Page added on January 26, 2019
Many people are expecting some degree of approaching collapse — be it economic, environmental and/or societal — thinking that they’ll recognize the danger signs in time.
As if it will be completely obvious, like a Hollywood blockbuster. Complete with clear warnings from scientists, politicians and the media. And everyone can then get busy either panicking or becoming the plucky heroes.
That’s not how collapse works.
Collapse is a process, not an event.
And it’s already underway, all around us.
Collapse is already here.
However, unlike Hollywood’s vision, the early stages of collapse cause people to cling even tighter to the status quo. Instead of panic in the streets, we simply see more of the same — as those in power do all they can to remain so, while the majority of the public attempts to ignore the growing problems for as long as it possibly can.
For both the elite and the majority, their entire world view and their personal sense of self depends on things not crumbling all around them, so they remain willfully blind to any evidence to the contrary.
When faced with the predicaments we warn about here at PeakProsperity.com, getting an early start on prudently shifting your own personal situation is of vital strategic and tactical importance. Tens of thousands of our readers already have taken wise steps in their lives to position themselves resiliently.
But most of the majority won’t get started until it’s entirely too late to make any difference at all. Which is sad but perhaps unavoidable, given human nature.
If everybody around you is saying “Everything is awesome!”, it can take a long time to determine for yourself that things in fact aren’t:

Real collapse happens slowly, and often without any sort of acknowledgement by the so-called political and economic elites until its abrupt terminal end.
The degree of rot within the Soviet Union went undetected until its final implosion, catching pretty much everyone in the West (as well as in the former USSR!) by surprise.
Similarly, one day people woke up and passenger pigeons were extinct. They used to literally darken the skies for hours as they migrated past, numbering in the billions. Nobody planned on their demise and virtually nobody saw it coming. Sure, just as there always are, a few crackpots at the fringes noticed, but they were ignored until it was too late.
Our view is that collapse of our current way of life is happening right now. The signs are all around us. Our invitation is for you to notice them and inquire critically what the ramifications will be — irrespective of whatever pablum our leaders and media are currently spewing.
While the monetary and financial elites strain to crank out one more day/week/month/year of “market stability”, the ecosystems we depend on for life are vanishing. It’s as if the Rapture were happening, but it’s the insects, plants and animals ascending to heaven instead of we humans.
Be very skeptical when the cause of each new ecological nightmare is ascribed to “natural causes.”
While it’s entire possible for any one ecological mishap to be due to a natural cycle, it’s weak thinking to assign the same cause to dozens of troubling findings happening all over the globe.
As they say in the military: Once is an accident. Twice is a coincidence. But three times is enemy action.
Right now, Australia is in the middle of the summer season and being absolutely hammered by high heat. Sure it gets hot during an Australian summer, but not like this. The impact has been devastating:
Australia’s Facing an Unprecedented Ecological Crisis, But No One’s Paying Attention
Jan 9, 2019
It started in December, just before Christmas.
Hundreds of dead perch were discovered floating along the banks of the Darling River – victims of a “dirty, rotten green” algae bloom spreading in the still waters of the small country town of Menindee, Australia.
Things didn’t get better. The dead hundreds became dead thousands, as the crisis expanded to claim the lives of 10,000 fish along a 40-kilometre (25-mile) stretch of the river. But the worst was still yet to come.
This week, the environmental disaster has exploded to a horrific new level – what one Twitter user called “Extinction level water degradation” – with reports suggesting up to a million fish have now been killed in a new instance of the toxic algae bloom conditions.
For their part, authorities in the state of New South Wales have only gone as far as confirming “hundreds of thousands” of fish have died in the event – but regardless of the exact toll, it’s clear the deadly calamity is an unprecedented ecological disaster in the region’s waterways.
“I’ve never seen two fish kills of this scale so close together in terms of time, especially in the same stretch of river,” fisheries manager Iain Ellis from NSW Department of Primary Industries (DPI) explained to ABC News.
The DPI blames ongoing drought conditions for the algae bloom’s devastating impact on local bream, cod, and perch species – with a combination of high temperature and chronic low water supply (along with high nutrient concentrations in the water) making for a toxic algal soup.
(Source)
Watching the video above showing grown men crying over the loss of 100-year-old fish is heartbreaking. This fish kill is described as “unprecedented” and as an “extinction level event”, meaning it left no survivors over a long stretch of waterway.
We can try to console oursleves that maybe this was just a singular event, a cluster of bad juju and worse waterway management that combined to give us this horror — but it wasn’t.
It’s part of a larger tapestry of heat-induced misery that Australia is facing:
How one heatwave killed ‘a third’ of a bat species in Australia
Jan 15, 2019
Over two days in November, record-breaking heat in Australia’s north wiped out almost one-third of the nation’s spectacled flying foxes, according to researchers.
The animals, also known as spectacled fruit bats, were unable to survive in temperatures which exceeded 42C.
“It was totally depressing,” one rescuer, David White, told the BBC.
Flying foxes are no more sensitive to extreme heat than some other species, experts say. But because they often gather in urban areas in large numbers, their deaths can be more conspicuous, and easily documented.
“It raises concerns as to the fate of other creatures who have more secretive, secluded lifestyles,” Dr Welbergen says.
He sees the bats as the “the canary in the coal mine for climate change”.
(Source)
A two-day heatwave last November (2018) was sufficient to kill up to a third of all Australia’s known flying foxes, a vulnerable species that was already endangered. As those bats are well-studied and their deaths quite conspicuous to observers, it raises the important question: How many other less-scrutinized species are dying off at the same time?
And the death parade continues:
Are these data points severe enough for you to recognize as signs of ongoing collapse?
Last summer was a time of extreme draught and heat for Australia, and this summer looks set to be even worse. This may be the country’s ‘new normal’ for if the situation is due to climate change instead of just an ordinary (if punishing) hot cycle.
If so, these heat waves will likely intensify over time, completely collapsing the existing biological systems across Australia.
