Turn it around... What good do banks in their current configuration,
cars, and the mayhem THEY CAUSE do?

Most countries in the third world spend the equivalent of their
foreign aid from the US just paying for the mayhem automobiles cause
in their society and to their people.

...and I won't even mention the disaster that is bank investment in
developing world infrastructure.

BTW, the 'industrial petrochemical' age was a one hundred year blip
that ain't coming around again, so, suck it up while ya' got it.

The Archdruid Report (May 23 2007)
http://www.energybulletin.net/newswire.php?id=30022

Most serious discussions of the predicament of industrial society
these days keep their focus tightly on the near future. The Limits to
Growth {1}, the seminal 1972 study along these lines, took its
computer models out to 2100 or so but put most of its attention into
the first half of the current century.

In much the same way, Richard Duncan's closely reasoned papers on the
Olduvai Theory - his prediction that modern industrial society will
turn out to be a one-time-only pulse waveform - center on the interval
between 1930 and 2030, the mathematical boundary points of the
waveform. Many other writers in the field have an even tighter focus,
directing their efforts toward predictions about the arrival of peak
oil and its immediate aftermath.

Now of course there's much to be said for this approach. In the far
future, as some wag or other has pointed out, all of us will be dead,
and that makes the near future naturally a little more interesting to
us. To some extent, and especially in the face of crises of the scale
we are likely to encounter in the next few decades, it's not wholly
unreasonable to take care of what's imminent and let the distant
future take care of itself. As I've argued here and elsewhere, though,
the most likely trajectory of industrial society is a process of
uneven economic and technological decline, a "long descent" over
several centuries leading into a deindustrial dark age and beyond. An
extended trajectory of this sort makes the occasional glance at the
long view worth taking. The further an archer plans on shooting, to
extend a metaphor from Machiavelli, the higher he needs to aim, and
the further downrange he needs to track his target.

For this reason, over the next few weeks, I plan on trying to sort out
some of the primary trends likely to shape the further reaches of the
future. To keep the project within manageable limits, I'll be limiting
my focus in space to North America, and in time to the next five
hundred years or so - a likely time frame for the Long Descent from
the industrial age, through the dark age following, to the seedtime of
the sustainable cultures of the future. Any conclusions proposed will
be tentative at best, since history is above all else the realm of the
contingent and unforeseen, and even those factors that can be
predicted in advance routinely take strange shapes under the sway of
unexpected forces. Many people in the first decade of the 20th century
predicted the coming of the First World War, but as far as I know
nobody dreamed that it would turn a penniless exile named V I Lenin
into the Communist dictator of Russia and topple Tsar Nicholas II from
what most observers at the time thought was one of the most secure
thrones in Europe.

Surprises on the same scale are doubtless lying in wait in our own
future. More generally, the one thing we can be sure of about the
future is that it won't look much like the present. A hundred years
ago, the United States was not the most powerful nation on Earth; a
hundred years from now, in all probability, it won't be, either. Two
hundred years ago, much of what now counts as American territory
belonged to other nations; two hundred years from now, it's entirely
possible that the same thing will be true. The sweeping cultural
transformations that turned a dowdy frontier society into a brash
imperial power will most likely have their equivalents in our future
as well.

At least five major factors, it seems to me, can be counted on to play
a role in these transformations. The first is depopulation. We are so
used to worrying about the population explosion that the possibility
of its opposite has rarely entered into serious discussions of the
future. Yet the population bubble of the last few centuries is just as
much a product of the extravagant exploitation of fossil fuels during
the same period as the industrial age itself. Without the massive
changes in agriculture, trade, and public health set in motion by the
needs of a fossil fuel-powered industrial society, the relatively
modest surge in human numbers in the 19th century would have reversed
itself in the normal way. (In point of fact, it nearly did so anyway;
at the dawn of the 20th century, bubonic plague once again surged out
of central Asia, and only massive efforts by the major colonial powers
of the age prevented a third plague pandemic from sweeping the globe.)

We are already seeing a preview of the future in Russia and several
other fragments of the former Soviet Union, where crude death rates
have risen to nearly double rates of live birth, a trajectory that
will cut population figures in half by 2050 or so. Similar population
contractions can be traced in the declining phase of many past
civilizations - the depopulation of large sections of the western
Roman Empire is well attested by contemporary sources, for example. As
the industrial age unwinds, similar patterns will likely unfold in
North America; for that matter, whole regions of the American West are
depopulating right now through outmigration, and archeologists of the
future are likely to trace the beginning of ancient America's decline
and fall back to the failure of settlement on the western plains in
whatever the late 20th century works out to in some future calendar.

Depopulation moves at different paces in different cultures and
regions, though, and one of the classic results of this differential
is migration. When civilizations collapse, one of the most notable
consequences is a massive relocation of peoples and cultures. Before
the fall of the Roman Empire, for example, the ancestors of today's
English lived in Denmark, the ancestors of today's Hungarians lived in
central Asia, and many of the ancestors of today's Spaniards lived
north of the Black Sea. Today, as tidal streams of economic and
political refugees press at borders worldwide, the only thing
preventing equally drastic migrations is the fraying fabric of
national sovereignty, backed by military forces totally dependent on
fossil fuels. As the industrial age enters its twilight, the
likelihood that those bulwarks will hold is vanishingly small, and
when they give way, movements of peoples on an epic scale are likely
to result.

