Showing posts with label Blogosphere. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blogosphere. Show all posts

Pulling back from the blog

SUBHEAD: After more than 7,000 articles posted on this website it may be the right time to lay down the "pen".

By Juan Wilson on 25 August 2017 for Island Breath -
(http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2017/08/pulling-back-from-blog.html)


Image above: Screen shot of front page of IslandBreath.org website.

[IB Piblisher's note: It's been a week without a post to this block. Note that below I didn't say there would never be another post, but that I needed to pull back. We talked about "pulling back". Putting up two or three articles a day meant spending most of every morning working the blog - and that is not counting research time finding or coming up with articles of interest. So we will be posting irregularly starting September 1st, 2017.]

We've been practicing  online activism since the early 1990's. Back in rural upstate New York as The Gobbler (first in print and then online) and in 2000-2001 on Maui as the Kihei Watchdog (in print and online).

Since 2004 we've been publishing Island Breath from Kauai. In 2009 we joined the blogging community with Ea O Ka Aina that shares its posts on IslandBreath. Yeah, I know, it sounds unwieldy. The Ea O Ka Aina  blog now has 6,808 postings. This may be the last.

Why end this effort? For two primary reasons.

One: I've been spending my mornings doing this for hours. I usually start after breakfast and go until around 10:30am but that sometimes means going until near noon. It's a lot of time that could be spent doing homesteading chores that keep piling up.

Two: Readership has been falling slowly for the last four years. The peak readership was mid 2012 with 613,700 page views. The last complete year (2016) had 187,761 page views. This year will be less than that.

Back in 2010 we had five editorial contributors: Juan Wilson, David Ward, Linda Pascatore, Brad Parsons and Jonathan Jay. That year we hit our most prolific level of output that averaged over three articles a day.

Probably the most impact we had on a controversial issue was pushback on the Hawaii Superferry, a scheme to test and operate a badly designed littoral combat ship for the Navy.

Our coverage began with an article by Judy Dalton in July of 2004 "There Are More Problems than Just the Added Traffic" (http://www.islandbreath.org/2004Year/02-growth/growth13SuperFerry.html). Our coverage of that issue produced hundreds of articles over the years until the ferry service was cancelled.

We have engaged on many controversial issues, most recently on the terrible Kauai General Plan Update that will lead us to suburban sprawl and greater dependence on mainland food and consumerism. We have dealt with the themes of dealing with Peak Oil and Climate Change.

But they has not been our first order of business. Since reading James Kunstler's "The Long Emergency" our personal focus has been acquiring the knowledge, skill and equipment to become more self reliant and less dependent on large scale systems.

Unfortunately not enough people have woken to deal the existential threats we face... at least not enough or fast enough.

The economic bubble is ripe for bursting. many observers we respect think that things are really about to unwind.  Before this year is over that deflation will take with it the current delivery system of vital services that provide energy, credit and food. We hope you have alternatives and are practicing using them now.

If there seems a valid need to address upcoming issues "I'll be bock", but in the meantime I'm going out to the garden.

See also:
Ea O Ka Aina: Ebbing the Blog  5/10/14
 I was reminded by a comment below by Familia Tober-Zambrano of a previous attempt to drop working on the blog every day. One forgets. I guess at some point "I'll be bock!"

 
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The End of the American Century

SUBHEAD: It can end with the US recognizing that it’s a nation among nations, not an overlord among vassals.

By John Michael Greer on 30 November 2016 for Archdruid Report
(thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com/2016/11/the-end-of-american-century.html)


Image above: Illustration by Matt Wueker "We Come as Liberators". From (http://livingtheimpossibledream.com/2012/01/the-american-empire/).

I have a bone to pick with the Washington Post.

A few days back, as some of my readers may be aware, it published a list of some two hundred blogs that it claimed were circulating Russian propaganda, and I was disappointed to find that The Archdruid Report didn’t make the cut.

Oh, granted, I don’t wait each week for secret orders from Boris Badenov, the mock-iconic Russian spy from the Rocky and Bullwinkle Show of my youth, but that shouldn’t disqualify me. I’ve seen no evidence that any of the blogs on the list take orders from Moscow, either; certainly the Post offered none worth mentioning.

Rather, what seems to have brought down the wrath of “Pravda on the Potomac,” as the Post is unfondly called by many DC locals, is that none of these blogs have been willing to buy into the failed neoconservative consensus that’s guided American foreign policy for the last sixteen years.

Of that latter offense, in turn, The Archdruid Report is certainly guilty.

