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Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

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General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby Ibon » Sat 08 Jan 2011, 13:29:51

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', '
')So I think, rhetorically speaking, it's useful to raise the question of whether we are Kudzu ape (or smarter than yeast) but to make the leap and classify us as such is to forfeit any illusions of trying to fix things.


When an alcoholic attends his first AA meeting he has to stand before the audience and state quite clearly, " I am an alcoholic". That is the starting point to deal with a disease that is all about denying that one has a disease.
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby rangerone314 » Sat 08 Jan 2011, 15:23:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', 'O')nce you slap a derogatory label on us as a species then it removes any illusions of freewill. If there's no freewill, then there is no right and wrong.

Both freewill, and right and wrong are human inventions.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', 'E')ither you think humans are capable of more, or you don't. But to, on the one hand, portray the future in fatalistic terms, and on the other, decry our sinful species just doesn't make sense. Being wrong means there's an alternative, but if there is no choice, there is no wrong.

Describing something as it is, always makes sense, there doesn't have to be an alternative. Most people don't think cockroaches have freewill and most people decry cockroaches.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', 'T')he reason these labels are evoked is to shame all of humanity, kind of like the original sin argument. It's done in order to get on the moral high-horse and evoke hellfire and brimstone.

More like a reaction to the philosophy that man is above nature, and is superior to other species. (Superior as a child serial killer is superior to his victims)

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', 'T')his is also why I generally don't like Kunstler or Orlov's essays, since they are mainly long screeds attempting to explain why Americans are so bad. It sets up two groups of people, the enlightened ones, and everyone else who are destined to go to hell. Salvation may not be possible for the enlightened (after all, it's doom) but at least we can feel morally superior on the downslope.

Orlov strikes me as a bitter Russian wingnut failing to come to terms with failure of Russian empire. Kunstler does have a few good points at least.

I wasn't aware who came up with the term Kudzu ape, but I use it all the time myself.

It is like Cinderella.

If the shoe fits, wear it.
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby Ludi » Sat 08 Jan 2011, 21:24:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', 'I') don't see climate change really causing widespread global ecosystem collapse.



Thanks for clarifying several points.

You seem to be disagree with Cid Yama, who sees humans going extinct in the next decade or so.
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby Ludi » Sat 08 Jan 2011, 21:26:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('papa moose', '
')One question "Kudzu ape"


I don't like the term. It's too outright misanthropic.



I hate it a lot.

Much stronger reaction than merely "don't like." Hate it. A lot.
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby Ludi » Sat 08 Jan 2011, 21:29:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', '
')So I think, rhetorically speaking, it's useful to raise the question of whether we are Kudzu ape (or smarter than yeast) but to make the leap and classify us as such is to forfeit any illusions of trying to fix things.


When an alcoholic attends his first AA meeting he has to stand before the audience and state quite clearly, " I am an alcoholic". That is the starting point to deal with a disease that is all about denying that one has a disease.



I don't personally see human nature as being a disease. For more about ideas I agree with regarding human nature, see the writings of Daniel Quinn and Jason Godesky.

With them, I see human nature as no more a disease than the nature of sharks or rattlesnakes.

Our culture, on the other hand, may be a disease.

We are not humanity.

For more details, see the writings of the above. They have already written about this at length, saving me the trouble of doing so again. Read what they have to say. I will not re-write it here.
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby Ludi » Sat 08 Jan 2011, 21:33:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', '
')The reason these labels are evoked is to shame all of humanity, kind of like the original sin argument. It's done in order to get on the moral high-horse and evoke hellfire and brimstone.



You got it,

We're off the hook, it's our "nature" to destroy, being the Kudzu Ape/Sinful Adam (they are one and the same).

We can't do any different, not our behavior, it is our very BEING that is at fault. The only way we can change is to Evolve To the The Next Spiritual Plane. Or accept Jesus. Whatever.

