by Twilight » Thu 03 May 2007, 14:35:37
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('I_Like_Plants', 'T')wilight you Brits had trouble then, and during/after WWII too, I think there was real rationing and real hunger, of course during, but also after WWII up into the early 1960s right? At least the old council houses etc were set up to have gardens.... we don't even have that in the US....
Yeah, we're so screwed....
Too young to know about all that, but I understand that yes, it wasn't until the 1960s that the UK kicked poverty. The post-war recovery was a longer time in coming than in the US, where there wasn't any war damage to deal with.
On the subject of limited self-sufficiency, there's allotments. Sadly these days it's a hobby for older people, but it makes good sense, even if I don't know exactly how they came about. Downside is, the land is generally on flood plains (and does flood), upside is, no-one is going to build a shopping centre on it, and you can grow vegetables to your heart's content. I know one or two people who seem to enjoy doing that. I can't imagine the current generation doing anything of the sort, but they do say necessity is the mother of invention. A good solid depression with hunger and all those floodplains will have their uses again.
But make no mistake, we are still screwed. We've got 60m people on this tiny island, we already know they couldn't all be fed when there were 40m. So if those conditions return, if the effect of oil depletion and financial crisis on imports is of equivalent severity to the wars on merchant shipping, then how much shortage will there be? Looking long-term here, twenty years down the line, we may be unable to feed half the country. A far worse prospect than any modern precedent.
Where I am now, it's country, farmland, a bit of industry (not heavy, more like machine tool stuff), rail track and canals to urban centres, all recently reconditioned. As far as low-energy transport goes, this place has the connections, and a big enough internal market so it doesn't fall apart as so many smaller rural communities do when economic hardship strikes. I look at this place and think, if the rest of the country looked like this, we wouldn't have such a big problem. But it doesn't. And the same is true of Europe. Too many people, looks too much like America. All I can do is say my spot is a lot better than most, and hope that's good enough.