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Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby americandream » Wed 21 May 2014, 07:56:53

There will never be a return to feudalism which was characterised by pre-indutrial social forms. Any descent from capitalism will reflect the greed inculcated in this social-economy. In other words, it will be a brutish barbarism devoid of the religious norms that were a natural function of pre-industrialism.
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby sparky » Wed 21 May 2014, 07:57:19

.
The classic form for crushing small farmers is big taxes ,
they get into debt when the harvest is not prefect
the debts grow while the corn doesn't
a few interminable and expensive lawsuits

they sell cheap to the big man , who just happen not to pay taxes and is the local judge
it's all legal
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby Pops » Wed 21 May 2014, 14:01:01

I moved the archiving posts over here:
knowledge-archiving-media-methods-etcetc-t69760.html
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby Mesuge » Fri 23 May 2014, 20:47:58

The timeline and sequencing of trigger points is still not certain. I do follow majority of the prominent energy depletion and economic forcasters/analysts and the prevailing order could flip by 2015-17 as well as 2020-25, can't be predicted with razor sharp accuracy.

I guess replanting that "greek austerity" plan by TPTB can provide several years, perhaps even 2-3 decades of relatively orderly descent before another profound round of stair case step down occurs (freefall into dark ages). General population demonstrates and still surprises with ever so highly unusual docile-sheepish behaviour event after event, i.e. people will swallow almost everything these days, especially the youngest generation - give them a lowcost toy (social networks) and they will just crawl down in the basement without job and no anti establishment attitudes. It will be a combination of simply petering out (older generations and passive people starving out), active refusal/escape from the system (small neo-farm movement), and fight for the urban-industrial scraps. This diverse combo of trends will in aggregate decimate lot of systemic demand on the resources in quite short order. So, skillfull feudals can establish pockets of order here and there.

However, in practice even the immediate lite-collapse phase in next few years will be doomerish anyhow, insuficient diet, high mortality rates, crumbling infrustructure, local and int. insecurity, ..

As someone said earlier the "3rd world" will become quite bigger soon (the "1st" getting way smaller).
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby careinke » Sat 24 May 2014, 00:39:31

I plan to be a feudal lord/Mentor. My goal will be to establish as many perma ethical fiefdoms as I can, as quickly as I can. I've already begun.
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby Mesuge » Sat 24 May 2014, 03:20:19

/Mentor Yes. That's a good plan, there will be many new "clueless" land owners, when we look at the history they always needed smart and skillfull craftsman, landsurveyors, architects, waterway engineers etc. Perma-man is or should be all of the above. However, I do note that future perma-ethics would be a very broader spectrum in terms of human interactions compared to contemporary meaning if you haven't noticed yet there is also growing number of "armed preppers" picking up some specific parts of perma approach (food, land care).. Is the coming bottleneck going to affect human nature as jumping platform to higher ethical level, could be, but it's not guranteed. So far it never worked that way, greed, exploitation, territoriality, violence, .. still remain to this day as core definition points of human race-psyche mix after unspeakable number of prior resets and collapses, wasted opportunities to evolve.
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby Pops » Sat 24 May 2014, 10:01:14

Yeah, in the very long run it will be city-states alternatively trading and warring with neighbors, sorta like today, just with shorter range weapons.
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby vtsnowedin » Sat 24 May 2014, 14:55:51

I doubt that we will ever return to a mid evil style feudalism. There is just too much knowledge spread about in so many places , (libraries books in private homes , thumb drives, PCs etc.) that you could not wipe out vast chunks of knowledge as was done by the Christians in the middle ages by destroying a few major libraries .
Also much of the population is educated enough that they are not expecting a return of a messiah of any stripe and will not sit and pray for salvation while they starve or serve an oppressive master but will seek out and find solutions to their predicament.
The exact form of government ,social, and economic structures post peak is unknown but a return to feudal fiefdoms with lords in a manor fed by serfs tilling fields with ox drawn plows is not a likely result.
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby Pops » Sat 24 May 2014, 15:56:46

Knowledge without surplus power is useless for the average serf.