(of course, I do not personally believe that. I believe it is our behavior, which is linked to our culture)
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby SeaGypsy » Sat 08 Jan 2011, 21:39:57

Why is it so hard to accept a conflictory state Mos?
I guess you won't answer. Obviously being human is something you are still coming to terms with.
To me your argument sounds immature.
Haven't you ever introspectively doubted yourself, yet defensively found redemption in this same self?
We are the Kudzu ape.
We are also the musical ape.
It is in your free will which aspects of yourself you want to focus on.
You don't have to believe in human sanctity to believe in free will.
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby mos6507 » Sat 08 Jan 2011, 23:27:39

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', '
')When an alcoholic attends his first AA meeting he has to stand before the audience and state quite clearly, " I am an alcoholic". That is the starting point to deal with a disease that is all about denying that one has a disease.


I don't think people are encouraged to "seek treatment" if you point at them and call them a "Kudzu Ape".
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby mos6507 » Sat 08 Jan 2011, 23:34:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rangerone314', '
')Both freewill, and right and wrong are human inventions.


Which is debatable.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rangerone314', '
')there doesn't have to be an alternative.


There doesn't have to NOT be one either. In other words, it ain't over 'til its over. The only moment in which we'll be able to make a final judgment is after our population crashes down to Georgia Guidestones levels. We're hardly that far into collapse for the final verdict to come in. I know everyone here is chomping at the bit to call this one, kind of like the Superbowl half-time game, but you're going to have to wait and see.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rangerone314', '
')More like a reaction to the philosophy that man is above nature, and is superior to other species. (Superior as a child serial killer is superior to his victims)


WTF is that supposed to mean?
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby Ibon » Sun 09 Jan 2011, 03:49:21

Kudzu Ape is what we have become but not necessarily who we are. What we have become truly resembles an invasive species.

The topic of whether Kudzu Ape can redeem his former position as an integrated part of his landscape instead of a dominating invasive is why many here are so committed to this topic of overshoot, climate change, peak oil etc.

These last posts raise the question whether this invasiveness is intrinsic in human nature or if it originates from cultures that formed since around 13000 years ago and have dominated the cultural landscape since.

I do agree that labeling humans as an invasive species intrinsically and as a fixed component of our nature is not completely correct. On the other hand concluding that our current culture is solely to blame is equally incorrect and I will share my thoughts on this below.

First a quick word on invasive species. All invasive species today on the planet are native species somewhere and ecologically well integrated in their place of origin. It is only when they are introduced that they create havoc. The European rabbit in Europe is a native but in Australia this agile placental mammal dominates its marsupial competitors in ways it never could in Europe and became very disruptive as it bloomed into a plaque since its introduction in the 19th century. These events have happened naturally and are not always caused by man. For example around 3 million years ago when the isthmus of Panama was formed it connected North and South America. The placental mammals headed south causing the extinction of marsupial ground sloths and the only marsupial that went north was the opossum that is still found today in North America.

What makes humans an invasive species today has its origins way back beyond the cultural evolution of civilization, centralized authority and agriculture. This is where Ludi and I probably disagree and where I am not completely in agreement with Daniel Quinn. Humans are ingenuous, they tinker, they invent and they are adaptive enough to become the top predator and dominate in almost all habitats. This was already true long before the advent of agriculture. Sea Gypsy pointed out some of the impacts of our tinkering human ancestors. But these ancestors where not yet Kudzu Ape. They may have caused some isolated extinctions of mega fauna and they may have created savannas using fire etc. but they still functioned in an integrated way within their environments. They mostly followed the law of limited competition as outlined in Quinn's book (Ishmael). They may have been the ultimate beavers in how they could change their landscapes but they were by no means invasive anywhere on the planet. Ludi, a little inside Quinn joke here.......humans then could be named "Leaver Beavers" :)

