastrophe.

These people are all protected. Even attempting to slow them down in their work is a crime. The truth laid bare is that they have a sanctioned right to bring death, and you have no right to try to prevent them, whether violently or not.

It’s not about who you kill, it’s about who you kill for.

The police are on standby in any event, ready to gleefully dole out violence to even the most passive demonstrator. Any flinch, parry, or brush of a hand that can be deemed an attack on the police, of course, will result in charges, possibly felonies. The guardians of power too, are a protected class, so much so that in some places even passively ignoring police is classed as a felony.

The message is clear. This world doesn’t belong to us, but to them. We are a society in name only. Language about unity and country are pap for the masses. Those who don’t swallow it down get the club, or the bullet. But don’t worry, the comments section is still open. Feel free to air your frustrations beneath the article. Hashtag, give-up-already.

—

In the cold night air my breath is visible. Darkness comes early as we approach the solstice. When I scan over the ridge, I feel a peace in the center of my being. There are those who think this is all that is left. They say that we have already lost the big fights, and now all that remains is to hold close to those you love as the dying picks up speed, and the maniacs in power continue throttling forward.

I cannot help but feel that such placid thoughts, wherever they may be rooted, are an appeasement to the powerful. My blog wouldn’t be named “Pray for Calamity” if I didn’t believe that things would get worse before they got better. But I also know that without question I would die for my family and for our home, and thinking this opens me to the idea that there are so many great places and causes to die for on this planet at this time. Perhaps its time to stop seeing this as an age of impending calamity, but instead to see it as an age of opportunity to banish our fears, cage our egos, and to remember that death comes for us all, and that the greatest shame would be to waste our flesh when there are so many perfect targets for our rage. Perhaps we should begin to recognize this as an age of awakening; a time to reignite an internal fire that an oppressive and abusive culture has devoted so much energy to snuffing out.

So I ask, what is your pole star? What is your true north? What do you know in the center of your being to be good, and right, and true? The dominant culture attempts to bend the mind and break the heart, until all that is left is the fetishization of power. Domesticated, isolated, institutionalized, traumatized people begin to believe that their responsibilities are to the dominant system of buying, selling, killing, producing, and ever increasing efficiency at all of them.

I submit that these are not my responsibilities, and they are not yours. I submit that none of the language they weaponize and fire so readily at dissenting voices is applicable. We are not malcontents, radicals, insurgents, or terrorists. We are dandelions who do not wish to bend to the will of the concrete poured over us.

And when we are ready to remember all of this, we are warriors.

Share this:

  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • Tweet
  • Share on Tumblr
  • Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
Like Loading...

Burning Down the House

02 Tuesday Dec 2014

Posted by td0s in Peak Oil

≈ 71 Comments

Tags

Addiction to Fossil Fuels, Capitalism, Climate Chaos, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Ecocide, Peak Oil, Peak Water, Police State, Poverty

Cross posted from Pray for Calmity
By TDoS

Despite the oddly warm weather that blew in today, we are in the depth of autumn. The days have been full of regular chores. Splitting firewood and stacking it on pallets outside the front door is something I tend to every third day or so, and I try to split in excess so that come the raw cold days of winter, I need not swing the maul. The gardens are almost all covered in a layer of horse manure, and the chicken coop is surrounded with straw bales in the hope that the next round of polar vortecies will not claim the lives of any of our birds. The quiet days spent fleshing deer hides and hauling gravel into the drainage trench around our house arouse my mind to thinking. Furious thinking about the state of the planet, the state of human beings within this culture, and just what the hell any of us should do with our time, our will, and our strength as we collectively are drawn into a decidedly more difficult future.

The bulk of my days this summer past were dedicated to the construction of our house. We have several acres of beautiful land in one of the forested pockets of North America, and through the heat and the rain I swung a framing hammer until at long last I now have a small, mostly finished cabin. It was not once lost on me, that building my house in a rural place as part of an attempt to alleviate myself of the necessity of the industrial capitalist system, I quite often had to lean heavily on that very system. “Using the grid to go off the grid,” my friend said. Despite having no wires or pipes running to my cabin, I know the truth of the matter: there is no escaping civilization. One can scoot to the edges, hang out near the lifeboats if you will, smoking a cigarette and waiting for the moment reality dawns on the crew and they cry “Abandon ship!” But no matter how far one goes, no matter how many comforts they shuck, the chemicals of industry still course through their blood. Catastrophic climate change will wipe out ways of life even in the remote, uncontacted jungles of the world. People who never drove a car or owned a cell phone will be subject to famine and cancer. Ironically, it is the poor who will likely suffer greatest as climatic change spurs droughts, floods, and mega storms. Worse yet, it is the non-human species who are being eradicated daily, never to return, for the hubris of petroleum man.

—

I hate this civilization, this machine, this juggernaut, this sleepwalking hungry ghost, this pathological ideology, this imaginary cage that we cannot seem to imagine a key for no matter how deeply we come to resent our captivity. But I still wanted a steel roof so that I could collect rainwater. It was July when I screwed the roof down to the purlins, and on that day I asked myself, “What does a person do, when they simultaneously need a thing, and need to destroy it?” Such a double bind cannot possibly have a rational answer, because the rational is captured by society, trademarked and owned by the dominant culture. We can only know in our souls, in the still wild places of our being what must be done, but making the case with the words crafted in the forges of civilization will almost certainly always fail. Words and arguments are Trojan Horses, trap doors to counter arguments, to platitudes, to endless winding hallways of thought not designed to deliver you anywhere, but merely to sap you of your energy in the traveling.

We know what we must do, and we know that we will never be able to rationalize it to the denizens of civilization, because at its very core a rationalization is a request for permission. Those who benefit most from the demise of the natural world and from the agony of the global poor will never permit anyone to cut the lights on this cavalcade of compounding tragedies.

We know what we must do. We must burn down the house we have built, force ourselves back into the wild. And further, we must tell the story to all of our children explaining that the house made us weak, it made us sedentary, it turned us against our land and our kin who dwell on the land, it made us servile to its own needs even as it fell apart around us, off-gassing formaldehyde and leaching fire retardants into our blood. We must explain that the lure the comfort of the house provides is undeniable, and that a long many days from now, the children of our children’s children may forget the perils that the house presents. We must send strong words and songs far into the unseen future, so that those who come after us value the freedom of their life out of doors with only simple shelters, that they understand the impermanence of the tipi or the wigwam is not a failing, but a strength, as the nature of life on this Earth is that of impermanence. We must convey the futility of attempts to forever banish the cold, the rain, or the wind with immovable dwellings, and that such folly will forever chain those who build them to a lifetime of work while making enemies of their surroundings as they till more soil for crops, as they sink more mines for more metal, as they cut trees for more wood, and still lose their great battle against the ravages of weather and time.

It is a great house we have collectively built. Many will say there is no other way of being. They will say that despite the dangers the house presents to body, mind, and soul, that these dangers are nothing when weighed against the impossibility of life outside. There will be those who even acknowledge the limitations of this house, they will nod in agreement when you tell them that the roof is caving and the foundation buckling. They will say, “Yes, yes, I know” when you present the children afflicted with leukemia brought about by the toxicity of the house’s very construction, and they will fight you still when you suggest dismantling this place and creating something new.

The house is a prison, and the people within it have become institutionalized, domesticated. They have been subjugated in spirit and thought to think there is no life outside the walls. If it were possible merely to escape, to dig a mighty tunnel to the far reaches of the mortar and beyond, perhaps that would be the righteous choice. But there is no place left that the ravages cannot reach you. There are no lands across the sea where you will not be subject the dictates of the warden, where the poisons of industry will not claim your health and kill your landbase. The walls must go, by any means necessary, even if in the here and now, we rely upon them.

Sleet is falling now outside of my window. It has been a long season of work, and as my body finds itself resting more, my mind grows agitated. There have been uprisings against police authority across the United States in recent weeks. The petroleum markets are in turmoil as global powers seek domination over their competitors. Experts are advising that the temperature of the planet will necessarily rise to one and a half degrees Celsius above baseline, and still the owner class seeks to exploit tar sand, deep-water oil, and coal.

What is a person to do? It seems that simultaneously, everything and nothing is possible. Action and inaction both appear to be dead ends. There are those who silently hope for a massive solar flare or a great pandemic, assuming the only way to break from this Mobius strip of horrors is if it is severed by some cataclysm delivered from above. This is praying for calamity, it is begging a still listening God for absolution, as if we have done anything to earn such favors.

As the winter sets in, I will be writing about our responsibilities in such times.

Share this:

  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • Tweet
  • Share on Tumblr
  • Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
Like Loading...

The Dull Static

28 Monday Apr 2014

Posted by td0s in Capitalism, Climate Change, Ecological Overshoot, Environmental Degradation, Inequality, Neo-Colonialism, Peak Oil

≈ 172 Comments

Tags

6th Mass Extinction, Capitalism, Climate Change, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Dark Mountain Project, Ecological Overshoot, Economic Collapse, Mass Die Off, Mike Ruppert, Neoliberal Capitalism, Paul Kingsnorth, Peak Oil, Uncivilization

Originally posted at: Prayforcalamity.com


The flowering dogwoods are in bloom. Along the country lanes, the pink petals have already exploded into ephemeral radiance and begun to wither and fall from the branches of the Jane Magnolia trees. For me this means no longer having the agonizing luxury of hours to sit and write. After six months of bi-weekly essays, I feel I have expressed much of what had become balled up and cluttered in my mind, and now it is time to ruminate in the garden once again.

I named this blog, “Pray for Calamity,” because there are several major crises converging which threaten human civilization, and there are no existing structures capable of mitigating them. Democracy, capitalism, neo-liberal globalization; they are all incapable of undertaking the work necessary to avert cataclysm. The paradigms of thought and approach which are almost hardwired into the modern mind at this point, need to be scrubbed. Of the remaining, solvable ecological crises, which may not include climate change, there is no tool available to attend to them that comes from the conventional tool box of legal, lawful pursuit. These ecological crises, which range from topsoil depletion to tree extinctions to massive die off of oceanic life, cannot be remedied without a fundamental shift in the thinking of the people in the civilized world. If people do not begin to perceive the world as a living entity, interconnected, conscious, and with intrinsic value beyond how it can be carved up and sold, then it is only a matter of time until the human race begins to suffer on a massive scale due to their callous disregard for the other beings with whom they share this planet.

And then there are the political and economic and resource depletion crises as well.

Changing our minds, changing how we think, is physically speaking one of the easiest things we can do. However, when our egos and our identities are wholly interwoven with an idea or an ideology, changing our way of thinking and discarding the old ideas, can be the hardest thing we are asked to undertake. If our physical reality changes, this can create a rip in the threads that stitch our view of ourselves with a dogma or a paradigm. So I await calamity because the egos of the civilized have hardened their hearts and deafened their ears, and until those in the first world middle class feel the gnawing pain of persistent hunger and the fear of deafening uncertainty, they will refuse to consider that maybe everything they have been taught to believe about themselves and their collective destiny, is abjectly wrong.

—

“We’re many generations overdue for a revolution, in our thinking. I’m not talking about blood and violence although I’m afraid thats already happened. I’m talking about a revolution that’s probably the hardest kind, the kind that takes place within the human soul and the human mind. To be able to tear everything down, throw everything out, and start with a completely fresh piece of paper and say, ‘OK, how do we solve this problem?’”

Mike Ruppert said that in the documentary “Collapse.” While by no means a perfect man, Mike was a good person, and did his best to tell the truth as he knew it. He shot himself two weeks ago. He left many insights like this one as gifts for us.

People who become aware of the depth of the problems facing humanity at this juncture in time, often seek answers. They want to know what we need to do. Some suggest we need a revolution. Some suggest we need to take to the hills and hide on personal homesteads, to perhaps form communities of these homesteads and just hold on white knuckled through the bottle neck of collapse. Then there is Paul Kingsnorth of the Dark Mountain Project, who speaks of the difference between problems which are to be solved, and predicaments which are to be endured.

“What do you do,” he asked, “when you accept that all of these changes are coming, things that you value are going to be lost, things that make you unhappy are going to happen, things that you wanted to achieve you can’t achieve, but you still have to live with it, and there’s still beauty, and there’s still meaning, and there are still things you can do to make the world less bad? And that’s not a series of questions that have any answers other than people’s personal answers to them. Selfishly it’s just a process I’m going through.” He laughed. “It’s extremely narcissistic of me. Rather than just having a personal crisis, I’ve said: ‘Hey! Come share my crisis with me!’

Kingsnorth was recently interviewed by the New York Times. As a long time environmental activist who years ago lost faith that there is much we can do to “save the planet,” he decries the false hope sold by mainstream environmentalist groups. With friend Dougald Hine, Kingsnorth wrote the “Uncivilization” manifesto, on which The New York Times writes:

“Uncivilization” was firm in its conviction that climate change and other ecological crises are predicaments, and it called for a cadre of like-minded writers to “challenge the stories which underpin our civilization: the myth of progress, the myth of human centrality and the myth of separation from ‘nature.’ ”

On this matter I think Kingsnorth and Hine are right on the mark. We will never weather the predicaments before us, let alone solve what problems remain solvable, if we refuse to take an honest look at who we are, where we are, and just what the hell we are doing. I think this is a meditation that would benefit revolutionaries and those hiding in the hills alike. We must ask if civilization is something we are even interested in continuing. We must ask what it is we value most and whether or not the lifestyles we are cordoned into are even in line with those values. We must ask what it means to be human. And if we are to trust any of our conclusions, we must first find a way to step outside of everything our culture has programmed us to believe.

—

Civilization is a power structure. It is a rejection of natural law in favor of the control of those high on social hierarchies. Civilization is the domestication of nature and people alike. It is the creation of a once regional, now global farm where the multitudes of humans are livestock, restricted by the borders of various owners, and subjugated and exploited for the extraction of the surplus values generated by their labor. Non human life forms and entire ecosystems are subjugated likewise, and as this control apparatus is now world wide and hell bent on growing in scale year over year, life itself is at risk. Simultaneously, this architecture of domestication and control has blunted the souls of the humans it dominates, and like house pets, the great many people have been declawed and broken. This is the existential portion of the crisis we face. The meaninglessness of life on the inside. The dull static of the best case scenario, where those in the first world yearn for the life of tepid, safe predictability offered by the owner class, should only one produce enough without question or complaint. We are a wretched bunch who fetishize our oppressors and spew vitriol at insurrectionaries who would in trying to shake us loose even for a moment, dare make us late for work.

Navigating circumstances beyond our control in which masters are hostile to us, constantly maneuvering to exert more control over our lives as well as to extract more value from us even in our imprisonment or death; most people are surviving, not thriving. Merely jockeying through a preset condition of work and fee schedules has muted the potential of our species. What has been throttled cannot be measured in discoveries or inventions, but in the satisfaction of individuals and communities to thrive on their own terms. To be fully actualized and autonomous creatures. To witness the assembly line life of modern man is to suffer a snuff film.

If we are to rescue our own hearts and our minds, if we are to save the last embers of burning wildness in our souls and to break the tethers that bind our thinking to suicidal paradigms, then we must uncivilize. Like Buck in “The Call of the Wild,” we must seek to undomesticate ourselves, no only to survive the realities of the world into which we are being thrust, but because to be a house mutt lying bored at master’s feet is to barely exist at all.

—

So what does any of this really mean? What are the steps, the actions to undertake which will align the force of our arms with the rhythms of our hearts? Do we fight or do we flee? Or do we stand upon the hill and bear witness until the fire consumes us? Or is there perhaps some combination of all; a time for rebellion, a time to tend our gardens, and a time to merely sit and say goodbye?

Certainly, if people seek a recipe for action that can maintain society in a form even remotely similar to its present incarnation, then I offer nothing. If what people desire is a map of the future from which plans can be derived and survival assured, I have none. I think maybe it is time to give up on maps. Maybe it is time to just be in the territory for a while. Maybe it is time to give up on human words and to leave the electronic buzz of the internet and to set foot on soil and rock. If domestication is the product of being in the domicile, in the house, then perhaps what we need is to step outside. If the stories we have been told for generations have poisoned us; if these myths about the greatness of the lines on maps and the men who ruled those patchwork lines have only served to make us slaves to abstractions, engendering in us a self righteousness and a malice towards all that isn’t of our hands and seeding in us a fear of what lies outside comfortable walls, then perhaps it is time to go and to hear some different voices. To hear some new stories. Maybe, lost in the ballad of crowing frogs and moaning trees we can crumple up what is written before us and find a blank piece of paper, and on it we will write of our sadness and our fear. We will admit our weakness in the face of all that we have made and we will scratch out our apologies and our gratitude.

Then we will collect up everything that we think the future needs to be given, and we will carry it within us to barricades and to garden gates, to jail cells and to barn bays and to graves. We will find the fire that will make tomorrow worth struggling towards, in that dark, when we are bent and cold heaps of hungry, smoke smelling bone and sinew beneath taught and blackened skin. The madness of the world will grow raw, and real. Privation and awfulness will bloom, and we will endure it.

Share this:

  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • Tweet
  • Share on Tumblr
  • Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
Like Loading...

Let’s Get Critical

02 Wednesday Apr 2014

Posted by td0s in Capitalism, Climate Change, Consumerism, Environmental Degradation

≈ 235 Comments

Tags

activist, Albert Camus, Alberta, anarchist, Anti-civ, Captain John Brown, critique, Derrick Jensen, forest defense, fossil fuel, HL Menken, Hypocrisy, Jean-Paul Sartre, Monte Belo Dam, moutain top removal, Niger Delta, Tar Sands Blockade

Cross Posted from Prayforcalamity.com


“Any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood.”

HL Menken


To criticize the status quo is to invite volley after volley of personal criticism back in your own direction. I am sure this has likely been the case for a very long time, and I believe this may be partly due to the way in which humans learn through pattern recognition, as well as how the architecture of the human brain physically lays neural pathways to build understanding. Thus when an idea too astray from the usual is presented to the human mind, there is a high chance of a negative reaction because the new pattern is far too asymmetric for the current set of neural pathways to incorporate. That, or the derogator is a bored and obtuse malcontent with nothing better to do than shit all over other people on the internet.

I often write about the exploitation inherent in the model of civilization itself, and how this organizing framework which is dominant on the planet now is entirely unsustainable and will necessarily collapse catastrophically. This is some level nine stuff. By this I mean that if you have not been initiated, if you haven’t read about this topic or all of the feeder topics that lead to this conclusion, it would likely seem extreme. Thorough understanding of an issue requires prerequisite knowledge. We get to where we are by having been where we were, even philosophically and intellectually. Because my topics of critique often surround the civilization paradigm, its parts, and alternatives, I often receive flak from people which either demonstrates that they do not fully understand the gravity of the issues, or which merely indicts me as complicit in civilization’s crimes. The former generally comes in the form of people arguing that technology will remedy all of the converging crises faced and created by civilization. The latter is far more frustrating, as it is usually some pathetic attempt at a “got’chya!” moment where someone tries to defeat my greater thesis by pointing out my use of a computer or some other trapping of civilization. “Hypocrite!” they cry.

The hypocrisy claim is everywhere you find people critiquing any facet of the status quo. Antiwar activists who protested the Iraq war were called hypocrites for using gasoline. Occupy Wall Street participants were called hypocrites for using Apple products. My friends in forest defense have been called hypocrites for using paper. As an anti-civ anarchist I have been called a hypocrite for everything from having moved into a house during the winter, to having gone to the hospital when after forty hours of labor at home with a midwife, my partner was physically exhausted and wanted access to drugs so she could sleep. Every time these criticisms are leveled, it becomes a major energy suck to explain exactly how nonsensical they are. I would like to here dedicate this essay to shredding the “hypocrisy” argument once and for all, so it can forever be linked to by activists and social critics of all platforms and stripes, who neither have the time nor energy to swat at the many zombie hordes who become agitated when new ideas are presented to them which run counter to the comfortable patterns that they are used to, and who then proceed to scream “hypocrite!” in place of an actual counter argument.

—

Jean-Paul Sartre wrote, “Hell is other people.” Despite my anti-civ analysis, I am no misanthrope. Civilization is a system of organization, a power arrangement in which a small few control the many. Using their power, these few exploit the lands and beings around them so they can grow their power and comfort at the expense of others. Industrial civilization takes this paradigm full tilt and is wiping out habitat and species at a mortifying rate. Understanding this does not cause me to hate my species, but rather to be eager to help them understand why we must pursue new organizational methods. Still, the uphill battle of convincing fellow humans, especially those who are net beneficiaries of this destructive and exploitative set of arrangements, can be at times an infuriating engagement. Of course, this is not because I need people to immediately agree with me, but if they don’t, I do prefer they focus on challenging the content of my statements as opposed to nit picking the content of my life.

In “The Fall,” Albert Camus wrote, “Everyone insists on his innocence, at all costs, even if it means accusing the rest of the human race and heaven itself.” I believe that it may be this personal insistence on one’s innocence which leads people to quickly cry “hypocrite!” at those who critique the status quo. Because we are all mired in this paradigm, when it is critiqued, some individuals feel that the critique is of them individually, likely due to a personal identification with the system. Thus critiques become personal attacks against which they must defend themselves. “If the system is guilty, then I am guilty, and I’m not guilty!”

The need for personal innocence runs deeper. If a critique against an overarching paradigm such as a government, capitalism, or civilization itself seems irrefutable, this can invoke in some a certain need to then utilize this new information as part of their own personal ethos. The problem here, is that this will mean that person will feel compelled to act accordingly with this information, and the actions required may seem difficult, uncomfortable, or frightening. For instance, if you’re told that capitalism is exploitative because employers retain the surplus labor value generated by their employees, and you happen to be a business owner, this new understanding will mean one of two things: either you rearrange the operating model of your business to fairly compensate your employees for their labor, effectively making them cooperative partners, or you change nothing but must go through life recognizing that you profit off of the exploitation of others. Here, your internal need to perceive yourself as innocent, or at least to believe yourself a good person, will run counter with your open acknowledgement that you exploit people for a living. What to do then to keep the ego in tact?

If the action required to fall in line with the new ethos created by accepting new information is too hard, too uncomfortable, or you just don’t want to do it, you must justify inaction. Justifying inaction will be achieved possibly by denying the veracity of the new information. Like most capitalists in this scenario, you could convince yourself that your entrepreneurial and risk taking spirit give you the right to take the surplus labor value generated by the people you employ indefinitely. Of course, the justifications are endless.

In some cases though, if the new information received cannot be deflected through argument or justification, and the need to preserve one’s picture of their innocence is too great, then calling into question the character or behavior of the information’s purveyor can also suffice. For instance, if an activist is working to halt fossil fuel extraction for the myriad reasons that such a halting would be beneficial, it can be difficult to disagree with this activist on a purely argumentative level. How could you? Deny climate change? Deny ozone killing trees? Deny the death and destruction from Alberta, to the Gulf of Mexico, to the Niger Delta? On an argumentative level, you’d be wrong every time. However, you could call into question the activist’s use of fossil fuels, thereby deflecting the conversation, and basically insinuating that, as Camus also wrote in The Fall, “We are all in the soup together.” Because hey, if we’re all guilty, then none of us are guilty, am I right?

In the fall of 2012, I was in Texas working with the Tar Sands Blockade using direct action tactics to shut down construction of the Keystone XL Pipeline. On the side of a highway north of Nacogdoches, I sat with some friends as our comrades were perched on platforms fifty feet in the air with their support lines tied to heavy machinery, effectively making the machines unusable lest their operators not mind killing these young people. There were a surprising amount of supporters for rural east Texas, but of course, there were plenty of people who made sure we were aware of their disdain for us. One such person passed by, slowed down, and said “I bet you used a pick up truck to get that stuff out here.” In his mind, this was a real zinger. I replied, “Of course we did. Why wouldn’t we?”

There are a slew of reasons why this man’s comment contained zero validity as a critique of our action. For one, the gasoline we used did not come from that as of yet unfinished pipeline. Also, though I wouldn’t, I could claim to be against tar sands bitumen, but not conventional crude. But really the truth is that anti-extraction activists are making what economists would even defend as an intelligent bargain; using X amount of fossil fuels to prevent the extraction of a million times X. Of course I would use a tank of gasoline to prevent the daily extraction and transportation of hundreds of thousands of barrels of bitumen. Not only am I seeking a massive net gain for the ecology of the planet, I am also not using any more fossil fuels than I would have used had I gone to work that day anyway.

In the same vein, it is not hypocrisy to write a book about the ills of deforestation. Though it may be printed on paper, it has the potential to affect policy which will then lessen the total amount of deforestation. Not to mention, the loggers are going to log and the publishing company is going to publish. Using those resources to ultimately dismantle that destructive activity is actually the best use for them. So no, the person who posts on the internet about the ravages of mountain top removal coal mining or hydraulic fracturing for natural gas isn’t a hypocrite. They are cleverly utilizing the paradigm’s resources to expose its flaws to the light of scrutiny, in the hope that the consciences of people will be stirred to ultimately upend the paradigm itself. This is, in fact, the most ethical use of the resources generated by destructive industrial activity.

Using the master’s tools to dismantle the master’s house is to be encouraged.

—

It feels ridiculous to even have to lay this out, but the “hypocrisy” barb is flung far too often and dismantled far too little. What’s worse, is that hypocrisy in this regard isn’t even being understood correctly. According to wikipedia:

“Hypocrisy is the state of falsely claiming to possess virtuous characteristics that one lacks. Hypocrisy involves the deception of others and is thus a kind of lie. Hypocrisy is not simply failing to practice those virtues that one preaches. Samuel Johnson made this point when he wrote about the misuse of the charge of “hypocrisy” in Rambler No. 14:

Nothing is more unjust, however common, than to charge with hypocrisy him that expresses zeal for those virtues which he neglects to practice; since he may be sincerely convinced of the advantages of conquering his passions, without having yet obtained the victory, as a man may be confident of the advantages of a voyage, or a journey, without having courage or industry to undertake it, and may honestly recommend to others, those attempts which he neglects himself.

Thus, an alcoholic’s advocating temperance, for example, would not be considered an act of hypocrisy as long as the alcoholic made no pretense of sobriety.”

This being understood, we can unequivocally state that a forest defense activist who prints pamphlets about saving tracts of woodland is not a hypocrite, unless they also claim to never use any forest products. Sure, there is a reasonable expectation that people who see a social ill will do their best to avoid adding to that ill, but sometimes the requirements of society horseshoe people into activity even they do not appreciate because the alternative options are worse or non-existent. Of course, this is where detractors will still claim that if an activist wants to save the forests, that they should cease using anything made from trees because consumer demand is behind all economic activity. Ignoring the obvious benefits of the trade off between printing five hundred pamphlets to save five hundred acres of woodlands, I think further disemboweling of this notion about consumer choice activism is also necessary.

Derrick Jensen writes about how he got in an argument with a man who accused him of being just as responsible for deforestation as Weyerhaeuser because he used toilet paper:

“Here, once again, is the real story. Our self-assessed culpability for participating in the deathly system called civilization masks (and is a toxic mimic of) our infinitely greater sin. Sure, I use toilet paper. So what? That doesn’t make me as culpable as the CEO of Weyerhaeuser, and to think it does grants a great gift to those in power by getting the focus off them and onto us.

For what, then, are we culpable? Well, for something far greater than one person’s work as a technical writer and another’s as a busboy. Something far greater than my work writing books to be made of the pulped flesh of trees. Something far greater than using toilet paper or driving cars or living in homes made of formaldehyde-laden plywood. For all of those things we can be forgiven, because we did not create the system, and because our choices have been systematically eliminated (those in power kill the great runs of salmon, and then we feel guilty when we buy food at the grocery store? How dumb is that?). But we cannot and will not be forgiven for not breaking down the system that creates these problems, for not driving deforesters out of forests, for not driving polluters away from land and water and air, for not driving moneylenders from the temple that is our only home. We are culpable because we allow those in power to continue to destroy the planet. Yes, I know we are more or less constantly enjoined to use only inclusive rhetoric, but when will we all realize that war has already been declared upon the natural world, and upon all of us, and that this war has been declared by those in power? We must stop them with any means necessary. For not doing that we are infinitely more culpable than most of us—myself definitely included— will ever be able to comprehend.”

He continues:

“To be clear: I am not culpable for deforestation because I use toilet paper. I am culpable for deforestation because I use toilet paper and I do not keep up my end of the predator-prey bargain. If I consume the flesh of another I am responsible for the continuation of its community. If I use toilet paper, or any other wood or paper products, it is my responsibility to use any means necessary to ensure the continued health of natural forest communities. It is my responsibility to use any means necessary to stop industrial forestry.”