Meanwhile, nearby in New Zealand, similar species loss is underway:
‘Like losing family’: time may be running out for New Zealand’s most sacred tree
July 2018
New Zealand’s oldest and most sacred tree stands 60 metres from death, as a fungal disease known as kauri dieback spreads unabated across the country.
Tāne Mahuta (Lord of the Forest) is a giant kauri tree located in the Waipoua forest in the north of the country, and is sacred to the Māori people, who regard it as a living ancestor.
The tree is believed to be around 2,500 years old, has a girth of 13.77m and is more than 50m tall.
Thousands of locals and tourists alike visit the tree every year to pay their respects, and take selfies beside the trunk.
Now, the survival of what is believed to be New Zealand’s oldest living tree is threatened by kauri dieback, with kauri trees a mere 60m from Tāne Mahuta confirmed to be infected.
Kauri dieback causes most infected trees to die, and is threatening to completely wipe out New Zealand’s most treasured native tree species, prized for its beauty, strength and use in boats, carvings and buildings.
“We don’t have any time to do the usual scientific trials anymore, we just have to start responding immediately in any way possible; it is not ideal but we have kind of run out of time,” Black says, adding that although there is no cure for kauri dieback there is a range of measures which could slow its progress.
(Source)
People are rallying to try and save the kauri trees, although it’s unclear exactly how to stop the spread of the new fungal invader or why it’s so pathogenic all of a sudden. It could be due to another natural sort of cycle (except the fungus was thought to have been introduced and spread by human activity) or it could be a another collapse indicator we need to finally hear and heed.
It turns out that New Zealand is not alone. Giant trees are dying all over the globe.
2,000-year-old baobab trees in Africa are suddenly and rather mysteriously giving up the ghost. These trees survived happily for 2,000 years and now all of a sudden they’re dying. Are the deaths of our most ancient trees all across the globe some sort of natural process? Or is there a different culprit we need to recognize?
In Japan they’re lamenting record low squid catches. Oh well, maybe it’s just overfishing? Or could it be another message we need to heed?
To all this we can add the numerous scientific articles now decrying the ‘insect Apocalypse’ unfolding across the northern hemisphere. The Guardian recently issued this warning: “Insect collapse: ‘We are destroying our life support systems’”. Researchers in Puerto Rico’s forest preserves recorded a 98% decline in insect mass over 35 years. Does a 98% decline have a natural explanation? Or is something bigger going on?
Meanwhile, the butterfly die-off is unfolding with alarming speed. I rarely see them in the summer anymore, much to my great regret. Seeing one is now as exciting as seeing a meteor streak across the sky, and just as rare:
Monarch butterfly numbers plummet 86 percent in California
Jan 7, 2019
CAMARILLO, Calif. – The number of monarch butterflies turning up at California’s overwintering sites has dropped by about 86 percent compared to only a year ago, according to the Xerces Society, which organizes a yearly count of the iconic creatures.
That’s bad news for a species whose numbers have already declined an estimated 97 percent since the 1980s.
Each year, monarchs in the western United States migrate from inland areas to California’s coastline to spend the winter, usually between September and February.
“It’s been the worst year we’ve ever seen,” said Emma Pelton, a conservation biologist with the Xerces Society who helps lead the annual Thanksgiving count. “We already know we’re dealing with a really small population, and now we have a really bad year and all of a sudden, we’re kind of in crisis mode where we have very, very few butterflies left.”
What’s causing the dramatic drop-off is somewhat of a mystery. Experts believe the decline is spurred by a confluence of unfortunate factors, including late rainy-season storms across California last March, the effects of the state’s years long drought and the seemingly relentless onslaught of wildfires that have burned acres upon acres of habitat and at times choked the air with toxic smoke.
(Source)
Note the “explanation” given blames the decline on mostly natural processes: late storms, droughts and wildfires. I believe that’s because the article appears in a US paper, so no mention was permitted of neonicotinoid pesticides or glyphosate. Both of these are highly effective decimators of insect life — but they’re highly profitable for Big Ag, so for now, any criticism is not allowed.
Sure a 97% decline since the 1980’s might be due to fires, droughts and rains. But that’s really not very likely. There have always been fires, droughts and rains. Something else has shifted since the 1980’s. And that “thing” is human activity, which has increased its willingness to destroy habitat and spray poisons everywhere in pursuit of cheaper food and easier profits.
The loss of insects, which we observe in the loss of the beautiful and iconic Monarch butterfly, is a gigantic warning flag that we desperately need to heed. If the bottom of our billion-year-old food web disintegrates, you can be certain that the repercussions to humans will be dramatic and terribly difficult to ‘fix.’ In scientific terms, it will be called a “bottom-up trophic cascade”.
In a trophic cascade, the loss of a single layer of the food pyramid crumbles the entire structure. Carefully-tuned food webs a billion years in the making are suddenly destabilized. Life cannot adapt quickly enough, and so entire species are quickly lost. Once enough species die off, the web cannot be rewoven, and life … simply ends.
What exactly would a “trophic cascade” look like in real life? Oh, perhaps something just like this:
Deadly deficiency at the heart of an environmental mystery
Oct 16, 2018
During spring and summer, busy colonies of a duck called the common eider (Somateria mollissima) and other wild birds are usually seen breeding on the rocky coasts around the Baltic Sea. Thousands of eager new parents vie for the best spots to build nests and catch food for their demanding young broods.
But Lennart Balk, an environmental biochemist at Stockholm University, witnessed a dramatically different scene when he visited Swedish coastal colonies during a 5-year period starting in 2004. Many birds couldn’t fly. Others were completely paralyzed. Birds also weren’t eating and had difficulty breathing. Thousands of birds were suffering and dying from this paralytic disease, says Balk. “We went into the bird colonies, and we were shocked. You could see something was really wrong. It was a scary situation for this time of year,” he says.