These ingenuous humans had an appointment with destiny back then. That their incessant tinkering and ingenuity would eventually lead them to discover tools that would empower them to depart from living within the limits set by their ecosystems and enable them to begin to "take" from their environments in ways that would lead them all the way to where we are today. Quinn explains this "taking" beautiful in Ishmael and it is a great read. For me however the book is greatly flawed in one very important aspect. In order to create the classic narrative of good and evil It sets up a false dichotomy that all humans previous to the agricultural revolution where "leavers" and egalitarian and intrinsically harmonious in their tribal cultures (good) and that the human culture that emerged after the agricultural revolution was a departure taking us all down this road of dominance (evil) . From Quinn's point of view Kudzu Human Culture began with the flawed dominance social hierarchy that came once we settled in large population centers enabled by agriculture which also enabled societies with central authorities. This lead to the arrogance and hubris of modern humans. Where as invasive species like the rabbit become disruptive when taken from their native habitats and introduced into new habitats creating havoc Quinn believes humans became invasive when we left our native habitat (pre agricultural tribal leaver culture) and were introduced into a new habitat that he calls "Taker" culture.

Sorry, as lovely a narrative as this story is it is a little too black and white in setting up this dichotomy solely on the basis of the introduction of a flawed culture. So there were really no seeds of Kudzu Ape in our early ancestors as they were tinkering with fire, stones and burning the savannas? Agriculture was discovered independently in southwestern Europe, China and Mesoamerica thousands of years ago. Was this discovery convergent because all these early modern humans adapted a flawed culture independently or was it simply the result of this incessant tinkering and ingenuity applied to your surroundings?

We are Kudzu Ape today not only because of our flawed culture but also because of our brains. It is a combination of something in our nature that tinkers so well together with this dominance. It is not quite the simple narrative of Ishmael. We are sentient mortal beings. When our sentient nature became aware of our mortality we applied our tools to try to control and mitigate this fact. This wont change by a change of culture. We are stuck with this. We are a marvelous species. Our humanity is capable of godliness. And yet we are a flawed species. The truth of this deeply wounds and hurts the sentiments of those that want to preserve a deeper concept of our humanity as idyllically integrated within the community of our fellow species on the planet and therefore we put all the blame on our current flawed culture. Dolphins and elephants and dogs and chimps may have the beginnings of sentient self awareness but even if they were aware of their own mortality they don't have the apposing thumbs to make tools to mitigate this. Why would a dolphin make a tool even if it was aware of its mortality when it lives in this aqueous habitat where it is so easy to catch fish with your smart dolphin brain. Humans didn't evolve in this type of environment. We evolved in environments that favored our apposing thumbs and brains and creating tools and this selected for intelligence until the unintended consequence happened; we woke up one day and became sentient and self aware and realized one day we will die. That truth has given us the greatest depths of our compassion but also the greatest hubris in trying to mitigate what cant be mitigated.

We will never achieve any semblance of sustainability if we don't govern the part of us that is flawed. We cant put this pre sentient "leaver beaver" humpty dumpty back together again.

I do believe the catalyst of consequences coming this century have the potential to embed in our culture the humility to self impose limits. It will come from the same sentient part of the brain that tries to control our environment because we fear our mortality. We will just become more rational in understanding the common sense in not exceeding carrying capacity. To tame the hyper individualism and submit to this consensus we will need a cultural revolution that will be as far reaching as what agriculture was 13000 years ago. But this new revolution has to weaken, threaten and start to undermine the foundations of our physical infrastructure first. In other words it has to throw our mortality back full circle into our face. We will only embed governance of sustainability in large populations of humans through the catalyst of consequences.

Until then we remain the Kudzu Ape.
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby Homesteader » Sun 09 Jan 2011, 04:11:25

Ibon,

That is a wonderfully written and thoughtful post.

