by theluckycountry » Wed 18 Dec 2024, 17:06:46
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('evilgenius', 'I') think John Michael Greer, that Archdruid guy, talked about a long, slow collapse. Kunstler gets into some of that. They both rely on a sense of nostalgia to get their points across. They each want to rely upon going back to the past in order to face the future.
Quite! I used to listen to those guys but at some point I came to the conclusion they were just aging Boomers looking for a fix so they could live out their latter years in comfort and security rather than the Hunger Games scenario. Each have written novels depicting a transition back to horse and cart and local farming, but with a sprinkling of solar panels so that their personal business models, feeding off income derived from internet denizens, could continue. It's a futile exercise in wishful thinking, a whistling past the graveyard but it sold books.
There simply is no going back from a collapse in energy abundance, as all the empires across recorded history clearly show. What happens, always happens, is a total collapse and abandonment of the collapsing system and a long period of anarchy. The very idea that our technology is a buffer against this is ludicrous since a simple loss of the electricity, or fuel networks, would instantly cripple every society across the Western World and doom a Billion people to a quick death. A good solar flare and associated CME would do it and you wouldn't even know it had occurred until you flicked the light switch or tried to start your modern car. What backup is there to feed the millions in our cities? To pump water in, transport food in? It takes roughly 20 years to transition to a new system of mass transport or energy production and that is
with the new system working at full pace to bring it about. I don't see millions of horses waiting outside the cities to take over the duties of the 18-wheelers. There is Zero redundancy built into our societies.
We actually would have been a lot better off as a species if the digital computer had never been invented, or for that matter if oil had never accumulated in the ground. From my look at the history of the industrial revolution we were doing just fine on steam power. That coupled with electricity was transforming our lives and I have no doubt we would have eventually achieved much of what makes life great today with just those alone. Even a moonshot would have been possible, certainly modern transport and energy networks, medical advancements and the like. What we would have avoided was nations choked with cars and trucks, the internet of thieves and pornographers. Could I live without the internet and modern digital devices? I spent the first 30 years of my life without them and lived a very good life in the process. There was nothing wrong with bank books and cash, home phones, mechanical cash registers. No one complained and it was nice to go out for the day and not worry about the cares of the world because you didn't have a mobile in your pocket.
It's too late to go back I'm afraid but it's never too late to shun some of the more invasive aspects of the techno now. I'm off for a ride, I'll pack a cell phone, for all the good it will do me where I'm going, but it won't be turned on! My phone is never turned on when I travel, in the car or on the bikes. It's a simple matter of not being addicted, of going your
own way and not the way the modern world dictates as acceptable.
We're 17 years past the peak now and the 3rd World is going hungry and dark. We'll be next, we're well on the way in fact.