Based on his past work documenting a similar crisis in several Baltic Sea fish species, Balk suspected that the birds’ disease was caused by a thiamine (vitamin B1) deficiency. Thiamine is required for critical metabolic processes, such as energy production and proper functioning of the nervous system.
This essential micronutrient is produced mainly by plants, including phytoplankton, bacteria, and fungi; people and animals must acquire it through their food.
“We found that thiamine deficiency is much more widespread and severe than previously thought,” Balk says. Given its scope, he suggests that a pervasive thiamine deficiency could be at least partly responsible for global wildlife population declines. Over a 60-year period up to 2010, for example, worldwide seabird populations declined by approximately 70%, and globally, species are being lost 1,000 times faster than the natural rate of extinction (9, 10). “He has seen a thiamine deficiency in several differ phyla now,” says Fitzsimons of Balk. “One wonders what is going on. It’s a larger issue than we first suspected.”
(Source)
This is beyond disturbing. It should have been on the front pages of every newspaper and TV show across the globe. We should be discussing it in urgent, worried tones and devoting a huge amount of money to studying and fixing it. At a minimum, we should stop hauling more tiny fish and krill from the sea in an effort to at least stabilize the food pyramid while we sort things out.
If you recall, we’ve also recently reported on the findings showing that phytoplankton levels are down 50% (these are a prime source for thiamine, by the way). Again, here’s a possible “trophic cascade” in progress:

(Source)
Fewer phytoplankton means less thiamine being produced. That means less thiamine is available to pass up the food chain. Next thing you know, there’s a 70% decline in seabird populations.
This is something I’ve noticed directly and commented n during my annual pilgrimages to the northern Maine coast over the past 30 years, where seagulls used to be extremely common and are now practically gone. Seagulls!
Next thing you know, some other major food chain will be wiped out and we’ll get oceans full of jellyfish instead of actual fish. Or perhaps some once-benign mold grows unchecked because the former complex food web holding it in balance has collapsed, suddenyl transforming Big Ag’s “green revolution” into grayish-brown spore-ridden dust.
To add to the terrifying mix of ecological news has been the sudden and rapid loss of amphibian species all over the world. A possible source for the culprit has been found, if that’s any consolation; though that discovery does not yet identify a solution to this saddening development.
Ground Zero of Amphibian ‘Apocalypse’ Finally Found
May 10, 2018
MANY OF THE world’s amphibians are staring down an existential threat: an ancient skin-eating fungus that can wipe out entire forests’ worth of frogs in a flash.
This ecological super-villain, the chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, has driven more than 200 amphibian species to extinction or near-extinction—radically rewiring ecosystems all over Earth.
“This is the worst pathogen in the history of the world, as far as we can tell, in terms of its impacts on biodiversity,” says Mat Fisher, an Imperial College London mycologist who studies the fungus.
Now, a global team of 58 researchers has uncovered the creature’s origin story. A groundbreaking study published in Science on Thursday reveals where and when the fungus most likely emerged: the Korean peninsula, sometime during the 1950s.
From there, scientists theorize that human activities inadvertently spread it far and wide—leading to amphibian die-offs across the Americas, Africa, Europe, and Australia.
(Source)
Frogs, toads and salamanders were absolutely critical parts of my childhood and I delighted in their presence. I cannot imagine a world without them. But effectively, that’s what we’ve got now with so many on the endangered species list.
This parade of awful ecological news is both endless and worsening. And there is no real prospect for us to fix things in time to avoid substantial ecological pain. None.
After all, we can’t even manage our watersheds properly. And those are dead simple by comparison. Water falls from the sky in (Mostly) predictable volume and you then distribute somewhat less than that total each year. Linear and simple in comparison to trying to unravel the many factors underlying a specie’s collapse.
But challenges like this are popping up all over the globe:
Fear And Grieving In Las Vegas: Colorado River Managers Struggle With Water Scarcity
Dec 14th, 2018
On stage in a conference room at Las Vegas’s Caesars Palace, Keith Moses said coming to terms with the limits of the Colorado River is like losing a loved one.
“It reminds me of the seven stages of grief,” Moses said. “Because I think we’ve been in denial for a long time.”
Moses is vice chairman of the Colorado River Indian Tribes, a group of four tribes near Parker, Arizona. He was speaking at the annual Colorado River Water Users Association meeting.
The denial turned to pain and guilt as it became clear just how big the supply and demand gaps were on the river that delivers water to 40 million people in the southwest.
For the last six months Arizona’s water leaders have been experiencing the third stage of grief: anger and bargaining.
Of the seven U.S. states that rely on the Colorado River, Arizona has had the hardest time figuring out how to rein in water use and avoid seeing the river’s largest reservoirs — Lakes Mead and Powell — drop to extremely low levels.
Kathryn Sorenson, director of Phoenix’s water utility, characterized the process this way: “Interesting. Complicated. Some might say difficult.”
One of the loudest voices in the debate has been coming from a small group of farmers in rural Pinal County, Arizona, south of Phoenix.
Under the current rules those farmers could see their Colorado River supplies zeroed out within two years.
The county’s biggest grower of cotton and alfalfa, Brian Rhodes, is trying to make sure that doesn’t happen. The soil in his fields is powder-like, bursting into tiny brown clouds with each step.
“We’re going to have to take large cuts,” Rhodes said. “We all understand that.”
(Source)
Oh my goodness. If we’re having trouble realizing that wasting precious water from the Colorado River to grow cotton is a bad idea, then there’s just no hope at all that we’ll successfully rally to address the loss of ocean phytoplankton.
That’s about the easiest connection of dots that could ever be made. As Sam Kinison, the 1980’s comedian might have yelled – IT’S A DESERT!! YOU’RE TRYING TO GROW WATER-INTENSIVE CROPS IN THE FREAKING DESERT! CAN’T YOU SEE ALL THE SAND AROUND YOU?!? THAT MEANS “DON’T GROW COTTON HERE!!”
