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THE Homeless Hooverville Tent City Thread (merged)

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby idiom » Sat 20 Dec 2008, 22:38:07

To be a depression, breadlines have to average at least 95 persons, for 2 quarters, in at least 15 states.
The world ends without a tragedy,Time is melting into history
The sky is falling, Voices crying out in desperation
Hear them calling, Everybody, save yourself
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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby careinke » Sun 21 Dec 2008, 02:16:47

Cube wrote:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')esides "Economics & Finance" is suppose to be *objective*. It's not about people's feelings.


Wrong. Economics is all about feelings.

A Joke:

Two Economists were walking by a Porsche Showroom in LA. One Economist said I really, really, want that Boxster. The other one said, "obviously you don't." The first economist replied yea, you are right.

The point being that if the first economist really wanted the car he would already have it.

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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby MrBean » Mon 22 Dec 2008, 11:02:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', '
')*looks out bedroom window*
Image
We're still in a recession so by definition it is minor. 8)


What goes around, comes around:
Image

Perhaps life wasn't so bad back then, before the ethnociders came. Perhaps life was much better in many ways. At least in those days people's of America didn't need to be constantly ashamed of themselfes. So maybe it's not that bad thing, starting slowly to learn how to live like a real American - in a tent village. :)
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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby MrBean » Mon 22 Dec 2008, 11:13:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('careinke', '[')b]Cube wrote:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')esides "Economics & Finance" is suppose to be *objective*. It's not about people's feelings.


Wrong. Economics is all about feelings.

A Joke:

Two Economists were walking by a Porsche Showroom in LA. One Economist said I really, really, want that Boxster. The other one said, "obviously you don't." The first economist replied yea, you are right.

The point being that if the first economist really wanted the car he would already have it.

Cliff (Start a rEVOLution, grow a garden)


Yup. Economic Depression is neither subjective nor objective but collective feeling.
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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby dohboi » Mon 22 Dec 2008, 11:50:24

I know that economists haven't declared this a depression yet, but look it took them till a few weeks ago to declare the recession, and then, lo and behold, we had already been in a recession for a year.

The official declaration of the state of misery we are in is always late and always after just about everybody else knows what's going on.

Cube won't accept that it's a depression till some official group of experts declares it so for him in another year or so. Everyone else can just open their eyes and see for themselves.

Wiki definition of depression:

"Depression is characterized by abnormal increases in unemployment, restriction of credit, shrinking output and investment, numerous bankruptcies, reduced amounts of trade and commerce, as well as highly volatile relative currency value fluctuations, mostly devaluations. Price deflation or hyperinflation are also common elements of a depression."

This sounds generally like a pretty darn good description of what's going on.
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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby cube » Mon 22 Dec 2008, 23:25:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBean', '[')img]http://www.sonofthesouth.net/union-generals/sioux-indians/pictures/indian-village.jpg[/img]

Perhaps life wasn't so bad back then, before the ethnociders came. Perhaps life was much better in many ways. At least in those days people's of America didn't need to be constantly ashamed of themselfes. So maybe it's not that bad thing, starting slowly to learn how to live like a real American - in a tent village. :)
geez I don't know about that one MrBean.
I kind of prefer life today with it's modern conveniences like you know the internet!
But hey I understand everyone is entitled to their own preferences.
I'm not here to impose my ideology on anyone seriously.
*Just ask all the people on my ignore list!*
If you don't care for having internet access I understand. :wink:
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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby ReverseEngineer » Tue 23 Dec 2008, 00:07:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', 'g')eez I don't know about that one MrBean.
I kind of prefer life today with it's modern conveniences like you know the internet!
But hey I understand everyone is entitled to their own preferences.
I'm not here to impose my ideology on anyone seriously.
*Just ask all the people on my ignore list!*
If you don't care for having internet access I understand. :wink:


Fundamentally, there is no reason you cannot live in portable housing and have access to the internet. I lived for 6 years in my Freightliner and had access to the Internet all the time. When I go out fishing, I STILL have access to the internet, in freaking ALASKA! You can get rid of all the SUVS, all the McMansions and all the Banksters, and you still could access the internet. All we need is one Nuclear Power Plant dedicated to run all the servers and a few satellites and we can have the internet right up until we are making Stone Tools. LOL.