I believe it is dangerous to convince people that their only power is in their purchasing decisions, because this relegates people to being mere consumers, not active citizens, let alone autonomous beings who define their own struggles, explore a diversity of tactics, and experiment to find new and effective measures for countering power. It also reduces all of society to nothing but customer transactions. Doing so ignores the power people have to protest, blockade, persuade, legislate, and sometimes, to overthrow. Would advocates of consumer choice activism stand by the idea that American revolutionaries should merely have boycotted tea, stamps and British products? Would they advocate that these revolutionaries should have instead of smashing windows, burning buildings, and fighting back against the crown have instead started their own competing tea trading companies? How about American slavery? Was the real solution that abolitionists and free blacks should have started competing fiber plantations in the north, hoping to push slave produced cotton out of business? Should we brand Captain John Brown a hypocrite for not wearing fair trade worker owned flax linen pants when he raided Harper’s Ferry seeking weapons with which to start a slave revolt? Preposterous!

Fighting against a behemoth industry that is interwoven into the state apparatus and has insulated itself as a central pillar of day to day operations is not something easily done. For one to claim they know exactly how to win such a fight is audacious. When it comes to the extraction industries, there is a large buffer where no matter how much the public cuts their consumption, the state will offset their financial losses through subsidies and purchases. The US government will happily buy discount oil for the fifth armored division after a civilian boycott lowers the price. Because of this, all forms of resistance are welcome and necessary, and it should be understood that attacking such a monolithic industry requires people hammering away, figuratively and literally, on every possible front. If it takes two million barrels of oil to power the cars and trucks necessary to organize the ten thousand strong blockade that cripples the refinery complex at the Port of Houston, well hell, oil well spent.

—

Those who demand lifestyle purity of anyone who ever raises a critique of any facet of the status quo are creating a double bind paradigm of hypocrites and extremists so to establish two camps into which they can then package critics in order to isolate and ignore them. The hypocrite camp is obvious. By misdiagnosing via a false definition someone who is against civilization as a hypocrite because they use electricity to write their thoughts online, these detractors can in their own minds, suggest there is no reason to take the critique seriously. But suppose the anti-civ critic did achieve lifestyle purity. Suppose that they lived in a wigwam in the woods that they constructed themselves from branches and deer hides. Imagine that this person walked to the center of town every weekend in haggard clothing they had pulled from thrift store dumpsters and then this person stood on a bench to shout about the ills of industry and hierarchy. Is it likely that this person would be taken seriously? Of course not! They would be labeled an extremist. Passersby would write this person off as insane before listening to argument one. There is no middle ground in this double bind, and that is the point. Those who would cry from the wilderness about the death and the misery that civilization brings will forever be stripping more and more from their lives in a futile effort to gain recognition, to be valid in the eyes of those who called them hypocrites, until one day they are branded as lunatics, if they are not unheard and unseen, exactly as their detractors want them to be.

On this, we should remember too, that there are people who have achieved this lifestyle purity. They are the tribal peoples around the world who never have been drawn into the net of civilization. They are the global poor who do not benefit from the burning of coal or the sinking of copper mines. And their voices consistently go unheard. In fact, their voices are almost ubiquitously silenced. What do the defenders of the status quo say to the Kayapó, Arara, Juruna, Araweté, Xikrin, Asurini and Parakanã peoples who are fighting the construction of the Belo Monte dam which threatens their survival? What do the defenders of the status quo say to the animals and plants who have been nothing but victims in the story of human progress? There is no inconsistency in their lives. No iPhone to scoff at, no power tool, no window fan. What is the excuse for denying their right to live? What is the excuse for exterminating them and pretending it isn’t happening? Why is it OK to deny their pleas?

Analysis and critique precede action. Without first understanding a system and describing its flaws, it will never be repaired or replaced. To assert that one must excise themselves from a system prior to criticizing it is asinine, especially so when the system being criticized is a global power structure with tentacles in almost every geographical region. Such assertions if considered legitimate would render critique impossible. They are also so implausible as to essentially be nothing more than a dismissal of critique, a backhanded way of saying “Shut up!” To be sure, the horrors of the dominant culture always have required a silencing of those it would make victims, so such behaviors amongst the denizens of civilization should come as no surprise, but they have never been and will never be intellectually or academically valid.

If you are in a prison, eating the food from the cafeteria does not mean you accept being a prisoner. Likewise, if you are a prisoner and you detest the prison and the system that put you there with every fiber of your being, you are not a hypocrite for allowing the prison doctor to treat you. Navigating life in a system of dominance, violence, and control is difficult and miserable, and if you have any designs to resist, whether to organize others on the inside with you to demand improvement of conditions, or to dig a tunnel and to escape, staying well fed and healthy in the mean time will be necessary for your success. While you fight, while you resist, use what you must to survive, especially in light of the fact that not doing so will not bring down the walls around you.

—

With the ever worsening issue of climate change, on top of the issues of political rot, net energy decline, and economic sclerosis, there will be more and more critique and analysis of exactly how societies are breaking down and what people should do in response. With this will come wave after wave of nonsense rebuttal to muddy the waters. At least when the defense of the status quo defers to indicting the behavior of the critics themselves, we can likely presume that their critiques are probably accurate, or at least that the status quo defender has no legitimate argument. For if the detractor had a legitimate counter analysis, they would present it. Attacking the messenger is behavior of the beaten. If I say “we need to abolish fossil fuels because they cause too much ecological damage” and someone responds “but you use gas in your chainsaw,” they have not displayed that my statement is untrue. In fact, there is a tacit admission that what I am saying is true, they just want to drag me down into the muck as if I’m not already standing in it.

Yes, I am knee deep in the shit of global industrial capitalist civilization. Yes, circumstances have me dancing from rock to rock, trying to avoid participating in the destructive protocols of the dominant culture, and obliging to where it makes strategic sense to do so. Most people understand this. Most people understand the nuance between having and living an ethic in a complex world which leaves little to our individual control. Those who would deny this reality in order to deny your point are a nuisance at most. Hell is not other people, just other people in the comments section on the internet.

Share this:

  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • Tweet
  • Share on Tumblr
  • Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
Like Loading...

So We Drove On Toward Death: The Casual Madness of Civilization

23 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by td0s in Capitalism, Climate Change, Ecological Overshoot, Environmental Degradation, Neo-Colonialism, Pollution

≈ 124 Comments

Cross Posted from: Prayforcalamity.com
—

“Once there were brook trout in the streams in the mountains. You could see them standing in the amber current where the white edges of their fins wimpled softly in the flow. They smelled of moss in your hand. Polished and muscular and torsional. On their backs were vermiculate patterns that were maps of the world in its becoming. Maps and mazes. Of a thing which could not be put back. Not be made right again. In the deep glens where they lived all things were older than man and they hummed of mystery.”

The Road
Cormac McCarthy

—

An annual report is about to be released by The Millennium Project which is titled, “State of the Future.” This report examines global problems and their potential solutions. In discussing the report, chief scientist of NASA’s Langley Research Center, Dennis Bushnell, has said that humans need three planets to sustain themselves. I had previously read a statistic which claimed that if all humans on Earth had the lifestyles and consumption habits of the average American, that we would need over five Earths to sustain the global population. That tidbit was more of a warning about the American “way of life,” whereas what Bushnell is saying is a more direct, we are running out of shit right now, sort of statement.

“The entire ecosystem is crashing,” says Bushnell. “Essentially, there’s too many of us. We’ve been far too successful as the human animal. People allege we’re short 40-50 percent of a planet now. As the Asians and their billions come up to our living systems, we’re going to need three more planets.”

Far too successful? This choice of words, while not surprising, is quite indicative of the logic of the civilized mind and its human-centric bias. Imagine for a moment, you’re a scientist studying a colony of rats living on an island, and that these rats eat so much that they are destroying their habitat. Imagine that these rats have, in their rapacious quest to eat, destroyed the trees and killed many of the other species on the island. Imagine that after running some calculations, you recognize that these rats are going to require not one, but two more islands worth of resources if they are going to survive, and that if they don’t acquire this new resource pool, their population will crash and potentially be wiped out. In writing your assessment of this rat colony, would you choose to describe them as “successful?” I think you might be more likely to use terms like “foolish,” “short-sighted,” “parasitic,” or “suicidal.”

No, modern humans aren’t “far too successful,” as a species. The dominant culture — because not all people live this way — is far too stupid to understand that it is “eating the seed corn” if you will. Not only are the people who live under the dominant culture destroying tomorrow’s resources to get by today, they are by and large too stupid to even enter this possibility into their self analysis. The fact that Bushnell and any of his ilk would with a straight face suggest that what humans need are more planets, as opposed to needing a massive overhaul of how the dominant culture operates, is frightening. The casual madness of this recommendation demonstrates that the overriding belief within the dominant culture is that everything is hunky-dorey; what people within industrial-civilization are doing on a daily basis is absolutely OK. It’s not the activities of global industrial capitalism that are the problem, no, the problem is that God just didn’t start us off with enough stuff!

Machete your way through the brambly facade, and the core premise within this assertion — even though it would seem contradictory based on the data being reported — is that civilization works.

—

As an anarchist, I have often attempted to persuade people that we do not need police, prisons, armies, politicians, even money or large scale societies. With near ubiquity, the response given to such suggestions is that they would never “work.” Some are not so bold as to claim never, but merely ask, “how would that work,” in a tone that clearly betrays a wall of disbelief. Before defending myself and my supposition, I have to draw back and lay out the unspoken premise: by declaring the unlikelihood of my idea’s ability to “work,” there is a presumption that the current way of doing things “works.”

Does civilization “work?” How would we define that? What are the primary goals of civilization, and are they being achieved, and if so at what costs? This question requires one to define “civilization” before even embarking on a quest to gauge its success. I think it is fair to assume that if you were to seek a common definition of civilization from laypeople on the streets, the recurring themes would likely surround the existence of arts, literature, philosophy, and surpluses of resources. Civilization is in this view, Plato and Leonardo Da Vinci hanging out in robes and Google Glasses, drinking wine in the park and thinking deep thoughts. The antithesis of this cartoon vision holds that the uncivilized would be anyone wearing warpaint and a loincloth while roasting a pig on a spit.

Caricatures aside, how can we academically define civilization? Writer Derrick Jensen devotes some time to defining civilization in his two volume work, Endgame:

“I would define a civilization much more precisely [relative to standard dictionary definitions], and I believe more usefully, as a culture—that is, a complex of stories, institutions, and artifacts— that both leads to and emerges from the growth of cities (civilization, see civil: from civis, meaning citizen, from Latin civitatis, meaning city-state), with cities being defined–so as to distinguish them from camps, villages, and so on–as people living more or less permanently in one place in densities high enough to require the routine importation of food and other necessities of life.”

In his own efforts to define civilization, writer Aric McBay offers:

“This common thread is control. Civilization is a culture of control. In civilizations, a small group of people controls a large group of people through the institutions of civilization. If they are beyond the frontier of that civilization, then that control will come in the form of armies and missionaries (be they religious or technical specialists). If the people to be controlled are inside of the cities, inside of civilization, then the control may come through domestic militaries (i.e., police). However, it is likely cheaper and less overtly violent to condition certain types of behaviour through religion, schools or media, and related means, than through the use of outright force (which requires a substantial investment in weapons, surveillance and labour).

That works very effectively in combination with economic and agricultural control. If you control the supply of food and other essentials of life, people have to do what you say or they die. People inside of cities inherently depend on food systems controlled by the rulers to survive, since the (commonly accepted) definition of a city is that the population dense enough to require the importation of food.”

Richard Heinberg in his critique of civilization wrote:

“…for the most part the history of civilization…is also the history of kingship, slavery, conquest, agriculture, overpopulation, and environmental ruin. And these traits continue in civilization’s most recent phases–the industrial state and the global market–though now the state itself takes the place of the king, and slavery becomes wage labor and de facto colonialism administered through multinational corporations. Meanwhile, the mechanization of production (which began with agriculture) is overtaking nearly every avenue of human creativity, population is skyrocketing, and organized warfare is resulting in unprecedented levels of bloodshed.”

If the reader finds a bias in these definitions, I offer this one from Wikipedia:

“The term is used to contrast with other types of communities including hunter-gatherers, nomadic pastoralists and tribal villages. Civilizations have more densely populated settlements divided into social classes with a ruling elite and subordinate urban and rural populations, which, by the division of labour, engage in intensive agriculture, mining, small-scale manufacture and trade. Civilization concentrates power, extending human control over both nature, and over other human beings.”

Some combination of the characteristics offered above, with room for nuance, forms my personal definition of civilization, and should be used insofar as understanding the question I posed above, “Does civilization work?”

To answer this, of course, we must also define “work.” What exactly is civilization trying to accomplish? High living standards for all members? Artistic greatness? This is almost impossible to measure as there are no set goals civilization is attempting to achieve and no set values by which it is trying to achieve them. It is likely more productive to approach this question by examining what civilization does. After all, to borrow a term from systems theorists, “The purpose of a system is what it does.”

So what does civilization do? What is accomplished by people living in large urban centers where the majority of their survival necessities must be imported and their waste exported? Well, for starters, the people within the cities do not have to engage in any of the toil required to aggregate the calories and nutrients to stay alive. These people are thus freed to do other things with their time. This begins to form the base of the hierarchy of work. Peasants do the heavy lifting in the fields while professional types earn higher incomes to engage in what they dub to be “skilled labor.” We are told all of this would come unhinged if it weren’t for the tireless efforts of professional decision makers; politicians and captains of industry who are granted the most influence and the highest incomes. Of course, there is a class within the cities who don’t earn high incomes, and they are generally relegated to laboring to support the “skilled laborers,” and other elites by manufacturing goods, doing janitorial work, preparing food, maintaining infrastructure, etc. In the modern world, all of the heavy lifting in the agricultural fields is no longer accomplished with human muscle alone, as the majority of the grunt work is performed by hydrocarbons, predominantly oil. The acquisition of this oil comes at a great ecological cost, from the deep wells in the gulf of Mexico to the war torn fields of Iraq to the decimated Niger delta. Anywhere on Earth where oil is being pumped out of the ground, there is death, be it human, animal, or entire ecosystems and ways of life.

Speaking of death, civilization seems to spread a lot of it around. From global and regional wars that scar the land and leave millions dead, to the constant emission of toxicity which has inundated the air, the water, and the soil with heavy metals, radioactive particles, and carcinogenic compounds causing cancer and disease. Around the world people sit locked in cages, tormented and dehumanized by their captors. In the US, where I live, the largest prison population on the planet is housed, we are told, to maintain the safety of those who participate in civilization according to the dictates of the “decider” class. If we ignore humans for a moment and try to tally the dead amongst our non-human neighbors, the task becomes nearly impossible. The best guess of biologists is that industrial activity is currently causing a mass extinction, and that upwards of two hundred species are being extirpated from the globe every day. Civilization, though it’s adherents would cite its peaceful and good natured virtues, is a bringer of death and suffering.

My critics will cry, “But death is natural; an unavoidable part of life. Absent civilization, death would not vanish.” To be sure, who dies, how, and why, are the key to what civilization does. The organizational framework found within civilization is hierarchical, and I would argue that this top down power structure is woven into the defining characteristics of civilization. With this hierarchy, power is held by a few and lorded over the many. How this is accomplished varies, but as McBay was quoted as stating above, access to food and other necessary resources is a primary component of this control. Civilization has had millennia to refine itself and to create a system for diffusing this “food-under-lock-and-key” scenario, mainly via economics. In this time civilization has been able to normalize its existence and to normalize the power dynamics by which few control many, and under which the ruling few have access to more resources than they will ever require, while the many have unmet needs. Religion, propaganda, nationalism, entertainment, myths of exceptionalism; all have served to sell civilization as a high and dignified way of existing, as well as to demonize alternatives to the civilized model, and to justify the slaughter of those who resist civilization’s advances.

Modern industrial civilization is global. The blur between the thrust of society in the United State, China, Russia, Australia, Brazil, India, South Africa, etc. is essentially the same. Cultures in these nations have their respective variances, but the general direction of human activity remains constant. The drive to acquire wealth by converting land and what it contains into some form of salable good is ubiquitous. The gains from these activities are held by those at the top of the hierarchy, while the overwhelming majority of the labor utilized to achieve those gains was performed by those at the bottom.

While the earliest civilizations would have been based in one or a few city centers which exploited an immediately surrounding region, as empires grew and technology allowed further and faster travel, the exploitation of far away lands and peoples became possible and profitable. Civilizations having merged into a global behemoth, the reality now in the wealthiest regions of the world is that resources and finished products from around the globe are widely available, and relatively, outright suffering is scant. This availability, this control of global people and places, is itself, wealth. By moving resources out of the regions they are born in, and by exploiting a global workforce, civilization has made it possible to extend the lives and drastically increase the comfort of some people at the expense of the lives, health, and happiness of others. Civilization is a con, a game of three-card-monte. It is the shuffling of resources to generate the illusion of plenty. It is the displacement of suffering from one people to another, and the shifting of ecological horrors from home to abroad. The net beneficiaries of this system are wont to ignore it, to never even question its basic functionality. They see images of the starving and dying a world away and ask, “Why don’t they move?”

—

A tirade against the ills of civilization is old hat for me, and certainly, there will be readers who think me unfair. Education, invention, medicine, art, sport, and so many other examples of the benefits of civilized life are likely hanging at the fore of my critics’ minds. Absolutely, these are components of civilized life, but not exclusively so. What education or innovation or medicine or art look like and how they are distributed may look different under civilized and non-civilized paradigms, but in no way are they monopolized by the former or absent from the latter. Under a civilized paradigm, the arts, sports, education, medicine – these all become the realms of professionals to a great extent, whereas for the non-civilized these are communal and regular components of daily life.

I don’t want to trade blow for blow, comparing civilized diets to non-civilized, modern medicine to herbalism, etc. I would rather here move onto the costs of the civilized model, for if civilization has its benefits, and if it has its purposes, and if it is doling these benefits and achieving these goals, we must then ask, “are they worth the cost?”

Calculating the costs of civilization is a monumental task, and doing so with any sort of scientific accuracy is likely beyond my capabilities. As a purely philosophical exercise, I would like to briefly address the issue by looking at a handful of categories.

First, there is the ecology. It is inarguable that civilization is detrimental to ecology and always has been. As human animals, we are not necessarily a net deficiency to our habitat, despite the absurd claims of those who would like us to believe that to live is to harm, so we should absent-mindedly live it up. Hunting, fishing, and even small scale planting are not necessarily destructive to an ecosystem. Sinking mine shafts, leveling mountains, damming rivers, trawling the oceans, spewing industrial waste into the atmosphere, clear cutting forests, razing prairie, laying concrete, mono-crop planting, stripping topsoil; these are all massive ecological harms, which if undertaken with an ever increasing rate become systemically cataclysmic whereby species are driven into extinction, habitat collapses, and the damage is irreparable.

Can civilization exist without such activities? Surely pre-modern civilizations did not utilize all of these methods? In fact, every pre-modern civilization did exploit the resources they had access to with what technology they had available. The forests of the middle east were leveled by the earliest civilizations, creating the barren land that now exists there. The Mesopotamians irrigated farm fields to grow great surpluses of food, until the build up of silt in their canals and salts in their soil destroyed their agricultural adventures and led to their collapse. The Greeks and Romans viciously deforested the Mediterranean basin, and the resulting topsoil loss has prevented a recovery in the region. The Maya similarly brought about their own doom by deforesting their region for agriculture and the production of lime concrete. The collapses of all pre-modern civilizations have an environmental component. By seeking to use agricultural bounty to temporarily increase their populations and thus their power, early civilizations created inescapable paradigms dependent on infinite growth. Modern civilization is no different, just more adept at avoiding early onset collapse through innovation.

Ecological costs are probably the most in dire need of attention, but costs in human misery are not to be ignored. In this vein, there is the obvious misery generated by civilization and its processes: those killed and maimed by war, those whose DNA is damaged by industrial toxins resulting in cancers, those who subsist in poverty globally, those in prison, those who are persecuted, those who are slaves, those who have their hereditary land stolen, those who are victims of genocide; these are the billions who clearly suffer, these are the billions who make possible the comforts and abundance enjoyed in wealthy nations.

But let’s not stop there. Inside the gates, the people who are beneficiaries of the pillaging of the wild suffer in ways they recognize and in ways they don’t. In the United States, one in five adults are taking a psychiatric drug, either an anti-depressant, an anti-psychotic, or an anti-anxiety prescription. Ten percent of the population suffers from clinical depression. Thirty percent of the population abuses alcohol. Numbers on recreational drug use are harder to come by. Add in those addicted to shopping, eating, sex, gambling, and pornography, and it is likely safe to say that about half of the American population is either depressed, burdened with anxiety, or has some debilitating habit of escapism. Can we blame them? What does the majority of life in the United States consist of? Working a job over which you have relatively little control, where it is likely your creativity is stifled, and from which you do not directly benefit? This consumes forty if not more hours of a person’s life every week. Commuting to and from this job and accomplishing the unrecognized shadow labor of preparing for this job, from taking clothing to a dry cleaners, dropping children off at day care, or even shaving, means that considerably more time is robbed from one’s life to serve the economic system.

Life in this civilization brings a large set of medical risks as well. Despite the illusion of abundance, most of the food the population has access to is derived from a handful of ingredients, primarily corn, wheat, soy, and beet sugar. The production of these crops en-masse is economically efficient, and therefore they have become the foundation of the western diet. The hand maiden of this poor nutritional foundation is tooth decay, diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, and cancer. According to the National Cancer Institute, “Cancer will affect one in two men and one in three women in the United States, and the number of new cases of cancer is set to nearly double by the year 2050.”

Despite the myths we are imprinted with about the greatness of civilization, the reality is quite ugly. For a select few, the benefits and wealth and power granted by this particular organizational system are incalculable. For most, participation in civilization is comprised of boredom, obedience, servitude, and depression while daily spinning the wheel of fortune to see if they will be one of the unlucky ones who is stricken with cancer, all the while slowly degrading their body and masking their unhappiness with drugs, deviant behavior, or plain and simple escapism into fantasy.

Should I even begin to assess the misery associated with maintaining full compliance with the state and its bureaucracies which is a must if one wants to avoid court rooms, prisons, and police?

—

Though I was born to middle class parents, on my own, I eke out an existence in near poverty. This is partly by choice, in that I am clever enough to acquire a higher income, but I cannot burden my conscience with what such a pay grade would ask of me. For myself and the people in my region who also get by on small amounts of money, it is clear that we are not thriving in civilization, but artfully navigating it, succumbing to some of its pratfalls while skillfully parrying others. Ours is one of innumerable subcultures and informal economies that dot the landscape globally. Examples abound of squatters, homesteaders, hobos, punks, drug dealers, communes, scrappers, monks, travelers, and the myriad others around the Earth who hope the eye of Sauron doesn’t ever draw its focus on them.

Here in the cracks and dark corners alternatives to civilization simmer in the primordial soup of human consciousness. Too few to outright revolt with only the occasional exception, there are people who retreat to something similar to what I would dare call the natural state of human organization; tribalism.

No, civilization does not work, not if the definition of work includes caring for all equally and stewarding our habitat with humans and non-humans many generations to come genuinely considered. Ignoring the monuments to the egos of psychopaths, from pyramids and temples to skyscrapers and particle accelerators, civilization leaves nothing for the future. Civilization is a cannibal, greedily devouring any concept of tomorrow for a grotesque spectacle of largess today, which is only enjoyed by a select few. The ceremonies and titles of today may look and sound different than those of the Aztec or the Persian, but the macabre reality behind the pomp and circumstance is absolutely the same, only scarier in that the rate and ability of modern civilization to churn up the living world before melting it on a spoon for an ephemeral high is exponentially greater.

Civilization needs three planets, according to the scientists. Civilization is running out of fuel for the furnace, and the holy men are telling us that it is not time to abandon the machine; despite the misery, despite the servitude, despite the disease, despite the poverty, despite the extinction, despite the necessity of death – we must take this organizational system beyond our planetary borders, as missionaries of madness because we know nothing of humility or grace. Because we’re too afraid to admit we have made a mistake. So we drive on, lost and running out of gas, because we’re too damn proud to turn around.

Suggesting that there is another way for humans to organize without hierarchy, without massive population centers that require the exploitation of outlying areas, without violence and control; this is not utopianism. It is suggesting that we look at how human beings existed for the majority of their time on planet Earth, and asking that we take from that wealth of knowledge the best ideas, and that we ask of ourselves a willingness to adapt to life without the benefit of some slavery far away, some suffering we can ignore, some set of dying eyes we can avoid looking into. It is asking that we live where we are, that we find a concept of home, and that we welcome the challenges that life presents while refusing to solve them on the back of someone else’s misery.

They will say that “we cannot go back.” They will say pastoral lives where we are intimately connected to our community, human and not, are impossible, unthinkable, insane. Then they will say, “we must begin to live on Mars.”

Share this:

  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • Tweet
  • Share on Tumblr
  • Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
Like Loading...
Newer posts →

Connect with me on BlueSky:

Connect with me on Tumblr:

Who really pulls the strings?:

The megawealthy and Washington have become so symbiotic as to be a single entity. The bought-and-paid politicians sitting in Washington are simply the marionettes of the corporations and financial elite who are dictating public policy and regulations.

Preserving the Status Quo

There is no right wing or left wing, only the aristocracy and the serfs (a vertical paradigm). To know this is to be like a fish who has broken the surface of the water, realizing he was in water the whole time.

A Kabuki Play

"What we have, in what passes for US democracy in 2012, is a kabuki play that Cicero put to papyrus 1948 years earlier. All historical empires and war aggressors have used propaganda to claim their looting and police states were necessary and helpful to the 99%. Instead, a sorrowful history tells us they were almost always for the sole benefit of the 1%." - Albert Bates

Climate Change & Global Warming Myths (Click on Icon)

Climate Change Videos

Topics

  • Basic Rules of this Website
  • Capitalism
  • Climate Change
  • Collapse of Industrial Civilization
  • Consumerism
  • Corporate State
  • Cyber-Warfare
  • Cyberwarfare
  • Ecological Overshoot
  • Empire
  • Environmental Degradation
  • Inequality
  • Intro
  • Mental Health
  • Military Industrial Complex
  • Neo-Colonialism
  • Oligarchy
  • Peak Oil
  • Pollution
  • Wall Street Fraud
  • Weekend Funnies for the Depressed Collapsitarian
  • Year-End Review

Doomsday Clock Stats

Meta

  • Create account
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Archives

  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • May 2024
  • September 2023
  • June 2022
  • January 2022
  • July 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • September 2020
  • January 2020
  • September 2019
  • June 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • March 2018
  • May 2017
  • February 2017
  • December 2016
  • November 2016
  • May 2016
  • April 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • August 2014
  • July 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • March 2014
  • February 2014
  • January 2014
  • December 2013
  • November 2013
  • October 2013
  • September 2013
  • August 2013
  • July 2013
  • June 2013
  • May 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • June 2012
  • May 2012

Lobster: The Journal of Politics, Parapolitics, & History

The Essays and Speeches of William Blum

RSS 3 Quarkes Daily

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS A Closer Look

  • Pseudo-Patriots
  • 7 RULES on Approaching Authoritarian Supporters
  • Trump supporters report higher levels of psychopathy, manipulativeness, callousness, and narcissism
  • How Mike Johnson became Speaker
  • Feed and Freeze
  • No! Obama Did Not Control Congress His First Two Years!
  • What Kind of Job Is Important
  • The Mathematics of Inequality
  • Cookies
  • The Choice

RSS A Prosperous Way Down

  • Easy! Halo MCC: How to Lower Your Weapon PC
  • Easily Check Minecraft Ore Spawn Rates!
  • Easily Replace a Tobacco Pipe Filter: A Simple Guide
  • Easily Replace Old Blades on Your Utility Knife
  • Easily Create DVDs from Streaming Services: A Simple Guide
  • Fix Dyson Vacuum: How to Repair a Dyson Vacuum That Shuts Off Randomly
  • Easily Check: How to Find Out if Your Halloween Candy is Safe
  • Find Awesome PA Skill Game Locations Now!
  • Easily Get Off Horse, Ashes of Creation Guide
  • Easy! How to Replace Toilet Handle Quickly

RSS Adam Curtis Blog

  • SAVE YOUR KISSES FOR ME
  • WHILE THE BAND PLAYED ON
  • HE'S BEHIND YOU
  • MENTAL CHANNEL NUMBER ONE - THE MAN FROM MARS
  • HOW TO KILL A RATIONAL PEASANT
  • IF YOU TAKE MY ADVICE - I'D REPRESS THEM
  • WHITE NEGRO FOR MAYOR
  • RUPERT MURDOCH - A PORTRAIT OF SATAN
  • BODYBUILDING AND NATION-BUILDING
  • WHO WOULD GOD VOTE FOR?