The bottom line is this: We are destroying the natural world. And that means that we are destroying ourselves.
I know that the mainstream news has relegated this conversation to the back pages (when they covered it at all) and so it’s not “front and center” for most people. But it should be.
Everything we hold dear is a subset of the ecosphere. If that goes, so does everything else. Nothing else matters in the slightest if we actively destroy the Earth’s carrying capacity.
At the same time, we’re in the grips of an extremely dangerous delusion that has placed money, finance and the economy at the top spot on our temple of daily worship.
Any idea of slowing down or stopping economic growth is “bad for business” and dismissed out of hand as “not practical”, “undesirable” or “unwise”. It’s always a bad time to discuss the end of economic growth, apparently.
But as today’s young people are increasingly discovering, if “conducting business” is just a lame rationale for failed stewardship of our lands and oceans, then it’s a broken idea. One not worth preserving in its current form.
The parade of terrible ecological breakdowns provided above is there for all willing to see it. Are you willing? Each failing ecosystem is screaming at us in urgent, strident tones that we’ve gone too far in our quest for “more”.
We might be able to explain away each failure individually. But taken as a whole? The pattern is clear: We’ve got enemy action at work. These are not random coincidences.
Nature is warning us loudly that it’s past time to change our ways. That our “endless growth” model is no longer valid. In fact, it’s now becoming an existential threat
The collapse is underway. It’s just not being televised (yet).
And don’t expect the cavalry to arrive.
Our leadership is absolutely not up to the task. If the Davos conference currently underway in Switzerland is a sign of anything at all, it’s that we’re doomed.
The world has been taken over by bankers and financiers too smitten by their love of money to notice much else or be of any practical service to the world.
By way of illustrative example, here’s the big techno-feel-good idea unveiled on the second day of the conference. The crowds there loved it:

Yes, folks, this is what the world most desperately needs at this time! /sarc
While I’m sure drone-delivered books is a heartwarming story, it’s completely diversionary and utterly meaningless in the face of collapsing oceanic and terrestrial food webs.
Sadly, this is exactly the sort of inane distraction most admired by the Davos set in large part because it helps them feel a tiny bit better about their ill-gotten wealth. “Look! We’re supporting good thngs!” The ugly truth is that big wealth’s main pursuit is to distort political processes and rules to assure they get to keep it and even amass more.
Drones carrying books to Indonesian children provides the same sort of dopamine rush to a Davos attendee as Facebook ‘like’ gives to a 14-year-old. Temporary, cheap, superficial and ultimately meaningless.
The same is true of their other feel-good theme of the day. “Scientists” have discovered an enzyme that eats plastics:

That’s swell, but you know what would be even better? Not using the bottles in the first place. Which could be accomplished by providing access to safe, potable water as a basic human right and using re-usable containers. Of course, that would offer less chances for private wealth accumulation so instead the Davos crowd is fixated on the profitable solution vs. doing the right thing.
In viritually every instance, the Davos crowd wants to preserve industry and our consumer culture as it is, using technology and gimmicks in attempt to remedy the ills that result. There’s money to be made on both ends of that story.
The only thing that approach lacks is a future. Because it’s not-so-subtly based on continued “growth”. Infinite exponential growth. The exact same growth that is killing ancient trees, sea birds, insects, amphibians, and phytoplankton.
Who wants more of that? Insane people.
In other words, don’t hold out any hope that the Davos set representing the so-called “elite” from every prominent nation on earth are going to somehow bravely offer up real insights on our massive predicaments and solutions to our looming problems. They’re too consumed with their own egos and busy preening for prominence to notice the danger or care.
As they pointlessly fritter away another expensive gathering, the ecological world is unraveling all around them. The oceans are becoming a barren wasteland. The ancient trees are dying. Heatwaves are melting tar and killing life. The web of life is snapping strand by strand and nobody can predict what happens next.
In other words, if you held out any hope that “they” would somehow rally to the cause you’d best set that completely aside. It’s no wonder social anger against tone-deaf and plundering elites is breaking out right now.
From here, there are only two likely paths:
(1) We humans simply cannot self-organize to address these plights and carry on until the bitter end, when something catastrophic happens that collapses our natural support systems.
(2) We see the light, gather our courage, and do what needs to be done. Consumption is widely and steeply curtailed, fossil fuel use is severely restrained, and living standards as measured by the amount of stuff flowing through our daily lives are dropped to sustainable levels.
Either path means enormous changes are coming, probably for you and definitely for your children and grandchildren.
In Part 2: Facing Reality we dive into what developments to expect as our systems continue further along their trophic cascade. Which markers and milestones should we monitor most closely to know when the next breaking point is upon us?
To reiterate: Massive change is now inevitable and in progress.
Collapse has already begun.
222 Comments on "Chris Martenson: Collapse Is Already Here"
Cloggie on Sat, 26th Jan 2019 3:39 pm
I love the smell of collapse in the morning
makati1 on Sat, 26th Jan 2019 5:49 pm
“The bottom line is this: We are destroying the natural world. And that means that we are destroying ourselves.”
That line says it all. Greed is our poison. Human species extinction is only a few generations away. My grand kids may be the last generation to grow up. They are not likely to live nearly as long as I have. Throw in the collapse of our societies and you can see the future and it isn’t very nice. Are YOU prepared?
Chrome Mags on Sat, 26th Jan 2019 6:11 pm
“…we’re in the grips of an extremely dangerous delusion that has placed money, finance and the economy at the top spot on our temple of daily worship.”
There is no lower gear, no consideration of letting off the accelerator. Human beings are relentless. You can see it, you can feel it. Everybody is driving ever faster and harder to the hoop for their share of the oil age loot. Don’t get in their way.