Whether or not we get a second chance will become more apparent in the next couple of decades.
"The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close. In its place we are entering a period of consequences…"
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Beliefs are what people fall back on when the facts make them uncomfortable.
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby rangerone314 » Sun 09 Jan 2011, 04:44:27

I am inclined to think that Darwin-style survival of the "fittest" favors high populated, technology-oriented, domination-centered "civilizations" that obliterate "barbarians" (tribal, small-scale agricultural, hunter-gatherer, etc), before consuming that which sustains them like a fire.

I am wondering if it is an eternal cycle that humans cannot break.
An ideology is by definition not a search for TRUTH-but a search for PROOF that its point of view is right

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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby mos6507 » Sun 09 Jan 2011, 11:43:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', '
')Sorry, as lovely a narrative as this story is it is a little too black and white in setting up this dichotomy solely on the basis of the introduction of a flawed culture.


Image

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', '
')I do believe the catalyst of consequences coming this century have the potential to embed in our culture the humility to self impose limits.


When you use the word "believe", some here groan. It reminds me of the Mike Brownlee "Deep Transition" vs. "Lite Transition" bru-ha-ha. That incident has had a very strong impact on my viewpoints lately.

There are some who just can't see things in such eschatological terms. I do "believe" in "The Great Turning" as it were, whether it is wrapped in a new-age bow or is merely a label to describe the "teachable moment" that we're going through. I can't say whether it will scar humanity enough (assuming we survive) to permanently change our culture, though. It's safe to say there will be far more malthusian red-pillers down the road than there is today, which I guess is some consolation to those of us like myself who feel so ideologically alone. I don't think everyone will get the memo, though, because we are so apt to deny, mythologize, rationalize, and scapegoat. What was true when the Mayans were sacrificing to the Gods to bring back the failed crops will be no different vs. those who "drill baby drill" to bring back Morning in America(TM). I just stop short of saying everybody falls into that basket of hopeless ignorance, or even that everyone who subscribes to that is destined to stay in that straightjacket to the end.

The editorial on the front page from a guy in West Virginia is a case-in-point. We should begin to see 'awakenings' happen in the most unlikely places. As much as the bitter part of my would like to stomp my feet and say categorically that this or that group of people just can't "get it", there are already exceptions to the rule. I guess that's what keeps me going, although if all we get are "exceptions" there's no hope of enough critical mass to really help matters other than maybe allowing the formation of some well-armed lifeboats.

So I'd very much like to see positive action above "awakenings", something a little more than screwing in a CFL or planting a few apple trees. I guess where I diverge from the "Lite Transition" crowd is I think you can't really have much useful action without first having an awakening. Because of Jeavon's Paradox, short-term costs guide people's decisions. If you believe in the frog boiling in the pot, then death-bed conversions aren't that useful. Just-in-time decisionmaking doesn't work. It doesn't work in regards to the latency of climate feedbacks or peak oil. Instead what you'll have are token gestures that don't really build much resilience, but once it gets to the point where the novelty wears off and people feel too inconvenienced, they will lean back onto BAU. Insofar as leaning back onto BAU, such as the 3,000 mile salad, or driving the roomy SUV vs. taking public transit, in some small part, continues to push us over the cliff, then we really haven't accomplished much with that 4x4 raised bed of heirloom tomatoes and all of the Transition Town potlucks where nothing was accomplished but talking about American Idol.
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby Ludi » Sun 09 Jan 2011, 11:49:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', '
')Sorry, as lovely a narrative as this story is it is a little too black and white in setting up this dichotomy solely on the basis of the introduction of a flawed culture.


Much less black and white than "the flawed nature of Man" aka "Kudzu Ape."

If it is our "nature" to destroy, we can't change unless we evolve to the next spiritual plane. If it is our behavior (culture), then we can change. Cultures have changed in the past, there is historical precedent.
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby Ibon » Sun 09 Jan 2011, 13:17:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', '
')Sorry, as lovely a narrative as this story is it is a little too black and white in setting up this dichotomy solely on the basis of the introduction of a flawed culture.