RSS Adam Vs The Man

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS AdBusters

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Against the Grain

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Aljazeera

  • Spain vs Belgium LIVE: FIFA World Cup 2026 quarterfinal
  • Trump refuses to sign US housing bill over voting act standoff
  • Family mourns baby after Israeli forces blocked journey to hospital
  • The search for Gaza’s missing brings heartbreak and closure for loved ones
  • Ukraine chokes fuel to Crimea, Russian consumers, targeting military supply
  • Israeli drones strike Lebanon despite US-brokered framework deal
  • Super typhoon as wide as France heads to East Asia
  • Ukrainian court detains alleged killers of Monaco bomb attack suspect
  • Death, silence, and survival inside New Jersey State Prison
  • Andy Burnham apology for Labour stance on Gaza: Is UK’s position shifting?

RSS Aljazeera – Opinion

  • Pride despite defeat as Morocco’s World Cup run ends
  • Conor McGregor vs Max Holloway 2 at UFC 329: All you need to know
  • How an Egypt-Argentina World Cup game became a referendum on Palestine
  • Fall in funding cuts aid to 1 million women: UN
  • How Hamas Governed Gaza
  • India is becoming a shaping power
  • UK police confront Morocco fans over unrest after World Cup loss
  • EU states do not need ‘consensus’ to hold Israel accountable
  • Trump grants Kyiv Patriots licences: What’s next in the Russia-Ukraine war?
  • Bomb attacks rattle Damascus but for most Syrians, life goes on

RSS All Tied Up and Nowhere to Go

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Alternative Radio

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS AlterNet

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Anarchist News

  • ANews Podcast 473 – 7.3.26
  • TOTW: National Identity and Anarchy
  • A New Proudhon Library: Next steps
  • The dogs bark, but the caravan goes on
  • Update on the Imprisonment of Dimitris Chatzivasileiadis
  • WE CALL FOR ANARCHIST PARTICIPATION
  • Solidarity with the 9 anarchists persecuted in Italy in the latest operation
  • Power, State, and Class
  • Signal Problems
  • FBI report claims anti-capitalist graffiti could indicate plans for violence

RSS Antony Loewenstein

  • Whistleblower Diaries #3: Antony Loewenstein
  • The Antony Loewenstein Podcast: Reacting to Viral Chaos – War, Racism & Immigration Narratives
  • Al Jazeera English The Inside Story on Israeli arms industry
  • The horrors in Palestine go far beyond Netanyahu
  • The Antony Loewenstein Podcast: The Far Right Global Movement and How to Fight It
  • The Antony Loewenstein Podcast: Inside Israel’s Booming Arms Trade
  • TRT World interview on endless conflict in West Asia
  • The Antony Loewenstein Podcast: Reaction to Viral Clips on War, Media & Immigration
  • Israeli arms sales are soaring
  • Computer Says Maybe podcast interview on the Palestine lab

RSS Apocadocs

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Arctic Emergency Institute

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Arctic Methane Emergency Group (AMEG)

  • AMEG Strategic Plan
  • Breaking the Chain
  • AMEG Policy Brief
  • The biggest story of all time
  • Getting the picture
  • Storm exacerbates Arctic predicament
  • Food security threatened by sea ice loss
  • Supplementary evidence to the EAC from John Nissen on behalf of AMEG
  • Message from the Arctic Methane Emergency Group

RSS Arctic News

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Arctic Sea Ice

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Arctic Sea Ice News & Analysis

  • Sea Ice Today services reduced
  • Antarctic sea ice maximum settles in third place
  • 2025 Arctic sea ice minimum squeezes into the ten lowest minimums
  • Taking a bite out of the Beaufort
  • The peak of summer, the depths of winter
  • SSMIS sunsets AMSR2 rises
  • May sea ice…always grace our planet’s poles
  • April falls flat
  • Spring is in the air
  • Arctic sea ice sets a record low maximum in 2025

RSS Around the Coast Mountains

  • The name’s Mark… Mark BC
  • Packrafting / Fatbiking Buntzen Lake
  • My New Surly Pugsley Fatbike Build
  • Salsipuedes Canyon by Fatbike
  • Bridge River Recon Part 3 — Chilcotin Mountains Park
  • Bridge River Recon Part 2
  • Bridge River Recon, Part 1
  • Chilcotin Bikerafting Route
  • May 25 to 28 — Long Beach, California to Alfonsinas, Mexico
  • Ring Pass, Attempt #2

RSS Arthur Silber

  • Moving Interruptus, and Why Hospitals Suck
  • Crisis
  • How Many Damn Fucking Times Do I Have to Explain This?
  • So Close, Yet So Far
  • Very Sick, Very Scared
  • Help! Please
  • Mama's Last Hug
  • Twilight Zone America
  • Concerning Moral Judgment, and Moral Monsters
  • SERIOUS TROUBLE: Pain. Hospital. ???

RSS Arundhati Roy

  • Arundhati Roy on her fugitive childhood: ‘My knees were full of scars and cuts – a sign of my wild, imperfect, fatherless life’
  • Modi’s model is at last revealed for what it is: violent Hindu nationalism underwritten by big business | Arundhati Roy
  • This is no ordinary spying. Our most intimate selves are now exposed | Arundhati Roy
  • ‘We are witnessing a crime against humanity’: Arundhati Roy on India’s Covid catastrophe – podcast
  • Arundhati Roy on India’s Covid catastrophe: ‘We are witnessing a crime against humanity’
  • Modi's brutal treatment of Kashmir exposes his tactics – and their flaws | Arundhati Roy
  • Arundhati Roy extract: 'The backlash came in police cases, court appearances and even jail'
  • Literature provides shelter. That's why we need it | Arundhati Roy
  • Amid arrests and killings, Bangladesh and India must fight censorship | Arundhati Roy
  • An exclusive extract from Arundhati Roy’s The Ministry Of Utmost Happiness

RSS Arundhati Roy Says

  • A perfect day for democracy
  • Arundhati Roy speaks about the issue of rape in India
  • We Call This Progress
  • ‘Those Who’ve Tried To Change The System Via Elections Have Ended Up Being Changed By It'
  • Roy Against the Machine
  • If we do not love people, what are we fighting for?
  • All roads lead to Sharjah book fair
  • ‘Fairy princess’ to ‘instinctive critic’
  • Arundhati Roy shuns 'activist' tag
  • State attacking tribals in name of Green Hunt: Roy

RSS ASPO – USA

  • On hiatus
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 23 October 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 17 October 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 10 October 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 3 October 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 26 September 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 19 September 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 12 September 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 5 September 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 29 August 2022

RSS Avedon’s Sideshow

  • Not another one, aw, no
  • It's time we started rockin' the boat
  • Not just anybody
  • Well you know it's a shame and a pity
  • It was a time when strangers were welcome here
  • We will protect our home
  • All you gotta do is call
  • Waiting for Twelfthnight
  • Stop all the firing and the fighting
  • Throw cares away

RSS Bad Astronomy

  • A Norwegian Soccer Player Has Captivated an Unlikely New Audience. There’s a Surprisingly Heartening Reason Why.
  • Slate SoundBites for July 10, 2026
  • I’ve Found a Solution to a Frustrating Public Pool Puzzle. It Involves Being Technically Part of the Problem.
  • Think You’re Smarter Than a Slate Senior Producer? Find Out With This Week’s News Quiz.
  • Slate Mini Crossword for July 10, 2026
  • Slate Crossword: Asimov Anthology That Foresaw the Ethical Quandaries of A.I. (Six Letters)
  • The World Cup Tragedy You Don’t Understand Until It Happens to You
  • Should You Take Trump’s Free $1,000?
  • Are We Really Back at War With Iran?
  • Maine Democrats Fell for a Candidate They Hadn’t Actually Met

RSS Barbara Ehrenreich

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS BBC: Science & Environment

  • East Asia braces for destructive typhoon as landslides kill 15 in Philippines
  • Watch: Typhoon Bavi forecast to bring heavy rains and floods to Taiwan, Japan and China
  • Struggling pig farmers say £2m support package 'not enough'
  • UK bakes in 35C highs as millions under hosepipe bans
  • How cows are helping one of Britain's rarest butterflies
  • Pressure builds on Europe's biggest port to be greener
  • Viral squeaky frog now at risk of extinction
  • UK heatwave spreads north and west as further heat health alerts issued
  • How beachgoers are turning snaps into science
  • Amber heat health alerts in effect as UK set for one of longest-lasting heatwaves since 1976

RSS Big Picture Agriculture

  • BIG PICTURE AGRICULTURE'S LATEST NEWS
  • How to Stay Informed About Agriculture, Food, and Farming Issues
  • Dr. Walter Falcon's 2019 Iowa Farm Report
  • Agriculture Reading Picks
  • The Merits of Amaranth
  • Global Food and Agriculture Photos October 28, 2018
  • Unloading Livestock in Ohio 1938
  • Agriculture Reading Picks
  • Managed Rotational Grazing with Profitable Dairy in Minnesota
  • Global Food and Agriculture Photos October 21, 2018

RSS Bill Moyers

  • PODCAST: Dr. Bandy Lee Saw It Coming – The Violence Foretold in Donald Trump’s Election
  • Trump-Russia-Ukraine Timeline
  • Insurrection Timeline
  • Juneteenth: America’s Other Independence Day
  • March 30, 2021
  • Letters From an American: Heather Cox Richardson
  • The Pandemic Timeline
  • Racism in America
  • Bill Moyers On Democracy Podcast
  • Stop Attacks on Asian-Americans NOW!

RSS Bit Tooth Energy

  • Waterjetting 37e - Using Cavitation to disintegrate rock
  • Waterjetting 37d - Underground Drilling with Waterjets
  • Waterjetting 37c - A Drilling Diversion
  • Waterjetting 37b - How safe is it?
  • Waterjetting 37a - Removing Explosives
  • Waterjetting 36d - Going through more complex walls.
  • Waterjetting 36c - Cutting walls
  • Waterjetting 36b - Katrina anniversary and the power of water
  • Waterjetting 36a - Jet stripping of tires
  • Waterjetting 35e - A low cost version of the soil sucker

RSS Bizarro Blog

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Brane Space

  • D.E. Littlewood's Elegant Introduction To Non-Commutative Algebras (Pt. 2)
  • BIS ('Bank of all Central Banks') Connects Dots To Show Proximity Of Global Financial Crash Linked To AI Boom
  • All Experts Redux: Constellation Patterns in the Sky Random Or Real?
  • 'Little' Holman Jenkins Jr. Cracks Up - Confusing Comcast-MSNOW With FOX News
  • An Introduction To The Basic Equations Of Elementary Astrophysics
  • Mensa Angle Geometry Problem Solution
  • WSJ Guest Contributor Exposes The Mirage Of "Trump Accounts" (Money Taxed Coming In & Going Out)
  • How Our Understanding of the Black Death Has Been Advanced By Genomic Evidence - & A Study Of Medieval History
  • A Math Treat: D.E. Littlewood's Elegant Introduction to Non-Commutative Algebras (Pt. 1)
  • The Untold Story Of The Reagan Tax Cuts? Conservo Parrots Still Remain Dishonest In Disclosure

RSS Brave New World

  • Georgia and the European Union – What Lies Ahead?
  • Islam: The Overlooked Aspect of Rumi’s Poetry
  • Remembering Nur ad-Din Zengi: The Light of Faith
  • Francophobia Among Muslims: Just Another Myth?
  • A Year in Kazakhstan: Some General Observations
  • ‘Dirilis Ertugrul’ — A History We’ve Forgotten?
  • Almaty, Kazakhstan: City of Tourists and Mountains
  • Nur-Sultan City (Astana): A Young and Futuristic City
  • Tashkent, Uzbekistan: The City with 2200+ Years of History
  • Remembering Berke Khan, 1209-66

RSS Breaking the Set

  • Abby Martin Breaks the Set One Last Time
  • Never Stop Breaking the Set!
  • Cuba Part III: The Evolution of Revolution
  • Cuba Part II: Ebola Solidarity & Castro’s Daughter on Gay Rights
  • Why Are Americans Getting Their Medical Degrees in Cuba?
  • Cuba Part I: Revolution, Sabotage & Un-Normal Relations
  • Why the CIA Won’t Give Up on Venezuela | Interview with Eva Golinger
  • [531] Bayer Infects Thousands with HIV, Clinton's Shocking Bedfellows & Netanyahu’s Cartoon Lies
  • CIA Torture Whistleblower John Kiriakou: Wake Up, You’re Next
  • Abby Responds to John McCain Promoting Breaking the Set

RSS Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Business Insider

  • I moved from Florida to the Midwest. I was skeptical, but my new home has the perfect mix of city life and suburban charm.
  • MrBeast's chocolate brand sees growth slow after a sugar rush
  • 'A different level of luxury': How Rolls-Royce makes custom, 6-figure cars for the ultra-wealthy
  • Fidji Simo says Mark Zuckerberg gave her one piece of health advice years ago, and she wishes she had listened
  • A Ryanair passenger was injured when a cabin window 'dislodged' in midair
  • Penélope Cruz says one thing matters most when raising teens in the social media age
  • I've lived in the Netherlands for 15 years. These 4 cities have canals and culture — and fewer crowds than Amsterdam.
  • This ETF firm is giving investors a way to avoid Elon Musk
  • How to watch Sinner vs. Djokovic: Free Wimbledon semifinal live streams, odds, and more
  • I'm from France, and my husband is from New Mexico. We are raising our child in Florida with no family nearby.

RSS C-Realm

  • Untitled
  • Ego-Syntonic Integration
  • Private Eschatologies
  • When Forecasting becomes Prophecy
  • The Seer, the Validator, and the Pastoral Guide
  • Moralization of Dissent and Narrative Management
  • 2019 pre-COVID transition
  • Conversation with East Forest
  • Untitled
  • Blog Roll of Olde

RSS Cagle: Premium Cartoon News

  • Father Gets BBQ Gifts But No Grill
  • Child Questions Social Media Ban Alternatives
  • Men React To Trump Iran Claim
  • Men Discuss Trump Canada Statehood Idea
  • Children Read FIFA Road Closure Signs
  • Woman and Child Fill Bucket from Cloud Pipe
  • Venezuelan Flag with Mourning Bow
  • Statue of Liberty MAGA Shirt Violin Sign
  • Politician Seeks Voting Laws to Retain Power
  • Roberts Court Unlocks Racism Chains

RSS Cassandra’s Legacy

  • Cassandra is Dead. Long Live Cassandra!
  • Margherita Sarfatti: the Woman Who Destroyed Mussolini
  • Are Mercenary Armies Evil? From Malatesta Baglioni to Evgeny Prighozyn:
  • The Lucky Demons that Rule us. Why Pay to Risk Your Life?
  • Cassandra: singing no harmonious tune; for it tells of no good
  • Ugo Bardi's Latest Post on "The Seneca Effect": The Collapse of Saudi Arabia's Water Supply
  • Ugo Bardi's Latest Post on "The Seneca Effect"
  • Ugo Bardi's Latest post on "The Seneca Effect"
  • Ugo Bardi's latest post on "The Seneca Effect"
  • Ugo Bardi's Latest Post on "The Seneca Effect". The Hydrogen Myth

RSS Censored News

  • New Date: Mni Wiconi 10 Year NO DAPL Reunion, September 2026
  • Dził Nchaa Si'an Sacred Run, Mount Graham, July 2026
  • Trump Denies he's on Stolen Land -- 'Seek Shelter' at Trump's Fireworks Event at Mount Rushmore
  • Oglala Lakota Oppose Fireworks Event at Mount Rushmore
  • Sacred Wind Drum Carrier Speaks of Peace and Melting Ice -- World Peace and Prayer Day at Bear Butte
  • Apache Stronghold '250 Years Later, What Does Freedom Mean for Indigenous Peoples?'
  • California: The State of Genocide and Forced Sterilizations of Native People
  • Mohawk Nation News 'The Red-X Speaks: 'House Mohawk' Continues to Disparage Field Warriors'
  • World Peace and Prayer Day: The Power of Spirit
  • Mohawk Nation News 'Warrior Society: Rebellion Against the Great Law'

RSS Center For Biological Diversity

  • Hawai‘i Needs Rules to Prevent Destructive, Invasive Pests From Spreading Across State, Letter Says
  • Western Gray Squirrels Granted Washington State Endangered Status
  • Lawsuit Challenges EPA Approval of Denver Oil Refinery Air Permit
  • Companies Lobbying for Weak U.N. Plastics Treaty Spend Big on U.S. Politics
  • Court Orders Do-Over for Proposed Highway Right-of-Way Through National Conservation Area in Utah
  • Petition Seeks Endangered Species Protection for Oregon’s Crater Lake Newt
  • California Court Upholds Ventura County Program to Safeguard Wildlife Connectivity
  • Miami-Dade Mayor’s Office Recommends Canceling Miami Wilds Deal
  • U.S. to Review Outdated Offshore Drilling Plans Linked to Huntington Beach Spill
  • House Republicans Target Center for Biological Diversity in Appropriations Rider

RSS Center for Investigative Journalism

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Center for Economic & Policy Research

  • Industrial Policy Is Like Dieting: We Always Do It
  • The Price of NATO Membership: Growing Resistance to the Alliance’s Rearmament Agenda
  • Mostly Economics – Episode 42
  • May Trade Deficit Jumps to Highest Level Since March 2025
  • The Federal Minimum Wage Hits a Seven-Decade Low
  • The Sanders-Trump Plan for an AI Sovereign Wealth Fund: Don’t Buy It
  • The Deadly Cost of Misguided Federal Wildfire Policy
  • The Fraudulent War on Medicaid Fraud
  • Medicare Advantage Companies Bank Billions in Bonuses
  • If Your Financial Adviser Recommends Putting Money in a Trump Account, Fire Them

RSS Charles Eisenstein’s Blog

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Chomsky

  • The Kind of Anarchism I Believe in, and What's Wrong with Libertarians
  • Upcoming speaking event in Boston with Noam Chomsky, Amy Goodman, and Jeremy Scahill
  • Violence and Dignity: Reflections on the Middle East (2013 Edward Said Lecture)
  • How Noam Chomsky is discussed, by Glenn Greenwald
  • Profile of Noam Chomsky in the Financial Times
  • Brief profile of Noam Chomsky in The Guardian (UK), by journalist Charles Glass
  • Rare video of Noam Chomsky interviewed with Gore Vidal in 1991
  • Complete videorecording of 1971 debate between Noam Chomsky and Michel Foucault
  • Noam Chomsky profile in the Financial Times
  • Additional video excerpt of Noam Chomsky speech at East Stroudsburg University, Pennsylvania

RSS Chris Hedges

  • Houston Father Killed Amid ‘Silent’ Surge by ICE
  • One Year Later: Bezos’ WaPo Cheerleads for MAGA, Billionaires and AI
  • Pink Flamingos & Yellow Vests
  • The Data Is In on GOP Budget: Rural Americans Are Losing Health Insurance Coverage
  • How Woody Guthrie Keeps Resonating With New Generations
  • Trump Acquired as Much as $24 Million in Defense Stocks Last Year
  • Revolutionizing Gynecology With Women in Mind
  • Who Will Replace Graham Platner — and How Will the Party Decide?
  • Debt Relief in the Global South Would Benefit Americans
  • When the Media Turned Away, ICE Got Worse

RSS Class Warfare Blog

  • Tit-forTat War-Style
  • Loose Language from People Who Should Know Better
  • Smoke and Mirrors Media-Style
  • Billionaires, Hunh, What are They Good For … Absolutely Nothing
  • Socialists to the Left of Me, Socialists to the …
  • The Sham that is Agnosticism
  • Holy Hell, Batman!
  • The Worst of the Worst Apparently Includes Nuns
  • Godless Norway Knows How to Deal With Powerful People
  • Science Fiction Nonsense

RSS Cliff Schecter

  • Norway vs England: World Cup quarterfinal – Haaland, Kane, prediction, news
  • Philippines landslides kill 15 as Typhoon Bavi threatens region
  • Paramount-Warner merger: could it reshape the media?
  • First Palestinian legislative elections in 20 years announced
  • US-Iran escalation threatens oil supply recovery, warns IEA
  • US-Iran war: Will peace talks resume, and when?
  • Condemned ex-PM Hasina plans December return to Bangladesh
  • FIFA World Cup 2026: Day 29
  • Pride despite defeat as Morocco’s World Cup run ends
  • Conor McGregor vs Max Holloway 2 at UFC 329: All you need to know

RSS Climate and Capitalism

  • Why socialists must understand metabolic rifts
  • How Big Oil Blocked a Plastic Pollution Treaty
  • The world’s heatwaves are a global health emergency
  • Weedkiller glyphosate boosts antimicrobial resistant bacteria
  • Metabolic Rifts: An interview with Ian Angus
  • How Obama, Trump, and Biden blocked court action on climate
  • Climate change disrupts freshwater faster than nature can adapt
  • Alberta carbon capture project quietly reduces its targets — by 77%
  • Social Murder: Pandemic Profits and Vaccine Apartheid
  • Ecosocialist Bookshelf, June 2026

RSS Climate Central

  • The looming threat for Maine’s iconic potato industry
  • Ellis Island, lighthouses among historic NJ sites flooding as seas rise
  • Still rare in Iowa, electric car powers Des Moines family’s home during blackouts
  • Storied Maine ski resort bets future on reining in high costs of warmer winters
  • Hardly any past Winter Olympic host cities will have the snow to host in 60 years
  • Data may be Colorado’s best bet to mitigate increasing wildfire risk on the Front Range
  • How sea level rise is affecting your commute to and around Atlantic City
  • ‘A moral imperative’: Monastic sisters in rural Midwest make faith-based case for climate action
  • As flooding amplifies along the East Coast, Buddhist and Jewish faith leaders join the climate fight
  • ‘Preach now or mourn in the future’: How Key West faith leaders are confronting climate change

RSS Climate Change: The Next Generation

  • Tamino's latest on the September 2024 temperature anomaly
  • Unofficial Temperature Records on July 9, 2023
  • Historic Greenland ice sheet rainfall unraveled
  • Flip Flop: Why Variations in Earth's Magnetic Field Aren't Causing Today's Climate Change
  • Let's call climate change deniers what they really are: CLIMATE LIARS!
  • Amy Westerfelt: The Reason COVID-19 and Climate Seem So Similar: Disinformation
  • Bill McKibben's response to Michael Moore's Planet of the Humans
  • WaPo: The Congo rain forest is losing ability to absorb carbon dioxide. That’s bad for climate change
  • Mark Carney of the Bank of England unveils climate stress test
  • Tropical forests may be heating Earth by 2035

RSS Climate Citizen

  • UN Oceans Conference: Australia commits to 30% highly protected marine areas by 2030, signs on to High Seas Biodiversity Treaty, Blue NDC Challenge
  • Prime Minister Albanese says global warming a factor in Tropical Cyclone Alfred and its extreme weather impacts
  • Younger people disproportionately represented in climate heat-related mortality trend according to Mexico study
  • Guest Post: Trusted partner to the Pacific, or giant fossil fuel exporter? This week, Australia chose the latter
  • INC5: Negotiations for Global Plastics Treaty 5th meeting in Busan, South Korea
  • Climate Progress in Australia's 2024 Annual Climate Statement delivered by Chris Bowen
  • Victoria releases latest (2022) Greenhouse gas emissions report showing year on year 4.3 megatonnes increase
  • Guest Post: After nearly 10 years of debate, COP29’s carbon trading deal is seriously flawed
  • Australia at COP29 Climate Diary
  • Fossil of the Day awards at COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan

RSS Climate Code Red

  • Avoiding 'worse-case' climate warming is big news. But is it true?
  • “Don’t mention the climate!”
  • Any sane foreign policy would put climate risks, not China, at centre stage

RSS Climate Connections

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Climate Denial Crock of the Week

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Climate Progress

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Climate Snapshot

  • "Carbon tsunami" lead by Enbridge Northern Gateway takes aim at BC
  • BC's tar sands? Thirteen proposed LNG projects equivalent to 13 times current BC emissions
  • Car Carbon series: cool new animation, plus the jaw-dropping impact it left out
  • Climate change fuels both California's record drought and "polar vortex" storms
  • Obama's Keystone XL delay forces Harper into the "choose first" hot seat
  • Four charts reveal gigantic climate impact from proposed Kinder Morgan mega-pipeline
  • Climate fail. Surging fossil fuels are leaving renewable energy far, far behind.
  • Twenty one ways America would destroy a safe climate -- and one way they won't: US govt. report
  • Fracking in America kills off clean energy, leading to higher emissions: EIA report
  • BP calls for global carbon price to avoid the "worst impacts of climate change"

RSS ClimateSight

  • Increasing melting of West Antarctic ice shelves may be unavoidable – new research
  • Let’s hear more from the women who leave academia (Part 2)
  • Let’s hear more from the women who leave academia.
  • Talking, typing, and the social model of disability
  • We need your help! Share your views on climate change with us.
  • Ice sheet melting: it’s not just about sea level rise
  • How I became a scientist
  • How does the Weddell Polynya affect Antarctic ice shelves?
  • Climate change and compassion fatigue
  • The silver lining of fake news

RSS Club Orlov

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS ClusterFuck Nation

  • Scenario
  • July 2026 | Eyesore
  • Werewolves of London
  • Burning Down the House
  • KunstlerCast_446 — Mel K on the Infiltration and Betrayal of America
  • It's All They've Got Now
  • The Party of Algae and 'Our Democracy'
  • KunstlerCast 445 — Susan Kokinda of Promethean Action on Bringing Back "The American System," and other Matters
  • Slouching Toward Peace
  • Give Peace a Chance (Not?)

RSS Cocktailhag – FDL

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Colin Tudge

  • Let's not bet the farm | Colin Tudge
  • Why the world needs a renaissance of small farming | Colin Tudge
  • Are modern British children suffering from 'nature deficit disorder'? | Colin Tudge and Aleks Krotoski
  • Let the country, not the City, drive the UK economy | Colin Tudge
  • Farming needs Adam Smith's invisible hand, not finance capitalism | Colin Tudge
  • Survivors by Richard Fortey - review
  • Why woodlands are wonderful
  • Fossil Ida's great big family | Colin Tudge

RSS Common Dreams: News

  • Troy Jackson Says He Would 'Never Vote’ for Military Aid to Israel if Elected to Senate
  • Trump Admin Trying to Deport Witnesses Who Contradicted ICE Claims About Fatal Shooting
  • 'A Pathetic Power Grab': Trump Purges Bipartisan Election Assistance Commission
  • 'Abolish ICE,' Says Mamdani After Agent Kills Houston Man Lorenzo Salgado Araujo
  • 'Absolutely Unprecedented': Trump Lackeys Crushing Efforts to Rein in Price-Hiking Corporate Mergers
  • 'It Was a Field Execution': IDF Shoots Driver Delivering Relief Supplies to Gaza in the Head
  • 'Sign the Damn Bill!' Anger at Trump Grows as US Housing Prices Hit All-Time High
  • 'Like Putting a Flat Earther in Charge of NASA': Trump Appoints Climate Denier to Key Climate Post
  • 'Free Davey!': Olympian Pleads Not Guilty to Charges That He Vandalized Reflecting Pool
  • A Winning Message for 2026 Swing Voters: Tax the Rich and Medicare for All!