Did humans grow a huge cranium 200 years ago and Boom! iPhones?

Naw, we had a huge brain already. So what changed?

Fossil fuels.

We'll not forget some of what we learned but I don't think any of us here have much of an idea what that means. If our salvation is knowledge, then why are so many people living a neolithic existence so long after so many breakthroughs in basic science?
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby Beery1 » Sat 24 May 2014, 15:59:30

The sort of catastrophe that would herald a return to feudalism would be far, far beyond anything likely in the aftermath of peak oil. All the feudalism ballyhoo seems to me to be the wet dream of far right libertarians and neo-nazis who seem to think that they'll somehow be elevated from their jobs cleaning toilets and unplugging drains to the position of feudal overlords. Not gonna happen.

The reality is that feudalism had a complex cultural system supporting it, and virtually nothing remains of that system. Also, virtually the entirety of political and social history since the Enlightenment would have to be wiped from human memory. It's just not gonna happen. Besides, there is simply no basis for the idea that feudalism is some fundamental state to which all cultures may revert when faced with stress.

It might be fun to talk about, but it's about as likely as Santa Claus being elected president of the World Bank.
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby Pops » Sat 24 May 2014, 16:04:17

So then it will be:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 's')mall villages inhabited by self-sufficient, low-energy, and low-consumption locavores,

Right?
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby ralfy » Sun 25 May 2014, 00:28:41

One can probably consider various places worldwide where societal breakdown has taken place. In such places, many are forced to live in small communities with very little consumption while paramilitary groups or bandits prey on them and attack each other.
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby americandream » Sun 25 May 2014, 02:21:39

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Mesuge', 'T')he timeline and sequencing of trigger points is still not certain. I do follow majority of the prominent energy depletion and economic forcasters/analysts and the prevailing order could flip by 2015-17 as well as 2020-25, can't be predicted with razor sharp accuracy.


Whats your guess at a likely date? I tend to watch China. Global capitalism is heavily invested in that factory and once they start to pull out en masse, the end is nigh.
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby Strummer » Sun 25 May 2014, 05:41:55

I think a few people are taking the "feudalism" part too literally. It's more about the "organisational" aspect of things. Having a small part of population which is wealthy and free to do anything they want on one side, and a large poor population that is bound by various debts to thier place of living / employment, etc... with all their option severly restricted, on the other side. Which is exactly what has been happening in the last 30 years, especially in the US, with its education debts, health care debts and mortgages. Education or access to information does not help you in any way, when the society around you is organised in a way which forces you into lifelong debt tenure since early childhood.
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby phaster » Tue 27 May 2014, 01:03:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('americandream', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Mesuge', 'T')he timeline and sequencing of trigger points is still not certain. I do follow majority of the prominent energy depletion and economic forcasters/analysts and the prevailing order could flip by 2015-17 as well as 2020-25, can't be predicted with razor sharp accuracy.


Whats your guess at a likely date? I tend to watch China. Global capitalism is heavily invested in that factory and once they start to pull out en masse, the end is nigh.


A strong contender for such a trigger point IMHO, will happen next June in 2015. That is when the US government accounting rules change and must take into account public employee pensions:

http://articles.latimes.com/2014/apr/09 ... a-20140410

From what I can gather, it seems "returns" have been modeled to be too optimistic, and payouts are very generous

http://www.city-journal.org/2013/23_1_calpers.html

Basically a realization will occur here in the US credit markets that "credit" can't be paid back (because debts will be put onto a balance sheet), which will in turn cause the public to not have confidence in the economy and make people save what they have instead of spending what have or use credit.

Right now those with access to credit are looking at their savings not earning much, so what I've seen is some asset classes like real estate (in prime areas) are being bid up in price (for example in NY city, San Francisco and even my home town of San Diego). Basically the global investor class is looking to invest in "prime" real estate in the USA because so it seems to be a "political" safe haven, and relative economic bargain (for example prime real estate in Hong Kong is 10x as expensive as it is in California).

