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Re: SC70

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June 06, 2008 05:12PM
http://globalpublicmedia.com/how_do_you_like_the_collapse_so_far

How Do You Like the Collapse So Far?

Take relentless population growth. Add decades of expanding per-capita resource consumption. Simmer slowly over rising global temperatures.

What do you get?

Traumatic information: that is, information that wounds us through the very act of obtaining it.

Everyone knows things are going wrong. But if you understand ecology, you know this in a way that others don’t. It’s not just that the current crop of world leaders is idiotic. It’s not just a matter of a few policies having gone awry. We’ve been on a perilous track since the dawn of agriculture, capturing more and more biosphere services for the benefit of just one species. Fossil fuels recently gave our kind an enormous economic and technological boost—but at the same time enabled us to go much further out on an ecological limb. No one knows the long-term carrying capacity of planet Earth for humans, absent cheap fossil fuels, but it’s likely a lot fewer than seven billion. The implication is not just sobering; it’s paralyzing.

So what to do with such traumatic knowledge? An argument can be made for denial. Why ruin people’s day if there’s nothing they can do, if it’s too late to unseal our fate?

But we don’t know that it’s too late.

As hard as it is to get up every day and remember, "Oh yes, that’s right, we’re headed toward systemic collapse," in fact we can’t afford to forget it, if there are in fact measures to be taken to save a species, an ecosystem, or a human community.

To be sure, some of us are better able to handle the information than others. Many fragile psyches come unhinged without constant doses of hope and assurance. And so for their sake we need continuing positive messages—about a project to make a village sustainable, or about a new coal power plant halted by protest. Some will cling to these encouraging news bits, believing that the tide has turned and we’ll be fine after all. But as time goes on, collapse becomes undeniable. Limits to growth cease to be forecasts; instead, we see daily proof that we’re hitting the wall. As this happens, those who can handle the information spend more of their time managing the fraying emotions of those around them who can’t.

Strategy shifts. We move from rehearsing "Fifty simple things you can do to save the Earth" to discussing global triage.

As the Great Unraveling proceeds, there may in fact be only one occupation worthy of our attention: that of identifying the qualities that make our species worth saving, and then celebrating and exemplifying those qualities. If we concentrate on doing that, perhaps we win no matter what. Outwardly, it will probably look a lot like what many of us are already doing: working to save a species, an ecosystem, a human community; to make a village sustainable, or to halt a new coal power plant.

Taking in traumatic information and transmuting it into life-affirming action may turn out to be the most advanced and meaningful spiritual practice of our time.
SubjectAuthorViewsPosted

SC70

Wizard 1299June 06, 2008 03:24PM

Re: SC70

Wizard 791June 06, 2008 04:53PM

Re: SC70

Wizard 1301June 06, 2008 05:12PM

Re: SC70

Wizard 769June 06, 2008 09:52PM

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Wizard 705June 06, 2008 10:35PM

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LaughingBear 770June 07, 2008 09:59AM

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Wizard 838June 08, 2008 11:03AM

Re: SC70

Wizard 764June 08, 2008 01:00PM

Re: SC70

Wizard 739June 08, 2008 10:35PM

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Wizard 698June 08, 2008 10:46PM

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Wizard 687June 09, 2008 10:07PM

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Wizard 830June 13, 2008 06:14PM

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Wizard 930June 13, 2008 08:26PM

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Wizard 700June 13, 2008 09:32PM

Re: SC70

Wizard 838June 15, 2008 11:03PM

Re: SC70

Wizard 1354June 16, 2008 11:47PM



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