RSS Consortium News

  • Caitlin Johnstone: Gaza Ethnic Cleansing Rolls On
  • Activist Cleared of Violent Disorder in Palestine Action Raid
  • Vijay Prashad: Why the World Needs a Genuine Left
  • Is it the End for Communism in India?
  • Interview: Indian Communist Leader Mohammed Salim
  • US Commanders ‘Bypassed Warnings’ on School Massacre
  • Washington Fails to Block Cuba-Embargo Debate at UN
  • AS’AD AbuKHALIL: The View From Lebanon
  • Hedges Report: Weaponizing ‘Civil Death’ to Crush Dissent
  • Amid Gaza Water Crisis, Israel Bombs a Critical Facility

RSS Consumer Energy Report

  • How Bulk Diesel Fuel Delivery Reduces Downtime for Industrial Operations
  • Death of the Florescent Shop Light – Energy Efficiency
  • Methanol VS Ethanol – Technical Merits and Political Favoritism
  • Bill Nye the Science Guy – Social Primate and Nuclear Energy
  • World’s Smallest Gasoline Engine – Technology Breakthrough
  • How Much Oil Does the World Produce? – Production Facts and Figures
  • World Sets New Oil Production and Consumption Records
  • What Makes Up the Cost of a Gallon of Gasoline? – Gas Price
  • Road Trip – Thoughts on the Satsop Nuclear Power Station
  • What Happened at Choren? – History & Events

RSS Corp Watch

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS CorrenteWire

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS CorrenteWire – Quick Hits

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Counter Currents

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS CounterPunch

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Crooked Timber

  • Brief thoughts on aircon
  • Sunday photoblogging: Palais des Papes, Avignon
  • Reflections on America’s 250th
  • The state of nuclear power in 2026
  • On Humphreys opacity, Reverse Engineering, and Social Externalities of LLMs.
  • Sunday photoblogging: wall, Collioure
  • Feels like 40 degrees – Let’s get a Ministry for the Future
  • AI Electricity use: a lot or a little
  • In the 19th century small business folk traded gold and money. And then the banks took over.
  • Sunday photoblogging: Sète

RSS Crooks and Liars

  • Source: ICE Officials Playing Dark Game Of Witness Suppression After Newest Killing
  • This Trump Official Just Can't Help Taking Lincoln's Name In Vain
  • ICE Killing Of Salgado Sparks Outrage And Protest In Houston
  • Mitch McConnell's Wife Finally Broke Her Silence, Made Things Even MORE Bizarre
  • Giant Tarp Painted To Look Like White House Columns Startles Onlookers
  • Trump's Disaster Aid Formula Is Simple: Did You Vote For Him?
  • Mike’s Blog Round-Up
  • Trump Torched His Own Iran Deal On The World Stage
  • Trump Nap Time At NATO
  • Nigel Farage To Take On Garbage Can In Clackton By-Election

RSS Cryptome

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Culture Change

  • Low Cost Polluting: The Real American Dream?
  • We Did It: Sailing Cargo in the Aegean
  • Cure for Depending on 90K Oil Spewing Cargo Ships: Sail Power Makes Inroads, Now in Mediterranean
  • The Trump Presidency: Celebration of the Little Boy, and Mass Awakening
  • Stepping Back from Trump's Election: Critique of underlying US Culture in a List - 25 Limitations
  • Dirty Fossil Fuel ‘Business-As-Usual’ Tactics Spew Out of the IMO at COP22
  • The Unconnected and Unrewarded in the New Divisive Dichotomy: Being Either Online Or Not
  • The Ameliorators: a possible coalition of progressives on (e.g.) NAFTA
  • It's the 21st, and this is what a growing movement is doing
  • Pro-Climate Actions - a community flier and poster

RSS Dahr Jamail

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Daily Kos Comics

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Damn the Matrix

  • TEOTWAWKI isn’t the End of the World
  • You need Resources
  • Growth is slow, Ruination is fast…
  • Sarah Wilson in Australia
  • The Raging Zombie Matrix
  • Life goes on….
  • On Amazing Techno-fixes
  • more Collapse Early and Avoid the Rush
  • The End is Nigh…
  • Europe on the Brink?

RSS Dan Hagen

  • Throw Yourself a Grappling Hook
  • Fix a Broken Day
  • An Encounter of the Fourth Kind
  • The Sound of Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang
  • Why Superheroes? Here's Why
  • When Roles Reverse
  • Agnes Moorehead and the Invaders
  • The Simple Things
  • Not Your Job
  • One of My Favorite Poems

RSS Dangerous Intersection

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Dark Ages America

  • Shifting to Substack
  • Postscript: A Passion for Cruelty: A Nation Spinning Out of Control
  • Karma Comes to America
  • And So, We Come to the End
  • The Origins of Sadism
  • Soul-Changers
  • 481
  • Calling All Texans: Major Event Coming Your Way
  • 479
  • Displacing Your Rage

RSS David Bollier

  • A Stunning Visual History of English Land Commoners and Their Folk Culture
  • Brave New Alps: New Forms of Rural Resurgence Through Commoning and Care
  • Jeremy Lent’s ‘Ecocivilization’ – A Bold Vision for System Change
  • Now Available -- Audiobook and Digital Versions of ‘Think Like a Commoner, Second Edition'
  • Benjamin Mako Hill on the Social Dynamics of Online Collaboration
  • Federico Savini on Degrowth and Its Future
  • Stéphanie Leyronas: France’s Bold Experiment in Commons-based Development
  • Lewis Hyde on Gift Economies and Cultural Commons
  • Relationalized Finance: Bridging the Chasm
  • Toward Socio-ecological Markets

RSS David Cay Johnston (Link – National Memo)

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS David Cay Johnston (Link – Tax Analysts)

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS David Harvey

  • What Everyone Should Know About How Capital Works
  • New book review of The Story of Capital by Matt McManus for Marx & Philosophy Review of Books
  • Book Review: “Capital’s Media, Digital Command, and the Fate of Public Communication: Reflections on David Harvey’s The Story of Capital”
  • A League of Socialist Cities: David Harvey interviewed by Novara Media
  • Press Roundup from Mexico City
  • Keynote Lecture at the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters, National Autonomous University of Mexico
  • Book Talk for The Story of Capital at the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters, National Autonomous University of Mexico
  • LSE Review of Books: David Harvey on Marx in the age of finance capital
  • Interview: Cosmonaut Magazine podcast
  • The Story of Capital: Book Launch with David Harvey in Conversation with Adam Tooze

RSS David Hilfiker

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS David McNally

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS David Roberts

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Death by Car: Capitalism’s Drive to Carmageddon

  • 놓치지 말아야 할 고급 중고차 구입 팁 5가지 체크리스트
  • 레트로 중고차의 매력, 2026년 활용법 총정리!
  • 왜 요즘 중고차를 사는 게 좋을까? 2026년 중고차 모델 5가지 체크리스트
  • 자동차 전문가가 추천하는 사고 싶은 중고차 모델 조사하기 리스트 2026년 필수 체크리스트
  • 처음 알게 된 중고차의 초기 투자로서의 장점 5가지 체크리스트
  • 요즘 핫한 학생이 추천하는 중고차 모델 리스트 2026 체크리스트
  • 취미로 중고차 수집을 시작할 때 필요한 사전 지식 2026년 가이드
  • 중고차로 인한 비용 절감 효과: 2026년 절약하는 5가지 방법
  • 요즘 인기가 높은 중고차, 직장인 선택 비결 5가지 총정리
  • 친환경 중고차 구입 방법에 숨겨진 혜택들, 2026년 절약 가이드

RSS Decline of the Empire

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Deep Green Resistence News Service

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Deepak Tripathi’s Diary

  • Netanyahu’s “Forever War” on Gaza: What Made it Unsustainable
  • The Fall of Syria’s Bashar al-Assad: What it Means
  • United Kingdom Heading for General Election
  • Assertions of Sovereignty: Dimensions of Domestic and Foreign Policy
  • After Brexit: The State of the United Kingdom

RSS Democratic Underground

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Democratic Underground – Breaking News

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Democratic Underground – Good Reads

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Democracy Now

  • FOIA Under Attack: Landmark Transparency Law Turns 60; Fed Gov't Blocking More Documents Than Ever
  • "Exposing Instagram's Darkest Secret": BBC's Divya Arya on Ads for Child Sex Abuse Material in India
  • "Now or Never": DSA & Justice Democrats on Changing the Democratic Party, Mamdani, Gaza & More
  • Headlines for July 10, 2026
  • Albania's Flamingo Revolution: Protests Against Kushner-Trump Luxury Resort Could Bring Down Gov't
  • Homicide by Asphyxiation: What Happened to Geraldo Lunas Campos, Who Died in a Texas ICE Jail?
  • "Demanding the Truth": Family Wants Answers After ICE Kills Houston Dad Lorenzo Salgado Araujo
  • "A Disastrous Development": Trita Parsi on Breakdown of U.S.-Iran Ceasefire
  • Headlines for July 9, 2026
  • "Inside the Secret Network Fueling Sudan's War": Filmmaker Julia Steers on UAE Backing RSF Atrocities

RSS Derrick Jensen

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Desdemona Despair

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Desertification

  • UNCCD Press ReleaseG7 declaration recognizes land degradation and drought as global security risks  
  • Prevention Vital Against Desertification
  • Native Vegetation Configuration Improves Stability of Restored Desertified Grasslands in Northern China
  • how-saudi-arabia-is-using-wastewater-to-build-a-green-corridor-in-the-desert
  • Much of humanity may face hot-dry extremes five times more often by end-century
  • Engineers installed 7 million solar panels in the desert and they began sustaining themselves, turning the landscape into vibrant green
  • Algiers conference to tackle Africa desertification
  • Smart tech empowers desertification control in Inner Mongolia
  • Anti-Desertification: The battle to breathe life into Inner Mongolia’s harsh land
  • 2 years on: China’s ‘desert wheat farms’ show the seeds of success

RSS deSmog Blog

  • Colorado Cut $11.4 Million in Penalties for Oil Firms Submitting Fake Cleanup Data
  • Nigel Farage Has Mentioned Clacton Only Twice in Commons During Past Year
  • Paul Marshall ‘Cashing in on Climate Chaos’ After Leap in Fossil Fuel Investments, Critics Say
  • Canadian Gas CEOs Are Hyping AI Data Centres to Investors as a Lifeline for Their Industry
  • Event | Join Naomi Klein, Michael E. Mann, and Jim Hoggan to Celebrate DeSmog’s 20th Anniversary 
  • Seafood Industry Giants Failing to Tackle Pollution, New Study Finds
  • ‘Detailed and Determined Scoop’: DeSmog Wins Association of British Science Writers’ Award
  • Anthropic Crowdsourced Ethics Feedback at a Far-Right London Confab
  • Revealed: The Trump Donors, Reform-Backing Billionaires and Oil Companies Funding the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship
  • Trump’s Energy Secretary Says ‘Cold Is Larger Killer’ During Record European Heatwave

RSS Digbys Blog

  • Untitled
  • They can save the world by @BloggersRUs
  • Just drifting: R.I.P. Buck Henry By Dennis Hartley
  • It looks like he wants to take Iraq's oil money
  • Untitled
  • Let's not forget who worked with Suleimani's IRGC
  • You can't win if you don't show up to play by @BloggersRUs
  • Friday Night Soother
  • I'm just going to leave this here.
  • Who wants to be the next Andy McCabe?

RSS Disinfo – Ecology

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Dispatches from the Underclass

  • “They’re Demonic” – Israel Runs the Gaza Playbook in Lebanon (w/ Rania Khalek)
  • Rania Khalek DESTROYS Piers Morgan As Israel Attacks Lebanon
  • Israel Invades Lebanon Again: The Greater Israel Project That Keeps Failing
  • Iran Is Playing the Long Game to Exhaust the U.S. — So Far It’s Working | Vali Nasr
  • Israel Brings ‘Gaza Doctrine’ to Lebanon: Rania Khalek Reports From Beirut
  • This Isn’t Going the Way Trump Thought. Vali Nasr on Iran’s War Strategy
  • Trump Kills Khamenei — Iran Hits Back | Regime Change War Day 2
  • Iran, Venezuela, Palestine: The Collapse of International Law | Craig Mokhiber
  • ‘There’s Been No Betrayal Here’ | Exclusive w/ Venezuela’s Ex-Foreign Minister
  • Why Israel Has No Future in the Middle East | Nakba Survivor Dr. Ghada Karmi

RSS Dissent Magazine

  • The Court vs. Democracy
  • The Uses and Abuses of the “Worst of the Worst”
  • Know Your Enemy: Lincoln at Gettysburg
  • What to Eugene Debs Was the Fourth of July?
  • The Diva and the Writer
  • New Declarations
  • The New York Left’s Super Tuesday
  • Rot and Reform
  • I Shall Not Live in Fear
  • Know Your Enemy: Pope Leo XIV’s

RSS Dissident Voice

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Do the Math

  • Big Picture Questions
  • The Smartphone Hypothesis
  • Accepting Loss as Fair
  • Galactic Time
  • A Lawful Anarchist
  • Cerebral Disconnect
  • Two Murphys, Part 5
  • Two Murphys, Part 4
  • Two Murphys, Part 3
  • Two Murphys, Part 2

RSS Dollars & Sense Blog

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Doug Stanhope

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Douglas Rushkoff

  • Foreward to The New Inquisition
  • Program Or Be Programmed: 11 Commands for the AI Future
  • Substack
  • Nonbinary: A Memoir – Afterward
  • Artificial Creativity
  • Douglas Rushkoff: Silicon Valley’s elite prize data over reality, and it’s hurting us all
  • Breaking from the Pace of the Net
  • The Model Isn’t The Territory, Either
  • ‘We will coup whoever we want!’: the unbearable hubris of Musk and the billionaire tech bros
  • Team Human ep. 248: I Will Not Be Autotuned – Live from All Tech Is Human’s Responsible Tech Mixer

RSS Dr. Paul Craig Roberts

  • President Trump and NATO Have Declared War on Russia and Putin Is Oblivious
  • Israel Demands War Not Peace, Trump Obeys
  • Netanyahu’s son abandons family name to conceal globally detested identity
  • Dear American: No One in Government Represents You
  • Senator Rand Paul Intends to Hold Fauci Accountable for His Crimes
  • Do you remember all the Big Pharma shills badmouthing Ivermectin?
  • Let’s Compare Jean Carroll’s Allegation against Trump with the Fact that Black Rape Gangs Raped British Children
  • Black South Africans Oppose Black Immigrant-invaders
  • The Federal Government Uses Taxpayers’ Money to Fund the Food Stamp programs of States, but the States refuse to account for the Taxpayers’ money
  • Israel’s Forced Expulsion of Palestinians from Gaza and the West Bank Rebranded as “a Plan for Free Movement”

RSS Dredd Blog

  • The Uncertain Gene - 12
  • APNDX UG One
  • How Much SLC?
  • APNDX How Much SLC?
  • Human DNA Found In 2-3 Mya eDNA? - 2
  • HDNA apndx 1
  • Human DNA Found In 2-3 Mya eDNA?
  • A3
  • A2
  • A1

RSS Ear to the Ground – Truth Dig

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Early Warning

  • New York Not Close to Exiting Lockdown
  • Is New York Containing Covid?
  • New York vs Italy
  • NYC Update - 46.5% increase Sunday over Saturday.
  • We Are About to Lose New York City to Covid
  • Containing Covid-19 (Or Not)
  • Covid-19 update
  • Covid-19 Infection Rates
  • Global Carbon Sink Holding Up So Far
  • The Wake-Up Call from David Buckel

RSS Earth First

  • “UNC Dildo-Boy” accosts homophobic preacher, releases anti-technology declaration
  • Subpoena caps bad week for fossil fuel
  • Less Than 60 Hours Left to Support Indigenous Land Defenders!
  • Shh! That Zookeeper Is a Total *&^%#!
  • Marcellus Shale Earth First! Aerial Blockade Celebrates 2 Weeks
  • Sabotaging the Badger Cull
  • Occupied Abenaki Lands Desecrated by 9/11 Memorial Protesters Intervene to Address U.S. Imperialism & Genocide
  • The Earth First! Newswire Has Moved
  • Massive Mine Proposed at Oak Flat, Sacred Tribal Land
  • Wharton Coal Prep Plant Spill Turns Boone County, WV River White

RSS Earth Observatory: Image of the Day, Natural Hazards, and News

  • TOI-2147
  • TOI-6019
  • NGTS-38
  • On-Orbit Checkouts in Progress for Mission to Boost NASA’s Swift
  • Space Runs in the Family
  • Where Venezuela’s Earthquakes Shifted the Ground
  • Video: The LAST Eclipse in History
  • Video: Which Planet Has the Best Eclipse?
  • Helio and You: June 2026
  • NASA Sets Coverage for Astronaut Anil Menon Launch to Space Station

RSS Earth Observatory: Image of the Day

  • TOI-2147
  • TOI-6019
  • NGTS-38
  • On-Orbit Checkouts in Progress for Mission to Boost NASA’s Swift
  • Space Runs in the Family
  • Where Venezuela’s Earthquakes Shifted the Ground
  • Video: The LAST Eclipse in History
  • Video: Which Planet Has the Best Eclipse?
  • Helio and You: June 2026
  • NASA Sets Coverage for Astronaut Anil Menon Launch to Space Station

RSS Earth Observatory: Natural Hazards

  • TOI-2147
  • TOI-6019
  • NGTS-38
  • On-Orbit Checkouts in Progress for Mission to Boost NASA’s Swift
  • Space Runs in the Family
  • Where Venezuela’s Earthquakes Shifted the Ground
  • Video: The LAST Eclipse in History
  • Video: Which Planet Has the Best Eclipse?
  • Helio and You: June 2026
  • NASA Sets Coverage for Astronaut Anil Menon Launch to Space Station

RSS Earth Policy Institute Blog

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Ecocide Alert

  • How to Choose a Web Host: 7 Steps to Make the Right Decision
  • WordPress.com Changelog: Shape Your Newsletter Signup and Get Domain Help in Chat
  • How to build a WordPress plugin with AI (Cursor + WordPress Studio)
  • Introducing Feature Clips: Turn Posts Into Social-ready Video
  • Customize Your Newsletter Subscription Experience
  • Your WordPress Site, Built by Conversation: Studio Code Now on Desktop
  • Jetpack Search 7.0: Find Products Faster in WooCommerce
  • WordPress.com Changelog: Sharper Image Editing and a New Way to Multitask
  • Meet Desktop Mode: A New Workspace for WordPress Admin
  • 4 Ways to Make Your Website More Discoverable by AI Search

RSS Ecohuman World

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Eco-Shock News

  • Radio Ecoshock: We Told You This Heat Would Come
  • Radio Ecoshock: Crazy Heatwaves Europe – Fire in America
  • Radio Ecoshock: Unstable Future – Deranged Climate Now
  • Radio Ecoshock: Creeping Crisis
  • Radio Ecoshock: Fire Science That Burns
  • Radio Ecoshock: Godzilla Heat: London, Moscow, Delhi
  • Radio Ecoshock: El Nino, Data Farms, Compound Crisis
  • Radio Ecoshock: Acute Climate Trouble Starts Now
  • Radio Ecoshock: El Nino wildfires & Amazon tipping
  • Radio Ecoshock: Climate: Hunger World

RSS Ecological Headstand

  • Dilke, Chapman, and Dahlberg Pop-ups
  • For the Abolition of the Wages System!
  • The Incredible Shrinking Blog
  • Keynes "hadn't got round to it"
  • Napoleon Solow and the Phantom Mechanism
  • Mathiness, Growth and Increasing Returns
  • Viral Gyro Spiral
  • Untitled
  • Untitled
  • Never Mind the Bollocks. Here's the Gyro.

RSS Ecological Sociology

  • Commons Enabling Infrastucture
  • A Short History of Progress: Book Review
  • Foucault, Power, Truth and Ecology
  • Democratizing Capital at Scale: Cooperative Enterprise and Beyond
  • Stanford: Climate Change Ten Times Faster than Previous 65 Million Years
  • Beyond Market and State: The Renaissance of the Commons
  • What Then Must We Do? The Next American Revolution
  • John Thackery: Limits to Resilience
  • Timothy Mitchell: Carbon Democracy
  • The Informal Economy Blog

RSS Ecologise

  • Deep Warming
  • My Continent Is Not Your Climate Laboratory
  • Why this Maharashtra village is fighting for the long forgotten Gramdan Act?
  • Ignored health risks, bungled pilot projects, bonanza for Dutch firm: Modi Govt. forces fortified rice on poor
  • Protests against Ratnagiri Refinery: Skeletons in the Development Closet
  • What will be the history of India without the history of its plant life?
  • We are ‘greening’ ourselves to extinction
  • [WATCH] We are living in a deluded world: Interview with Iain McGilchrist
  • The Avocados of Wrath
  • How Mr Miyawaki Broke My Heart

RSS Economic Hardship Reporting Project

  • How Autonomous Trucks Are Eroding the American Middle Class
  • How children became this city’s lead detectors
  • College Grads Are Rejecting AI En Masse
  • Injured Retail Employees Are Being Screwed at Every Turn
  • New York Dairy Workers Push for Better Protections Under New Bill
  • The Gig Economy
  • Coming of age in East LA, unhoused activists in Oakland and a love letter to working-class immigrants
  • Hollywood, Gaza, and the Invisible Blacklist
  • Insecurity now: Vanishing mutual aid, halted family planning, soul-crushing AI jobs
  • Some Minneapolis Donors Have Moved On. The Immigrants Waiting for Help Haven’t

RSS Economic Undertow

  • Ending The War In Ukraine By Attacking Russian Railroads
  • The Good, the Bad and the Takfiri (Repost from 2014)
  • Z Marks the Spot
  • The Death of Economics
  • Cars and More Cars …
  • Repost From 2015: Pied Piper of Dumb Money
  • The Arc of the Moral Universe
  • Meet the New Year, Same as the Old Year
  • David Graeber Dead …
  • Frieden In Unserer Zeit, Peace In Our Time

RSS EcoWorldView

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Empire Burlesque

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Empirical Magazine

  • From the Empirical Archives: Genius or Folly?
  • From the Empirical Archives: Nights Such as These
  • From the Empirical Archives: Second Time Foster Child
  • From the Empirical Archives: A Moment with Mary Nash-Pyott
  • From the Empirical Archives: In the Shade of a Cave
  • From the Empirical Archives: In Search of a Good Teacher
  • From the Empirical Archives: The Circle and the Pyramid
  • From the Empirical Archives: Why Human Rights Matter
  • From the Empirical Archives: Arizona
  • From the Empirical Archives: The Offer by Jennifer Hanno

RSS EmptyWheel

  • Harmeet Dhillon Doxes the 100 People She Hired to Undermine Democracy
  • A Virtuous Life
  • Harmeet Dhillon’s Team Appears To Have Already Started Framing People
  • Republicans Have a Thee Too Problem
  • Trump Loves Cheating More Than He Hates Birthright Citizenship
  • Fridays with Nicole Sandler
  • Happy Fourth of July
  • This is How You Give a Speech on American Independence
  • Schrödinger’s Lemon: Harmeet Dhillon’s Team Treats “Organized Protest Activity” as a Crime
  • Democrats Describe the Wire Fraud behind the Single Ferris Wheel and the Empty Fields of Glyphosate

RSS End of More

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Energy Balance

  • "The Little Things That Run the World": Film screening + TTR's own film ("What If a Better World Were Possible?") + Panel Discussion, 6.00 pm on Tuesday, July 14th (2026).
  • "For Our Children's Earth: Building the Soil, Sustaining the Future." A talk given at Braziers Park College.
  • "Becoming Nature Positive" & "Transition Town Reading: What If a Better World Were Possible?" Film double bill, Tuesday June 9th (2026), 7 pm, Reading Biscuit Factory.
  • "Fires & Fascism", film screening options plus Q&A with the film director, Dr Peter Knapp.
  • “What If a Better World Were Possible?" A film made by Transition Town Reading.
  • Why are Fuel Prices so High?
  • Strait of Hormuz Chokehold Released for Now, but Global Supply Chains Remain at Risk.
  • "The Energy and Climate Conundrum," talk by Prof. Chris Rhodes, on April 28th (2026), 7-9 pm, Zero Degrees Reading.
  • Is the Hormuz Chokehold a Foretaste of Peak Oil?
  • “The Empathy Project.”

RSS Environment & Food Justice

  • National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies Statement on the Climate Crisis
  • La Lucha por La Sierra | Scion of Texas Oil Barons Seeks to Overturn Historic Use Rights to the Sangre de Cristo Land Grant
  • Biopiracy in Mexico | Foundation stealing wild beehives in Yucatán
  • Deep Seeds at the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues | April 2018
  • Exclusive Update - Monsanto in Mexico | Corporate impunity and the beekeeper struggle against transgenic soybeans
  • Student Blogs | Race, Gender, and Settler Colonial Violence
  • Notas de Campaña | Por una Tortilla 100 ciento Nixtamalizada
  • Campaign Notes | For 100 Percent Nixtamalized nonGMO Tortillas | Part One
  • Maize: Our Identity, Our Food | Photo Exhibit of Indigenous Corn Farmers Featured at UN Headquarters
  • Protecting the Sacred in Corn | Seed Sovereignty Documents | Berenice Sánchez Intervention on the Protection of Indigenous Agroecosystems presented to the UNPFII-2018 | 1 of 2

RSS Envisionation Blog

  • Roger Hallam: +3ºC Global heating Will Lead to 4 Billion Dead
  • New Genn Podcast: Prof. Chad Briggs on Cognitive Warfare and Climate Chaos
  • Antarctica’s Warning Sign: Inside the Collapse of Hektoria Glacier
  • Why Do Politicians Keep Pushing North Sea Drilling When It Won’t Lower Your Bills? Intercview with Ed Matthew, E3G Think Tank
  • Last Resort: Could Geoengineering Save the AMOC from Collapse?
  • Have The UK Green’s Abandoned Climate For Far-Left Populism?
  • Why We Need A Climate Solvency Plan – Sir David King
  • New Research: Climate Change is Accelerating – It’s Getting Hotter Faster!
  • El Niño 2026: The Strong Heat Spike That Could Break Global Temperature Records – Interview with Dr Jennifer Francis
  • Following the money: Is the Blair Institute’s North Sea oil and gas pivot good for Britain?

RSS Extraenvironmentalist Blog and Podcasts

  • [ Episode #47 // Power Transition ]
  • [ Episode #46 // Recovering Environmentalists ]
  • [ Episode #45 // Opening Money ]
  • [ Episode #39 // Debunking Economics ]
  • [ Episode #16 // Powering the Dream ]
  • [ Episode #15.2 // Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss // Part II ]
  • [ Episode #15.1 // Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss // Part I ]
  • [ Episode #14 // Discovering Dirt ]
  • [ Episode #10 // Brilliant ]
  • [ Episode #9 // Economics of Happiness ]

RSS ExtraEnvironmentalist’s Videos

  • [ Rick Wolff // A Cure for Capitalism ]
  • [ Firefly Gathering ]
  • [ John Kraus // Knife Sharpener ]
  • [ Jimmy McMillan // Rent is Too Damn High ]
  • [ Nate Hagens // From Wall St. to Ecological Economics // Part 1 ]
  • [ Dennis McKenna // Tools for a Culture of Healing ]
  • [ Montreal Degrowth Conference // Mini-Doc ]
  • [ Charles Eisenstein // Living Without Economic Growth ]
  • [ James Howard Kunstler // American Dream on Hiatus ]
  • [ Peter Victor // Ecological Economics]

RSS ExtraGeographic

  • Why Coventry council is using Palantir AI
  • CMAT at Glastonbury 2025. Over the barriers, into the crowd
  • We live and we die, we know not why / But I’ll be with you when the deal goes down
  • How to stop dogs barking
  • Review: What did you do yesterday? podcast
  • Gracie Abrams is resonating
  • Paul Heaton at Glastonbury 2024. Join the caravan of love
  • All Gregs on Desert Island Discs have to select The Wonder Stuff
  • Jimmy Buffett, Tropical Rock and the deadheads with credit cards
  • Trapped in the David Letterman Late Show archive

RSS Facts for Working People

  • 250 YEARS: The United States – from independence to empire (part three)
  • Ken Klippenstein: Exit Mitch McConnell, Enter Abdul El-Sayed
  • 250 YEARS: The United States – from independence to empire (part two)
  • Zionism and Imperialism
  • 250 YEARS: The United States – from independence to empire. Part 1
  • Israel is an apartheid state – and its weird marriage laws show us how
  • Summer books: trade wars, billionaires and global warming
  • Guilty as Charged: How America and Israel Created the Iranian Nuclear Programme They Now Use as a Pretext for War
  • Social Democrats Win Big in New York City Democratic Primaries
  • Editorial: what will a Burnham leadership mean?