Just now, the pressures that get news coverage involve people from
outside the industrial world trying to get into it - Mexicans entering
the United States, Arabs and Turks entering Europe, and so forth. As
the industrial age comes to its close, though, other dynamics are
likely to come into play. Consider the situation of Japan. Close to
150 million people live on a crowded skein of islands with little
arable land and no fossil fuels at all, supported by trade links made
possible only by abundant energy resources elsewhere. As fossil fuel
production peaks and begins its inevitable contraction, industrial
agriculture and food imports both will become increasingly
problematic, and over the long term the Japanese population will be
forced to contract to something like the small fraction of today's
figures the Japanese islands supported in the past. Mass migration is
nearly the only viable option for the rest of the population, Japan's
ample supply of ships and fishing boats provide the means, and
possible destinations beckon all around the Pacific basin.

All this assumes the collapse of current political arrangements over
at least some of the world, but this is a good bet. A third factor
that needs to be taken into account, then, is political
disintegration. When civilizations fall, their political systems
rarely remain intact, and when they do it's usually as a shell of
titles and formalities covering drastically different political
realities. The shell can exert a potent influence of its own - in
western Europe after the fall of Rome, just as in China after the
collapse of the Han dynasty, the title of "emperor" retained immense
power even when nobody existed who could plausibly claim it, and the
gravitational attraction of the old imperial state in both cases
helped drive efforts toward political unification many centuries
later. Along the same lines, warlords of the future may well lay claim
the title of President of the United States, centuries after the
office and the national polity it once served exist nowhere outside of
the realm of legend and chronicle.

A fourth factor, parallel to the third, is cultural drift. Right now
the manufacture and mass marketing of popular culture maintains a thin
shell of cultural similarity across large parts of English-speaking
North America, but even that is under strain as regional, religious,
and ideological subcultures take advantage of the decentralizing power
of today's communications technology and move more and more boldly in
their own directions. While the end of the industrial age will bring
down the Internet, it will also play taps for the mechanisms of mass
communication and manufacture that make popular culture, in the modern
sense of the word, possible at all. In the bubbling cauldron of
deindustrial North America, many of today's new cultural initiatives
will fuse with older traditions and brand-new movements in ways we
can't even begin to imagine today. The disintegration of political
unity and the end of reliable long-distance travel, two very likely
effects of the Long Descent, make the emergence of new local and
regional cultures all but certain.

Finally, ecological change is the wild card in the deck. Natural
systems form the bedrock foundation of all human societies, and the
sweeping impacts of industrial civilization's brief heyday and
collapse promise to set ecosystems spinning into radically new forms
over much of the globe. Climate change is only one aspect of this
picture, though its importance needs not to be understated. Major
climate shifts have affected North America powerfully in the
geological and historical past, and in the latter case have played a
crucial role in the rise and collapse of entire civilizations.
Ecosystems are complex enough, and change over such varied timescales,
that many of the effects of industrial civilization's rise and fall
may unfold over many more centuries than I intend to survey, but some
possible changes can certainly be guessed at.

These five factors are the palette of colors I plan on using in an
attempt to sketch out where we may be headed in the aftermath of the
industrial age over the next few weeks. Many other factors will
doubtless play important roles as well, including some that can't
possibly be anticipated here and now. Still, if an attempt to glimpse
the shape of the coming deindustrial age can help guide us toward
constructive action in the present, it's worth a shot.

_____

Editorial Notes

John Michael Greer seems to be assembling a new paradigm for the
coming age, one to replace the prevailing paradigm of
industrialization and progress. Such a new vision is important, even
in the short-term, since it helps us make sense of events and plan
more realistically.

Permaculture co-originator David Holmgren has a similar vision of
"energy descent" which he elaborates in his book Permaculture:
Principles and Pathways Beyond Sustainability {2, 3}.


Endnotes

{1} http://www.powells.com/biblio/72-9781931498517-0

{2} http://www.powells.com/biblio/1-9780646418445-0

{3} http://transitionculture.org/?page_id=22


Article found at http://www.energybulletin.net/newswire.php?id=30022

Original article http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com



On 6/19/07, Jim Devine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
what good does this kind of stuff do?

On 6/19/07, Dan Scanlan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Jun 19, 2007, at 10:47 AM, Leigh Meyers wrote:
>
> >
> > Athens - Dozens of masked youths destroyed banks and cars using
> > sledgehammers and iron bars in a rampage across the Greek capital
> > during business hours on Tuesday, reports said.
> >
> > The youths smashed the windows of several branches of Citibank and
> > three Greek owned banks, causing extensive damage.
> >
>
> a la Santa Barbara Bank of America in '60s.
>


--
Jim Devine /  "if there's an original thought out there, I could use
it right now." -- Bob Dylan & Sam Shepherd.

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