But also don’t cry for the loss of BAU when all hell breaks loose. It’s bound to and needs to if our species is ever going grow up.
onlooker on Sat, 26th Jan 2019 8:11 pm
It is plainly clear economic collapse is already here. All they can do is print imaginary money and fiddle with the interest rate and disingenuously declare “everything is fine and the economy is growing”
twocats on Sat, 26th Jan 2019 8:56 pm
good one cloggie – whether you mean it or not.
this article is brutal. a slap in the face of humanity – and well deserved. I won’t shed a single tear for the collapse of industrial civilization. And yes, it will probably take untold millenia for the Earth to recover complex life forms (assuming most are wiped out in the current period).
I guess i’m just prejudiced – that life and living things are special and have more meaning than a dead, burnt up rock floating through space.
Cloggie on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 3:28 am
good one cloggie – whether you mean it or not.
It was mobster, not me. Nevertheless I am a big fan of collapse, political collapse to be precise, in order to get the US-led West over with and replace it with a hard-core pro-white PBM, with some Anglo hinterlands under our wings as junior partners, 1492-1776 style, with some local autonomy, as we can’t be baby-sitters of moonlanders.
Back to today’s reality…
UK political system is in total meltdown over the question: “who are we?”.
Europeans (Remain) or Anglo-globalists (no-deal) or something in between (May-deal)?
The contest is still open.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-6635891/PETER-HITCHENS-David-Cameron-never-Prime-Minister.html
Conservative Peter Hitchins wouldn’t mind if the Tory party would cease to exist.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6636457/Theresa-Mays-husband-enters-No-10-civil-war-urging-PM-fighting-Brexit-deal.html
Tess May’s hubby is in the background plotting with Labour MPs to get the May-deal through parliament.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6635899/Jacob-Rees-Mogg-plies-Tory-MPs-wine-boost-support-Johnson-leadership-bid.html
Rees-Mogg now supports BoJo as the next PM. This is interesting as recently he quietly seem to back May and her deal. Apparently he is assuming that eventually the May-deal WILL make it through parliament, after which she has promised to step down and BoJo will be next. But there are many other vultures waiting in the wings…
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6636785/Britain-impose-MARTIAL-LAW-avoid-chaos-streets-no-deal-Brexit.html
White Hall seems to be including martial law as apart of the upcoming Brexit event. The government knows very well that in all major UK cities there are a large number of darkies with a very low stiff-upper-lip ratio, who might go in the riot mode in case of all sorts of scarcity begin to emerge, when Britain will begin to compete with Venezuela in the race towards the bottom. We all remember what happened in 2011 when the police whacked a bro, no doubt for good reason and every major UK city caught fire as a result:
https://tinyurl.com/ycbqyjuu
Meanwhile demography has shifted only further. Interesting times and all.
Cloggie on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 3:51 am
Here is another Tory Brexit hardliner Esther McVey, competing with BoJo to succeed May:
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6635907/Tory-Brexit-hardliners-Esther-McVey-Leaves-true-believer-succeed-Theresa-May.html
And then there is the Britain=Singapore clown Jeremy Hunt with similar ambitions:
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6635905/Jeremy-Hunts-bid-succeed-far-advanced-started-tapping-recruits.html
Singapore is a 70% Chinese small city state, but Hunt has a Chinese wife and a high ambition level, so perhaps Hunt will succeed in making Britain Chinese rather than Islamic, which would constitute a small improvement indeed.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6636057/Theresa-faces-assault-Tuesdays-critical-Commons-vote.html
On Tuesday there will be yet another showdown in Westminster by MPs who will try to remove the government from power and let parliament take over. Note that in said parliament there is a majority for Remain. Please don’t let that happen. In the end of the day we might end up with Tony Blair rather than Salvini as head of the European commission, an absolute horror scenario. Again, in the light of global white survival the best outcome-hierarchy would be:
1. May-deal
2. no-deal
3. Remain
Anglos are the problem, not the solution. The best is to park out British friends in some position of neutrality where they can’t do any further harm and will be spared in WW3, that will be mainly fought out in the Americas.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6636059/The-8m-Georgian-mansion-Amber-Rudds-brother-plotting-second-Brexit-referendum.html
And then there is Amber Rudd, who is working overtime to prevent no-deal Brexit.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6635897/Eccentric-Welshman-nicknamed-Stop-Brexit-Man-moves-house-opposite-Jacob-Rees-Mogg.html
Remainer stalking Rees-Mogg, supported by public money.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6636061/EU-negotiators-Brussels-talks-Theresa-Mays-Brexit-deal-line.html
Some EU activity in giving May a last-minute help to get her deal through parliament in showing willingness to extend the deadline of 29 March.
To complicate things further, the “give Ireland back to the Irish” crowd is warming up to get the old Protestant-Catholic conflict flaring up again. As we all remember, Northern Ireland came into being into 169x, as its border coincides with the extent the Dutch army managed to make inroads into Ireland as part of the Glorious Revolution campaign:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWuUbqJTV1Y
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6635723/Elderly-former-IRA-terrorists-coaxed-retirement-exploit-Brexit-tensions.html
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6635519/Protester-build-mock-check-point-manned-machine-gun-toting-soldiers-Irish-border.html
I wouldn’t be surprised if Northern Ireland will be taken back by force by Dublin, if the British state collapses as a result of multicult, civil war, Scotland taking a hike, etc., etc.
#LastDaysOfAnglosphere
Cloggie on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 4:08 am
Thousands of British companies now seriously preparing for no-deal Brexit:
http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/unternehmen/tausende-britische-firmen-bereiten-sich-auf-no-deal-brexit-vor-a-1250180.html
Reason: in case of a no-deal (“or-deal”) EU free trade will be replaced with a WTO-regime. Think 45% import tariffs on meat and other agricultural produce, which will hit the British and Dutch most.