RSS Fair: Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Fairewinds

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Fairfax Climate Watch

  • 3BMETEO:“nuova e più intensa ondata di caldo africano nella prossima settimana, su tutta Italia”
  • Digital Angels vince il Press, Outdoor & Promotion Key Award 2026 con la campagna “Very Important Plants” realizzata per 3Bee
  • Arginare la deriva dei trattamenti abusivi in Medicina Estetica e Chirurgia Plastica
  • NAPOLI. MERCATO IMMOBILIARE II SEMESTRE 2025
  • Ospedali connessi: sei ambiti in cui IoT, dati e cybersecurity possono supportare cura e continuità operativa
  • Innovation Village Award 2026, aperta la call per gli innovatori: candidature fino al 30 luglio
  • PROTOCOLLO D’INTESA TRA ANAS E FRIULI VENEZIA GIULIA STRADE PER UNA VIABILITA’ PIU’ INTEGRATA ED EFFICIENTE
  • IL MERCATO DELLE LOCAZIONI IN ITALIA
  • Arriva il pomodoro ciliegino ‘Questo l’ho fatto io’
  • Amazon e i suoi partner di vendita donano oltre 600 mila prodotti per un valore di oltre 8 milioni di euro a sostegno delle famiglie in tutta Italia

RSS Farooque Chowdhury’s Diary

  • Road rage faces student spirit
  • Fires within the Arctic Circle
  • A Facebook post on quota mobilisation
  • Marx in Bangladesh
  • Drug money and ambulance
  • The disinformation campaign on Venezuela
  • Bangladesh Liberation War Exposed A Neocolonial State’s Failure
  • DIGNITY OF TEACHERS AND AN ADMISSION TEST : THE EDUCATION MARKET EXHIBITS ……….
  • The Ambiguity: The Case Of Democracy
  • Blackmailing Bankers Now Stage A Coup In Greece

RSS Feasta

  • Hormuz and Dividend
  • Tribute to Willi Kiefel
  • Submission to the Irish Regional Assemblies on their Regional Spatial and Economic Strategies
  • The Cost of Growth: Film screening and discussion in Dublin, June 24
  • Webinar: Securing our Food Sovereignty
  • Rethinking Systems: Growing Local Strength for People and Planet
  • Finding steady ground in a time of crisis
  • Governing For The Future: Institutions And Practices
  • Oil Windfall Profits Tax & Dividend
  • Podcast: the Role of Creativity in Health

RSS FireDogLake

  • David vs. Goliath: Consumer Watchdog Gets Their Day in Court With Googl
  • What I Care About Is the Social Safety Net
  • Obama Meets With Labor, Progressive Groups Today
  • What the Marijuana Legalization Polling in 2012 Says About Its Prospects Moving Forward
  • Petraeus Affair Shows Dominant Power of Government Surveillance State
  • Pelosi to Speak to House Democrats Amid Rumors That She Will Step Down From Leadership
  • United Parcel Service to Boy Scouts of America – no funds for your anti-gay org
  • For the Long-Term Unemployed, It Is A Fiscal Cliff
  • Love In The House Of Spy
  • Fatster’s Roundup

RSS Fish Out of Water

  • Platner’s exGF wrote “I will personally go campaign for Collins” told Times it was a joke.
  • A Miraculous Rebirth in the Gulf of Mexico
  • Ice Detention of Legal Irish Man Married to U.S. Citizen Creates Major International Incident
  • Stretched Polar Vortex set to Split in Two likely leading to Severe Tornado outbreaks in March
  • Pray for Jamaica then send money: Hurricane Melissa’s 185mph winds coming ashore.
  • Key satellite data for Hurricane intensification forecasts and sea ice extent terminated by Trump
  • Particularly Dangerous Situation for Memphis Region: Tornado outbreak updated
  • Tornado outbreak this weekend from Plains to Carolinas enhanced by Stratospheric Warming Updated
  • Harris winning North Carolina & Georgia – NY Times – strong early voting for Kamala
  • PWB: The Community Cats of old San Juan Puerto Rico

RSS Foreign Confidential

  • Film History: the French New Wave
  • Nine Beautiful Places to Visit in Slovenia
  • Top 10 European Islands to Visit
  • Little Europe: the Amazing Microstates
  • Chinese Virologist, MD, PhD, Says Coronavirus Made in Wuhan Lab
  • Rebels and Spies: the [GREAT] Graphic Novels of Vittorio Giardino
  • Deep in Red China ...
  • Preview Video Comic Strip Hero Battles Totalitarian China
  • Dystopian Graphic Novel Depicts China as Nazi-Like Occupier of USA
  • Coming Soon to Your Digital Device: Dack Dixon, Special Agent

RSS FracTracker

  • PA DEP Approves Unusual “Mineral Brine” Well in Erie County, Raising Concerns About New Regulatory Loophole
  • Campaign Update: Progress on FracTracker’s Community Air Monitoring Projects
  • From Coal Plant to AI Campus: FracTracker Documents Construction at Homer City
  • An update on Southwest Detroit Industrial Impacts: The Zug Island Ruling
  • Introducing the New FracTracker U.S. Data Centers Tracker Dashboard
  • FracTracker’s New Data Tool Visualizes Shell’s Pollution, Violations, and Malfunctions Ahead of Permit Public Hearing (copy)
  • FracTracker’s New Data Tool Visualizes Shell’s Pollution, Violations, and Malfunctions Ahead of Permit Public Hearing
  • Howell Township Data Center Win: $1B Project Withdrawn After Community Meeting on Energy and Infrastructure Impacts
  • Comment Opposing the Southeast Supply Enhancement Project (SSEP) – Clean Water Act Section 404 Permit Application (SAW-2024-01961)
  • Docket No. PHMSA-2025-0050: Comment Opposing LNG by Rail Transport

RSS George Monbiot (Alternet)

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS George Monbiot (Official Home Page)

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Get Real List: Chris Nelder

  • Moving on…
  • My new gig
  • Announcing the Energy Transition Show
  • Guest appearance on The Energy Gang podcast
  • My most recent project: NPV+
  • Taking over the grid
  • The straight dope on oil prices
  • New report casts doubt on fracking’s future
  • Stranded asset risks are larger than anyone thinks
  • Cleantech is sexy again

RSS Gil Smart

  • With Gil Smart on guns, the NRA
  • Gil Smart right on development
  • Gil Smart makes sense
  • Right on, Gil Smart
  • Insightful is Gil Smart
  • Gil Smart wrong on gun ownership
  • Gil Smart goes off the deep end
  • Gil Smart: What's the future of work in America?
  • Gil Smart: What’s causing the rise in panhandling?
  • Invasion of Gil snatchers?

RSS Glen Ford – Black Agenda Report

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Global Guerrillas

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Global Occupy News

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Global Oneness Project

  • Farewell RSS Feeds

RSS Global Research

  • I Can’t Do It Alone, Can You Help Me? “Why the House is Collapsing Around Us”
  • Russia Massive Attack: Kiev Regime Hides Depleted Uranium Ammunition in the Capital’s Suburbs
  • The Arsonist in the Oval Office. The Failed US-Iran Memorandum of Understanding. “Was Never a Peace Treaty”
  • Privatizing Defense, Part II: Private Equity Funding Fuels the Success of Top Contractors
  • Global Research Daily: The News Behind the News
  • NATO Versus MAGA. Did Trump Finally Drop the “Pacifist Act”? “Drowning in the Swamp”. More Escalation?
  • Create Positive Energy in a World Shrouded in Darkness
  • Netanyahu’s Son Drops Family Name to Conceal Globally Detested Identity
  • A Nagasaki Doctor’s Lifelong Research on Radiation Exposure: An Interview with Dr. Masao Tomonaga
  • Ukraine’s “Neo-Nazi Summer Camp”. Military Training for Young Children, Para-military Recruits

RSS Global Research CA

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Gonzalo Lira

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Green is the New Red

  • Trump Supporter Promises Legislation to Label Protest as “Economic Terrorism”
  • Violence against environmentalists is now at an all-time high
  • “To Build a Fire”: New Split EP With “Old Lines” and Will Potter
  • “It changes who you are—forever. What you do with that change is what defines who you are.”
  • Exclusive: New Virtual Reality Investigation Goes Inside Factory Farms
  • New Sticker — Animal Rights Activists Must “Join or Die”
  • “Truth and Power” TV series features Will Potter on “eco-terrorism,” ag-gag laws, and investigative journalism
  • This woman rowed straight into a hurricane. And you should too.
  • 6 Lessons From How the FBI and Media Treat Militia Groups
  • Here’s How One Activist Convinced the FBI to Leave Him Alone

RSS Green on Huffington Post

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Greenpeace Blogs

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Greg Palast

  • Platner: Face Down in the Oyster Pond
  • America at 250, of Thee I Sing
  • Trump’s Cage Fight GeniusHow ‘bout a cage rematch? Don “The Bovine” Trump v. Sen. Jon Ossoff?
  • If Trump Stood the White House on its Side
  • 9+ million Muslim voters purged in 4 states Trump “SAVE” plan takes a test drive in India
  • Frank Sinatra, Donald Trump and My Partner
  • Mr. Colbert, I’m not laughing anymore
  • Trump, the Pirate of Hormuz
  • Pam Bondi’s Lobbyist Loot Built on Free Market in Human Misery
  • Trump’s Tanker Toll Triumph

RSS Gregor Macdonald

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Grinning Planet

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Grist

  • Workers are risking dangerous heat to keep the World Cup running
  • The nation’s biggest public utility just doubled down on coal, gas, and nuclear
  • Why heat is so deadly and how to stay safe
  • How to build a highway in the age of climate change
  • The tiny cell that broke a big rule of biology
  • Western Europe just set the record for its hottest June ever
  • El Niño is here, and it’s already scrambling fisheries throughout the Pacific
  • Another super typhoon just pummeled the Pacific
  • Trump tried to appease MAHA’s fury over Roundup. It backfired.
  • The plan to make climate science harder to erase

RSS Growth Busters

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Guernica Mag

  • Ṣẹ̀kẹ̀rẹ̀
  • Still Life with Peach
  • The Gateless Gateless Gate of the Poem
  • Young Lad
  • The Sweet Smell of Money
  • Old Darkness / Under a New Moon
  • Origin Story for War 
  • Origin Story for Tattoos
  • The June Issue
  • After Hunger: In Conversation with Sean Sherman

RSS Guy McPherson’s Blog

  • Science Snippets: Acidification Milestone Passed
  • Science Snippets: Microplastics Inhibit Marine Absorption of Carbon Dioxide
  • Science Snippets: Wildlife Documented Along US-Mexico Border Wall
  • Will Private Cities Allow Tech Billionaires to Escape the U.S.?
  • Science Snippets: Central American Amphibians Affect Human Health
  • Science Snippets: Sea Levels Dangerously Underestimated
  • Science Snippets: Disturbing Threat Lurks in Cattle Meat and Milk

RSS Health After Oil

  • Public Health’s Response to Decline: Loyalty to the 1%
  • Health systems, neoliberalism, and the end of growth: The World Health Organization in denial
  • Postcard from the Frontline
  • Power, Identity and Social Change as We Enter Degrowth
  • Health groups put climate first in election poll – Media release 5 August 2013

RSS Hot Topic: Global Warming and the Future of New Zealand

  • Postcards from La La Land #132: time warps and twaddle
  • The final cut: crank paper on NZ temperature record gets its rebuttal – warming continues unabated
  • Anthropogenic climate change is real: pithy post-punk anthem for the Trump generation
  • Why (and how) cheaper solar power, batteries, electric and autonomous vehicles are going to change our world over the next 5 years
  • At last it can be revealed: climate change researcher describes challenge of pulling off worldwide global warming conspiracy

RSS How to Save the World

  • Our Emotional Reactions to Collapse
  • A Comforting Fiction
  • Will Substack Be The Next Facebook and/or Xwitter?
  • Collaborative and Peace-Loving By Nature
  • What We Don’t Know, Don’t Notice, Don’t Ask About, and Don’t Remember
  • Happy Places
  • Has the Epstein Class Always Been This Bad?
  • The World Through Different Eyes
  • How Our Bodies (Usually) Compel Us To Do What’s Best For Us
  • Links of the Month: June 2026

RSS I am Not a Number

  • THE ART OF THE POSSIBLE?
  • Alt-Right conspiracy theories are obviously true… except they are not.
  • The civil war in the LP was NEVER about antisemitism.
  • English patriotism and the left – a political conundrum
  • The new Reclaim Party and the ‘culture wars’ – the incoherence of our two party system and the failure of liberalism
  • An alternative to the Labour Party?

RSS I Cite

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Iamronen

  • AI & Quality
  • 1000 Petals
  • How to draw the Sri Yantra
  • Mushrooms, second encounter
  • Michael Levin | Cell Intelligence in Physiological and Morphological Spaces
  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 17: Nirodha
  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 16: Jñāna, Bhakti, Mantra, Rāja, Kriyā, Karma, Laya, Tantra, Haṭha, Kuṇḍalinī
  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 15: Antarāya, Iśvara-praṇidhāna
  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 14: Bandha
  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 13: Antaraṅga Sādhana, Saṃyama, Kaivalya

RSS Ian Welsh

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Idea Explorer

  • Partial Shutdown
  • Life vs. Artificial Life
  • Can’t Give Up
  • Best Future
  • Limits to Superiority
  • The World Is Dying and We’re Doing This
  • Belief and Reality
  • Value Statement
  • Interactions of Value
  • Interactions

RSS Idea Explorer – Big Pic Explorer

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Idea Explorer: Land of Conscience

  • Remember
  • Death Stoppers
  • A Clear Choice
  • Update
  • Projects and Responsibility
  • In Pursuit Of Waste
  • Doubt
  • Remembrance
  • Seeking Miracles
  • Emergence

RSS If You Love This Planet – Helen Caldicott

  • REGISTER TO WATCH: February 19, 2024 7 pm EST webinar Dr. Helen Caldicott and Martin Sheen
  • Steven Starr, Bruce Gagnon and William Hartung at the Dynamics of Possible Nuclear Extinction symposium
  • Dr. Helen Caldicott, Ted Postol, Max Tegmark and Alan Robock at The Dynamics of Possible Nuclear Extinction symposium
  • Dr. Caldicott’s October 2014 speech: The Ukraine Crisis, Is Nuclear Conflict Likely?
  • Dr. Helen Caldicott interviewed by Bob Herbert about her latest book, “Loving This Planet”
  • Best of 2011: Dr. Caldicott’s speech in New Hampshire three weeks after Fukushima
  • Subhankar Banerjee on how corporate resource wars and global warming are decimating native peoples and forests worldwide
  • Marion Pack on the many safety risks at the San Onofre nuclear power plant and how a Fukushima-type meltdown would contaminate Southern California
  • Tom Engelhardt on Washington’s increasing war focus to the exclusion of everything else and its indiscriminate use of drones
  • Holly Barker on the devastating ongoing effects of mid-century U.S. nuclear weapons testing on the Marshall Islands

RSS Indybay Features

  • May Day 2026 Confronts War and Autocracy
  • Juristac is Protected
  • Chevron Outspends All Other Lobbyists in California
  • Mapping California's Factory Farming Industry
  • No Kings, No ICE, No War
  • New Year's Eve Demonstration at California City ICE Detention Facility
  • SF Students Walkout for Massive Anti-ICE Action
  • TPS Hearing Temporarily Stalls Deportations of Haitians
  • ICE Out Everywhere! January 30 National Day Of Action
  • ICE Out of Super Bowl and End the Deportations

RSS Indybay Newswire

  • Religious Zealots Embedded in the US Government and Supreme Court Murder American Mothers
  • DOES THE TAIL WAG THE DOG? IMPLAUSIBLE DENIABILITY AND THE FOMENTING OF ANTI-SEMITISM
  • My Conversation With Karl Marx About Donald Trump
  • Vote for Pacifica Mission Coalition Candidates at KPFK
  • City of Vallejo Releases Sanitized Report On Police Officers' Badge-Bending Ritual
  • Censorship in Pride March video
  • Request To Extend Timelines For Pacifica's Election Deadlines
  • Why Biden’s Debate Disaster Two Years Ago Matters for the Future
  • Pacifica Nomination & Election Process - Kamau Harris From Pacifica’s WFPW In DC
  • Support Independent Retailers Like Bookshop & Say No to Amazon Prime this 23-26 June 2026

RSS Information Clearing House

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Inside Left – The OFFICIAL Anti-Olympics Blog™

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Institute for Public Accuracy

  • U.S. Bombs Iran, Violations of MOU
  • Gaza Doctor in “Tangible Danger”
  • Why Are Socialists Unseating Democratic Incumbents? 
  • The Department of Forever War
  • One Thousand Days of Genocide
  • Will Petro Move on Palestine?
  • Are Congressional Democrats Leading a War Party?
  • Kucinich Warns NDAA Provision Forfeits U.S. Sovereignty. Merger of US-Israeli Military “Inherently Unconstitutional”
  • Israel’s Genocide and Journocide
  • An Ordinary Insanity

RSS International Debt Observatory

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS io9

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS iWatch: Global Muckraking

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer Blog

  • Five Things We Need to Know About the “Fiscal Cliff”
  • Wasteful Pentagon Spending and Costly Wars Hurting Minnesota Communities
  • Don’t Forget to Remember: Amnesia about War Costs is Costly
  • Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer Blog # 16:
  • Militarization, MNASAP, Move to Amend, and the Common Good
  • The Three Most Dangerous Words a Soldier Can Hear: “Support Our Troops”
  • Selling War Is Easy: Challenging the Culture of War
  • Tax Day Numbers to Motivate Action for Peace
  • Making Sense of Recent Polls Showing Most Americans Want to End the Afghan War Part Part 1: Why This is Good but not Great News
  • Neil Young, Jackson Browne, and the Insights of Andrew

RSS Jacobin

  • Neo-Nazis Have Never Found It Easier to Join the US Army
  • We Have the Chance to Reel In Israel Right Now
  • The US Far Right Is Mounting an Invasion of Europe
  • The Iran War’s Most Embarrassingly Wrong Pundits
  • Israel Is Deliberately Targeting Lebanon’s Journalists
  • The Case for Nationalizing Artificial Intelligence
  • Friedrich Engels Showed Us How We Can Make History
  • Multinationals Sold Kenyan Farmers a Lethal Harvest
  • The BBC Has Appeased Its Enemies and Alienated Its Friends
  • Romantic Love and Family Are Not the Enemy

RSS Jeremy Scahill

  • NYC Mayor Smeared a Grandmother as an “Outside Agitator” to Justify NYPD Assault on Columbia
  • New York Times Brass Moves to Stanch Leaks Over Gaza Coverage
  • Leaked NYT Gaza Memo Tells Journalists to Avoid Words “Genocide,” “Ethnic Cleansing,” and “Occupied Territory”
  • “Man-Made Hell On Earth”: A Canadian Doctor on His Medical Mission to Gaza
  • Kibbutz Be’eri Rejects Story in New York Times October 7 Exposé: “They Were Not Sexually Abused”
  • The Story Behind the New York Times October 7 Exposé
  • With Netanyahu Threatening Rafah Invasion, Biden Prepares to Send Israel More Bombs
  • Israel’s Ruthless Propaganda Campaign to Dehumanize Palestinians
  • ICJ Ruling on Gaza Genocide Is a Historic Victory for the Palestinians That Israel Vows to Defy
  • 21 Israeli Troops Killed While Planting Explosives for a Controlled Demolition in Gaza

RSS Jill Stein

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Joe Bageant

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS John Cook Video Uploads

  • The Science of Cranky Uncle Part 3: Fighting Misinformation with Critical Thinking
  • The Science of Cranky Uncle Part 2: Inoculation Theory
  • The Science of Cranky Uncle Part 1: Why We Can't Ignore Misinformation
  • Climate misinformation: Will Happer on CO2 being plant food
  • Climate misinformation: David Legates & Willie Soon on CO2 lag
  • Climate misinformation: Marco Rubio on past climate change
  • Climate misinformation: Rick Perry compares climate denial to Galileo
  • Climate misinformation: John Stossel likens climate science to religion
  • Critical Thinking Cafe 2
  • Wishful Thinking about COVID v3

RSS John Hively

  • Supreme Court Fantasy Stories and Their Constitutional Violations
  • The War Over Global Warming is Class Warfare on Many Fronts
  • How the Billionaires Corporate News Media Have Been Used to Brainwash Us
  • Is President Biden Serious About His Infrastructure Package?
  • President Joe Biden and the False Promises of Immigration Reform and Raising the Federal Minimum Wage to $15
  • The Billionaires Have Programmed Too Many of Us Into Opposing Teams
  • When the Dust Clears…the Rich Have Been Redistributing $2.5 trillion Every Year for the Last Twenty-Five Years
  • The Political Games of the Billionaires and Their Political Representatives
  • SW Washington’s Take on the STATE’S Disparity STUDY
  • Why the Electoral College is Allowed to Exist

RSS John Pilger

  • MARK CURTIS PAYS TRIBUTE TO THE JOURNALISM AND FILM-MAKING OF THE LATE JOHN PILGER
  • “A DEEPLY FELT LOVE FOR ORDINARY PEOPLE” – THE WORLD REMEMBERS JOHN PILGER
  • “HE GAVE A VOICE TO THOSE NOT HEARD” – DARTMOUTH FILMS HONOURS JOHN PILGER
  • WE ARE SPARTACUS. ARE WE? THIS MAY BE THE QUESTION OF OUR AGE.
  • THERE IS A WAR COMING SHROUDED IN PROPAGANDA. IT WILL INVOLVE US. SPEAK UP.
  • THE TRUE BETRAYERS OF JULIAN ASSANGE ARE CLOSE TO HOME
  • SILENCING THE LAMBS. HOW PROPAGANDA WORKS.
  • THE US IS ‘CLOSE TO GETTING ITS HANDS ON JULIAN ASSANGE’
  • WAR IN EUROPE AND THE RISE OF RAW PROPAGANDA
  • THE JUDICIAL KIDNAPPING OF JULIAN ASSANGE

RSS John Perkins

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS John W. Whitehead

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS John Zerzan: Anarchy Radio

  • Zerzan, J.: El Crepúsculo de las Máquinas, Madrid, 2016.
  • The Final Straw - Anti-civilization Anarchism: A Conversation with John Zerzan
  • Média Recherche Action - Domestication, aliénation et civilisation (partie 1)
  • En profondeur - Le documentaire End Civ en tournée
  • The 4ZZZ Anarchy Show - END:CIV Premise 1
  • B.U.R.N. - BETTER QUALITY! John Zerzan on B.U.R.N.
  • Anarchy Radio 06 23 2026
  • RadioActive - Interview w/ Eddie Yuen, Editor of the Book "The Battle of Seattle"
  • Steppin' Out of Babylon - John Zerzan on Anarchism
  • The Weekly Freak Show - Headlines & Highlights for the week ending 6/14/01

RSS Jonathan Turley

  • “It’s a Constitutional Thing”: Rubio Deports Convicted Rapist Protected by Walz and Minnesota Pardon Board
  • Post-Platner Politics: The Democrats Fight for Wales After Shedding Their Values
  • “Rage and the Republic” Returns as New York Times Bestseller
  • Berkeley Gives Back Corn, Peas, and Seeds to Tribes as Protected Items of “Cultural Patronage”
  • Sweet Home Alabama: Exploring the Gorgeous Gulf Shores
  • “F**k the USA”: Professor Delights Chicago Crowd With Anti-American and Anti-Border Rant
  • The Push for a Robotic Workforce: Chris Murphy Introduces Bill for Massive Minimum Wage Hike
  • The Fall of Josh Shapiro: Pennsylvania Governor Collapses on the Political Waterfront
  • No, The Framers Would Have Hated the Billionaire Tax
  • “What Then Is This American?”: America Celebrates 250 Years as a Free People

RSS Karl Grossman

  • I've switched from this site to my website -- www.karlgrossman.com -- for my blog.
  • The End of Police Raids -- at Long Last -- on Gays of Fire Island
  • "Fire Island Was Paradise,Truly Paradise"
  • My First Big Story
  • Disaster Waiting to Happen at Indian Point
  • Zephyr Teachout -- The Most Refreshing Candidate for New York Governor in Decades
  • Science May Be Objective But That Doesn't Mean That All Scientists Are Because of Their Drive to Push Their Institutions and Projects
  • Secret Diablo Canyon Report Revealed
  • Solar Power as an Alternative to Dangerous Nuclear Power in Space
  • The Lyme Disease Epidemic

RSS Karl North Eco-Intelligence

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Kate Ausburn

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Keith Farnish

  • Uprooting Civilization (Part 2)
  • Uprooting Civilization (Part 1)
  • The Problem With…Conspiracy Theories
  • What If…No One Voted?
  • The Problem With…Responsibility
  • An Experiment In Self Liberation
  • Getting Real
  • Finding My Limit
  • What If…We Stopped Using Money
  • Anger Is Good

RSS Knight Science Journalism – MIT

  • The Tracker Now Lives Here …
  • A farewell post: Three reasons why good science writing is worth defending.
  • Globe story on non-invasive prenatal testing offers murky argument.
  • (UPDATED/2*) What Ho? A 2014 List of Lists of best, worst, or otherwisest in 2014
  • Cancer & poverty: When a reporter’s journey becomes part of the story.
  • Malcolm Gladwell faces new charges of using others’ information without attribution.
  • Retraction Watch awarded a two-year, $400,000 grant from the MacArthur Foundation
  • Scientific American reshapes blog network, cuts number of blogs and bloggers in half.
  • The 13 boldest ideas in science: If you wear lipstick and pearls…
  • In the Aftermath of the Holsey Execution: What Courts Say About Drunken Lawyers and Hypothetical Justice.

RSS Kulture Critic

  • In the Folds of the Flesh: Philosophic Reflections on Touch
  • A New World Apocalyptic Eschatology
  • The QAnon Shaman ~ and his Modern Cargo Cult
  • Distraction, Deflection, Diremption
  • A BRAVE ‘NOVEL’ WORLD
  • Myth, Mystery, and Magic: Religious Imagination in Ancient Egypt
  • Patience, A Personal Reflection on Life and Its Impermanence
  • Embodiment, Ecstasy, Emptiness
  • What’s Love Got To Do With It?
  • ‘Putin Did It’ ~ The Russians are Coming

RSS Kunstler Cast

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Kurt Kobb

  • Something's gotta give: The American West and the dwindling Colorado River
  • Taking a break - no post this week
  • Why the U.S.-Iran MOU (probably) won't prevent the approaching energy cliff
  • Here's comes the AI bailout: Why government stakes in AI companies are a sucker's bet
  • Our oil "savings account" is dwindling rapidly, more oil price spikes likely
  • Taking a break - no post this week
  • South by Southwest: Water crises hit America
  • Fertilizer, Energy and Liebig's Law of the Minimum
  • Chinese ag theft, pathogen research only point up dangers of GMO crops and monoculture
  • Will the U. S. curtail oil exports as fuel prices rise?

RSS Lack of Environment

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Law and Disorder

  • Law and Disorder July 6, 2026
  • Law and Disorder June 29, 2026
  • Law and Disorder June 22, 2026
  • Law and Disorder June 15, 2026
  • Law and Disorder June 8, 2026
  • Law and Disorder June 1, 2026
  • Law and Disorder May 25, 2026
  • Law and Disorder May 18, 2026
  • Law and Disorder May 11, 2026
  • Law and Disorder May 4, 2026

RSS Le Monde diplomatique – English edition

  • Highly strategic maritime borders
  • Humans and tigers: life among the mangroves
  • The genocide that still haunts Namibia
  • Indonesia: depoliticised injustice
  • Where the Ganges and Brahmaputra meet
  • Military dominance, strategic defeat
  • The US Democrats' foreign policy dead end
  • Iraq stakes a claim to Gulf waters
  • The nationalist ideology that binds India to Israel
  • The Balkans in Europe's waiting room

RSS Le Monde diplomatique – Open Page

  • Highly strategic maritime borders
  • Humans and tigers: life among the mangroves
  • The genocide that still haunts Namibia
  • Indonesia: depoliticised injustice
  • Where the Ganges and Brahmaputra meet
  • Military dominance, strategic defeat
  • The US Democrats' foreign policy dead end
  • Iraq stakes a claim to Gulf waters
  • The nationalist ideology that binds India to Israel
  • The Balkans in Europe's waiting room

RSS Leaving Babylon

  • Even Iran is laughing at us
  • Reaping what you’ve sown
  • From Belarus with love
  • Self-hastened death
  • Requiem for a truly civilized world
  • Pollan’s psychedelic adventure
  • Intentional immiseration
  • Responding to Orlov’s Virtuous Collapse Sequence
  • Farewell to mainstream medicine
  • Dancing through the elder years

RSS Lee Camp

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Lee Fang

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Leonardo Boff

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Les Leopold

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Life Itself

  • Goodness, mostly
  • Light or Darkness?
  • AI and Chaos Forever
  • One Year of War on Ukraine
  • Confessions of a Petroleum Engineer and Ecologist
  • On Snowflakes, Blogs and Loneliness
  • Why the Year 2022 Stood Out?
  • Bad Karma
  • Hope Dies Last
  • Ascent of the Angry and Stupid

RSS Limited, Inc.

