Are you ready to embarce the apocalypse?
Moderator: Peak Moderation
-
- Posts: 1324
- Joined: 05 Mar 2010, 14:40
Are you ready to embarce the apocalypse?
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfre ... apocalypse
MSM (if that phrase applies to the Grauniad) discussing the differences between responses to the coming apocalypse. It's not a very satisfying piece to us kollapsniks, but interesting to see the thinking filtering through.
Please delete/lock if already posted.
MSM (if that phrase applies to the Grauniad) discussing the differences between responses to the coming apocalypse. It's not a very satisfying piece to us kollapsniks, but interesting to see the thinking filtering through.
Please delete/lock if already posted.
"Tea's a good drink - keeps you going"
Re: Are you ready to embarce the apocalypse?
I'm fifty and potless and the future does not look pretty but, for my kids, it looks even tougher and I don't even want to think about the world my grand-kids will inhabit.featherstick wrote:http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfre ... apocalypse
MSM (if that phrase applies to the Grauniad) discussing the differences between responses to the coming apocalypse. It's not a very satisfying piece to us kollapsniks, but interesting to see the thinking filtering through.
Please delete/lock if already posted.
Hi everyone again, I agree with Steve, I posted somewhere else on a forum, we/ I haven't seen 'austerity', will I?, maybe, my kids?, probably, my grandkids?, certainly. I use the word 'austerity', as it's a word the political mob use, mainly to cut benefits & services, my parents having grown up through the second world war period, saw it.
As an aside Steve, please stop talking sense, I can't cope with it nowadays!
Regards Alan.
As an aside Steve, please stop talking sense, I can't cope with it nowadays!
Regards Alan.
One day people will say to me, you were right mate.....
Pity. Any idea why not?clv101 wrote:Yeah, acceptance that we're "living in a time of disintegration, a time of ongoing loss" whilst still a small minority view, is growing. Sadly this was the first Dark Mountain festival I didn't go to and also the last as there won't be any more Uncivilisation gatherings.
Engage in geo-engineering. Plant a tree today.
You do what you can. Our lads are all grown and left home. They're hooked into the system, all working (for now, thankfully), all with partners, but no kids yet. They will probably be hit hard as collapse continues. We, on the other hand, are progressively disconnecting ourselves from the system, and there's a place for them with us when they need it.
It's a slow process, but we are gradually replacing dependence on money with dependence on direct labour. Every new foraging skill we learn, and every new thing we grow, reduces the food bill. Similarly with energy; the more wood we cut and season, the less oil, coal or electricity we need to burn. So, as and when the boys join us, they can contribute with labour and won't be a burden, even if they have to come because they don't have money.
I think they understand the predicament we're all in on an intellectual level, but they're not yet ready to embrace it yet in terms of a dramatic lifestyle change. (They look a bit uncomfortable if I go off on one of my PO rants, especially if their partners are there!) But that's OK. We're lucky in that we have the resources to be preparing a place without their contribution at the moment. And if they don't need or want it at any stage, well, it's a nice way of life anyway.
I still fear for their future though.
It's a slow process, but we are gradually replacing dependence on money with dependence on direct labour. Every new foraging skill we learn, and every new thing we grow, reduces the food bill. Similarly with energy; the more wood we cut and season, the less oil, coal or electricity we need to burn. So, as and when the boys join us, they can contribute with labour and won't be a burden, even if they have to come because they don't have money.
I think they understand the predicament we're all in on an intellectual level, but they're not yet ready to embrace it yet in terms of a dramatic lifestyle change. (They look a bit uncomfortable if I go off on one of my PO rants, especially if their partners are there!) But that's OK. We're lucky in that we have the resources to be preparing a place without their contribution at the moment. And if they don't need or want it at any stage, well, it's a nice way of life anyway.
I still fear for their future though.
Engage in geo-engineering. Plant a tree today.
Well, hopefully. I'm just conscious that we are in quite a privileged position to be able to make these choices compared to many others. Tends to focus the mind on trying to do the best thing.Sounds like you're doing all the right things, Tarrel.
The Sustainability Centre is an interesting place. Great book shop. I've been down there a couple of times. I'm aiming to take their Sustainable Woodland Management course later this year. Their natural burial ground seems to be becoming quite a major part of their operation.I think this was the last Uncivilisation as they didn't want to become full time festival organisers!
Engage in geo-engineering. Plant a tree today.
-
- Posts: 1683
- Joined: 02 Jun 2011, 00:12
- Location: SE England
I know this is off topic but according to this RT article about Fukushima: http://rt.com/news/fukushima-apocalypse ... around us?
I know this is off topic but according to this RT article about Fukushima: http://rt.com/news/fukushima-apocalypse ... around us?
- biffvernon
- Posts: 18538
- Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
- Location: Lincolnshire
- Contact:
Yeah I know, my computer seems to believe the apocalypse is upon it and given up hope. I was trying to link to an RT article about the planned Nuclear Fuel Rod removal at Fukushima in a few months and the article's (alarmist or not) predictions that a screw up with the extraction (which is a possibility) could cause a cataclysm which according to the article could wipe out the entire northern hemisphere - either in months or within a couple of generations) and that the incident could be in the article's own words "apocalyptic." There are other similar articles on the web were some scientists supposedly warned we should all consider going 15 degrees south of the equator in relation to this.biffvernon wrote:Looks like the apocalypse has embraced Standuble.
Whilst the post was OT I did pose a question: We all assume we could adapt and survive PO and the slow decline sometimes forecast. What would we do however if we had an inescapable end via a deadly radioactive cloud a year from now or if deformed births caused a projected ELE within a few decades (e.g. children of men)? What chance would any of us have when the entire world was falling apart around us and there was nothing we could do?
Edit: Here is the link: http://rt.com/news/fukushima-apocalypse ... moval-598/
- biffvernon
- Posts: 18538
- Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
- Location: Lincolnshire
- Contact: