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Six Urgent Matters for Humanity in Global Crisis

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In these mean streets of globalized capitalism in crisis, it has become profitable to turn poverty and inequality into a tourist attraction.

The South African Emoya Luxury Hotel and Spa company has made a glamorized spectacle of it. The resort recently advertised an opportunity for tourists to stay “in our unique Shanty Town … and experience traditional township living within a safe private game reserve environment.” A cluster of simulated shanties outside of Bloemfontein that the company has constructed “is ideal for team building, braais, bachelors [parties], theme parties and an experience of a lifetime,” read the ad. The luxury accommodations, made to appear from the outside as shacks, featured paraffin lamps, candles, a battery-operated radio, an outside toilet, a drum and fireplace for cooking, as well as under-floor heating, air conditioning and wireless internet access. A well-dressed, young white couple is pictured embracing in a field with the corrugated tin shanties in the background. The only thing missing in this fantasy world of sanitized space and glamorized poverty was the people themselves living in poverty.

Escalating inequalities fuel capitalism’s chronic problem of over-accumulation.

The “luxury shanty town” in South Africa is a fitting metaphor for global capitalism as a whole. Faced with a stagnant global economy, elites have managed to turn war, structural violence and inequality into opportunities for capital, pleasure and entertainment. It is hard not to conclude that unchecked capitalism has become what I term “sadistic capitalism,” in which the suffering and deprivation generated by capitalism become a source of aesthetic pleasure, leisure and entertainment for others.

I recently had the opportunity to travel through several countries in Latin America, the Middle East, North Africa, East Asia and throughout North America. I was on sabbatical to research what the global crisis looks like on the ground around the world. Everywhere I went, social polarization and political tensions have reached explosive dimensions.

Where is the crisis headed, what are the possible outcomes and what does it tell us about global capitalism and resistance? This crisis is not like earlier structural crises of world capitalism, such as in the 1930s or 1970s. This one is fast becoming systemic. The crisis of humanity shares aspects of earlier structural crises of world capitalism, but there are six novel, interrelated dimensions to the current moment that I highlight here, in broad strokes, as the “big picture” context in which countries and peoples around the world are experiencing a descent into chaos and uncertainty.

1) The level of global social polarization and inequality is unprecedented in the face of out-of-control, over-accumulated capital. In January 2016, the development agency Oxfam published a follow-up to its report on global inequality that had been released the previous year. According to the new report, now just 62 billionaires — down from 80 identified by the agency in its January 2015 report — control as much wealth as one half of the world’s population, and the top 1% owns more wealth than the other 99% combined. Beyond the transnational capitalist class and the upper echelons of the global power bloc, the richest 20 percent of humanity owns some 95 percent of the world’s wealth, while the bottom 80 percent has to make do with just 5 percent.

This 20-80 divide of global society into haves and the have-nots is the new global social apartheid. It is evident not just between rich and poor countries, but within each country, North and South, with the rise of new affluent high-consumption sectors alongside the downward mobility, “precariatization,” destabilization and expulsion of majorities.

Inside the world’s green zones, privileged strata avail themselves of privatized social services, consumption and entertainment.

Escalating inequalities fuel capitalism’s chronic problem of over-accumulation: The transnational capitalist class cannot find productive outlets to unload the enormous amounts of surplus it has accumulated, leading to stagnation in the world economy. The signs of an impending depression are everywhere. The front page of the February 20 issue of The Economist read, “The World Economy: Out of Ammo?

Extreme levels of social polarization present a challenge to dominant groups. They strive to purchase the loyalty of that 20 percent, while at the same time dividing the 80 percent, co-opting some into a hegemonic bloc and repressing the rest. Alongside the spread of frightening new systems of social control and repression is heightened dissemination through the culture industries and corporate marketing strategies that depoliticize through consumerist fantasies and the manipulation of desire.

As “Trumpism” in the United States so well illustrates, another strategy of co-optation is the manipulation of fear and insecurity among the downwardly mobile so that social anxiety is channeled toward scapegoated communities. This psychosocial mechanism of displacing mass anxieties is not new, but it appears to be increasing around the world in the face of the structural destabilization of capitalist globalization. Scapegoated communities are under siege, such as the Rohingya in Myanmar, the Muslim minority in India, the Kurds in Turkey, southern African immigrants in South Africa, and Syrian and Iraqi refugees and other immigrants in Europe.

As with its 20th century predecessor, 21st century fascism hinges on such manipulation of social anxiety at a time of acute capitalist crisis. Extreme inequality requires extreme violence and repression that lend to projects of 21st century fascism.

2) The system is fast reaching the ecological limits to its reproduction. We have reached several tipping points in what environmental scientists refer to as nine crucial “planetary boundaries.” We have already exceeded these boundaries in three areas — climate change, the nitrogen cycle and diversity loss.

There have been five previous mass extinctions in earth’s history. While all these were due to natural causes, for the first time ever, human conduct is intersecting with and fundamentally altering the earth system.

If the capitalist system stops expanding outward, it enters crisis and faces collapse.

We have entered what Paul Crutzen, the Dutch environmental scientist and Nobel Prize winner, termed the Anthropocene — a new age in which humans have transformed up to half of the world’s surface. We are altering the composition of the atmosphere and acidifying the oceans at a rate that undermines the conditions for life. The ecological dimensions of global crisis cannot be understated.

“We are deciding, without quite meaning to, which evolutionary pathways will remain open and which will forever be closed,” observes Elizabeth Kolbert in her best seller, The Sixth Extinction. “No other creature has ever managed this … The Sixth Extinction will continue to determine the course of life long after everything people have written and painted and built has been ground into dust.”

Capitalism cannot be held solely responsible. The human-nature contradiction has deep roots in civilization itself. The ancient Sumerian empires, for example, collapsed after the population over-salinated their crop soil. The Mayan city-state network collapsed about AD 900 due to deforestation. And the former Soviet Union wrecked havoc on the environment.

However, given capital’s implacable impulse to accumulate profit and its accelerated commodification of nature, it is difficult to imagine that the environmental catastrophe can be resolved within the capitalist system. “Green capitalism” appears as an oxymoron, as sadistic capitalism’s attempt to turn the ecological crisis into a profit-making opportunity, along with the conversion of poverty into a tourist attraction.

3) The sheer magnitude of the means of violence is unprecedented, as is the concentrated control over the means of global communications and the production and circulation of knowledge, symbols and images. We have seen the spread of frightening new systems of social control and repression that have brought us into the panoptical surveillance society and the age of thought control. This real-life Orwellian world is in a sense more perturbing than that described by George Orwell in his iconic novel 1984. In that fictional world, people were compelled to give their obedience to the state (“Big Brother”) in exchange for a quiet existence with guarantees of employment, housing and other social necessities. Now, however, the corporate and political powers that be force obedience even as the means of survival are denied to the vast majority.

Global apartheid involves the creation of “green zones” that are cordoned off in each locale around the world where elites are insulated through new systems of spatial reorganization, social control and policing. “Green zone” refers to the nearly impenetrable area in central Baghdad that US occupation forces established in the wake of the 2003 invasion of Iraq. The command center of the occupation and select Iraqi elite inside that green zone were protected from the violence and chaos that engulfed the country.

Urban areas around the world are now green zoned through gentrification, gated communities, surveillance systems, and state and private violence. Inside the world’s green zones, privileged strata avail themselves of privatized social services, consumption and entertainment. They can work and communicate through internet and satellite sealed off under the protection of armies of soldiers, police and private security forces.

What is required is a redistribution of power downward and transformation toward a system in which social need trumps private profit.

Green zoning takes on distinct forms in each locality. In Palestine, I witnessed such zoning in the form of Israeli military checkpoints, Jewish settler-only roads and the apartheid wall. In Mexico City, the most exclusive residential areas in the upscale Santa Fe District are accessible only by helicopter and private gated roads. In Johannesburg, a surreal drive through the exclusive Sandton City area reveals rows of mansions that appear as military compounds, with private armed towers and electrical and barbed-wire fences. In Cairo, I toured satellite cities ringing the impoverished center and inner suburbs where the country’s elite could live out their aspirations and fantasies. They sport gated residential complexes with spotless green lawns, private leisure and shopping centers and English-language international schools under the protection of military checkpoints and private security police.

In other cities, green zoning is subtler but no less effective. In Los Angeles, where I live, the freeway system now has an express lane reserved for those that can pay an exorbitant toll. On this lane, the privileged speed by, while the rest remain one lane over, stuck in the city’s notorious bumper-to-bumper traffic — or even worse, in notoriously underfunded and underdeveloped public transportation, where it may take half a day to get to and from work. There is no barrier separating this express lane from the others. However, a near-invisible closed surveillance system monitors every movement. If a vehicle without authorization shifts into the exclusive lane, it is instantly recorded by this surveillance system and a heavy fine is imposed on the driver, under threat of impoundment, while freeway police patrols are ubiquitous.

Outside of the global green zones, warfare and police containment have become normalized and sanitized for those not directly at the receiving end of armed aggression. “Militainment” — portraying and even glamorizing war and violence as entertaining spectacles through Hollywood films and television police shows, computer games and corporate “news” channels — may be the epitome of sadistic capitalism. It desensitizes, bringing about complacency and indifference.

In between the green zones and outright warfare are prison industrial complexes, immigrant and refugee repression and control systems, the criminalization of outcast communities and capitalist schooling. The omnipresent media and cultural apparatuses of the corporate economy, in particular, aim to colonize the mind — to undermine the ability to think critically and outside the dominant worldview. A neofascist culture emerges through militarism, extreme masculinization, racism and racist mobilizations against scapegoats.

4) We are reaching limits to the extensive expansion of capitalism. Capitalism is like riding a bicycle: When you stop pedaling the bicycle, you fall over. If the capitalist system stops expanding outward, it enters crisis and faces collapse. In each earlier structural crisis, the system went through a new round of extensive expansion — from waves of colonial conquest in earlier centuries, to the integration in the late 20th and early 21st centuries of the former socialist countries, China, India and other areas that had been marginally outside the system. There are no longer any new territories to integrate into world capitalism.

Meanwhile, the privatization of education, health care, utilities, basic services and public land are turning those spaces in global society that were outside of capital’s control into “spaces of capital.” Even poverty has been turned into a commodity. What is there left to commodify? Where can the system now expand? With the limits to expansion comes a turn toward militarized accumulation — making wars of endless destruction and reconstruction and expanding the militarization of social and political institutions so as to continue to generate new opportunities for accumulation in the face of stagnation.

5) There is the rise of a vast surplus population inhabiting a “planet of slums,” alienated from the productive economy, thrown into the margins and subject to these sophisticated systems of social control and destruction. Global capitalism has no direct use for surplus humanity. But indirectly, it holds wages down everywhere and makes new systems of 21st century slavery possible. These systems include prison labor, the forced recruitment of miners at gunpoint by warlords contracted by global corporations to dig up valuable minerals in the Congo, sweatshops and exploited immigrant communities (including the rising tide of immigrant female caregivers for affluent populations).

Furthermore, the global working class is experiencing accelerated “precariatization.” The “new precariat” refers to the proletariat that faces capital under today’s unstable and precarious labor relations — informalization, casualization, part-time, temp, immigrant and contract labor.

As communities are uprooted everywhere, there is a rising reserve army of immigrant labor. The global working class is becoming divided into citizen and immigrant workers. The latter are particularly attractive to transnational capital, as the lack of citizenship rights makes them particularly vulnerable, and therefore, exploitable.

The challenge for dominant groups is how to contain the real and potential rebellion of surplus humanity, the immigrant workforce and the precariat. How can they contain the explosive contradictions of this system? The 21st century megacities become the battlegrounds between mass resistance movements and the new systems of mass repression. Some populations in these cities (and also in abandoned countryside) are at risk of genocide, such as those in Gaza, zones in Somalia and Congo, and swaths of Iraq and Syria.

6) There is a disjuncture between a globalizing economy and a nation-state-based system of political authority. Transnational state apparatuses are incipient and do not wield enough power and authority to organize and stabilize the system, much less to impose regulations on runaway transnational capital. In the wake of the 2008 financial collapse, for instance, the governments of the G-8 and G-20 were unable to impose transnational regulation on the global financial system, despite a series of emergency summits to discuss such regulation.

Elites historically have attempted to resolve the problems of over-accumulation by state policies that can regulate the anarchy of the market. However, in recent decades, transnational capital has broken free from the constraints imposed by the nation-state. The more “enlightened” elite representatives of the transnational capitalist class are now clamoring for transnational mechanisms of regulation that would allow the global ruling class to reign in the anarchy of the system in the interests of saving global capitalism from itself and from radical challenges from below.