Much less black and white than "the flawed nature of Man" aka "Kudzu Ape."

If it is our "nature" to destroy, we can't change unless we evolve to the next spiritual plane. If it is our behavior (culture), then we can change. Cultures have changed in the past, there is historical precedent.


Of course our culture will change. And soon. Don't be fooled by what appears resilient denial. It will crumble when undermined by consequences. Unfortunately change does not coincide with ones own life cycle. Mos would be less frustrated by what he sees as cultural entrenchment if he would let go of the need that cultural change has to coincide with his own maturity as an adult.

Perhaps we are glorious because of our imperfections?
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby Ibon » Sun 09 Jan 2011, 13:49:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', ' ') I guess where I diverge from the "Lite Transition" crowd is I think you can't really have much useful action without first having an awakening.


I diverge from this Lite Transition crowd also in that they believe we can painlessly transition without the catalyst of brutal consequences. They see awakening as some process where we can all coordinate locally and with nations a grand plan of sustainability starting now. As if our entrenched "taker" culture only needs to be informed and educated. That actually is about as naive as you can get.

Deep cultural changes will only happen when consequences penetrate down to the core origins of our flawed culture. Only then can Kudzu Ape be redeemed. Only then can the consequences also reveal the parts of our nature that is not perfect. I am not using the word flawed. Our rational brains will not stop tinkering. The tinkering however has to stay within boundaries which will be set by cultural transition that mirrors how nature and healthy ecosystems function. Only consequences will hammer this home. Not urban planning.

This Taker culture has to play out to the extreme that it comes full circle once again being confronted by the environment that it believed it could dominate. We are cocky adolescents about to get slammed. Humbled. Big Time.

It just might not happen tomorrow or even in 10 years. Don't count on it mirroring your own life.
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby Ibon » Sun 09 Jan 2011, 18:16:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', '
')When you use the word "believe", some here groan. It reminds me of the Mike Brownlee "Deep Transition" vs. "Lite Transition" bru-ha-ha. That incident has had a very strong impact on my viewpoints lately.


Mos, thanks for that link. I read through it. It was interesting.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')is argument is that at the heart of the challenges facing us is a crisis of a culture that has become disconnected both from nature and also from a sense of connectedness to the rest of life. There’s some validity to this argument but the conclusion Michael reaches from it – i.e. you can’t successfully do Transition without engaging the ‘Sacred’ as a central part of the approach – seems to be the perfect recipe to alienate, bewilder and sideline Transition in the US or anywhere else, to condemn it to the back pages of Kindred Spirit magazine and restrict it to a very narrow slice of society.


At the center of this debate is engaging more people and not alienating them. So you tone down the message and work on the practical. On the other hand a toned down message wont really wake up the masses therefore Michael pushes for engaging the "Sacred" which this critic says will only alienate people as this borders on the religious.

I read through this conundrum and my interpretation comes back to the missing catalyst of consequences. Putting so much emphasis on consequences might seem an intellectually lazy position and a refusal to engage in all the nuts and bolts required to get transition started.

But this "Deep Transition" vs "Lite Transition" debate only really points out that the wheels are spinning in the mud and the transmission hasn't yet engaged the gears.

I agree with the engaging the "Sacred" by the way. Consequences will eventually awaken a mysticism in our reverence toward the planet. That will also be a consequence.

If the revolution is deep enough it can in fact deeply change existing religions or even replace them with a new mythology around the relationship with our planet.

It is not only political governance that will manage high populations of humans sustainably after the bottleneck. To succeed humans will need a new mythology with taboos and the sacred intertwined with governance.

