by ennui2 » Mon 07 Mar 2016, 21:29:27
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')You have to consider the point that most people worldwide live in poverty, which means "doom" has been in place for them for sometime. Meanwhile, short-term "doom" has been taking place for various economies during the past decade, driven by combinations of financial crashes, high oil production costs, and effects of climate change.
Right, but that's a separate topic. Throughout history there have been localized dooms. Two world wars, the black plague, the crusades, etc... None of this is the same as what doomers are
supposed to be talking about, which is the total crash of our entire civilization from which there will
never be a recovery.
Of course, localized doom can claim any one of us, so when it comes to assessing risks, there's no difference. But rhetorically speaking, doomers like to pontificate about "the big one" because it gives them a chance to play judge, jury, and executioner on the human experiment. It's a great opiate for misanthropes.
What tends to happen, though, is when the doom that was supposed to happen doesn't pan out, then doomers just start camping out on google news to find something else worthy of our cortisol. Saber rattling, whining about debt, etc... Then if you pin them on this, they will try to connect the dots as best they can, even though only people in their own echo-chamber will see the tenuous connections.
"If the oil price crosses above the Etp maximum oil price curve within the next month, I will leave the forum." --SumYunGai (9/21/2016)