by Heineken » Fri 25 Apr 2008, 13:51:35
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'P')ops, some of your posts remind me of the "soma" people take in the novel "Brave New World." Sort of a calmness pill.
Bear in mind that most Americans aren't settled down on farms. They're huddled in angst in their overbuilt, heavily mortgaged suburban shacks on tiny lots, totally dependent on TWAWKI.

I'm a has been at lots of things and been accused of lots of others but pushing drugs is a first!
But seriously Heine, the opposite of calm must be panic and my Funk and Wagnalls defines panic as:
sudden uncontrollable fear or anxiety, often causing wildly unthinking behavior I don't care if you live in a cardboard box or on a 10,000ac inherited farm, panic is not the ideal frame of mind to make rational assessments, plans and progress in the face of adversity.
On the flip side, late last night (late for me anyway) I was thinking how my posts are sometimes schizophrenic. On some threads, the various Food Shortage threads for example, I wind up in the doomer camp and though I try to cite evidence of my worries I am accused of being Ms. C. Little. Like Pup on depletion, Seahorse on real estate, other folks on GW, and others on politics, I guess preps and especially food security and ag in general are my hobbyhorse. Ag affects everyone, top to bottom.
But in threads where folks do Get It and don't need any more bludgeoning I seem to wind up being the bug in the ear saying:
Yea, you are lost. Now sit down, get your bearings and make a plan.I can't remember much of New World but my pill's name wouldn't have the connotation of sleep, more like Plana.

Calm is better, no doubt about it. Calmness in all things.
But when I stand back and get the longer view, the darkness descends. Punctuated by sparks of fear.
I am starting to feel afraid because when I talk doom I realize it is no longer in a purely academic sense. It's getting real. It's getting personal.
Regarding your general stance, I would just caution that it's possible to be biased by one's own station in life. Among POers, a farmer of means is likely to see the whole situation somewhat more positively than a suburbanite without a tomato plant to his or her name.