How deeply do the consequences have to reach to make the population accept such a mythology?
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby SeaGypsy » Sun 09 Jan 2011, 21:03:34

My vision quest suggests this sense of awe and sensitivity to nature is the primordial key with which we initially opened Pandora's box. Curiosity and the cat. Calling it sacredness is correct for those who have not some connotation about organised religion and this word. Those who own their sense of sacredness, rather than the spoon fed variety. There is the problem with using such language. It has been perverted and subverted to serve the dominant collective and their paradigm. Often it will inspire the exact opposite of awe and sensitivity to nature; paranoia and withdrawal. This keeps the consumer animal consuming.
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Re: Hyper individualism vs the tyranny of the group

Unread postby mos6507 » Sun 09 Jan 2011, 21:19:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', '
')I read through this conundrum and my interpretation comes back to the missing catalyst of consequences. Putting so much emphasis on consequences might seem an intellectually lazy position and a refusal to engage in all the nuts and bolts required to get transition started.


To me it keeps revolving around the central question of last-minute change. If you accept he Hirsch report, that serious mitigation would need to have taken place decades before peakoil, and if you accept what the climate scientists say, that what we do around this time can make or break passing tipping points (like the methane bomb that Cid and a few others think already went off) then waiting around for "consequences" is SUICIDAL. There, frankly, won't be much left for us to save if we do that.

It seems to me that Greer is much more optimistic when it comes to this point. That's why he pushes Green Wizardry. He seems to think we'll have this explosion of resourcefulness as we scurry around like chickens with our heads cut off, in panic mode. Surely we are a resourceful species, but there is a limit to how you can adapt to serious carrying capacity deficits brought on by peak everything, the depths of which will largely be determined based on how proactive we are starting, like, yesterday.

Let me give you an example. With all the permaculture stuff that is discussed. This stuff needs ramp up time. Lots of ramp up time. Martin Crawford put 15 years into building his temperate food forest, for instance. I hear about grand projects all the time, like planting chestnuts all over median strips in Vermont. Great ideas, but ideas that, based on my timeline of collapse, better the hell get a move on now if they have any hope of paying off when we need them the most. Otherwise you're going to have these piddling little saplings struggling to grow when people are paying $100 for a loaf of bread.

Instead what we will have is whatever last-minute things are possible when people instantly get off their duff, but they are left with land covered in asphalt etc... Sure, you can evoke the Cuban experience all you want, considering that it wasn't the perfect analog of doom that it's sold as. I am not very optimistic that a last-minute approach will have anywhere near the success than starting well in advance.

Maybe that's all we can expect, but I am just not satisfied with this. I am not comforted with the idea that people will hit a breaking point and then rush to their shovels to start planting potatoes. If that means you're going to have Cassandras out there trying to preach to deaf ears, my hat's off to them. Go out there, burn yourself out, take a break, then get back out there and be spat on again.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', '
')But this "Deep Transition" vs "Lite Transition" debate only really points out that the wheels are spinning in the mud and the transmission hasn't yet engaged the gears.


More specifically what is going on is a costly and time-consuming diversion of the blame-game. Instead of making the leap of judging others in a negative light, which would in essence cause us to classify them as incorrigible and hence write them off, Transitioners are starting to burn their own at the stake. So suddenly it's Mike Brownlee or other "uppity" people who are sabotaging the movement by laying it down straight, not that people might just be ignorant, gullible, or selfish. By Transition avoiding the dogmatic, it also has no real teeth. Since nobody's lifestyle can be "wrong" and everybody is welcomed in the tent, what can we ever expect people to do?

Transition Towns act like direct democracy, so they "go where they want to go". If you happen to live in West Virginia, that might mean the town opting for "relocalized" CTL plant, since we all know global warming's a crock and we have to keep the cars running. Rob's not the Pope so he's not going to tell a WV transition town to say no to coal if that's what their strongest natural resource is.

You see what I mean? If a Transition movement can only reflect the preexisting culture of the populace, then it will always lead to a "brown tech" approach to an EDAP. It will not engage in a complete paradigm shift.

If that's all Transition aims to do, then count me out.
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