Personally, the IDEAL life as far as I am concerned would be to live following the herds of Caribou in my tent while I chit chat with Polish Pimps running Debt Prisons and Bozo Day Traders on the internet :-)

I see no reason we have to give this one up, its not consuming THAT much energy that one Nuke Plant couldn't handle it. Heck, I'll use my Hand Crank Generator to keep my laptop running when the power goes down! It might slow down my keyboarding somewhat, which most people here would consider a GOOD thing. LOL.

Hunter-Gatherers with Internet Cell Phones! That's the IDEAL Post Peak Oil World!

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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby eastbay » Tue 23 Dec 2008, 01:05:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', '
')
Fundamentally, there is no reason you cannot live in portable housing and have access to the internet. I lived for 6 years in my Freightliner and had access to the Internet all the time. When I go out fishing, I STILL have access to the internet, in freaking ALASKA! You can get rid of all the SUVS, all the McMansions and all the Banksters, and you still could access the internet. All we need is one Nuclear Power Plant dedicated to run all the servers and a few satellites and we can have the internet right up until we are making Stone Tools. LOL.

Personally, the IDEAL life as far as I am concerned would be to live following the herds of Caribou in my tent while I chit chat with Polish Pimps running Debt Prisons and Bozo Day Traders on the internet :-)

I see no reason we have to give this one up, its not consuming THAT much energy that one Nuke Plant couldn't handle it. Heck, I'll use my Hand Crank Generator to keep my laptop running when the power goes down! It might slow down my keyboarding somewhat, which most people here would consider a GOOD thing. LOL.

Hunter-Gatherers with Internet Cell Phones! That's the IDEAL Post Peak Oil World!

Reverse Engineer



That's one of the best handful of paragraphs I've ever read here. The highlighted part... that's totally insane man. :-D :-D
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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby ReverseEngineer » Tue 23 Dec 2008, 02:19:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('eastbay', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', '
')
Fundamentally, there is no reason you cannot live in portable housing and have access to the internet. I lived for 6 years in my Freightliner and had access to the Internet all the time. When I go out fishing, I STILL have access to the internet, in freaking ALASKA! You can get rid of all the SUVS, all the McMansions and all the Banksters, and you still could access the internet. All we need is one Nuclear Power Plant dedicated to run all the servers and a few satellites and we can have the internet right up until we are making Stone Tools. LOL.

Personally, the IDEAL life as far as I am concerned would be to live following the herds of Caribou in my tent while I chit chat with Polish Pimps running Debt Prisons and Bozo Day Traders on the internet :-)

I see no reason we have to give this one up, its not consuming THAT much energy that one Nuke Plant couldn't handle it. Heck, I'll use my Hand Crank Generator to keep my laptop running when the power goes down! It might slow down my keyboarding somewhat, which most people here would consider a GOOD thing. LOL.

Hunter-Gatherers with Internet Cell Phones! That's the IDEAL Post Peak Oil World!

Reverse Engineer



That's one of the best handful of paragraphs I've ever read here. The highlighted part... that's totally insane man. :-D :-D


<Takes Bow> Thanks EB. :-)

I'm going for a record in "Member Quotes".

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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby dohboi » Tue 23 Dec 2008, 11:12:50

"Hunter-Gatherers with Internet Cell Phones! That's the IDEAL Post Peak Oil World!"

I heard a report on NPR about a year ago about just this thing in Siberia: people living essentially hunter-gatherer lifestyles but with cell phones and other technology that kept them abreast of anything happening in the rest of the world that they might want to learn about. The guy that they talked to really enjoyed this combination. The only problem was that most of the women of the tribe had given up on the hunter-gathering part and moved into town. So it might be a lonely life.

As for energy use, the latest I heard, the net was using ten percent of the nation's electricity. That sounds like more than one nuke's worth.
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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby ReverseEngineer » Tue 23 Dec 2008, 11:22:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dohboi', '
')As for energy use, the latest I heard, the net was using ten percent of the nation's electricity. That sounds like more than one nuke's worth.


My guess would be that figure includes all the individual computers in all the homes, not the central servers, but that is just a WAG, as the 10% figure is also probably.

A network engineer would probably be a better responder on a "factual" level, I just look at the big picture. However, I do not see in principle why a system of sattelites all connecting to a central hub of servers powered by a nuclear plant would not be able to exchange all the information from individual computers, as long as each of those computers had their own power source (hand crank) and could link to the sattelite.

Techys here are free to disabuse me of this notion and prove why its wrong. :-)

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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby gnm » Tue 23 Dec 2008, 11:36:00

Data farms use a surprisingly large amount of power as do all the distributed routers/hubs/etc that the telcomm boys run. 10% sounds high but maybe not unreasonable. I doubt that includes all home pc's however. Power consumption has decreased on a per-server level quite a bit in the past 10 years but the primary response to that has been to increase capacity. Now you can run 40 servers in the same rack you had one - power consumption only up 20% but capacity increased dramatically. Thats been the mindset.