At the same time, the division of the world into some 200 competing nation-states is not the most propitious of circumstances for the global working class. Victories in popular struggles from below in any one country or region can (and often do) become diverted and even undone by the structural power of transnational capital and the direct political and military domination that this structural power affords the dominant groups. In Greece, for instance, the leftist Syriza party came to power in 2015 on the heels of militant worker struggles and a mass uprising. But the party abandoned its radical program as a result of the enormous pressure exerted on it from the European Central Bank and private international creditors.

The Systemic Critique of Global Capitalism

A growing number of transnational elites themselves now recognize that any resolution to the global crisis must involve redistribution downward of income.

However, in the viewpoint of those from below, a neo-Keynesian redistribution within the prevailing corporate power structure is not enough. What is required is a redistribution of power downward and transformation toward a system in which social need trumps private profit.

A global rebellion against the transnational capitalist class has spread since the financial collapse of 2008. Wherever one looks, there is popular, grassroots and leftist struggle, and the rise of new cultures of resistance: the Arab Spring; the resurgence of leftist politics in Greece, Spain and elsewhere in Europe; the tenacious resistance of Mexican social movements following the Ayotzinapa massacre of 2014; the favela uprising in Brazil against the government’s World Cup and Olympic expulsion policies; the student strikes in Chile; the remarkable surge in the Chinese workers’ movement; the shack dwellers and other poor people’s campaigns in South Africa; Occupy Wall Street, the immigrant rights movement, Black Lives Matter, fast food workers’ struggle and the mobilization around the Bernie Sanders presidential campaign in the United States.

This global revolt is spread unevenly and faces many challenges. A number of these struggles, moreover, have suffered setbacks, such as the Greek working-class movement and, tragically, the Arab Spring. What type of a transformation is viable, and how do we achieve it? How we interpret the global crisis is itself a matter of vital importance as politics polarize worldwide between a neofascist and a popular response. The systemic critique of global capitalism must strive to influence, from this vantage point, the discourse and practice of movements for a more just distribution of wealth and power. Our survival may depend on it.

TruthOut



46 Comments on "Six Urgent Matters for Humanity in Global Crisis"

  1. Davy on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 7:19 am 

    Good article with some honest and thought provoking ideas. Yet, the real issues is the systematic and necessary collapse of modern man. There is no degrowth or organized revolution that is going to change that. Our system is a self-organizing adaptive system in its end game of breaking to a lower level of stability.

    Human impute in the process is limited to the upside. The upside in this equation is “saving his ass”. Humans can have a big impute on the process on the down side. We can committee species suicide by global war. We can cause this process to end sooner by continued poor decisions.

    We spent a few hundred years creating this mess we are not getting out of it. Our insanity of technology, efficiency, and substitution is fully at diminishing returns except with deception. We cannot scale out of this in time and resources. We are far too far into population overshoot and overconsumption dependence. We are a cooked goose.

    We can get on with the class and race wars because humans have to blame, complain, and finger point. That leads to lynch mobs eventually. What will that solve well it will get the process going quicker and get us to a population balance sooner. Will it solve anything else? Yea, it will satisfy all the hate and resentment rampant everywhere including this board. There are so many people full of hate the place is ready to explode with conflict. Have at it but remember what goes around comes around. There are only so many 1%ers and when they run out it will eventually get down to your level whoever you are.

  2. Apneaman on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 8:44 am 

    I can’t wait for the young raging eco anarchists to start chopping up the 1%ers with dull rusty machetes. It’ll be “good for the economy”.

  3. makati1 on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 9:11 am 

    Ap, lots of fertilizer in the 1%. After all, they must be full of it. They spew so much continually.

  4. PracticalMaina on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 9:34 am 

    I bet soylent green is much tastier when its all marbled from years of caviar, champagne and easy living.

  5. penury on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 9:43 am 

    For anyone who thinks that “humanity” will suddenly become different, I have bad news. We are all screwed. From he wealthiest to the poorest.

  6. Kenz300 on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 9:54 am 

    Too many people……….create too much pollution and demand too many resources….

    China made great progress in moving its people out of poverty…….one reason was slowing population growth…..

    If you can not provide for yourself you can not provide for a child.