  • The King Fink
  • US versus the Shi'ites the puzzle of the great Satan
  • Free Love and Alienation, or the Proverbs of Hell, rewarmed
  • Mamdani's speech
  • What the gin and tonic sez
  • Vico: "a world of men who are composed of lines, of numbers, and of algebraic signs."
  • from the ancien regime to hemingway
  • The adventures of the psychosomatic
  • Backrooms
  • Anger and repetition: a non-Kierkegaardian excursus

RSS Link TV – Earth Focus

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Low-Tech Magazine

  • Rediscovering the Handcart
  • Low-tech Magazine: The Uncompressed Book Series
  • Winter is Coming: Build a Solar Powered Foot Stove

RSS LRB Blog

  • Le Pen’s Hollow Revolution
  • World Cup Stories
  • Foul Means
  • Trump’s Golden Dome
  • Turn off the lights

RSS Luis J. Rodriguez

  • The death of a grandson to fentanyl
  • Updates from Luis J. Rodriguez (Mixcoatl Itztlacuiloh)
  • Help Luis J. Rodriguez become California governor
  • Stand Firm on Election Day
  • 50th Anniversary of Chicano Moratorium Against the Vietnam War
  • Trump's War on the United States
  • Covid-19: The Collective initiation from which something new and vital must be born
  • Class warfare playing out on TV
  • Creativity in a Time of Chaos
  • We are the weave and weaver, we are the dream and dreamer

RSS Mabinogogiblog

  • MorePeaceful.world/
  • 33rd Anniversary of the Murder of Bulic Forsyth
  • An Ecological Approach to the “Meaning of Life” Question
  • JANUARY 2026 WEATHER IN BRITAIN AND MAN-MADE CLIMATE CHANGE
  • LIVING BRUE DAY, MARCH 28th GLASTONBURY TOWN HALL
  • RESOLVING THE WAR IN UKRAINE: MOVING THE IMMOVABLE
  • MP LETTER ABOUT TRUMP’s PLAN TO ANNEXE GREENLAND
  • HOW ONE MAN, VASILY ARKHIPOV, STOPPED A NUCLEAR WAR IN THE CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS
  • MP LETTER ABOUT DEFINING TERRORISM AND ENDING THE BUYING OF POLITICIANS
  • Letter to MP about donations to politicians from (foreign) corporations

RSS Manicore – Accueil

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Marginal Revolution

  • Andrew Hall is on a roll
  • Redux of my Homer’s Odyssey essay
  • My Conversation with the excellent Joel Mokyr
  • That was then, this is now
  • Thursday assorted links
  • Land Reclamation!
  • The tomb of Duns Scotus
  • Single-payer health care systems are looking worse all the time
  • Just wondering what the correct model of Iran is here
  • Wednesday assorted links

RSS Mark Biskeborn – Underground Essays

  • Kafkaesque
  • Larry Summers Still Living Large
  • War and Corruption Deficits: Insects and Leviathans
  • Breaking News: Lt. Col. Shaffer Accuses Former CIA Dir. Tenet
  • Movie Review: Zero Dark Thirty
  • Wild Sex, Drugs, Howling in the Desert
  • Bradley Manning—A Case of Class-based Justice System
  • Drones Enable Corporate Power
  • Corporations in the U.S. and in Mexico an Inverted Totalitarianism: Devour, Prey, Seduce
  • Rapture of Charlatans

RSS Mark Fiore

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Mark Lynas

  • FAQ on ‘Clean Energy Shift’ – what it is and why it matters
  • Why is the Marine Stewardship Council giving this Norwegian trawler company ‘license to krill’?
  • To help the climate, we need to get positive about energy
  • As we breach 1.5 °C, we must replace temperature limits with clean-energy targets
  • Why we should protect the high seas from all extraction, forever
  • Hope and memory in Hiroshima: A journey from Mount Fuji to global zero
  • This is how to avoid annihilating ourselves in a nuclear war – NewScientist
  • One Nuclear War Can Ruin the Whole Climate – WSJ
  • New book – Six Minutes to Winter: Nuclear War and How to Avoid It
  • Trump wins – but don’t despair

RSS Martin Wolf

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Matt Bruenig

  • What Am I Doing With AI These Days?
  • My Fully Automated Labor Law Research Tool Is Finally Here
  • What even is an autonomous AI agent?
  • Technical Details of My LLM-Generated Book
  • Some Thoughts on AI
  • The Midwit Theory of Geoff Shullenberger
  • Desert and Capitalism Again
  • Dissecting My Recent Argument (Are Error Theories Offensive?)
  • The Fertility Question
  • Yglesias on the Politics of NAFTA

RSS Matt Taibbi

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Matt Wuerker

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Max Keiser

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Media Lens

  • Whitewash: Media Silence Over Starmer’s Gaza Legacy
  • Invitation To A Turkey Shoot – How To Debunk Climate Denial
  • Media Myopia As We Hurtle Towards Climate Oblivion
  • ‘Starmageddon’ – The Anti-Polanski Smear Campaign That Ate Itself
  • A Lefty Progressive Goes To The Tank Museum
  • Nuclear Genocide – The Threat And The Ceasefire
  • ‘How On Earth Do You Justify That?’ Laura Kuenssberg’s Selective Empathy
  • ‘Operation Epic Fury’ – Anatomy Of A War Of Aggression
  • ‘The Weak Must Suffer’: The Eternal Fiction Of The ‘International Rules-Based Order’
  • Venezuela – ‘War Is Peace’

RSS Media Matters – Environment

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Media Matters – Everything

  • Fox guest on possible troop withdrawal from Afghanistan: "The solution is more blood, sweat, and tears" 
  • Fox host defends Trump: "Just because you use harsh language doesn't mean your intent is to denigrate another race"
  • Fox News is talking more about abortion than the Democratic debates did
  • Fox & Friends touts Trump's "connections to Ohio" without noting they involve housing discrimination
  • The only Black Republican in the House announced he will not seek reelection. Fox News covered it for 20 seconds.
  • Fox's Newt Gingrich complains about Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren: "I don't remember us electing an angry president literally in my lifetime"
  • Fox's Stuart Varney: Electing a Democrat as president will lead to an economic contraction
  • New Bureau of Land Management head complained that federal employees aren’t held “personally responsible for the harm that they do”
  • Sean Hannity says one of his main criticisms of Republicans is that they aren't more like Rush Limbaugh
  • On Fox, Rush Limbaugh complains about efforts to address the climate crisis: "There is no man-made climate change"

RSS Media Roots

  • Media Roots Radio: Ep 5: the Acid Drought, Making DMT, A Godfather of Psychedelic Analogs & His Problem Child 2-C-T-7
  • Media Roots Radio: Uniquely American Mass Murders, ‘Officer Safety’, Anti-LGBTQ Strategy of Tension & AI as Art
  • Media Roots Radio: Ep 2: How Raves Brought Back the Psychedelic Subculture, DanceSafe, Pill Tests & the DEA vs MDMA
  • Media Roots Radio: Ep 1: A Brief History of Hallucinogens, MK-Ultra, the CIA, LSD, Leary & the Psychedelic 60s/70s
  • Media Roots Radio: UNLOCKED: the Smallpox Doomsday Failsafe Scenario, 100s of Tons of Virus ‘Missing’ Pt 2

RSS Methane Hydrates

  • Joint New Zealand - German 3D survey reveals massive seabed gas hydrate and methane system
  • Noctilucent clouds: further confirmation of large methane releases
  • Earthquake M6.7 hits Sea of Okhotsk
  • Methanetracker
  • Sea of Okhotsk
  • High daily peak methane readings continue over Antarctica
  • Is Global Warming breaking up the Integrity of the Permafrost?
  • Antarctic methane peaks at 2249 ppb
  • Methane hydrates
  • Message to the Survivors

RSS Michael Hudson

  • How the Federal Reserve Learned to Love Bubbles
  • How Slave States Blocked America’s Industrial Credit System
  • The War America Cannot Admit It Lost
  • Iran Broke the Spell
  • The Limits of Empire
  • When Control Becomes the Imperial Trap
  • Geopathology and the Econopathology Behind it
  • The Last Colonial Wars
  • BRICS Doesn’t Need a New Bancor
  • The Petrodollar Trap Is Becoming a War Trap

RSS Michael Miller – Viewpoint

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Michael Parenti

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Mike Philbin – Free Planet

  • TWENTY IS PLENTY
  • PROJECT PERPETUA: 2026 modern concept car
  • LAUNDRYMAN: a new Hertzan Chimera serial-killer novel for 2026?
  • MADELINE SOTO: missing persons case
  • FLINT: a new Hertzan Chimera novel... coming in 2025
  • STAR CITIZEN - HALF A BILLION DOLLARS - TEN YEARS AND COUNTING
  • ELECTRO-BULLET: reinterpreting a classic...
  • LAST OF THE CATHEDRA available in trade paperback from Amazon.
  • OUR ELECTRIC MOON
  • Best Real-time in-game Physics engine EVER by Dennis Gustafsson

RSS Mondoweiss

  • A new important book shows why the ADL has never been a civil rights organization
  • These Palestinian families in the West Bank have barricaded themselves inside their homes to survive Israeli settler attacks
  • Israel is murdering Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya. The U.S. media is covering up the crime.
  • Israel is drowning the West Bank in hazardous waste. Palestinians are paying the price with their health.
  • UAW becomes the first major U.S. union to vote to divest from Israel Bonds
  • How Congress manipulates its own rules to make sure Israel still gets its weapons
  • A new ‘strategic’ plan being pushed by the Israeli settler movement would establish 100 outposts in the heart of Palestinian cities
  • When the story breaks the journalist
  • Israel’s seizure of Palestinian church land raises renewed fears of efforts to erase Christians from Jerusalem
  • Will the Iran War hurt J.D. Vance’s presidential hopes?

RSS Mons Angelorum: Deadly Serious 3

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Mons Angelorum: Waiting for Good Weather

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Mother Jones

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS MR Zine

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Musings on Iraq

  • Iraq Wants To Become Even More Oil Dependent To Develop Economy
  • This Day In Iraqi History - Jul 9 Al Qaeda’s Zawahiri told Zarqawi should include more Iraqis in his group and warned against killing Iraqi civilians which could cost him support
  • This Day In Iraqi History - Jul 8 Saddam survived assassination attempt in Dujail Would destroy town 1500 people arrested 150 executed
  • Iraq Put Back On Watch List By Intl Group For Money Laundering
  • This Day In Iraqi History - Jul 7 Iraq’s concealment comm decided to reveal nuke program to UN while secretly destroying its WMD Would prove long term problem because Iraq could never prove it got rid of its weapons
  • This Day In Iraqi History - Jul 6 Saddam Hussein told Baath leadership he was going to invade Iran
  • This Day In Iraqi History - Jul 5 1920 Revolt leaders demanded full independence for Iraq
  • This Day In Iraqi History - Jul 4 Islamic State’s Baghdadi declared caliphate from Mosul Said ISIS would now be Islamic State and he was Caliph Ibrahim
  • Review Khidhir Hamza, Saddam’s Bombmaker, The Terrifying Inside Story Of The Iraqi Nuclear And Biological Weapons Agenda, Scribner, 2000
  • This Day In Iraqi History - Jul 3 IS car bomb in Baghdad set off fire in mall Killed 324 Wounded 200 One of the deadliest bombings

RSS Nafeez Ahmed

  • IDF's Gaza assault is to control Palestinian gas, avert Israeli energy crisis | Nafeez Ahmed
  • World Bank and UN carbon offset scheme 'complicit' in genocidal land grabs - NGOs | Nafeez Ahmed
  • The open source revolution is coming and it will conquer the 1% - ex CIA spy | Nafeez Ahmed
  • Iraq blowback: Isis rise manufactured by insatiable oil addiction
  • Defence officials prepare to fight the poor, activists and minorities (and commies) | Nafeez Ahmed
  • Pentagon preparing for mass civil breakdown | Nafeez Ahmed
  • The inevitable demise of the fossil fuel empire | Nafeez Ahmed
  • US shale boom is over, energy revolution needed to avert blackouts | Nafeez Ahmed
  • Scientists vindicate 1972 'Limits to Growth' – urge investment in 'circular economy' | Nafeez Ahmed
  • Exhaustion of cheap mineral resources is terraforming Earth – scientific report | Nafeez Ahmed

RSS Naked Capitalism

  • Cloudflare Threatens to Cut Google Off From Their Publishers in Searches Due to AI Scraping
  • Links 7/10/2026
  • Iran War: Conflicting Reports on Momentary Pause – Restart of Talks or Iran Readying Big Strike? Russia Diesel Export Halt and Qatar LNG Pullback Increase Energy Pressure
  • Europe’s Gathering Backlash Against Palantir Hits NATO Resistance
  • AI Investment Mania Has Begun to Percolate Through the Economy, and the Fed Has Begun to Fret About the Effects
  • How Winning Became the Shared Ethos of the US Oligarchy
  • How Unions Pave the Way to the American Dream
  • Links 7/9/2026
  • Iran War: US and Iran Continue Escalation With New Exchange of Harsher Strikes; Iran Options Include Closing Strait of Hormuz
  • Greenspan Ran the Fed for 18 Years and Left an Economic Time Bomb

RSS Naomi Klein

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Naomi Klein – Guardian.UK

  • Alaa Abd el-Fattah’s tweets were wrong, but he is no ‘anti-white Islamist’. Why does the British right want you to believe he is? | Naomi Klein
  • Wealth and power shape the climate emergency – the most important tool we have to defend ourselves is the facts | Naomi Klein
  • The rise of end times fascism | Naomi Klein and Astra Taylor
  • Night of bombing in south Beirut – as it happened
  • How Israel has made trauma a weapon of war
  • We need an exodus from Zionism | Naomi Klein
  • The Zone of Interest is about the danger of ignoring atrocities – including in Gaza | Naomi Klein
  • We have a tool to stop Israel’s war crimes: BDS – podcast
  • We have a tool to stop Israel's war crimes: BDS | Naomi Klein
  • This Giving Tuesday, support the publication that sees news as a right for all | Naomi Klein

RSS Nature Protects, As She is Protected

  • No Name Calling Please, Give Us Evidence Which Proves GM Crops Are Safe
  • Let’s Be Honest About Genetically Modified Crops
  • Hindu roots of modern ‘ecology’
  • Ancient wisdom for a contemporary problem
  • By trashing the Gadgil report recommendations, did we just kill the Western Ghats?
  • GM crops debate needs Swadeshi voice
  • GM food crops – Why India must say no
  • GMOs are uneeded and unsafe - says India's largest farmer union
  • And all is not lost
  • Up and up and up

RSS Navdanya’s Diary

  • Food for health: the right to health is to live healthy lives
  • Making peace with the Earth. 600 organisations urge a sustainable new start
  • The Seed War
  • An Agroecological Transformation to Tackle Climate Change
  • Rewilding food, rewilding farming
  • Which future of food do we want?
  • Vandana Shiva : No to Junk Food in Schools, Yes to Climate Change Education in Schools
  • Education and knowledge can stop the fake “science” of multinationals that is leading the planet and society to collapse
  • We Need Biodiversity-Based Agriculture to Solve the Climate Crisis
  • Industrial Agriculture, based on War Technologies, continues to kill millions of species driving the sixth mass extinction: Agroecology is the Future

RSS New Internationalist

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS New Left Project

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS New World Notes

  • Observations on Work
  • The GOP and the Dems: Hypocrisy and Betrayal
  • Can Technology Save Us?
  • George Carlin at the National Press Club
  • Bitter Lake
  • How to Ruin an Economy
  • Killing Us Softly
  • Confronting the Authorities
  • Peasant of the Dawn
  • Police

RSS News Junkie Post

  • Mayotte Crisis: Putrid Leftover of France’s Imperialist and Colonialist Scrooge?
  • China, Russia and India Versus USA, EU and Japan: Axes Powers of a New Global Cold War?
  • French Radical Protests: Can the Sinister Fascist Traits of Capitalism be Overcome?
  • Qu’est donc la memoire?
  • The Stench of Extinction
  • Forget Wars on Covid and Terror: War on Climate Collapse Is the Only War of Necessity for Human Survival
  • Covid Fear Management Policies: Distractions from and Tests for Looming Climate Collapse
  • France Neoliberal Macron: Vanguard of a Covid Global Corporate Dictatorship?
  • Magic Woman of Haiti’s Mountains
  • Afghanistan War Outcome: Hope for Sovereign Nations Fighting the Scourge of Neocolonial Imperialism

RSS NOAA: Monthly State of the Climate Report

  • June 2026 Monthly National Climate Report
  • June 2026 Monthly Global Climate Report
  • June 2026 Monthly Upper Air Report
  • June 2026 Monthly Tropical Cyclones Report
  • June 2026 Monthly Global Snow and Ice Report
  • June 2026 Monthly Wildfires Report
  • May 2026 Global Drought Narrative
  • May 2026 Monthly Tornadoes Report
  • May 2026 Monthly Synoptic Discussion
  • May 2026 Monthly Drought Report

RSS Notes from the Aboveground

  • On Inequality
  • Shameless is as shameless does
  • Wages of Rebellion
  • Seveneves
  • Guns across America
  • How to Clone a Mammoth
  • Madness in Civilization
  • Post-TV
  • Thieves of State
  • Protecting the Wild

RSS NYT Examiner

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Occupy.com

  • Trump’s New World Disorder: Abandoning Rojava Kurds While Boosting the Islamic State?
  • The Democratic Establishment Is Panicking and Knows Its Time Is Almost Over
  • How Billionaires Are Using Data Centers as a Weapon in the Class War
  • Donald Trump Fits the Bill for the Biblical Antichrist
  • Reconsidering Our Planet, Part III
  • A 3-Step Blueprint Democrats Can Follow to Win in 2028 and Beyond
  • Fighting the Corporations that are Killing Our Planet, Part II
  • Democrats' Last Major Obstacle to Defeating MAGA for Good
  • The Struggle to Keep a Living Planet
  • Can the UK Green Party Surge Match Mamdani’s NYC Earthquake?

RSS Occupy las Vegas

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Occupy Wall Street

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Oddity Central

  • Bizarre Trend Has Russian Men Smashing Their iPhones for a Manlier Look
  • This Giant, Spine-Covered Caterpillar Looks Like an Alien Species
  • Woman Drinks Diet Coke to Dissolve Huge Mass in Her Stomach
  • This 4D Rollercoaster in China Allegedly Delivers the Most Terrifying Thrill Rides on Earth
  • Arachnophobs Beware! The World’s Fastest Spider Can Outrun Most Humans
  • China Builds World’s Largest Train Station in Just 38 Months Using an Army of Workers
  • Nepalese Family Loses Four Members to the Same Wild Elephant Over 12 Years
  • The World’s Largest Paper Plane Is 7 Meters Long and Weighs 63 Pounds
  • Superstitious Man Slaps Twitching Eye to Ward Off Bad Omen, Suffers Detached Retina
  • A Growing Number of Russian Women Are Selling Their Used Breast Implants Online

RSS Of Two Minds

  • Without Subsidies, AI Is Unaffordable
  • Sailing the Stormy Seas of AI
  • Risk and AI: It's Tricky
  • The US Economy In a Nutshell: Privatize the Gains, Socialize the Costs
  • Five Dynamics That Make Sense of an Increasingly Chaotic World
  • What Once Explained Everything Now Explains Nothing
  • What If the Work We're Busy Automating Is Needless?
  • What AI Is and Is Not-- or, When Electrocution of Innocents Becomes Profitable
  • We Don't Need the World, We Only Need Money
  • AI's Insurmountable Flaw: "Mass Regurgitation of Misinformation"

RSS One Penny Sheet

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS One Struggle – South Florida

  • Toys on the Dash and Cops at the Vigil
  • Beyond the Headlines: Issue #2
  • Organize Against Alligator Alcatraz!
  • “No Kings Day 2025”: Your discontent shouldn’t end at a protest
  • Solidarity and Support for Haiti in 2025
  • Beyond the Headlines: Issue #1
  • Beyond the Headlines:
  • GANG VIOLENCE, CHAOS IN HAITI – WHY?
  • Don’t Fall for Capitalist Slick Talk About “Community Redevelopment”
  • Our taxes are funding war and a genocide!

RSS Orion Magazine

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Our Finite World

  • Why Oil Shortages May Bring Lower Prices–and Recession
  • China and US Trade Talks: A Solution for Oil Shortages?
  • Losing the Iran War May Be the Best Outcome for the World
  • A New Explanation for Tariffs and Bombings
  • Understanding Deglobalization: The Role of Diesel and Jet Fuel
  • 2026: Expect a very uneven world economic downturn
  • Too many promises; too few future physical goods
  • A lack of very cheap oil is leading to debt problems
  • What has gone wrong with the economy? Can it be fixed?
  • Sierra Club talk that may be of interest

RSS Pando Daily

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Paul Haeder

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Paul Kingsnorth – Elswhere

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Paul L. Street

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS PBD – Progressive Blog Digest

  • 46
  • HIS LEGACY
  • THE END GAME
  • DISUNIFICATION
  • THE WALL
  • GUILTY!
  • DSM-5
  • MOVING ON
  • 6000
  • CRICKETS

RSS PeakOil.com News

  • Pakistan Buys Second Spot LNG Cargo as Supply Crunch Persists
  • Can the World Withstand Another Oil Shock After the Iran War?
  • The Era of Cheap U.S. Natural Gas May Be Coming to an End
  • Australia Built a Gas Export Empire. Now the Backlash Is Here
  • America’s thirst for gasoline may not recover after Iran war
  • Russia’s fuel crisis is so bad that a mom and her baby waited in line for 18 hours to get gas
  • OPEC+ ratifies planned oil quota hike as Gulf flows rebound
  • Energy Minister’s Fuel Update avoids statement on tanker GRAND WINNER 5 now idling offshore for 1 month and omits breakdown of forward fuel orders
  • EXPLAINER – From ‘oil state’ to fuel shortages: How Ukraine’s strikes are pressuring Russia’s energy sector
  • The War Premium Is Gone: Saudi Oil Revenue Crisis

RSS Peak Prosperity Blog

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Peak Prosperity: Daily Digest

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Peak Prosperity: Featured Voices

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS People Before Profit Blog

  • "Blacklisted Again" Michael Berkowitz on "Trumbo" by Norman Markowitz
  • A Corrected and Updated Version of The "Madness" of Donald Trump by Norman Markowitz
  • The "Madness" of Donald Trump by Norman Markowitz
  • Robert Parry's Constructive Criticism for both the Obama Administration and the Center Left by Norman Markowitz
  • A Marxist IQ for December by Norman Markowitz
  • A Wake Up Call for those in Labor and the Left who Who Wait for Hillary Clinton by Norman Markowitz
  • A Powerfful Isreali Critique of the Concept of "International Terrorism" and Wars without End Against it by Norman Markowitz
  • A Corrected Version and Updated Version of "The Missiles of November" by Norman Markowitz
  • The "Missiles of November" by Norman Markowitz
  • The Ontario Federation of Labor Speaks Out in International Terrorism by Norman Markowitz

RSS Phlegm

  • "we fight each other while it devours us" Belgium June 2017
  • West Didsbury Manchester. May 2017
  • Dulwich picture gallery. April 25th 2017
  • Ostend, Belgium April 2017
  • Jacksonville, Florida - USA
  • Sheffield - UK
  • Lexington, Kentucky - USA.
  • Reykjavik - Iceland
  • Toronto - Canada.
  • Birmingham, UK.

RSS Phyllis Bennis

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Physicist-Retired Newsvine

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Pink Tank

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS PlanetSave – Climate

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Political Violence @ a Glance

  • A Fond Farewell to Political Violence @ A Glance
  • Sudan’s Junta Chief Survived the Coup, but Can He Win the War?
  • The Limits of Plausible Deniability in Ukraine and Beyond
  • The Responsibility to Protect Palestinians
  • Ecuador Has 99 Problems but a Coup Isn’t One
  • How Economic Crises Make Incumbent Leaders Change Their Regimes from Within
  • Do No Harm: US Aid to Africa and Civilian Security
  • Perceptions in Northern Ireland: 25 Years After the Good Friday Agreement
  • Viewpoint: Is Military Aid Really the Best Way to Help Ukraine?
  • Beyond Victimhood: Women’s Contributions to Criminal Violence

RSS Popular Resistance

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS PRN with Danny Schechter

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Progressive Radio Network

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS ProPublica

  • He’s Suspected of Hiring a Venezuelan Gang for a Political Killing. Trump Officials Still Work With Him.
  • Lawmakers Call for CDC to Track Vitamin K Shot Refusals, Cite ProPublica Report
  • Trump Pushes Out Remaining Members of Bipartisan Election Commission Ahead of Midterms
  • New York Hasn’t Raised Housing Allowances for Needy Residents in Decades. That’s Unconstitutional, a Lawsuit Says.
  • A Puerto Rico Government Agency Exposed 1 Million Social Security Numbers
  • Top Legal Adviser to Joint Chiefs Is Stepping Down Nearly a Year Before Completing Term
  • Wall Street Wants to Change the Rules for Your 401(k). It Could Put Your Retirement at Risk.
  • Have a 401(k)? Help ProPublica Investigate What’s Really Happening to Your Money.
  • Washington Law Says to Alert the Public When Doctors Are Accused of Misconduct. It Can Take Months.
  • Ken Paxton Vowed to Crack Down on “Illegal Voting.” He May Have Violated Texas Election Law.

RSS Project Censored

  • Why Can’t We Hold Israel Accountable for Its Genocide in Gaza? It’s the Media…
  • Colonial Distortion of Palestine’s History
  • The Project Censored Newsletter—June 2026
  • The News That Did Make the News – But Was Wrong
  • The Sycophancy Machine: How AI Rewards Confirmation Over Accuracy
  • Frame-Checking Generative AI’s Role in Transmitting News
  • LGBTQ Organizing Beyond Meta’s Censorship
  • The Misuse of History: Archaeology in Palestine
  • Big Tech’s Campus Takeover, ICE’s Expanding Reach
  • The Sycophancy Machine 

RSS Public Intelligence

  • 2025 Bilderberg Meeting Participant List
  • U.S. Senate Homeland Security Committee Interim Report on July 13th, 2024 Trump Assassination Attempt
  • Joint Chiefs of Global Tax Enforcement Crypto Assets Risk Indicators for Financial Institutions
  • 2024 Bilderberg Meeting Participant List
  • U.S. House Financial Surveillance Report: How Federal Law Enforcement Commandeered Financial Institutions to Spy on Americans
  • Asymmetric Warfare Group Iran Quick Reference Guide
  • (U//FOUO) FBI Domestic Terrorism Reference Guide: Sovereign Citizen Violent Extremism
  • Department of Justice Critical Incident Review Active Shooter at Robb Elementary School
  • Virginia Guiffre v. Ghislaine Maxwell Unsealed Jeffrey Epstein Documents Batch 8 January 9, 2024
  • Virginia Guiffre v. Ghislaine Maxwell Unsealed Jeffrey Epstein Documents Batch 7 January 8, 2024

RSS Pulse

  • How Gaza has changed the narrative on global Jihad
  • Universal Jurisdiction in Islam
  • Rachid Ghannouchi’s letter from a Tunisian Prison
  • ILAN PAPPE : There is still time to stop the Gaza genocide
  • From the Israel-Palestine Memory Hole
  • Scotland First Minister’s family stuck in Gaza
  • maiñ Burhan hūñ
  • A Protest for Ukraine free of Dogma and Cynicism
  • Dismantling Hindutva with Islamophobia?
  • Of UnStating the Stated, and the Silences in its Wake

RSS Quartz

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Question Everything

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS R-Squared Energy

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Rabett Run

  • Bad (and the few ok) population decline arguments
  • The Mikes have the Willies
  • Just why are people doing the thing that I said they should do?
  • Elon believes in half of "Fake It Til You Make It"
  • Dispatchable Hydropower For The Win! (Just Don't Call It That)
  • Alex Tabarrock and Argumentum ad Flubberum
  • Brian's new gig
  • Something left unsaid about Koutsoyiannis et al.
  • "A Left That Refuses to Condemn Mass Murder Is Doomed"
  • Well, crud

RSS Rabble.Ca

  • Don’t buy-in to climate science denialism
  • UCP set to announce plan to bust up AHS
  • Deepfakes and gender based violence
  • City of Vancouver to lowest paid workers: Let them eat cuts!
  • Hundreds of thousands of Quebec public sector workers vow further strike action
  • Dual boss battle: video game workers face-off multiple employers at once
  • Degrowth, green energy, social equity, and circular economy
  • Take Back Alberta completes take over of UCP board
  • Saving Palestinian lives will save Israeli lives
  • Edmonton activist protests climate crisis with demonstration in AB legislature

RSS Radical Philosophy

  • Embodied phantasm
  • Saint-Alban’s contested legacy
  • Frantz Fanon at Saint-Alban
  • The space of ideology
  • The actually existing ‘state of Palestine’
  • Breaking out of the circle
  • On the bourgeois concept of real abstraction
  • Phenomenology of necessary illusion
  • Reproductive subsumption
  • The fascistisation of social reproduction

RSS Ran Prieur

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Random Communications from an Evolutionary Edge

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS RANTINGS ON MARKETS, ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS STRATEGY

  • Update On The Crisis Of Capitalism That The System Doesn’t Want You To See
  • France’s Sunday Presidential Election Looms Large
  • 2022 – A World Where Everything Is On The Brink
  • The Power Elite, The World Of Men, And A Simple Litmus Test To Determine When They Will Be Defeated
  • Is The CIA Involved In The Origins Of The Coronavirus?
  • Buckle Up For What May Possibly Be A 2022 Social And Economic Shit Show
  • The Trump Administration And CIA Talked Of Murdering Julian Assange… And More
  • Newly “Discovered” And Potentially Damning Documents On US Funding Of Coronavirus Research
  • Now We Will See America’s True Soul
  • The Best Video I’ve Ever Watched On Why The US Is Really In Afghanistan- Pathological Plunder