I think it would certainly be possible to keep an "internet" of some kind up in a powerdown situation and would very likely be done since the relative value of communications can far exceed the minimal expenditure. There wouldn't be any motivation to return to the pony express.

-G
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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby MrBean » Tue 23 Dec 2008, 11:37:03

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dohboi', '
')As for energy use, the latest I heard, the net was using ten percent of the nation's electricity. That sounds like more than one nuke's worth.


My guess would be that figure includes all the individual computers in all the homes, not the central servers, but that is just a WAG, as the 10% figure is also probably.

A network engineer would probably be a better responder on a "factual" level, I just look at the big picture. However, I do not see in principle why a system of sattelites all connecting to a central hub of servers powered by a nuclear plant would not be able to exchange all the information from individual computers, as long as each of those computers had their own power source (hand crank) and could link to the sattelite.

Techys here are free to disabuse me of this notion and prove why its wrong. :-)

Reverse Engineer


What kind of infrastructure and social hierarchy from basic materials to finished products is needed to produce and maintain the Internet terminals for nomads? Is that infrastructure and hierarchy sustainable in the long run? I guess I don't have to answer that, the question answers itself. Sorry.
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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby cube » Tue 23 Dec 2008, 12:56:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBean', '.')..
And ridiculous? You are ridiculing the hobos or neonatives in tent villages of your "civilized" America.
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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby nobodypanic » Tue 23 Dec 2008, 15:48:23

F the internet. i'd rather ride free across the plains with the wind in my hair.

only a madman would voluntary accept these clever shackles for something so silly as the internet.
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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby Ludi » Tue 23 Dec 2008, 17:35:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('nobodypanic', 'F') the internet. i'd rather ride free across the plains with the wind in my hair.


Yet here you are on the internet....

?
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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby gnm » Tue 23 Dec 2008, 18:00:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('nobodypanic', 'F') the internet. i'd rather ride free across the plains with the wind in my hair.

only a madman would voluntary accept these clever shackles for something so silly as the internet.


LOL w/Ludi...

Clever shackles? I'm guessing you have never heard of "Freenets" and such - people building and linking their own networks and even setting up remote relays.

-G
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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby Quinny » Tue 23 Dec 2008, 19:05:24

[
LMAO :)

quote="ReverseEngineer"]$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', 'g')eez I don't know about that one MrBean.
I kind of prefer life today with it's modern conveniences like you know the internet!
But hey I understand everyone is entitled to their own preferences.
I'm not here to impose my ideology on anyone seriously.
*Just ask all the people on my ignore list!*
If you don't care for having internet access I understand. :wink:


Fundamentally, there is no reason you cannot live in portable housing and have access to the internet. I lived for 6 years in my Freightliner and had access to the Internet all the time. When I go out fishing, I STILL have access to the internet, in freaking ALASKA! You can get rid of all the SUVS, all the McMansions and all the Banksters, and you still could access the internet. All we need is one Nuclear Power Plant dedicated to run all the servers and a few satellites and we can have the internet right up until we are making Stone Tools. LOL.

Personally, the IDEAL life as far as I am concerned would be to live following the herds of Caribou in my tent while I chit chat with Polish Pimps running Debt Prisons and Bozo Day Traders on the internet :-)
I see no reason we have to give this one up, its not consuming THAT much energy that one Nuke Plant couldn't handle it. Heck, I'll use my Hand Crank Generator to keep my laptop running when the power goes down! It might slow down my keyboarding somewhat, which most people here would consider a GOOD thing. LOL.

Hunter-Gatherers with Internet Cell Phones! That's the IDEAL Post Peak Oil World!

Reverse Engineer[/quote]
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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby Ferretlover » Tue 23 Dec 2008, 19:24:45

Off Topic posts have been split from this thread.
Moderator hat ON: Stay on topic and
Moderator hat OFF: knock off the ad hom attacks.
Moderator hat ON: Thank you.
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Re: The Return of Hoovervilles

Postby nobodypanic » Tue 23 Dec 2008, 19:37:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('nobodypanic', 'F') the internet. i'd rather ride free across the plains with the wind in my hair.


Yet here you are on the internet....

?

yes, i am here all dayyyyy long ludi. everday... 24/7/365. :roll:
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