Cloggie on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 4:11 am
Vultures and nothing else:
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6636537/Amazon-CEO-Jeff-Bezos-gives-wealth-charity-Gates-Zuckerberg-Trump.html
“Bottom of the table! Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos ‘gives less than 0.1 per cent of his $160bn fortune to charity’ and is put in the shade by philanthropist Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg and President Trump”
Cloggie on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 4:18 am
More CW2 rumblings from the Belly of the Beast:
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6631785/Trump-ally-Roger-Stone-arrested-Robert-Mullers-Russia-probe.html?ito=jwplayer_1
Deep State makes move to go after the right-wingers who enabled the Trump presidency, the president of white America.
Only a matter of time until merely “staring down” will morph into something more potent, like a Donbass-XXL uprising:
https://media.gq.com/photos/5c4618d0c6e40853b487632e/3:2/w_640/Screenshot%202019-01-21%20at%202.08.24%20PM.png
The ultimate chance for Eurasia to get ZOG over with and return the core of civilization back to Eurasia where it belongs.
Dooma on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 4:27 am
The environmental disaster that killed so many fish (some on the endangered species list) was a disgrace — considering that it could have been avoided.
The state government has allowed the cotton growers to build dams on their properties. They are robbing the river of precious water from rain run-off. Then the farmers onsell the stored water to farmers downstream. Water theft is rife and poorly policed.
The second driest continent DOES NOT need to grow such water-intensive crops. Cotton is something we can afford to buy from other nations. Same as rice. And yet we still flush our toilets with 100% pure drinking water! We deserve everything that mother nature is starting to throw at us. Including an unusually abundant jellyfish season this summer.
The other animals on this planet certainly do not.
Cloggie on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 4:33 am
To get a nice insight in British political thinking, just study the comments and most of all the kudos:
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6631785/Trump-ally-Roger-Stone-arrested-Robert-Mullers-Russia-probe.html#comments
Note, this is the DailyMail, a “rightwing” newspaper, especially the readers, strongly pro-Brexit, deeply anti-German. If there ever was a source of (closet) white nationalism, it should be here.
Except there isn’t any trace of it.
“Finally, Great job.”
(arrest Stone)
pro: 2510
con: 2058
“Twelve FBI swat agents confront pipsqueak Stone with guns drawn at 6 AM. He’s that dangerous? Really?”
pro: 2091
con: 368
“#MAGA = Many Are Getting Arrested! And things are falling apart for TRUMP’s closet, and the center will no longer hold together!! AMERICA WAKE UP, our justice system will work to bring YOU ALL justices!!!”
pro: 1677
con: 877
Again, Britain is COMPLETELY HOPELESS when it comes to white survival. It is not just the elite, it is the upper income segment as well. That’s why Brexit is such a Godsend. The main hope for white survival, that is Russia, Eastern Europe, Italy and in the end of the day Germany and even France (Yellow Vests).
And American white nationalism.
Forget Britain and its offshoots Canada and Down-Under.
Thedigger on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 4:37 am
Sorry Chris the reason for the fish dying is drawing to much water for irrigation up stream,the tempuratures inland we have been having out not out of the ordiary for inland Australia
Davy on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 5:11 am
“this article is brutal. a slap in the face of humanity – and well deserved. I won’t shed a single tear for the collapse of industrial civilization. And yes, it will probably take untold millenia for the Earth to recover complex life forms (assuming most are wiped out in the current period).”
Come on twocats, all of humanity? You are pissed off and pointing fingers like someone throwing air punches. This is a self-organizing phenomena and yes with individual and group bad behavior but let’s not personalize it like you did. Humans are doing what all species do it is just we have a highly developed pre frontal cortex that other species do not that is gone berserk. This may be an evolutionary dead end but it could be an aspect of the universe where intelligence manifests itself. Maybe intelligence eventually destroys itself only to reappear. Who knows but emotions are not science so let’s keep such judgments to a minimum or you are as bad as sky daddy worshipers. Wales and dolphins are probably better creatures than us and just as smart in the ways that matter. This is about a systematic process and getting emotional about it is not going to help anything.
Davy on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 6:02 am
This is especially for you clogged:
https://tinyurl.com/y9qhnk5t
Here we go again on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 6:08 am
In my younger days I was a tropical fish enthusiastist and had a number of breeding tanks of various species, cichlids, gouramis,
Tetras, ECT… The primary factor to induce mating was temperature change…just by a few degrees…
So, when folks say only 2 degrees won’t matter….it does alot.
We have no idea what we humans are unleashing in our natural world..
Cloggie on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 6:55 am
This is especially for you clogged:
https://tinyurl.com/y9qhnk5t
And now what? You expect me to sit through hours of watching testimonies of “holocaust survivors”, who “miraculously” escaped from a non-existing extermination campaign?
Show me a picture of a pile of “gassed people”.
Show me forensic research where samples were taken from the walls of alleged “gas chambers”, containing traces of Zyklon-B.
Spoiler, these (revisionist sourced) studies exist and you won’t like the result.
Show me the location in Treblinka where the remains of hundreds of thousands of bodies are buried. You can’t. They don’t exist.
These camps in Eastern Poland were situated there because a transfer of trains was necessary because of different railway gauge between Europe and Russia/Ukraine.
Davy on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 7:37 am
“And now what? You expect me to sit through hours of watching testimonies of “holocaust survivors”, who “miraculously” escaped from a non-existing extermination campaign?”
LOL, no, just teasing you. You are so into the Holocaust that you are easy to poke. Clogged, the holocaust was long ago. Drop the bone and move on.
“Show me a picture of a pile of “gassed people”.”
Clogged, I could give a shit how the Jews and others were killed. The Nazi murdered people in cold blood on an epic scale. They were not victims but were criminals. Not all Germans deserve the blame. The German army was the best army of WWII but led by a very bad leader. Bad shit happens when you have this combination. The bombing of German civilian targets was also cold blooded murder. Move on weirdo.
JuanP on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 7:49 am
Delusional Davy ” The Nazi murdered people in cold blood on an epic scale. They were not victims but were criminals”
The AMERICANS murder people in cold blood on an epic scale. They are not victims, but criminals and terrorists. Fuck! They are just like the Nazis, maybe even worse!