China too has a problem in mal-investiment, but the difference is its a central planned economy, they are a creditor nation (they hold lots of US bonds), and don't keep "open books" (which unlike the USA has some rules and regulations which can be used as a benchmark)

Japan and Europe, are not great places to invest because they both have aging populations and social welfare programs in place that are going to be a drag on the economy as time goes. Further more, both Japan and the EU are going to be net importers of energy (or said another way both areas are going to be even more dependent on outside regions for "raw" energy stock)

The USA by contrast does have "raw" energy reserves, but won't be able to get the working capital needed to build the infrastructure needed to extract an process the raw energy stock, and political infighting will prevent anything being done in a timely manner.

If you want to glimpse what the future will be like in the USA, just look to be big divide between the rich and poor in the Philippines and Brazil for example. Historically economic elites in the third world operate by inbreeding (i.e. political connections) rather than by merit, sadly I see a trend where this is happening all too often here in the USA.
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby sparky » Wed 28 May 2014, 08:31:40

.
Feudalism emerged when the central state system could not protect the countryside anymore
local big men with a few friends were doing the protection
the farmers and his descendants had a right and an obligation of cultivating the lord land ,
in exchange for taxes in kind
the big guys leagued with other like neighbors to mobilize an armed troops to clear their area of bad guys
they were basically a standing militia
farmers just couldn't do it , too much work on the farm ,
they just couldn't leave everything every week or so to go tramping around the countryside
the lords usually were bound to a bigger guy to come with their men at a summon ,
but only for a set period of days , the feudal system was very legalistic about rights and obligation

as for knowledge , the medieval monastery had collected plenty of old romain and Greek knowhow
including some very technical stuff , but they did not know how to use it

if a technique is not used it fossilize and is ,
in practice useless until the whole machine of production is re created
the knowledge of ball bearing is a critical piece of labor saving
without advanced metallurgy , it's just sets of diagram on a piece of paper
if one doesn't have some rare metal pure enough
electronic designs can gather dust and be copied and re copied ( with gorgeous paintings in the margin)

Knowledge is effective only if it is in use , else it just is a memory
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby KaiserJeep » Wed 28 May 2014, 15:03:55

We simply have to make the right choices for everything we do.

For example, the total energy invested in growing vegetables outdoors in California and then shipping them by rail to NYC is 1/6th the energy required to grow those same vegetables in a greenhouse in NY state. But nobody knows that is so until the correct total life-cycle energy analysis is made.

Somebody needs to do an analysis to see if for example the energy budget for manufacturing, disposing, and recycling cardboard or plastic milk containers is higher or lower than reusing glass milk bottles. In the 1950's, milk bottles cost more, today it might be different.

The point would be that in everything we do, we have to make the correct choices based on the energy budget. Then we have to transition to doing things that way. These changes are unavoidable as the cost of energy rises, I am only pointing out that if one recognizes and plans for the needed changes, the disruption is minimized.

For example, one change that has to happen is that we need to give up burning oil for personal transportation. Everyone knows this, but no politician has the stones to put real incentives in place for electric vehicles, and (more importantly) real disincentives for oil burning vehicles. A 100% surcharge for ICE vehicles would be a start, with milestone dates announced for when the surcharge goes to 200%, then to 500%.

Local is not necessarily better. The alternative with the lowest fossil energy cost is probably the one we want.

But I don't see any reason to return to feudalism, ever.
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Re: Lind: Energy Austerity A Return to Feudalism

Unread postby PrestonSturges » Sat 31 May 2014, 13:34:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Simon_R', 'n')o mercs (except the cops)

Very good Simon, I always thought the local Sheriff would be the bigger threat than the Zombies.


Look at that in terms of the Bundy Ranch:

1) The Kochs are battling wind and solar energy at the state level across the US.
2) The militias show up at the Bundy ranch to battle an imaginary Chinese solar project (actually 200 miles away and canceled).
3) They have a wacky theory about "Constitutional Sheriffs" that makes the local sheriff the ultimate authority.

There's your energy austerity AND feudalism right there.
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