    CLIMATE CHANGE, declining fish stocks, droughts, floods, air water and land pollution, poverty, water and food shortages all stem from the worlds worst environmental problem……. OVER POPULATION.

    Yet the world adds 80 million more mouths to feed, clothe, house and provide energy and water for every year… this is unsustainable… and is a big part of the Climate Change problem

    Birth Control Permanent Methods: Learn About Effectiveness

    http://www.emedicinehealth.com/birth_control_permanent_methods/article_em.htm

    Poverty in the Philippines.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9M5PAS8Lr10

  7. Davy on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 9:56 am 

    PM, kind of curious isn’t it all relative with class? In relation to the poorest of the world you and I and everyone on this board is 1%er’s. How do you want to die? Baseball bat or gunshot? Do you want to suffer or quick? Come on be a man.

  8. PracticalMaina on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 10:02 am 

    Epic orgasm is my preferred exit. It was a joke and you are a little defensive. I never made a dime off the destruction of someone else health. I try to not waste and I try to help those who need it. Is that not being a man? In some families your only a man when you accrue your first million.

  9. PracticalMaina on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 10:26 am 

    How do you want to go Davy? You gonna share with your neighbors who were not blessed with 400 acres?

  10. ghung on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 10:50 am 

    Near the end of the article; “…the favela uprising in Brazil against the government’s World Cup and Olympic expulsion policies;…”

    I’m expecting this year’s Olympics to be quite ‘exciting’, all things considered. They may even need to open the gates to the masses to make it look like more paid spectators showed up. Bread and circuses? It’ll be interesting to see how the MSM spins that. Making the Olympiad affordable for all!? It’s likely to go down as the biggest Olympic clusterfuck ever, despite their best efforts.

    Zika Caipirinha? Anyone? I’ll stick to gin and tonic,, but thanks anyway.

  11. Davy on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 12:34 pm 

    PM, we are all guilty and innocent depending on the argument. Yet, the gross inequalities in the world today has practical implications above acedemic musing. These implications are macro with a less resiliant and sustainable society the worse the inequalities. It also has moral and ethical implications for the individual for those who are not psychopathic and have a human heart.

    I firmly believe we all should practice relative sacrifice per our socioeconomic place. We should do this because it is right for us and others. In many cases today the sacrifice is insignificant compared to the benefits. Many are not wanting. Many are gluttons for stimulation. Be a little less of a glutton.

    As for the extremely rich they are in a whole other classification. The higher you are the farther the fall. When this global world does fly apart many will free fall. Many will prosper as rich often do in crisis. In the end nature could give a shit about rich or poor. Nature just wants her vigorish.

  12. PracticalMaina on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 1:59 pm 

    Davy I feel like you called me a glutton in the middle of your statement. Which is amusing, because once again you don’t know me. I am not a glutton and I am not part of the global top 1% of income. I am sorry I upset you expressing anger at the super wealthy, good for you defending those with the means to defend themselves.

  13. Davy on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 2:15 pm 

    PM, you are a glutton as well as every other one on this board. We are the global gluttons of which there are maybe a billion. The rest live on our scraps.

  14. Practicalmaina on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 2:36 pm 

    True

  15. Apneaman on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 4:14 pm 

    “Didn’t make it onto the yearly roll call of the mega-wealthy? Now’s your chance to find out where you actually sit in comparison to the rest of the world.”

    http://www.globalrichlist.com/

  16. Apneaman on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 4:35 pm 

    Unusually Early Greenland Melt

    http://polarportal.dk/en/nyheder/arkiv/nyheder/usaedvanlig-tidlig-afsmeltning-i-groenland/

  17. onlooker on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 6:22 pm 

    “We are the global gluttons of which there are maybe a billion. The rest live on our scraps.” Absolutely. Yet I know I nor any of you chose to make this world like this. The elites did. What is on the menu? Elite Crêpe Suzette

  18. onlooker on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 8:52 pm 

    Civilization and Capitalism are cancers and diseases upon the Earth and that is borne out by the realities of the present.

  19. Apneaman on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 9:36 pm 

    That was quick.

    What I was saying at the top of this thread about 1% getting chopped up………

    Welcome to Canada bitches

    The Curious Story Of The Chinese Tycoon Found “Chopped Up Into 100 Pieces” In A Vancouver Mansion

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-04-14/curious-story-dismembered-chinese-tycoon-found-dead-vancouver-mansion

  20. Go Speed Racer on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 9:42 pm 

    Crisis #1 Top priority. Not enough pretty women, too many fat ugly ones. We’re doomed.

