Possible Futures In A Changing World

For Non-Believers Everywhere

  • This site is a collation and analysis of various information sources to give a big picture view of the factors behind the 2008-2009 crash and what future possibilities might arise.

    Many "alternative" commentators focus on say Peak Oil, or the Real Estate Crash, or 9/11, or the "New World Order", or Environmental Destruction, or Aliens and Black Ops Technologies. Well I've tried to bring all those threads together, because everything really is connected.

    Are you nuts?? Why mention Aliens? Because in a Universe that for all practical purposes is infinite, it seems just as insane to me to assume that humans are the only intelligent lifeform, as it is to assume that unemployed single Mothers with no jobs, income or assets can afford to pay the mortgages on 3 townhouses.

    Also, if you search through the data, it seems likely there was alien involvement in several ancient civilizations and that doesn't even take into account UFOs, crop circles etc. Hell, we couldn't even build the Great Pyramid with our technology today.

    Anyway, back to life on Earth. If you step back from the media and government propaganda and apply just a small amount of discrimination to what you hear and read, it has to appear more and more like mindless drivel with each passing day. Once you've taken that step, it becomes clear that something has to give.

    Then, if you still think life as we have been fortunate to know and live it in the West for the last 50 or so years can happily roll on, well "you ain't been payin attention!"

    However, you do have to go beneath the surface of the "happy surburban motoring utopia" (although that utopia now has cracks appearing in it that are getting harder and harder to ignore) and ask questions with unpleasant answers, if you really want to understand the "dark side" behind the financial collapse.

    Why should you bother? Well mental and physical preparation is going to make a big difference when the crunch comes.

    However, in reality only a few people are actually willing to take an open minded look and to learn what is happening behind the scenes, because most people have too much invested in believing the status quo will roll on.

    Still, if this blog triggers even just a few to take the step, it's worth the effort.

    My personal agenda changes over time and is a mixture of:

    - Trying to help people to wake up and get themselves ready for BIG changes heading straight towards us down the road of history

    - In doing so, perhaps persuade people to consider whether they could change and who knows, maybe change the course of history.

    - For my own ends, to clarify my understanding about the human race as a whole and what the hell we are doing here.

    - Also, writing this all down helps me to get the ideas clear and stops me driving my wife to distraction.

    P.S. Regarding the human race and our general mixed-up-ness, we really should know better by now, but it does seem that we're really slow learners!

Ecological Collapse

In reality money is meaningless, unless you can do something physical with it, such as build something – a house, a factory, a rail system, or plant trees and crops.

So when you read $X Trillion or $Y Billion has been lost in the crash, it doesn’t really mean anything – they were only numbers in a computer system. They had never been transformed into anything physical and probably never could have been because there are not enough physical resources to do so.

There is a an old North American Indian saying:

“Only when the last river has been poisoned and the last fish taken will white man realize that you can’t eat money”

As it says in the article below, the impact of an ecological collapse will be much worse than a fininancial collapse, but most of us are so disconnected from reality that we don’t pay attention to that.

 Almost all undistorted statistics i.e. those which are not sponsored to support a particular agenda, show an ecological crash is underway, just as peak oil is here.

Article: Financial vs. Ecological Crash

Copyright Richard Heinburg

This article originally appeared in the Ecologist November 2008.

During the past weeks the world media have been transfixed by the convulsions of the US and global financial system. At stake are billions in bailouts and trillions in derivatives. The viability of banks and currencies is threatened, and ultimately the savings and investments of hundreds of millions of ordinary people.

Meanwhile, the news from the environmental front is just as terrifying: this past summer saw the second-highest Arctic icecap melt rate (after last year’s record), and Russian scientists observed the large-scale release of methane (a super-potent greenhouse gas) from thawing Siberian permafrost.

How is the average person to judge the relative importance of the financial and environmental news?

Of course financial turmoil has real-world consequences for people. Families that were formerly middle-class may now be forced to learn what poverty feels like. But, however uncomfortable, this kind of economic dislocation is inevitable, given the nature of our economic system. During the 19th century, the world’s industrial nations endured a depression, currency collapse, or financial panic at least once every decade or two. The most recent general depression, during the 1930s, was followed by war and a period of relative stability (and furiously paced fossil-fueled growth). Sweden, Argentina, and other countries have seen more recent banking failures, but otherwise we’ve all gotten used to an unusual calm.

Welcome back to the historic norm of economic uncertainty!

Ecosystems are also unstable. Natural disasters, freak weather events, and plague species can send finely-tuned mutual relations between plants, animals, and microbes into dramatic flux. These perturbations tend to balance themselves out over a time period commensurate with their scale and severity.

But now we are seeing converging environmental crises on a scale and level of severity that is comparable only with mass extinction events of the geologic past. The climate is destabilized, the oceans are dying, and both renewable and non-renewable resources are being depleted at such a rate that one has to wonder whether future human generations can maintain any economy at all.

These ecological disasters are unfolding at a slower pace than the financial crisis, and therefore seem not to warrant as much public attention. Yet civilizations have collapsed because of far smaller environmental problems than any one of a dozen now converging upon us.

Moreover, news about the environment must compete not only with numbers from Wall Street, but with stories about our favorite celebrities and sports teams as well. In effect, we are entertaining ourselves to death while we obsess over the fortunes of gamblers and thieves.

Which is all the more reason to turn off the television, look out the window, and pay attention to the real world of non-human nature. Doing so is the only way to maintain a sense of proportion about what we hear and read, about where we’re headed and what we should do about it.

Financial collapse? It will be nasty, but we’ll survive it. Ecological collapse? I wish I could be so sure.

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