by Bandidoz » Tue 31 Jan 2006, 01:49:47
I've got to like it more over time. Skipping the material at the beginning and the end makes it more watchable (Start at "More Elephants coming at us"). This is what I thought after first watching it:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')'d give it 2/5, maybe 3/5 (
http://www.copvcia.com/ )
I've seen a lot of critiscism of Ruppert recently - and this film does him no favours by appearing to be very self-indulgent. In short, it's "Crossing the Rubicon" for people with a short attention span.
In Rubicon there was a reasonably progressive flow. However this is like a disjointed scrapbook of video clips accompanied with insipid backing music. The material is collated from several presentations, with mixed audio quality. In some parts the interleaving is almost at the sentence level, making it difficult to follow.
Some sentences are duplicated, and in places the topics jump around, most noticeably where his rebuttal to the "The Stone Age didn't run out of stones" argument is developing, to then jump into "activists should not be poor". Cringeworthy.
The second time I watched it, it seemed better.
The best sections are "China" and "Permaculture and Climate", which also seemed to be the most coherent, as well as providing some new information.
There is a lot of useful information, snippets, and a few gems such as.....
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'f')or me the issue is no longer about saving the world
the world doesn't want to be saved, forget it
I'm here to save you
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')nce you pass this peak,
No matter how much money, science, effort, prayer,
animal sacrifices in the back yard, i dont care
you will never produce any more oil than you do at this peak,
and nothing will change that,
And there is an abundance of scientific evidence to show this is the case
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')efore every major collapse of a civilisation were currency devaluation and soil degradation