RSS Read the Science

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Reader Supported News

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Reader Supported News – Posts

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Real Economics

  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – July 05, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – June 28, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – June 21, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – June 14, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – June 07, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 31, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 24, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 17, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 10, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 03, 2026

RSS Real-World Economics Review Blog

  • Quick Thoughts on Wealth
  • Krugman on Trump’s 80th birthday party
  • Understanding entropy as a constraint on economic processes
  • The sociology study that changed my thinking
  • The AI Bubble
  • A dominant economic fact of the past half century is . . . .
  • Trickle-down economics, the Swedish way
  • Is the U.S. Trade Deficit a Loss or a Gain?
  • New models constantly renovate poverty
  • Medieval inflation medicine

RSS Red Pepper

  • Cory Doctorow: AI bubbles, bosses and sci-fi
  • Fires in the Night – review
  • Iran: a third way between oppression and aggression
  • Stella Dadzie: A Whole Heap of Mix Up – review
  • Citizens’ Advice and the hidden cost of welfare reform
  • Nueva derecha: Latin America’s new authoritarians
  • Fighting fire with fellowship
  • Britain’s electorate has changed – our voting system needs to keep up
  • Corporate profiteering and the war on Iran
  • Real existing degrowth

RSS Reddit: Environment

  • The Pollution Being Churned Out by AI Data Centers Is So Severe That It’s Almost Incomprehensible
  • Researchers declare catastrophic mortality event as 145 gray whales found dead on West Coast
  • E.P.A. Moves to Loosen Limits on Pollution From Trucks | The Trump administration wants to roll back some Biden-era restrictions on smog-causing emissions from heavy-duty vehicles.
  • The right's bizarre outrage over Mamdani's 78F thermostat advice is a smokescreen for a deeper attack on energy efficiency that serves only one constituent: the fossil fuel industry.
  • UK swelters in third heatwave of the year as western Europe counts cost of hottest-ever June
  • Big Oil Is Heating Us to Death and Telling Us It’s Our Fault
  • UK waters hit with extreme heatwave as global sea temperatures reach record levels
  • EPA proposes weakening heavy-duty truck pollution rules
  • Datacentres are a ticking timebomb. We must make sure AI’s benefits outweigh the costs
  • Big Tech Is Now Targeting Native American Land for Massive Data Centers

RSS Reddit: Overpopulation – Unending Growth

  • Advocating for murder, eugenics, or culling people does not help make recognition of overpopulation more mainstream.
  • What are some links that you like to share in discussions relevant to overpopulation?
  • Korea's birthrate rises at fastest pace on record in Q1
  • We are artificially boosting our carrying capacity through fossil fuel/artificial fertilizer. Its the equivalent of going Kaoiken. This boost is only temporary and the reconing will come eventually.
  • The impacts of overpopulation in India are already horrifying
  • A dose of truth
  • Conservatives maintain birth rates, but left-leaning Americans are having significantly fewer children, driving the U.S. birth decline. Education was consistently linked to having fewer children. Religious attendance was positively associated with having more children.
  • I think there should be a limit of two kids per family.
  • Drought and the effect on Population. Please Like and Subscribe
  • The 50-year Gap -- global human population doubled, and no one in comments seems to notice or factor that in (except me)

RSS Republic of Lakotah – Mitakuye Oyasin

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Resilience.org

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Richard Heinberg

  • MuseLetter #399: When the Saints Go Marching Out: New Orleans and the Resilience of Cities
  • MuseLetter #398: Small Modular Nuclear Reactors are a Dead End
  • Museletter #397: The 2026 Energy Crisis and Our Wile E. Coyote Moment
  • Museletter #396: The Future of Forests
  • Museletter #395: The Empire Crumbles
  • Museletter #394: Nourishing the Bioregional Economy
  • Museletter #393: Electricity Price Squeeze: Something’s Going to Give
  • Museletter #392: What Futures Are Possible?
  • Museletter #391: Gratitude in the Great Unraveling
  • Museletter #390: Peak Oil for Gen Z

RSS Robert Koehler

  • Make America Racist Again
  • United Humanity: A Future Beyond War
  • Where Does Indifference to Life Begin?
  • Do You Believe in Them Yet?
  • Sanctuary Cities and International Security
  • This Old House . . .
  • Earth Day Is the Planet’s Future
  • There’s No Real Future Without Empathy
  • Everything That Doesn’t Matter
  • A Little Mix of Money, Poetry and God

RSS Robert Kuttner

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Robert Lindsay

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Robert Scheer

  • Houston Father Killed Amid ‘Silent’ Surge by ICE
  • One Year Later: Bezos’ WaPo Cheerleads for MAGA, Billionaires and AI
  • Pink Flamingos & Yellow Vests
  • The Data Is In on GOP Budget: Rural Americans Are Losing Health Insurance Coverage
  • How Woody Guthrie Keeps Resonating With New Generations
  • Trump Acquired as Much as $24 Million in Defense Stocks Last Year
  • Revolutionizing Gynecology With Women in Mind
  • Who Will Replace Graham Platner — and How Will the Party Decide?
  • Debt Relief in the Global South Would Benefit Americans
  • When the Media Turned Away, ICE Got Worse

RSS Robert Scribbler

  • OBX Wave Report July 6 — 1-2 Foot, Waves Likely to Build a Bit Friday and Saturday
  • The OBX Wave Report July 5 — 1-2 Foot With Some Shark Bumps Reported
  • OBX Wave Report July 4th — Celebrating Freedom in the 2 Foot Surf
  • OBX Wave Report July 3 — 2 Foot, Clean, Hot Weather
  • OBX Wave Report July 2 — 2-3 Foot With Little Barrels + Talking Climate Crisis
  • OBX Wave Report June 30 — 2-4 Foot Friday For Future + Record Global Heat
  • OBX Wave Report June 29 — Gorgeous Green 2-3 Footers With Light Northeast Winds
  • OBX Wave Report June 28 — 2-3 Foot and Semi-Clean
  • OBX Wave Report June 27 — 1-3 Foot and Cleaning Up Through Afternoon
  • OBX Wave Report June 26 — 1-3 Foot and Choppy With Strong Southerly Winds

RSS Rogue Columnist

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS RollingStone: Politics

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS RT: Documentary

  • Free to be yourself. Surf master & disabled pupil inspire each other (Trailer) Premiere 02/23
  • Beauty and the Bleach. Skin-whitening trend ravages Senegalese women
  • A gastronomic odyssey through St. Pete’s literary haunts – Taste of Russia Ep. 17
  • Beauty and the Bleach.Skin-whitening trend ravages Senegalese women (Trailer) Premiere 02/19
  • Of Ice and Fame. Medvedeva v Zagitova: friends off the ice, rivals on it
  • Is this a yolk? Ostrich omelettes & peculiar pastries - Taste of Russia Ep. 16
  • Champions of the spirit. Unknown stories of 1st Soviet Olympic medalists
  • Of Ice and Fame. Medvedeva v Zagitova: friends off the ice, rivals on it (Trailer) Premiere 02/10
  • Champions of the spirit. Unknown stories of 1st Soviet Olympic medalists (Trailer) Premiere 02/09
  • Art at the Stake. Afghan artists risk lives to return style, music, and culture to their country

RSS RT Today

  • Drug-driving overtakes drunk-driving in UK
  • US mercenary demands special jail food in India
  • South African coach steps down after historic World Cup run
  • Suspected Ebola patient placed at hotel holding US deportees – lawyers
  • Germany to hit its industry with more energy tariffs
  • Trump’s ‘cruel gift’: Why Patriot license will be useless for Ukraine
  • India clears Chinese investment in strategic sectors
  • China makes space program breakthrough (VIDEOS)
  • ‘They may even kill me’: Ousted Bangladeshi PM says she is ready to surrender
  • Russia to assist Mozambique in fighting terrorism – Lavrov

RSS RT: USA News

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Sail Transport Network

  • We Did It: Sailing Cargo in the Aegean
  • Cure for Depending on 90K Oil Spewing Cargo Ships: Sail Power Makes Inroads, Now in Mediterranean
  • Dirty Fossil Fuel ‘Business-As-Usual’ Tactics Spew Out of the IMO at COP22
  • Noah’s Ark Gone Awry
  • Good News/Bad News for Consumers in an Increasingly Energy-Challenged, Shipping-Dependent World
  • Sail cargo's imminent achievement: Timbercoast's Steel Schooner, the Avontuur
  • COP21 Follow-up for Sail Transport and Its Fight against Shipping Emissions and for Resilience
  • Shipping Emissions Must Be Tackled at COP21 with Advances such as Sail Power
  • Maine Sail Freight — America Gets Serious about Clean, Renewable Energy for Transport
  • The Tres Hombres Ship is Homeward Bound

RSS Science-Based Life

  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 22
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 21
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 20
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 19
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 18
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Weeks 16 & 17
  • Science Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 15
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 14
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 13
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 12

RSS ScienceDaily: Top Environment News

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS ScienceDaily: Top Science News

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Scrap Weapons

  • Effects of a Nuclear War: Bridging Science, Policy, and Global Risk Governance 
  • Conceptualising a COP for Weapons
  • When Deterrence Meets Climate Catastrophe: Rethinking Nuclear Risk in a Post-Treaty World
  • Arms and Arguments March 2026 Review
  • Arms and Arguments February 2026 Review
  • Arms and Arguments January 2026 Reviews
  • The New START Treaty and Nuclear Winter: Re-centering Global Risk in Arms Control Debates
  • Prioritizing Weapons and Ammunition Management Ahead of the 2026 Somalia Transition
  • Who Decides the Future? Intergenerational Perspectives on Disarmament
  • ‘A House of Dynamite’ is a great film, which gets nuclear security dangerously wrong. Why does that matter?

RSS Seemorerocks

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Shadow Government Statistics

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Shame Project

  • Wall Street Journal Issues Epic Correction On Radley Balko’s Error-Riddled Reporting
  • Malcolm Gladwell’s “David & Goliath” Asks Us To Pity the Rich
  • Radley Balko: Anatomy of a “Stand Your Ground” Shill
  • Radley Balko
  • Radley Balko: Anatomy of a “Stand Your Ground” Shill
  • NPR’s Education Coverage Funded By Pro-Privatization Billionaires
  • Charles Murray
  • Why is Malcolm Gladwell running cover for the enablers of serial child molester Jerry Sandusky?
  • The Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg Was a Follower of Jewish Rightwing Terrorist Meir Kahane
  • Recovered History: Wall Street-Funded Self Help Propaganda Greased the Real Estate Bubble

RSS Simple Climate

  • What is the gender and ethnic balance of the science stories I write?
  • New year, new ideas
  • Why we should be wary of ’12 years to climate breakdown’ rhetoric
  • Can we fight climate change on our own?
  • Becoming more than an old gasbag: Climate chemistry on YouTube, cryogenic energy storage, and community renewable energy
  • How does carbon dioxide cause global warming?
  • Australian rodent first mammalian victim of climate change
  • Modern mussel shells much thinner than 50 years ago
  • A very beautiful and unusual animal in danger
  • Eyes on Environment: the many stories of climate change

RSS Skeptical Science

  • Skeptical Science New Research for Week #28 2028
  • Six charts show how clean power was world’s largest source of new energy in 2025
  • Eastern U.S. broils after heat wave kills over 1,300 in Europe
  • How climate change influences extreme weather
  • 2026 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #27
  • Skeptical Science New Research for Week #27 2026
  • How bad is AI for the environment?
  • Climate Adam - Is Climate Change Ramping Up El Niño Risks?
  • 2026 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #26
  • Skeptical Science New Research for Week #26 2026

RSS Smithsonian – Smart News

  • Roughly 100,000 Years Ago, This Man Got Stabbed in the Face—and Survived. He's Likely One of the First Known Victims of an Attack by a Sharp Weapon
  • The Culprit Behind South Australia's Deadly Algal Bloom Might Be the Most Toxic Species Ever Tested, Scientists Say
  • Are Moose Colorado Natives or Introduced Outsiders? New Research Suggests That the Animals Have Lived in the State for Centuries
  • Country Music Legend Dolly Parton's Autobiographical Musical Exploring Her Journey From East Tennessee Will Hit Broadway This Winter
  • Could We Mitigate Super El Niños by Artificially Changing the Climate? A New Study Indicates Yes
  • Why Did This Dutch Museum Cover the Floor With an 800-Pound Installation of Creamy Peanut Butter?
  • Scientists Just Learned That This Bat Eats Birds Midflight. A Renaissance Painter May Have Known About It Hundreds of Years Ago
  • Kazakhstan's Iron Age 'Golden Man' and Other Elite Scythians of Eurasia Inherited Their High Social Status, Ancient DNA Suggests
  • Smallpox Scabs That British Doctors Used to Inoculate Patients May Have Introduced the Deadly Disease to Australia, New Research Suggests
  • New Images Reveal That This Asteroid Is Actually Two Conjoined Space Rocks. They Form a Peanut-Shaped Object Called a 'Contact Binary'

RSS Social Text Journal

  • No Need for Gender: A Brief Meditation on Nonbinary Life
  • On Counter-cartographies: Neurodivergence and the Errancies of Performance
  • Kushnerism: Gaza Gentrification Means Palestinian Genocide
  • On Henrike Kohpeiß’s Bourgeois Coldness
  • On Nouri Gana’s Melancholy Acts
  • From the Classroom to Gaza: Belated Narratives and the Shared Struggle for Freedom
  • A Hundred Years of Coloniality: Sedulur Sikep and Fitri DK’s Nyawiji Ibu Bumi
  • Black Limbs, White Laws: On Patricia J. Williams’s The Miracle of the Black Leg
  • Two Poems from Neutrøis
  • A Review of Aliyyah Abdur-Rahman’s Millennial Style

RSS Speaking Truth to Power

  • Carolyn Interviewed about her book “Undaunted” by Canadian Ecopsychology Network
  • Will You Be Diagnosed With Mysticism In 2021? By Carolyn Baker
  • Collapsing Into The New Administration Amid Pandemic Lunacy, By Carolyn Baker
  • Collapse Changes Everything: Stop Whining For Perfection, By Carolyn Baker
  • The Collapse Of Ideology And The End Of Escape, By Jem Bendell
  • Top Global Experts Say Humanity Must ‘Heal Our Broken Relationship With Nature’ to Prevent Future Pandemics, Jessica Corbett
  • The United States: An Obituary, By Richard Heinberg
  • Reviving Radical Social Work In Collapse, By Desiree Coutinho
  • We Are All Being Cooked In The Soup Together, By Paul Levy
  • Some Progressives Are in Denial About Trump’s Fascist Momentum, By Norman Solomon

RSS squashpractice

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS State of Nature

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS State of the Union

  • Untitled
  • Untitled
  • Untitled
  • Untitled
  • Untitled
  • Untitled
  • Untitled
  • Untitled
  • Untitled
  • Untitled

RSS Stephanie McMillan

  • Constant decentralization builds collective strength
  • What does this moment ask of us?
  • Forced to become a commodity
  • Comrades
  • United, the working class can end capitalist exploitation
  • Everything for Everyone
  • “Overthrow” and other verb choices
  • Dialectics: fundamental contradiction
  • Revolution: overturning
  • Intentions for 2022: affirmations for revolution

RSS Steve Cutts

  • Safety First
  • Happy Friday!
  • Loop #3
  • Merry Christmas!
  • Infinity Loop II
  • ‘The Battle of Walmarté’
  • Can’t beat the classics
  • Happy Judgement Day
  • Slumber Party
  • A Brief Disagreement

RSS Steve Lendman Blog

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Stop the War Coalition

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Submedia TV – Molotov!

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Subrealism

  • Chipocalypse Now - I Love The Smell Of Deportations In The Morning
  • No Donut Or Coffee Breaks Required...,
  • Is This Why The Little Dogs Have Been Yapping And Snarling At The Russian Bear?
  • USS Harvey Milk To Be Renamed 'USS No Homo'
  • Lil Buckwheat Can't Get A Job But Still Gotta Eat....,
  • Negroe Fatigue
  • Our private research universities are not actually purely private...,
  • The Hidden Holocausts At Hanslope Park
  • Is RFK Jr Being Blackmailed?
  • Are American Elites Terrified Of Whitney Webb?

RSS Subversify Magazine

  • Hillbilly Elegy: An Uncomfortable Glimpse Into the Mindsent of Young Republicans
  • Andy Kaufman and Paul Reubens: Welcome to the Playhouse
  • Georgia Tann: America’s Most Notorious Child Trafficker
  • Comedy as Moral Allegory: Modern Literature’s Subtle Lessons
  • 10 Books Considered Ahead of Their Time

RSS Summit County Community Voice

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Sun Weber

  • “Pity the nation"
  • A Requiem for the Beautiful Earth
  • On Our Way
  • Earth Gifts 2
  • Earth Gifts 1
  • An American Child's Future.
  • Green Irony
  • NARCISSUS from me me to ennui
  • Survivalists, The Optimistic Minority
  • A Rock, A Tree, A Cloud

RSS Survival Acres

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Surviving Capitalism

  • Recommended Websites/weblogs & Sources of Information and Analysis (updated at least once a month to include current changes. Grand Thesis, which formulates my political philosophy, is below this post.)
  • Recommended Websites/weblogs & Sources of Information and Analysis (updated at least once a month to include current changes. Grand Thesis, which formulates my political philosophy, is below this post.)
  • Grand Thesis: Socialism is not only necessary, it is a matter of survival of the human species and other species (This is an essay in its final edited form except for needed improvements.)
  • Recommended post of the year: President Putin at the Valdai Discussion Club: “He Who Sows the Wind Will Reap the Whirlwind”
  • Recommended article: War on ‘Russian Disinformation’ is the New ‘War on Terror’ and Equally Fake with Ben Norton
  • A recommended article of the year: "Germany’s Energy Suicide: An Autopsy" by Pepe Escobar
  • Article of the month of September 2022: Breaking! NY Times: "US Created COVID-19"
  • Video of the month: "Is the Ukrainian War on its Own People Now Over?"
  • A message to my readers
  • Article of the year: "How Spooks and Establishment Journalists Are Circling The Wagons"

RSS Talking Points Memo

  • Grim New Details of Fatal ICE Shooting Make It Even Worse
  • How Butler Assassination Attempt Conspiracy Theories Became the New Dallas 1963
  • The Brief: Trump Seizes on SCOTUS Decision to Mess With the Midterms
  • Trump Pushes Out Remaining Members of Bipartisan Election Commission Ahead of Midterms
  • Why the Democratic Party Has No ‘Base’ and Why That Matters
  • A Big Milestone Is In Sight
  • Stop What You’re Doing!
  • A Pro-Trump Christian Group Wants to Put a Cross on the Moon 
  • FBI Demands Backup As It Tries to Substantiate Trump’s 2020 Delusions
  • E. Jean Carroll on the Verge of Forcing $5M From Trump

RSS The Agonist Blog

  • Le Mindset des entrepreneurs qui réussissent malgré les crises
  • Pourquoi la Newsletter reste votre meilleur atout marketing
  • Donnez du caractère à votre intérieur : idées et inspirations travaux
  • Sommeil réparateur : Comment le CBD peut transformer vos nuits
  • Pourquoi certains projets immobiliers échouent avant même la première visite… sans que les acheteurs ne s’en rendent compte
  • Lancer son Podcast : le guide étape par étape du matériel à la diffusion
  • SEO moderne : les techniques qui fonctionnent vraiment en 2026
  • Branding : pourquoi votre identité visuelle repousse vos prospects
  • Maîtriser le Storytelling pour rendre votre marque inoubliable
  • Comment concilier cohésion d’équipe et maîtrise budgétaire à Paris ?

RSS The Angry Arab

  • Migrated to Twitter
  • Will US global hegemony last for another century?
  • Eulogy of Dar As-Sayyad
  • My interview from yesterday on the latest about the Khashoggi matter
  • US Secret Wars against Communism
  • The New Congress and Palestine
  • Why the US-Saudi Crisis will Pass
  • The Khashoggi Affair
  • jets over Ridyah
  • Untitled

RSS The Archdruid Report

  • This blog is now closed...

RSS The Art of Annihilation

  • It’s a Family Affair – Venezuela’s Second Largest Newspaper Serves U.S. Empire
  • Support for Canadian Truckers Skyrockets – Alongside Vaccine Injuries in Canadian Children
  • The Great Reset: The Final Assault on the Living Planet [It’s Not a Social Dilemma – It’s the Calculated Destruction of the Social, Part III]
  • It’s Not a Social Dilemma – It’s the Calculated Destruction of the Social [The Enclosure of Africa, Part II]
  • It’s Not a Social Dilemma – It’s the Calculated Destruction of the Social [Part I]
  • COMMENTS on ‘Green’ billionaires behind professional activist network that led suppression of ‘Planet of the Humans’ documentary
  • The Clairvoyant Ruling Class [“Scenarios for the Future of Technology & International Development” 2010 Report]
  • COVID-19 as a Weapon. The Crushing of the Disposable Working Class – by Design
  • The Show Must Go On. Event 201: The 2019 Fictional Pandemic Exercise [World Economic Forum, Gates Foundation et al.]
  • Mandatory Masks in the Age of Climate Emergency & Planetary Biodiversity Crisis

RSS THE AUTOMATIC EARTH

  • Debt Rattle July 10 2026
  • Debt Rattle July 9 2026
  • Debt Rattle July 8 2026
  • Debt Rattle July 7 2026
  • Debt Rattle July 6 2026
  • Debt Rattle July 5 2026
  • Debt Rattle Fourth of July 2026
  • Debt Rattle July 3 2026
  • Debt Rattle July 2 2026
  • Debt Rattle July 1 2026

RSS The Big Picture

  • 10 Friday AM Reads
  • Ticker Take: The Biggest Mistakes Investors Make
  • 10 Thursday AM Reads
  • MiB: Lyft CEO David Risher
  • 10 Wednesday AM Reads
  • 10 Tuesday AM Reads
  • Transcript: Mamoon Hamid, Kleiner Perkins
  • 10 Monday AM Reads
  • 10 Sunday Reads
  • MiB: Mamoon Hamid, Kleiner Perkins on AI Investing

RSS The Bureau of Investigative Journalism

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Conflicted Doomer

  • No Blog Post Today
  • Get Ready
  • Sick and Tired
  • The Year the Nose Fell Off
  • No Blog Post Today
  • Friendships
  • The Right to Be Stupid
  • Lies
  • Whole Lot of Whistling Going On
  • Being Thankful

RSS The Conversation: Energy + Environment

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Cost of Energy

  • Elevatorul auto, unul dintre cele mai importante instrumente dintr-un service
  • Avantaje si dezavantaje pentru iPhone 7
  • Cele Mai Bune Jucarii pentru Pisici
  • Cel Mai Bun Compresor Auto
  • Cel Mai Bun Pavilion de Gradina
  • Cel Mai Bun GPS pentru TIR
  • Cea Mai Buna Piscina Gonflabila
  • Cea Mai Buna Telecomanda Universala
  • Cele Mai Bune Manusi de Portar
  • Cele Mai Bune Genunchiere

RSS The Daily Banter

  • Interview With A Men’s Rights Activist And Child Porn Advocate
  • MAJOR UPDATE: The Daily Banter Is Closing Down And Moving Exclusively To Email
  • Interview With A Men’s Rights Activist And Child Porn Advocate
  • Watch Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Rips Apart Dark Money In Politics In 5 Astonishing Minutes
  • Eddie Haskell’s State Of The Union Was An Infuriating Study In Gaslighting
  • Let Them Eat Fake
  • Trump Described By U.S. Intelligence Officials As Willfully Ignorant
  • We Now Have Proof Trump’s Family Separation Policy Was Meant To “Traumatize” Children
  • Are Steve Schmidt And Howard Schultz Helping Trump Get Re-elected? Maybe, Maybe Not.
  • Kellyanne Conway: Cory Booker ‘Sexist’ Because He Is Running For President

RSS The Daily Impact

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Dark Mountain Project

  • Summer Bookshelf Offers
  • The Sister-Sows
  • Boundary? What Boundary?
  • Two Poems from the Bestiary
  • Birubi
  • Five Salmon Dancing
  • Introducing Dark Mountain: Issue 29
  • Plant People
  • Of Hidden Futures and Star-Shaped Worlds
  • January Archive Offer

RSS The Disaffected Lib

  • The Sorcerer's Apprentice - Still Looking for the Magic Wand.
  • Raising the Bar or Catch-Up Ball
  • Living In an Anti-Vax World
  • Junk Has Got to Go. In a World Short of Resources, the Case for a Steady State Economy Returns.
  • Our Ghastly Future
  • An Inauspicious Day, March 11
  • A Trip Down Memory Lane
  • McConnell Tells Trump to "Back Off"
  • A Sea of Bodies
  • Wishful Thinking?

RSS The Dissenter

  • David vs. Goliath: Consumer Watchdog Gets Their Day in Court With Googl
  • What I Care About Is the Social Safety Net
  • Obama Meets With Labor, Progressive Groups Today
  • What the Marijuana Legalization Polling in 2012 Says About Its Prospects Moving Forward
  • Petraeus Affair Shows Dominant Power of Government Surveillance State
  • Pelosi to Speak to House Democrats Amid Rumors That She Will Step Down From Leadership
  • United Parcel Service to Boy Scouts of America – no funds for your anti-gay org
  • For the Long-Term Unemployed, It Is A Fiscal Cliff
  • Love In The House Of Spy
  • Fatster’s Roundup

RSS The Duck of Minerva

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Ecologist

  • Fracking industry advances with phase one exploratory applications in South Africa
  • What the closure of a small Suffolk factory says about the future of the automotive industry
  • Digging yourself a hole: how Australia is keeping coal current
  • How a circular economy can help prevent a global water crisis
  • Is Hurricane Harvey a harbinger for America’s future?
  • New report says electric cars will dramatically improve Britain's energy security
  • Climate change could tarnish the flavour of cava, study suggests
  • How to win the climate wars – talk about local ‘pollution’ not global warming
  • Ecologist Special Report: The Al Hima Revival
  • Dealing with climate migration: 'what matters are our actions'

RSS The Ecosocialist

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The End of Capitalism

  • We live in the 20s
  • Marx and Colonialism – Zombie-Marxism Part 3.2 – What Marx Got Wrong
  • How Capitalism Causes Depression
  • The Paradoxical Viewpoint
  • How Anti-Capitalists Can Seize the Moment as Trump Enters the White House
  • Response to Reader’s Questions
  • Obscuring The Promise of Democracy: Mass Media Reacts to the 1960s
  • How Does Capitalism Make You Feel?

RSS The Energy Skeptic

  • Energy, Water, & Climate Change are interdependent
  • Why fusion power is Forever Away
  • Climate Change dominates news coverage at expense of other existential planetary boundaries
  • Excerpt from “The Geopolitics of Resource Wars”
  • Homes & Buildings
  • Book Review “The Outlawed Ocean” by Ian Urbina
  • Underestimating the Challenges of Avoiding a Ghastly Future
  • Motherboards: too complicated to make after oil
  • “More and More and More” one of the best books on energy ever written
  • The staggering destruction of knowledge by Christians in the Roman Empire

RSS The Equation (Union of Concerned Scientists)

  • Big Temps, Big Storms, and Climate Change: Talking About Extreme Event Attribution
  • Ask a Scientist: How is Rural California Anticipating and Building Resilience to Climate Change?
  • How Attribution Science Uses Models to Uncover Climate Change’s Effects on Weather
  • Scope 3 on Trial: What it Means For Corporate Climate Accountability
  • Envisioning Federal Scientific Integrity as a Tool to Protect Democracy and Fight Corruption
  • Why the EPA Is Attacking California’s Clean Car Standards (Again)
  • Megafires, Land Use, and Climate Change
  • A New Way to Uncover How Science Is Under Attack
  • FEMA Review Council Report, Like President Trump, Is Out of Touch with Reality
  • The American Project Has Never Been Perfect. It’s Still Worth Fighting For.