  21. Sissyfuss on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 10:07 pm 

    Wow, according to the Rich list,I make $50,000 and that makes me as a 1/2 percenter. Eewww, I feel so dirty!

  22. Apneaman on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 10:18 pm 

    Speed Racer, they all look the same when you turn them upside down.

  23. makati1 on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 11:31 pm 

    Sissy, you are definitely in the 1%er class if you consider world per capita incomes. But don’t worry, your income will be brought down to the level of the others soon. Be patient.

  24. makati1 on Thu, 14th Apr 2016 11:35 pm 

    BTW Sissy, I’m on SS and am in the top 5%. ~300,000,000 people have a higher income than me. Who cares? If you cannot pay for the basics it doesn’t matter.

    LOL

  25. GregT on Fri, 15th Apr 2016 12:34 am 

    “Not enough pretty women, too many fat ugly ones. We’re doomed.”

    Move to Russia.

  26. GregT on Fri, 15th Apr 2016 12:48 am 

    “Wow, according to the Rich list,I make $50,000 and that makes me as a 1/2 percenter. ”

    If you make more than ~$45K US per year, then you are among the global 1%. It isn’t the 1 percenters that are the problem, it is the .0001 percenters that are. Anybody that nets over a million per year, nets more in one year than your average American will net in his entire lifetime. You don’t get rich by working hard, you get rich by exploiting scores of other people who work hard.

  27. Dredd on Fri, 15th Apr 2016 7:26 am 

    Don’t forget the price of wooden ships (Will This Float Your Boat – 12).

  28. Dooma on Fri, 15th Apr 2016 8:54 am 

    They are poking fun at the poor by simulating (vaguely) the living conditions and PROMOTING it!

    Anyone who stays in one of these shacks should then be sent to the slums of Rio for a week-wearing a shirt that says “NARC” in Portuguese.

    IT is time to round these pigs up and put a bullet in their sick heads. Enough is enough!!

  29. Dooma on Fri, 15th Apr 2016 9:12 am 

    It is simply a matter of time before the developed world resembles the “developing” countries I have visited.

    The middle class was only really one generation long. The future is bleak for the poor as the gap widens between them and the rich. You can see it quite vividly in any one of these developing countries.

    The poor sell cigarettes at the traffic lights and dodge and weave between luxury German cars.

    This is our future unless there is a lot of blood spilt.

  30. GregT on Fri, 15th Apr 2016 9:19 am 

    “The poor sell cigarettes at the traffic lights and dodge and weave between luxury German cars.”

    Hmmm, here in Canada the poor don’t even have cigarettes to sell. They just beg for spare change, and often times, cigarettes.

  31. JuanP on Sat, 16th Apr 2016 7:50 am 

    This writer has good intentions but has been confused by American MSM propaganda and is confusing natural popular uprises with US CIA and DOS instigated color revolutions and hybrid wars like the one going on against Brazil.

    When the time comes nobody will be safe, but the richer you are the more likely you will be killed and die in a violent way and the poorer you are the more likely you are to die from starvation, disease, and exposure to the elements. We will all die; we will just do it in different ways. Embrace your death and prepare to die as your death is the only 100% certain thing in your life.

  32. makati1 on Sat, 16th Apr 2016 8:19 am 

    JuanP, very true. I can kinda enjoy watching events unfold as I have made my peace with Death. He will come when he comes and nothing I can do will add a minute onto my life.

    Since I know death is the kindness of total oblivion, I don’t worry about some fictional Hell or Heaven as a prop for my problems. They are a man made fiction. When it happens, I may not even know it. THAT is the best way to go.

  33. onlooker on Sat, 16th Apr 2016 8:26 am 

    Yeah, guys in the end all of what we talk revolves around death one way or the other for us and others into the future. I too have made my peace with death. Death is the great unknown and the great equalizer. Nothing to fear and the way things are going, perhaps something to welcome.

  34. makati1 on Sat, 16th Apr 2016 8:30 am 

    Onlooker, if there is a nuclear war, the ones who are vaporized in the blast will be the lucky ones. The others will wish they had been at ground zero, I think.

