by Heineken » Fri 04 Jul 2008, 14:20:22
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('darwinsdog', 'I')'m 52 also, Heineken, at least for a few more weeks.
Unlike you, what's surprised me has not been the rapidity of the Unraveling, but it's slowness. Studying the environmental sciences in the 1970s, we read Malthus, Garret Hardin, the Ehrilichs, about Hubbert's model & resource depletion, etc. We were well aware of "Peak Oil," anthropogenic mass extinction & climate change, all along. We fully expected the proverbial "crap to hit the fan" during the '80s or '90s, and certainly by the turn of the millenium at the very latest.
As a young guy I was jazzed by the prospect of the collapse of that unsustainable house of cards we call civilization, during my lifetime. The surprising thing to me has been that it's taken so long. Now that it's beginning to actually happen, I'm no longer very excited about it. On the one hand it may be remarkable to be living thru times of ecosystem collapse & mass extinction, but on the other I no longer have the youthful energy for heartily facing unpleasantness I may have once had.
You are correct that there are two clocks ticking: the personal life clock & the clock marking time until extinction of the ecocidal ape. Both clocks may well be approaching midnight. But it's the former clock that is the one that's important. We will die a bit sooner rather than later, perhaps, then no longer care or know what happens to our loved ones that survive us - if any.
I have a 10 yr. old granddaughter & I worry sometimes about her fate. There's no way that she's going to have as easy of a life as I have enjoyed, or that she has enjoyed up 'til now. But oh well, life is never certain & the best one can ever do is to cast one's genes into the future & hope for the best for the phenotypes that carry them. Nothing lasts forever so have a Heineken on this holiday weekend, Heineken. Relax & enjoy the moment and don't worry about what we know to be shortly in store for us all.
Best wishes.
Well Darwin, the predictions of doom in the 70s were premature because they weren't taking energy availability into proper account. At that time there were abundant energy sources left for one more big round of partying.
Also, the resilience of the Earth was underestimated.
But now, finally, we're reaching the Wall.
I'm doing my bit for survival this weekend. Bought another 120 rounds of ammo. Bought a coupla more bottles of Jack. (These I keep stockpiling.) Am installing a whole wall of cabinets in the basement for storage of canned food.
I keep plugging away with my "preps," but I know it's probably futile.
Nice post, and welcome to the site!