RSS The Exile Nation Project

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Exiled Online

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Fall of Civilization

  • Join the LiveJournal Revival!
  • Woo-hoo!
  • The Recession has Restarted
  • 10 to 15 years
  • Untitled
  • NASA-sponsored HANDY model tells us what we already knew.
  • A big pile of crap.
  • If not one hell, then the other.
  • In the End, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.
  • Peak Food

RSS The Global MuckRaker

  • Crypto giant Circle rebuffed efforts to help scam victims, police say
  • Taiwanese authorities charge executives who helped China’s cyber spies target ICIJ network
  • Senator questions Merck over patent strategy for blockbuster cancer drug Keytruda
  • Businessman accused of masterminding Caruana Galizia assassination stands trial in Malta
  • Law enforcement, banks warn of money laundering gaps in major US crypto bill
  • Cyprus anti-corruption watchdog refers former president to prosecutors for alleged ‘abuse of power’
  • Lowering doses of cancer drugs could slash global health spending by $30B, new research shows
  • Trump intelligence adviser previously helped father pursue millions from Kremlin-linked bank, leaked documents show
  • Chinese spies are posing as recruiters to target officials and journalists
  • Mexico seizes suspicious Keytruda in raid to dismantle counterfeit medication ring

RSS The Great Change

  • We Were Young
  • Burke's Law
  • Toy Wars
  • Thinking like a Creek
  • The Parish of the Watershed
  • The Internet is Unsustainable
  • Hanta Me, Baby
  • Mars or Bust
  • The Woman Who Knew What Dirt Was
  • When the House Loses

RSS The Guardian – Environment

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The HipCrime Vocab

  • New Location
  • New Site Up.
  • Automation and The Future of Work: Black Lives Matter - part 2
  • Automation and The Future of Work: Black Lives Matter
  • Against Techno-Fetishism
  • Corn-Pone Hitler?
  • The Other Dieoffs
  • The Dying Americans
  • The Hipcrime Vocab on JRE
  • Oil and Money - Lessons Learned

RSS The Institute for Anarchist Studies

  • Applications Now Closed for the 2025-2026 Grant Cycle
  • Announcing the 2026 Grant Cycle – Applications Now Open!
  • Encampments Paved the Way for Jewish Liberation by Naomi Bennet
  • 10 Movies for Anarchists (and the Anarcho-Curious) By Tate Williams
  • CONTROL: Call for Perspectives’ Submissions: 2026 Deadline Extended to February 16th!
  • Announcing the 2025 IAS Anarchist Horizons Grantees
  • Applications Now Closed for the 2024-2025 Grant Cycle
  • Announcing Our 2024-2025 Grant Cycle – Applications Now Open!
  • New IAS Lexicon Pamphlet: Democracy Beyond The State
  • Announcing the 2024 IAS Anarchist Horizons Grantees

RSS The Monkey Trap

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The New Left Review

  • Anton Jäger: Hyperpolitics in Command?
  • Thea Riofrancos: The New World Climate Order
  • Régis Debray: Metamorphoses
  • Christian Sorace & David Sneath: Steppe Transitions
  • Javier Moreno Zacarés: Dynamics of American Capitalism
  • Jack Copley: Rentier Regimes
  • Katie Ebner-Landy: Norm Smuggling?
  • Tom Mertes: Manufacturing Impunity

RSS The Oil Drum

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Onion (Satire)

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Physics arXiv Blog

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Political Circus

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Principle of Imminent Collapse

  • Emergent Characteristics and Behaviors
  • Flash Flooding and The PIC
  • Photo of the Day - Feb 12, 2024
  • Lunar New Year Year of the Dragon
  • My MERCHR shop of ClickaSnap Images
  • ClickASnap has partnered with Merchr Hub for Print on Demand
  • The PIC in Everyday Situations
  • Dear Readers of the PIC
  • The AI Revolution Will Be What We Make It
  • Hop on Over to My New Blog

RSS The Rag Blog

  • MICHAEL MEEROPOL / REMEMBRANCE / David Rosner, a great public intellectual, a defender of public health
  • SUSAN VAN HAITSMA / CULTURE / Down on the Drag: Austin Music History
  • ALICE EMBREE / MEDICARE / Taking on the Medicare Disadvantage
  • AUSPOP / CULTURE / Retrospective of Underground Comix Pioneer Gilbert Shelton
  • ALLEN YOUNG / OPINION / June: From shame to pride
  • BRUCE MELTON: UNGINEERING, Not Geoengineering
  • ALICE EMBREE / MAY DAY! MAY DAY!
  • ALICE EMBREE / HISTORY / Where on earth was The Rag?
  • JAN LANCE / RETIREES / Senior Solidarity
  • MICHAEL MEEROPOL / FOREIGN POLICY / Trump’s War of Choice

RSS The Raw Story

  • Meddling Hegseth decides to 'fix' suspension for beach-buzzing Apache pilots
  • Trump’s late-night ‘shock move’ leaves experts horrified over midterms: ‘My stomach sank’
  • 'Terrible sign': experts warn Wall Street is chasing Trump over a financial cliff
  • 'Cease Fire is OVER!' Trump declares in Truth Social Post
  • 'Leave us the hell alone!' Dem bigwigs warned of catastrophe if they swarm into Maine
  • 'Fool': Kash Patel gets stark warning as he takes on furious GOP
  • ‘They’re gonna impeach!’ RNC chair panics over potential GOP midterm shallacking
  • 'What happened?' MAGA actor James Woods' social media lockdown raises questions
  • CIA staffers secretly admit they're scared by Trump's impact on agency
  • ‘I will not sign’: Trump defies GOP in tantrum over stalled voter ID bill

RSS The Satanic Capitalist

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Siberian Times: Ecology

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Skeptical Humorist

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Smirking Chimp

  • MAGA Man Arrested for ‘Lewd Acts’ at a Trump Rally Blames Antifa — to a Puppet
  • Trump Family Grift Now Extends to Guns
  • Who’s Gonna Buy All the AI Stuff?
  • This Deadly Heat Wave Has a Culprit
  • Stealing Democracy: Trump’s Assault on Birthright Citizenship
  • What Happens When Trump Voters Realize They Want the Same Thing Progressives are Working For?
  • Applying the Imperial Rule in the Strait of Hormuz
  • ICE Kills, DHS Lies: The New Normal of Trump’s America
  • Veterans, Military Members, and Families Marched Against Fascism and War on July 4
  • Seriously, Where Does Trump’s Power Come From?

RSS The Sociological Cinema

  • Don't Be Racist!
  • Don't Be a Racist!
  • How One Sociologist is Using Fiction to Address Trauma, Healing, and Interpersonal Relationships: An Interview with Dr. Patricia Leavy
  • No going back to normal--the left must seize the moment and dominate the crisis
  • An Open Letter: What Is the End-goal of Sociology?
  • ​Film: A Case of Literary Sociology
  • Tracking the Model Minority Trope in Hollywood Film
  • Sociologist’s New Novel Teaches Research Methods and Critical Thinking
  • Racism, Can You Talk About It? An Infographic Assignment
  • An Interview with Dr. Patricia Leavy about the Handbook of Arts-Based Research

RSS The Solari Blog Report

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Thin Red Line

  • Cuba was saved from a brutal, destabilizing despotism
  • Impediments to Peace in Syria
  • Microchip your Pets!
  • The Federal Reserve: A quintessentially capitalist institution
  • Guilty of everything: How America scapegoats a public dissident
  • The right to suppress human rights: 2 case studies
  • Thoughts on the Shuttering of Al Jazeera America
  • My house for a kingdom: Israel resists Palestinian concessions
  • Human life is too important to let police take it with impunity
  • Palestinians Demand huge Concessions - Survival, Rights & Non-destroyed Infrastructure

RSS The Tree

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Usual Mix

  • Što se MUP-u mota po glavi zadnjih 50+ godina?
  • “Nekultura” hrvatskih “biciklista”
  • Zagrebačke Mickey Mouse biciklističke staze, 2841. nastavak: 3. generacija loših rubnjaka
  • Trijumf “zdravog razuma”
  • Otvoreno pismo B.net-u/A1
  • Biciklom po svijetu: pokret!
  • Biciklom po svijetu: dalmatinsko zaleđe
  • Aktivistička posla: Upravni sud srušio Studiju utjecaja na okoliš za golf na Srđu
  • Kratka povijest hrvatskih šefova države
  • Reforma kurikuluma

RSS The Yes Men

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Yes Men Blog

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Young Turks

  • Republicans Have A School Shooting Conspiracy Theory
  • The Young Turks LIVE! 2.20.18
  • How To Get Featured On TYT
  • White People Claiming To Be Attacked At Black Panther
  • Your Boss Might Be Stealing From You But There's Nothing You Can Do About It
  • Cancer Drug Price Raised 1400%
  • WORST National Anthem Performance EVER
  • Conservatives Attacking School Shooting Survivors Online
  • Democratic Focus Group Has Some Bad News...
  • Top REPUBLICAN Donor: No More Money Until AR-15 Ban

RSS This is Ecocide

  • Fausto Pocar
  • Robert Bray
  • Untitled
  • Ocean for Ecocide Law: coming together to legally protect the ocean
  • Agriculture and a liveable planet: the transformative role of ecocide law
  • Davos 2023: the transformative power of ecocide law
  • Accelerating strategic positive change: the business case for ecocide law
  • Recognizing ecocide: a legal framework to protect nature, communities and our common future
  • Global crisis and the potential of the ICC: relevance of ecocide as the fifth crime
  • Powerful and practical legal tools in pursuit of climate justice

RSS Thom Hartmann

  • Sue's Stack is moving
  • Monday 06 March '23 show notes
  • Friday 03 March '23 show notes
  • Thursday 02 March '23 show notes
  • Wednesday 01 March '23 show notes
  • Tuesday 28 February '23 show notes
  • Monday 27 February '23 show notes
  • Friday 24 February '23 show notes
  • Thursday 23 February '23 show notes
  • Wednesday 22 February '23 show notes

RSS Thomas Riggins’ Blog

  • As Parents Reject Vitamin K Shots, Some Babies Develop Devastating Bleeding By Maggie Astor— NYT 7/9/2026
  • PUTIN'S POPULARITY AT LOWEST LEVEL SINCE 2022!!!
  • NEW POST NYT 6/25/2026
  • FIVE GENDERS AND COUNTING?
  • COMMENTARY on The Process of Democratization a book by Lukcás on Soviet democracy
  • The truth about October 7
  • The Coming War Expansion
  • TRUMP/PUTIN APPROVAL RATINGS
  • Untitled
  • China's Road to Socialism

RSS Thoughts On The Roof

  • Punctuated Evolution
  • The AMOC
  • Chris Hayes and Bill McKibbin
  • Arctic - Antarctic tipping point
  • Iran's nuclear ambitions
  • Democracy
  • Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny
  • An open letter to Kamala
  • The call for an end of the war and for a two state solution
  • Sorting out the American System of government

RSS Three E’s

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Tom Toles

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Too Much Online

  • In France, Echoes of a Daring FDR
  • A Flying Public Finally Erupts
  • The Railroad Robber Baron Returns
  • The Charities Making Inequality Worse
  • Has America Become Too Generous?
  • Policing in America’s Plutocracy
  • A New Rationalization for Riches
  • Standing Up for ‘Bullied’ CEOs
  • By the Numbers
  • What Makes a Recession ‘Great’?

RSS Top of the Ticket

  • Letters to the Editor: Loneliness is at epidemic levels. We still need small talk
  • Letters to the Editor: One movie foreshadowed the U.S.' current troubles, but is still optimistic
  • Letters to the Editor: We can't let more innocent Cubans die as a result of our blockade
  • Letters to the Editor: Somehow, it's become NATO's job to infantilize the president
  • Letters to the Editor: The radicals on the left don't compare to the racism on the far right
  • Granderson: When a young Black man dies mysteriously in the South, assume nothing
  • Contributor: What a 700-year-old Italian fresco can teach America today
  • Letters to the Editor: Our federal museums are no place for 'censorship and revisionist history'
  • Letters to the Editor: Mexicans have achieved elite status in plenty of fields beyond soccer
  • Letters to the Editor: Alcohol use requires a rational approach, not marginalization

RSS Transition Voice

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Transparency International News Feed

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Treasure Islands

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Tree Hugger

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Triple Crisis

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS TRNN: Audio Feed

  • UK Local Elections: Labour Moves Forward
  • 200th Anniversary of the Birth of Marx and a Revolution in Understanding History
  • Ohio Governor's Race: Kucinich Attacks Cordray's 'Left' Credentials
  • Activists Discuss How Public Officials Thwart Accountability for Sexual Harassment
  • French Unions & Students Mobilize Against Reforms: Another May '68?
  • US Gov. and Media Whitewash 'Reformer' Saudi Prince MBS as He Beheads Dissidents
  • Natalie Portman's Boycott of Netanyahu Prompts Attack by Billionaire-Backed Right-Wing Rabbi Shmuley Boteach
  • UK's 'Windrush Scandal' Shines Light on Who is an 'Illegal' Immigrant
  • 'Poison Papers': US and Canadian Regulators Colluded with Manufacturers of Highly Toxic Substances
  • Police Crack Down on Puerto Rico May Day March Against Austerity

RSS TRNN: News Feed

  • UK Local Elections: Labour Moves Forward
  • Netanyahu's Long History of Crying Wolf over Fake 'WMDs' in Iran and Iraq
  • Laura Flanders Show: Taking Down the Confederacy - Symbol by Symbol
  • 200th Anniversary of the Birth of Marx and a Revolution in Understanding History
  • US Interventions in Latin America Continue and Intensify
  • Ohio Governor's Race: Kucinich Attacks Cordray's 'Left' Credentials
  • Sixth Consecutive Week of Friday Gaza Protests Leaves Over 160 Wounded
  • Economic Update: The Contributions of Karl Marx (Pt 1/4)
  • Hopkins Students Fight Against 'School to War Pipeline'
  • Activists Discuss How Public Officials Thwart Accountability for Sexual Harassment

RSS Truth-Out

  • In the Wake of Supreme Court Rulings, Trump Purges Federal Election Agency
  • 40 Epstein-Tied Billionaires Have Injected $1.6B Into US Elections, Report Finds
  • Infant Formula Manufacturers Decide Whether to Inform FDA About Possible Harm
  • Democrats Threaten Lawsuit If Trump Tries to “Restart” Iran War
  • Geraldo Lunas Campos Died in a Texas ICE Jail. Now His Family Is Suing.
  • Amnesty Calls for War Crimes Probe as Israel Is “Wiping Out Families” in Lebanon
  • Mamdani, Tlaib Re-Up Call to Abolish ICE After Killing of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo
  • AI Is Turbocharging Bosses’ Efforts to Spy on Their Workers
  • Western Europe Just Had Its Hottest June on Record. Climate Change Is to Blame.
  • US Targets Iran Railways as It Unleashes Deluge of Strikes for Third Day

RSS Undercurrents Alternative News

  • 'Ethical loneliness’- Sheffield Documentary Festival
  • Sol Cinema gives Wales the Royal Treatment
  • Free radical counter culture videos to good home
  • Majority of Government press meetings are with right wingers
  • Watch LIVE reports from COP climate talks & resistance in Glasgow
  • Court rules undercover policing operation against protest movements were 'unlawful and sexist'
  • Exploding Cinema- video art in the 1990s- new book out
  • Crane protest in support of Palestine at Vauxhall, London
  • Rich man V skateboarders of Mumbles (beep beep)
  • Solar powered Cinema accepts first cryptocurrency payment

RSS Underminers Blog

  • Underminers in German
  • Pulped
  • Autumn Migration
  • After Seasonturn : The Author as Underminer
  • The Conorol Trilogy
  • Guest Essays – At Last A Page
  • Looking for an Agent
  • The Network is No More
  • 10k and Running
  • A Fictional Start

RSS Uploads by Vsauce2

  • Giant Robot, Electronic Skin and more -- Mind Blow #117
  • Robot Muscle, Plant Tattoos and more -- Mind Blow #116
  • Skywalker Hand, Planet Discovery and more -- Mind Blow #115
  • I Eat Brains And Explain Zombies
  • Laser Mapping, Floating Island and more -- Mind Blow #114
  • Dunbar's Number (Friend Limit)
  • One-Touch Healing Device -- Mind Blow #113
  • Eclipse At Sea
  • The Invention Of Blue
  • Scapegoats

RSS Urbanomics

  • The loss of financial market discipline
  • AI for organisational and bureaucratic reforms
  • Some thoughts on the AI trade
  • Weekend reading links
  • More on the limits to China's growth trajectory
  • The problems of additionality and technology sector skew in the public funding of startups and innovation
  • Indian economy's cost competitiveness constraints - a graphical summary
  • Weekend reading links
  • Why it's hard to see beyond the dollar?
  • Comparing the R&D expenditures by Indian firms and their global peers

RSS Versobooks.com

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Veterans Today

  • Who Set Up The Hit?
  • Might The Polls Be Wrong?
  • Why Is the African Dish, Shakshuka So Popular In Israel?
  • Exploring Winning Betting Strategies In Blackjack
  • How to Identify GI Bill Fraud
  • Rumsfeld Shady Heritage in Pandemic: GILEAD’s Intrigues with WHO & Wuhan Lab. Bio-Weapons’ Tests with CIA & Pentagon
  • Age Old Battle Between Khazarian Mafia and True Christianity Crashing Into Finality
  • Shipping to Poland from the US: Navigating Customs Clearance
  • Braving the Storm and Tackling Addiction in the Ranks of US Veterans
  • Navigating the Transition from Battlefield to Civilian Life for Our Homefront Heroes

RSS Vice

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Vimeo Video Picks

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Volatility

  • The Final Addiction
  • Where it Comes From and Where it Goes
  • Ordeal
  • The Intact Against the Cult (with notes on public protest)
  • Come Home
  • Springtime
  • Desert City
  • Make A Desert to Prepare the Way for the Beast
  • Why Reject the Good News?
  • Miasma Now

RSS Waging NonViolence

  • The Yippies and the power of counterculture
  • The strategic satire of India’s Gen Z ‘Cockroach’ movement
  • Finding real national pride on America’s 250th birthday
  • An intimate reckoning with the Weather Underground
  • Trump’s repression of dissent is backfiring
  • Inside Albania’s youth-led ‘flamingo revolution’
  • The data center backlash that’s uniting America
  • The left needs better answers for scared people
  • Time traveling to a 1980s ACT UP meeting through theater
  • ICE will be at the World Cup, but organizers are ready

RSS Waldenswimmer

  • Paul Beckwith, thinking WAY outside the box
  • Saturday Morning Essay: "Pond Scum," a New Yorker article by Kathryn Schulz
  • Now Is the Winter of Our Discontent Made Glorious Summer
  • Over at Fielding's Place
  • Check in with Fielding Mellish over at the other place
  • Arctic Sea Ice and Weird Weather
  • A few notes from Mellish on 9-11 Truther
  • A Reply from Professor Oscar Pemantle
  • Over at Fielding Mellish Observations
  • Politically Incorrect observations at Fielding's Place

RSS Wall of Controversy

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS War Criminals Watch

  • 4/7/25 Israeli Troops Blow Whistle on War Crimes in Gaza 'Kill Zone'
  • 3/29/25 The Real Outrage in Yemen
  • 3/9/25 Columbia University’s Nazi Tradition
  • 11/7/24 Don't Let Democrats Whitewash What They Did on Gaza Once Trump Is in Office
  • 10/7/24 1 The Human Toll: Indirect Deaths from War in Gaza and the West Bank, October 7, 2023 Forward
  • 10/07/24 United States Spending on Israel’s Military Operations and Related U.S. Operations in the Region, October 7, 2023 – September 30, 2024
  • 10/4/24 Inside the State Department’s Weapons Pipeline to Israel
  • 9/18/24 'The Genocide Gentry': Weapon Execs Sit on Boards of Universities, Institutions
  • 9/16/24 Biden Genocide Case: Legal Experts, Ex-Diplomats, Human and Civil Rights Groups Urge Court to Review Palestinians’ Claims That Biden Is Enabling Israel’s Genocide in Gaza
  • 9/1/24 UARCs: The American Universities that Produce Warfighters

RSS War in Context

  • Attention to the Unseen
  • The poison in Britain’s Labour Party
  • We have become enslaved by our impatience
  • A history of hype behind Cambridge Analytica
  • Facebook employees feel increasingly responsible for the world’s problems
  • The ancient hunt in which the tracker’s skill united reason and imagination
  • Novichok chemical attack near Porton Down fed catnip to conspiracy theorists
  • The depletion of the human microbiome and how it can be restored
  • Are we smart enough to know how smart animals are?
  • The immobilization of life on Earth

RSS War is a Crime

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Washington’s Blog

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Water is Life

  • Another World Water Day Gone
  • Humanitarian Disaster in the Sahara
  • We Are The Cure
  • The Future Is Now the Present
  • A Thank you
  • Making Rivers Come Alive...My Struggle To Live
  • Planning For An Island's Demise
  • Keep Talking...
  • NASA/Water In Space
  • Climate Change Drying Up One of World's Largest Lakes

RSS We Meant Well

  • State to Save Millions Closing Visa Offices Across Africa
  • The Next Stage of U.S.-Iran Relations
  • Supreme Court, Birthright Citizenship, and Espionage
  • Does a Secret State Department Office Promote Neo-Nazism?
  • Morality, Responsibility, and Immigration
  • For Springsteen Fans Now Angry with Bruce
  • School Violence and China
  • Why the Ben Franklin Fellowship at State?
  • Is Iran a Turning Point?
  • Whistleblowers, Leakers, and Spies

RSS Web of Debt

  • AI Abundance, Part 4: THE CLARITY ACT AND THE STABLECOIN WARS
  • AI ABUNDANCE, PART 3: GOVERNMENT MONEY WITHOUT STRINGS ATTACHED
  • The AI Revolution: Where Capitalism Meets Socialism: The Abundance Paradigm, Part 2
  • THE ABUNDANCE PARADIGM: WHY AI FORCES A RETHINKING OF MONEY ITSELF — PART 1
  • All Wars Are Bankers’ Wars: Iran and the Bankers’ Endgame
  • Regime Change at the Fed: From Big Bank Bailouts to Local Productivity
  • The Wealth Concentration Engine: Rethinking America’s Financial Plumbing
  • Compound Interest Is Devouring the Federal Budget: It’s Time to Take Back the Money Power
  • Why New York City Needs a Public Bank
  • How a Fed Overhaul Could Eliminate the Federal Debt Crisis, Part II: Curbing Fed Independence

RSS What If?

  • Comet Ice
  • Star Ownership
  • Transatlantic Car Rental
  • Hailstones
  • Hot Banana

RSS Where’s Our Money

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Whole Larder Love: Grow Gather Hunt Cook

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Who What Why

  • Progress Should Be Our Most Important Product
  • Slain Immigrant Got the ICE Treatment Republicans Think He Deserved
  • Trump Fires EAC Commissioners in Latest Broadside Against Democracy
  • Workers Are Deserting the US Labor Force. Experts Can’t Agree on Why.
  • As Platner Suspends Campaign, Challenges Lurk and Opportunity Looms for Dems
  • Removing AI From Your Google Account
  • Alaska GOP Pushes 800-Mile Gas Terminal & Pipeline That Could Decimate Climate
  • Eloquence: Yet Another Thing Missing From America’s Joyless Fourth of July
  • Bronx Zoo Eyes Tenn. Sanctuary for Patty, Its Last Remaining Elephant
  • Trump’s Plan To Deface Federal Property

RSS Why Evolution Is True

  • AI leads to massive cheating at Brown
  • Friday: Hili dialogue
  • NYT news editor says he wouldn’t have run Kristof’s dog-rape column
  • The “progressive” biases of ChatGPT
  • Thursday: Hili dialogue
  • Jesus ‘n’ Mo ‘n’ feminism
  • Readers’ wildlife photos

RSS Wild Ancestors

  • Untitled
  • Wild Free & Happy Sample 65
  • Wild Free and Happy Sample 64
  • Wild Free and Happy Sample 63
  • Wild Free and Happy Sample 62
  • Wild Free and Happy Sample 61
  • Wild Free and Happy Sample 60
  • Wild New World
  • Wild Free and Happy sample 84: Wild Free Isolation
  • Wild Free and Happy sample 83 Update: Human Web

RSS William Bowles

  • Pentagon turns earthquake into occupation of Venezuela
  • Reminder – please donate to bring film about the future of food to the world
  • Iranian Hypersonic Missiles Takeout US Command & Control Sites – IRGC Prepares For Ground Invasion
  • The Backdoor Empire: When Chinese Sensors Expose U.S. Cyber Hypocrisy
  • Stay out of the heat, officials said. The apps sent workers into it
  • How the Global Food Economy Is Killing Children: The Twenty-Eighth Newsletter (2026)
  • Black Agenda Report July 8, 2026
  • NATO’s Plantation Ledger: When Spain Refused the War Chain
  • The Israeli Spy Behind PragerU’s Plan to Rewrite American Education To Indoctrinate Children
  • Trump BOMBS Iran, US Bases Under Iranian Fire – Full-Scale War BACK ON | KJ Noh

RSS Wired – Danger Room

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Wolff Economics

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Work of the Negative

  • Trump to Ukraine/Europe: Drop dead
  • Syrian revolution topples Assad: preliminary thoughts
  • Lead-editorial article: The U.S. election as manifestation of counterrevolution
  • The U.S. election as manifestation of counterrevolution
  • Review of Terminal Warfare
  • The perfect COP head is the oil honcho al-Jaber
  • Trumpist coup reveals fascist threat and Left’s philosophic void
  • The Trump administration’s fear of teenagers
  • No One Is Too Small to Make a Difference, by Greta Thunberg–book review
  • Climate strikes as resistance and revolutionary potential: the connection with Marcuse’s concept of the liberation of nature as determinant between socialism and fascism

RSS Wunderground: Dr. Jeff Masters

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS WWS

  • Australia: Telstra outage stops trains, blocks emergency calls
  • ICE murder in Houston: Trump’s war against the working class
  • Montefiore moves to eliminate 12 Bronx nursing positions in AI restructuring
  • Utah book banning spree part of a broader, preemptive campaign of censorship and oppression
  • Trump bombs Iran for third day amid Khamenei funeral
  • Sri Lankan government abandons cyclone-affected tea plantation workers
  • Join us to expand the Nexteer Workers Rank-and-File Committee! Support Will Lehman’s insurgent campaign for UAW president!
  • VW Action Committee calls for strikes and industrial action at all sites. Break the control of the IG Metall union apparatus! Defend every job!
  • Colombian President Petro accused of “coup” by Trump-backed president-elect
  • New Zealand woman released after 73 days in ICE detention

RSS Yale Environment 360

  • Ugandan Farmers Sue to Halt East Africa Pipeline Before It Goes Online
  • Beyond Lithium: New Battery Tech Starts to Break Through
  • What Do We Actually Know About the Microplastics Inside Us?
  • Collapse of Atlantic Currents May Already Be ‘Locked In’
  • In Overfished Adriatic Sea, Dolphins Look to Trawlers for Food
  • A Home Battery Revolution Is Reshaping the Power Grid
  • After a Civil Rights Complaint, Chicago Built Largest Air Monitoring Network in the U.S.
  • The Loss of Glaciers Is Inflicting a Spiritual Toll on Indigenous People
  • In East Africa, a Controversial Oil Project Is Poised for Production
  • Like Humans, Mediterranean Sperm Whales Have Their Own Dialects

RSS Yes Magazine

  • The World Is Burning—Does the YES! Approach Still Matter?
  • Beyond Criminality in the U.S. Immigration System
  • Lessons From the Māori and Japanese Peoples on Grieving Pregnancy Loss
  • Messages of Fierce Hope From the Global South
  • Boycotts Are Back: Queer Travelers Fight Bigotry With Their Wallets
  • Growing Up On the Migration Route
  • Recovering Lost Stories From Trans History
  • The Freedom to Choose Hysterectomy
  • St. Louis Says “Not Another Nickel” to Human Rights Violators
  • Voters Demand a Bolder and More Progressive Democratic Party

RSS Your Passport to Complaining

  • UK Communities Conference – July 9 thru 12
  • Reddit: “Why don’t they wake up?”
  • Communities Conferences 2026
  • Playgrounds and Promenades
  • A New Peruvian Commune
  • Is Texas a Dummymander?
  • AI and the midterms – Bushwick Feb 15
  • Commie Clothes Fire
  • A new Paradox Collective
  • The Joys of Censorship

RSS Z Communications Economy Page

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Zed Books

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Zero Anthropology

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Zoriah

  • New Exhibition Opening Today in Chicago
  • Children's Most Loved Toys
  • Paris Attacks
  • Happy Halloween From Paris - Père Lachaise Cemetery
  • Chernobyl Small Group Workshop - One Spot Left for December 2015

FAIR USE DISCLAIMER, US COPYRIGHT LAW

This blog may contain copyrighted material, the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. All posts are clearly attributed by name and/or active link to the original author/artist and website. I am making such material available on a non-profit basis for educational, research and discussion purposes in my efforts to advance understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. I believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in US Copyright Law, Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107. Consistent with this notice you are welcome to make 'fair use' of anything you find on this web site. However, if you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. More information at http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml.

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Collapse of Industrial Civilization
    • Join 1,090 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Collapse of Industrial Civilization
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
%d