by TorrKing » Fri 10 Feb 2006, 16:47:15
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Leanan', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') would say just the opposite. Living through any sort of collapse clearly sucks. In the end, living in a more sustainable society is much more desirable.
Catabolic collapse is slow, though. Centuries, even.
Easter Island had about two generations - 50 years - where they more or less continued on as usual, even though they knew they were running out of wood, and that meant the end of their way of life. They made some relatively small changes to adjust to the growing lack of resources. The cannibalism didn't come until later.
We might go on much longer than 50 years. Rome's collapse took, what, 400 years?
Greer points out that after a catabolic collapse, it may become very difficult to create a sustainable society. Because all resources are converted to waste. Trees cut down, water polluted or dried up, topsoil depleted, etc.
If there's a sudden collapse, that would be really unpleasant for us, but we would have less opportunity to do damage. If collapse takes 400 years, those of us currently alive may not face too much difficulty, but the environment will be trashed, as we go through coal, nuclear, natural gas, ethanol, etc.
Even if Rome was at it's geographically biggest around year 0, that doesn't have to mean that their civilisation hit prime time then. Most of the western states of Europe, was in that case at their greatest around 1900. But we all agree that our civilisation has evolved greatly since then (at least technologically). So we are at least done with 100 of those 400years.
The environment is much more stretched now than in Roman times. In addition, the population of Rome was probably never much more than 1 million. What is the population of London? 8 millions?
When people begin to starve in one country, they will start to migrate to other countries. The effect will of course be that other, very weakned states will collapse.
To my understanding it all rests on the situation in the Middle-East. If Saudi-Arabia, of some reason, suddenly stop producing oil. Then the dieoff will commence in a maximum two years.
If we can keep the oil production at it's geological maximum and only have to deal with the decline itself, it may well take 20 years before the dieoff really kicks off in Europe.