Davy on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 7:56 am
“The AMERICANS murder people in cold blood on an epic scale. They are not victims, but criminals and terrorists. Fuck! They are just like the Nazis, maybe even worse!”
No shit dummy, did I say otherwise. Where did I say Americans were victims stupid? Good, I am glad you admit the Nazi’s were blood thirsty murders. About time, normally you are a Nazi apologist. BTW, wow, you decided to comment like a normal member instead of using a sock or identity theft. WTF got into you dirty Juan? I did notice the word “F**K more of your juvenile low IQ’ness
JuanP on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 8:09 am
Fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck! Just for you, Delusional Exceptionalist! ROFLMFAO! God, you are such an idiot! LOL!
Davy on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 8:11 am
LOL, dirty juan is losing it. He will be back to identity theft and sock puppets soon. That is what normally happens when he loses it.
JuanP on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 8:23 am
Rdelusional Davy “LOL, dirty juan is losing it. He will be back to identity theft and sock puppets soon. That is what normally happens when he loses it.”
Says the guy who already lost it! ROFLMFAO! You are such a widdle sad fuck! You are the one who will start with his sock puppets and identity theft now, just like you do every single time you can’t control the narrative here with your bullying and lies. You are such a pussy! LOL!
Davy on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 8:30 am
“Says the guy who already lost it! ROFLMFAO! You are such a widdle sad fuck! You are the one who will start with his sock puppets and identity theft now, just like you do every single time you can’t control the narrative here with your bullying and lies. You are such a pussy! LOL!”
Translation: “I am wounded and beaten. I am trying to get off here so I can go sailing in the Bahamas but I want the last world as usual”
DerHundistLos on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 8:35 am
Well done twocats:
“this article is brutal. a slap in the face of humanity – and well deserved. I won’t shed a single tear for the collapse of industrial civilization. And yes, it will probably take untold millenia for the Earth to recover complex life forms (assuming most are wiped out in the current period).
I guess i’m just prejudiced – that life and living things are special and have more meaning than a dead, burnt up rock floating through space.”
JuanP on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 8:43 am
Delusional Davy “… but I want the last world as usual”
Assuming you meant to say word rather than world, that is a perfect projection. LOL! I know I can keep you going all they long because YOU are the one with an obsessive compulsive need to have the last word and control the narrative with your lies, falsehoods, and distortions.
JuanP on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 8:44 am
All day long! LOL!
Davy on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 8:50 am
Assuming you meant to say word rather than world, that is a perfect projection. LOL!
“Aren’t you cute? Are you running out of ammo? Why not make a real comment pussy or are you busy trying to pack for your Bahamas trip?”
“I know I can keep you going all they long because YOU are the one with an obsessive compulsive need to have the last word and control the narrative with your lies, falsehoods, and distortions.”
Assuming you meant to say day rather than they …lol. It is cold and nasty out right now. I am waiting for it to warm up a little before I check on the animals. I was out at 4:00am feeding the birds and the outdoor wood furnace. It was lovely out then. A little windy and raw now. Go ahead and head to the Bahamas, I will hold the fort down so you can playboy.
JuanP on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 9:13 am
Don’t forget to “check” the goats, too, pussy! ROFLMFAO!
JuanP on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 9:16 am
I wonder if you even have a 10 gallon fish tank in your momma’s basement. If you were up at 4 am you couldn’t stop yourself from posting shit here at that hour, too, so I know you are LYING AGAIN and were sleeping at that time. ROFLMFAO! You are such a funny pussy!
Davy on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 9:19 am
“noise” you like listening to yourself you selfish fool
Davy on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 9:20 am
try a rare stab at a on topic comment or is that not enough exposure for your dumbass?
DavySkum on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 9:34 am
DavySkum at his best. What a first class douche bag. Just shut the fuck up, for once. Nobody concurs with your stupid and insane pointing of fingers.
“Come on twocats, all of humanity? You are pissed off and pointing fingers like someone throwing air punches. This is a self-organizing phenomena and yes with individual and group bad behavior but let’s not personalize it like you did. Humans are doing what all species do it is just we have a highly developed pre frontal cortex that other species do not that is gone berserk. This may be an evolutionary dead end but it could be an aspect of the universe where intelligence manifests itself. Maybe intelligence eventually destroys itself only to reappear. Who knows but emotions are not science so let’s keep such judgments to a minimum or you are as bad as sky daddy worshipers. Wales and dolphins are probably better creatures than us and just as smart in the ways that matter. This is about a systematic process and getting emotional about it is not going to help anything.”
Davy on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 9:53 am
There you go dirty Juan. I knew you wouldn’t wait
Long to go dirty. It’s just your low IQ low morality nature. Have fun. It is being documented for use later. Lmfao
Cloggie on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 10:47 am
German lament about the demise of Anglosphere, as their respective political systems descend into chaos:
http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/service/brexit-shutdown-handelskrieg-sieg-der-zynischen-vernunft-a-1250122.html
There is zero Schadenfreude to be detected, for good reason: if Anglosphere goes as the world’s preeminent power-block, so will their vassal regimes go in the world, first and foremost in Europe and Germany in particular. And der Spiegel knows it. They only have to look at the fate of the example of the GDR newspaper of note, Neues Deutschland:
https://www.neues-deutschland.de/
They still exist, they are still socialist, but nobody reads them any more since 1989. Won’t be different with der Spiegel and their multicult, “after the break”.
http://www.spiegel.de/video/stimmen-aus-der-brexit-hochburg-chesterfield-video-99024490.html
Images from Chesterfield, UK, a bulwark of no-deal Brexit. Typical British wishful thinking: “if we go, the EU will fall apart”, ignoring that the European unification process came about without any British influence. It remains to be seen if these people fully realize how vulnerable they are and at the mercy of Brussels. A no-deal Brexit could strip the UK of valuable corporate assets, that see no prospect in staying in a country that is excluded from Europe, with high tariff walls. Perhaps Corbyn will succeed with his shabby vision for Britain as a “workers paradise”, the next GDR/Albania.
