by Tanada » Fri 08 Apr 2016, 12:22:26
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', 'I') want to come back to Pstarr's comment about how people are increasingly devoting their time and self sacrifice trying to keep their heads above water and how the prospect for many is becoming increasingly hopeless.
As much as everything you posted is correct that we are currently stubbornly devoting our energies and self sacrificing to keep BAU strong, there is this undeniable rise of hopelessness as what Pstarr alluded to. It is like an erosion from within the collective denial. This will collapse one day and out of the failure something has to replace this devotion to the status quo. For increasing millions it has already failed to sustain well being.
So this opens up an opportunity for culture to begin to re orient their values.
If we take the Roman example working through this is clearly multi generational.
I agree wholeheartedly with Pstarr's assessment for Joe6P, that is why I posit that the decline of our current civilization began in 1970. Joe6P in 1969 lived in a world where one working class income supported a family of 5 or 6, provided food, shelter, clothing and one automobile and to top it all off he had a wonderful infrastructure of roads, bridges, railroads and ports to support that lifestyle. In 2009 that same working class family needed two full time or four part time jobs between two working adults to provide for a family of 2, 3 or maybe 4 persons. Even worse the infrastructure that was so wonderfully built and maintained up to 1969 is falling apart and decaying in 2009. They have access to lots of cheap low nutrition food and cheap imported electronics that are designed to last three or four years before breaking down and needing replacement.
Things are not as they were, and I believe that is a great deal of the motivation pushing forward the Donald Trump voters. Working class folks look around and see that the America they have is not the America their parents and grand parents had, and nobody in leadership roles seems to care.
The harsh reality is USA peaked in cheap oil in 1970-71 and from that time to now we as a culture have been increasingly beholden to oil exporting countries to maintain our high fossil energy lifestyle. IMO we would have been much better off if we had limited oil imports and developed our culture to live with less fossil fuel intensity, but that is not the road we chose to follow.