by Pops » Thu 05 Nov 2015, 13:35:06
Haven't seen this at the library yet but from what you all have reported I think the guy is pretty close, as far as he gets. In my mind the apocalyptic environmentalist believes we humans are way past overshoot and will be getting our earned comeuppance along about Tuesday when the big Die-Off begins. We're nothing more than a mistake of nature, a pathogen on Gaia. Our imminent and well deserved demise has been cheered here at PO since day one.
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What the author, in his youth and inexperience, misses, is that there are lots of apocalyptic flavors, not just enviros. Obviously the original are the religious zealots of whatever stripe who are certain God loves them but hates you. And others who don't need to come up with any complicated enviro or mystical justifications for die-off, they are simply misanthropes. They usually talk about how the Sheeple will all die because they are losers, weak, stupid... and low energy, LoL.
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But there is another kind of peaker. He doesn't "believe" in the various apocalyptic faiths. He simply doesn't trust the status quo. Call him a neo-Luddite, agnostic-survivalist, back-2-lander or the currently fashionable "prepper." His knee-jerk opinion isn't as predictable as the apocalyptist but usually doesn't read "We're Dead! Just look at [insert pretty much anything here]!" It isn't that he is more or less of anything in particular, mostly just that he doesn't believe in fate and thinks doing pretty well anything is better than just sitting and fretting.
That's me. Preppish isn't a new trait or a passing fad for me and lots of folks, and it didn't come from watching a movie. I'm pretty sure I came by my planning gene naturally and I'm sure most people like me did too. The old folks' stories about once upon a time having it pretty good only to have "it" snatched away unexpectedly stuck with me. My folks had a big garden and pantry and never hired a repairman because they pretty well just dug in and did whatever themselves. They knew how to get by and I guess I picked that up. I tend to look the gift horse in the mouth. But really, if you don't, how do you get an idea how long before you should plan on being back to walking?
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PO.com came online the same month as Facebook. There were a few static PO sites at the time: DieOff, LATOC, WolfAtTheDoor; but no forum type boards that gained much traffic on the web to that point. There were and had been quite a few survivalist type boards since the early days of the BBSs but the survivalists weren't all that hep to the idea the old 4x4 might not be the ultimate bug out vehicle. I have more in common with survivalists who do stuff with their hands (other than just wring them) than I do with the enviro or misanthropic apolalypsists who take die-off as fate. Aside from politics that is.
I started pushing the planning aspects of PO pretty soon after arriving here because the "enviro faith based" apocalypse arguments didn't ring any truer than the religious or misanthropic arguments on the typical survivalist boards. Right off the bat there was a tension here between the die-off crowd and the planning crowd. To the believers and hopers-for-apocalypse, peak oil is the means the to an end, TheEnd. To the planners and preppers on the other hand, PO is an obstacle to be overcome with the end goal being survival.
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The latest phase of the conversation has been interesting. Like someone upstream said, it surprises me somewhat that the survivor element has faded from sight. Perhaps post-recession, our painted-over economic malaise makes play acting doom less entertaining and maybe a little too close to home?
Likewise the shift from overnight civilizational collapse via PO to boiling in our skins sometime next century. On a site ostensibly about the existential danger of a forced reduction in FF burning it's been amusing to watch the shift from PO to AGW as the favored horseman of doom. The very thing apocalyptic environmentalists once promoted as the killer of civilization is now promoted as the only hope of avoiding environmental apocalypse.
Oh well. Doom on.
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)