JuanP on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 11:36 am
Delusional Davy “There you go dirty Juan. I knew you wouldn’t wait Long to go dirty. It’s just your low IQ low morality nature. Have fun. It is being documented for use later. Lmfao”
Of course you “knew” since you are the one doing it. I knew it, too, because you are like Pavlov’s dogs, and I rang the bell. ROFLMFAO! Your documenting shit here for later use is a clear symptom of mental health issues. No sane person would ever do such a stupid thing! LOL!
Sissyfuss on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 12:00 pm
Derhund my brother, this article elucidates precisely the nature of our predicament, triggering tepid responses from the infantile and uncaring. My heart grows heavier each day and I realize that even though my footprint is as miniscule as I can reduce it to, it is still too destructive and it contributes more to the 6th ME than it removes. Sentient beings will follow the fate of the amphibians, the insects, and the phytoplankton and all that will be left will be the dregs of mankind, the egomaniacs, the religious fanatics, and the dictators. The karma of their lives will then be beyond horrific.
I AM THE MOB on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 12:04 pm
Renewable energy is a scam being pushed by china and the “Big Tech” industry..
Renewable energy ‘simply won’t work’: Top Google engineers
https://www.theregister.co.uk/2014/11/21/renewable_energy_simply_wont_work_google_renewables_engineers/
Solar and Wind produced less than two percent of total world energy in 2016 — IEA WEO 2017
https://www.iea.org/publications/freepublications/publication/KeyWorld2017.pdf
It Will Take 131 Years To Replace Oil, And We’ve Only Got 10
https://www.businessinsider.com/131-years-to-replace-oil-2010-11
Warning of shortage of essential minerals for laptops, cell phones, electric cars, solar panels, wiring
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/03/170320110042.htm
We Might Not Have Enough Materials for All the Solar Panels and Wind Turbines We Need
https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/energy/a25576543/renewable-limits-materials-dutch-ministry-infrastructure/
Study predicts world economy unlikely to stop relying on fossil fuels
https://phys.org/news/2016-02-world-economy-fossil-fuels.html
At this rate, it’s going to take nearly 400 years to transform the energy system
https://www.technologyreview.com/s/610457/at-this-rate-its-going-to-take-nearly-400-years-to-transform-the-energy-system/
Why sustainable power is unsustainable
https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn16550-why-sustainable-power-is-unsustainable/
Top scientists show why powering US using 100 percent renewable energy is a delusional fantasy
http://energyskeptic.com/2017/big-fight-21-top-scientists-show-why-jacobson-and-delucchis-renewable-scheme-is-a-delusional-fantasy/
Davy on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 12:09 pm
“Of course you “knew” since you are the one doing it. I knew it, too”
Sure thang there dumbass, you can’t even cover your stink up anymore. Why not make an on topic comment triggered juan? What a low IQ guy who thinks his shit smells sweet. Dumbass parading around as the white knight ruining the board with his hours of harassment.
pointer on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 12:10 pm
Does anyone think this earth thing is supposed to go on forever? Of course it is supposed to die at some point, which appears to be soon. Enjoy your remaining time!
JuanP on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 12:27 pm
Delusional Davy “Dumbass parading around as the white knight ruining the board with his hours of harassment.”
Projecting again, Exceptionalist? LOL!
I AM THE MOB on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 12:28 pm
Former NASA scientist and climate advocate James Hansen said
“suggesting that renewables will let us phase rapidly off fossil fuels in the United States, China, India, or the world as a whole is almost the equivalent of believing in the Easter Bunny and Tooth Fairy.”
https://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/23/jim-hansen-presses-the-climate-case-for-nuclear-energy/?_r=0
Davy on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 12:31 pm
“Projecting again, Exceptionalist? LOL!”
dirty juan showing off his vast intellect. lol. More like a juanpee brain. Maybe junapee brain instead of surfing trips to Costa Rica and sailing trips to the Bahamas try going back to school
DerHundistLos on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 2:28 pm
Sissyfuss,
You express my feelings perfectly. When humanity forces its own extinction, the epitaph on the tombstone shall read:
Clever apelike organism yet uniquely different: selfish, short-sighted, entirely lacking in wisdom, pernicious destroyer of all other life forms.
Result: Failed species.
onlooker on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 2:48 pm
Someone said our problem is –We have paleolithic emotions, medieval instructions and godlike technology. So, our epitaph will read “Here lies Homo Sapiens, quite intelligent but not very wise”
I AM THE MOB on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 3:24 pm
Back 10 years ago, the elites at the Davos conference were seen as the people who ruled the world..
Now they are seen as the people who ruined the world..
onlooker on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 3:34 pm
They don’t give a damn about the world, they are already building bunkers to save themselves
I AM THE MOB on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 3:50 pm
‘Trump is very worried’: Fears spread that Roger Stone will turn on the president — and that Don Jr. could be next
https://www.rawstory.com/2019/01/trump-worried-fears-spread-roger-stone-will-turn-president-don-jr-next/
I hope Trumps son goes down hard..And I hope the goons in prison rape him endlessly! Little rich entitlement bitch!
Cloggie on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 4:01 pm
“And I hope the goons in prison rape him endlessly!”
Nice little charmer we have in our midst here.
If you want to know what kind of monsters ran the USSR, look no further and study this little mobster satanist.
Oh, and they intend to run the US unhindered by any constitution… after the break.
Unfortunately for mobster, in contrast to 1917, the entire world outside the US is now free to do what it likes.
Cloggie on Sun, 27th Jan 2019 4:07 pm
Jimmy Carter: “Donald Trump would be worthy of consideration for the Nobel Peace Prize“
https://nypost.com/2018/05/22/carter-trump-could-be-worthy-of-nobel-peace-prize/