by gg3 » Thu 29 Dec 2005, 07:13:36
Interesting about this discussion leading to the question of bioweapons. I was having similar thoughts over the past few days.
The scenario goes roughly like this:
Resource depletion and ecological crises lead to the beginning of a collapse scenario, starting with Western economies going into long deep recession. Various forms of authoritarianism and totalitarianism become popular; checks and balances are removed one by one. Resource wars break out, first on a limited scale, and gradually scaling up.
Then at some point, someone, possibly even a small nation that has "nothing left to lose" or even a terrorist group, attempts to gain an advantage by releasing a genetically modified bioweapon. The result is a die-off of about half the world's population. This takes the pressure off the resource wars, and new international alliances and spheres of power emerge. Totalitarianism gradually scales back to authoritarianism and remains at that stage indefinitely.
We have already seen the beginnings of the economic impacts of ecological and resource crises, and the beginnings of the removal of checks and balances in the US government (e.g. Snoopgate, expanded Executive powers and claims for further expansion of powers). And arguably, Iraq is a resource war. So here we have the beginnings, the faint ripples, of what may be ahead.
The only way out of this is a) reduce population by half through various forms of birth control, b) massively build new energy sources e.g. nuclear, wind, coal, etc., and c) significantly restructure Western economies on a non-growth-oriented basis. These steps are not being taken. Therefore, in the absence of the cure, the disease continues to grow, and I personally see no way out of this any time soon.
My point about bioweapons here is, genetic technologies are becoming so widely availble as to put bioweapon engineering within reach of any country or group that has the financial resources of a typical biotech startup company. The question is not "if" but "when."