  35. onlooker on Sat, 16th Apr 2016 8:34 am 

    Again your spot on Mak. Hope all is going well in PHIL.

  36. onlooker on Sat, 16th Apr 2016 8:36 am 

    Just thought I would remind others of the priorities of the Empire.
    https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1091657137560932&set=gm.1106219049442059&type=3&theater
    54% of its budget on War, just 6% on Education.

  37. onlooker on Sat, 16th Apr 2016 8:42 am 

    a better link to those statistics I posted above. http://www.morningnightcap.com/us-government-spending-free-stuff/

  38. makati1 on Sat, 16th Apr 2016 9:30 am 

    Thanks, Onlooker. All is going as well as can be expected. We have enjoyed some above average temps and the rain has been sparse, but it is summer here and the el nino usually causes some drought. But the economy is expected to grow at a 6% rate and inflation is low. There is some problems in the lower island of Mindanao, but that has been ongoing for decades. Nothing new.

  39. makati1 on Sat, 16th Apr 2016 9:50 am 

    This is a sure sign of our future:

    “Hottest March on Record as Earth Keeps Hurtling Past Temperature Milestones”

    http://www.commondreams.org/news/2016/04/15/hottest-march-record-earth-keeps-hurtling-past-temperature-milestones

    Pass the lemonade with ice.

  40. Kenz300 on Sat, 16th Apr 2016 10:09 am 

    Too many people demand too many resources……yet the worlds population grows by 80 million every year…..

    How many charities are dealing with the same problems they were dealing with 10 or 20 years ago with no end in sight. Every problem is made worse by the worlds growing population. IF you can not provide for yourself you can not provide for a child.

    Rescuing Homeless Children From the Streets of India

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cpaR_pTVeBk

    Poverty in the Philippines.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9M5PAS8Lr10

    If you can not provide for yourself you can not provide for a child.

    Birth Control Permanent Methods: Learn About Effectiveness

    http://www.emedicinehealth.com/birth_control_permanent_methods/article_em.htm

  41. Boat on Sat, 16th Apr 2016 10:49 am 

    Kenz,

    Why not take on the worlds religions. They promote birth. Maybe if charities and governments quit subsidizing those who don’t work populations would balance.

  42. Apneaman on Sat, 16th Apr 2016 1:35 pm 

    Boat, isn’t it the people who work that are causing the greater share of humanity’s problems? Especially westerners who make the most money?

    Correction, that should be predicaments, not problems. Problems have solutions predicaments do not.

    If there was such a thing as human progress, there’s not, but if we are pretending (we good at that) there is, shouldn’t the goal be to strive so that no one has to work unless they want to?

  43. Boat on Sat, 16th Apr 2016 3:36 pm 

    ape,

    I would rather talk human fairness. If the top World 10 percent had no tax havens, the top 10 percent of all corporations paid a min 25 percent, the systems would have a l

  44. Boat on Sat, 16th Apr 2016 3:38 pm 

    alot more money to operate.

  45. Apneaman on Sat, 16th Apr 2016 6:27 pm 

    Boat, just think of all the ways we could convert that extra 25% into CO2 instead of it sitting on some offshore banks server collecting cyber dust.

    Some how I don’t think most of that money is ever going to get spent. Funny how a bunch of 1’s and 0’s on a computer somewhere grants some rich prick so much power. See, money is just one more abstract ape invention. One more article of faith we dreamed up. This is why, I say when the system collapses the rich are done. They only have power as long as the system is functioning. You know Eric Prince? He’s the owner of that mercenary outfit Black Water or whatever they are calling it now. There are a bunch of them out there. When TSHTF some .001%er is going to have a merc crew escort him and his family to his bug-out, but the minute the mercenaries realize the system is done, they are going to cut his throat, take his women, eat all the food, drink all the booze and sell or use the rest of the supplies.

    What is Coming? Elite Feverishly Building Survival Bunkers: “Fear Of Uprising From The 99%”

    “Panicked members of the elite are buying luxury bomb-proof underground survival bunkers because they fear mass civil unrest might be on the horizon.”

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-04-14/what-coming-elite-feverishly-building-survival-bunkers-fear-uprising-99

  46. Dooma on Sun, 17th Apr 2016 9:11 am 

    Thanks for the link ap. Let the rich bury themselves in the ground. It just means that it saves us digging holes for them.

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