There are at least two significant factors behind the Post’s adoption of the tactics of the late Senator Joe McCarthy, dubious lists and all.

The first is that the failure of Hillary Clinton’s presidential ambitions has thrown into stark relief an existential crisis that has the American news media by the throat. The media sell their services to their sponsors on the assumption that they can then sell products and ideas manufactured by those sponsors to the American people.

The Clinton campaign accordingly outspent Trump’s people by a factor of two to one, sinking impressive amounts of the cash she raised from millionaire donors into television advertising and other media buys.

Clinton got the coverage she paid for, too. Nearly every newspaper in the United States endorsed her; pundits from one end of the media to the other solemnly insisted that everyone ought to vote for her; equivocal polls were systematically spun in her favor by a galaxy of talking heads.

Pretty much everyone who thought they mattered was on board the bandwagon.

The only difficulty, really was that the people who actually mattered—in particular, voters in half a dozen crucial swing states—responded to all this by telling their soi-disant betters, “Thanks, but one turkey this November is enough.”

It turned out that Clinton was playing by a rulebook that was long past its sell-by date, while Trump had gauged the shift in popular opinion and directed his resources accordingly.

While she sank her money into television ads on prime time, he concentrated on social media and barnstorming speaking tours through regions that rarely see a presidential candidate.

He also figured out early on that the mainstream media was a limitless source of free publicity, and the best way to make use of it was to outrage the tender sensibilities of the media itself and get denounced by media talking heads.

That worked because a very large number of people here in the United States no longer trust the news media to tell them anything remotely resembling the truth. That’s why so many of them have turned to blogs for the services that newspapers and broadcast media used to provide: accurate reporting and thoughtful analysis of the events that affect their lives.

Nor is this an unreasonable choice.

The issue’s not just that the mainstream news media is biased; it’s not just that it never gets around to mentioning many issues that affect people’s lives in today’s America; it’s not even that it only airs a suffocatingly narrow range of viewpoints, running the gamut of opinion from A to A minus—though of course all these are true. It’s also that so much of it is so smug, so shallow, and so dull.

The predicament the mainstream media now face is as simple as it is inescapable. After taking billions of dollars from their sponsors, they’ve failed to deliver the goods.

Every source of advertising revenue in the United States has got to be looking at the outcome of the election, thinking, “Fat lot of good all those TV buys did her,” and then pondering their own advertising budgets and wondering how much of that money might as well be poured down a rathole.

Presumably the mainstream news media could earn the trust of the public again by breaking out of the echo chamber that defines the narrow range of acceptable opinions about the equally narrow range of issues open to discussion, but this would offend their sponsors.

Worse, it would offend the social strata that play so large a role in defining and enforcing that echo chamber; most mainstream news media employees who have a role in deciding what does and does not appear in print or on the air belong to these same social strata, and are thus powerfully influenced by peer pressure.

Talking about supposed Russian plots to try to convince people not to get their news from blogs, though it’s unlikely to work, doesn’t risk trouble from either of those sources.

Why, though, blame it on the Russians? That’s where we move from the first to the second of the factors I want to discuss this week.

A bit of history may be useful here. During the 1990s, the attitude of the American political class toward the rest of the world rarely strayed far from the notions expressed by Francis Fukuyama in his famous and fatuous essay proclaiming the end of history.

The fall of the Soviet Union, according to this line of thought, proved that democracy and capitalism were the best political and economic systems humanity would ever come up with, and the rest of the world would therefore inevitably embrace them in due time.

All that was left for the United States and its allies to do was to enforce certain standards of global order on the not-yet-democratic and not-yet-capitalist nations of the world, until they grew up and got with the program.

That same decade, though, saw the emergence of the neoconservative movement. The neoconservaties were as convinced of the impending triumph of capitalism and democracy as their rivals, but they opposed the serene absurdities of Fukuyama’s thesis with a set of more muscular absurdities of their own.

Intoxicated with the collapse of the Soviet Union and its allies, they convinced themselves that identical scenes could be enacted in Baghdad, Tehran, Beijing, and the rest of the world, if only the United States would seize the moment and exploit its global dominance.

During Clinton’s presidency, the neoconservatives formed a pressure group on the fringes of official Washington, setting up lobbying groups such as the Project for a New American Century and bombarding the media with position papers.

The presidency of George W. Bush gave them their chance, and they ran with it. Where the first Iraq war ended with Saddam Hussein beaten but still in power—the appropriate reponse according to the older ideology—the second ended with the US occupying Iraq and a manufactured “democratic” regime installed under its aegis.

In the afterglow of victory, neoconservatives talked eagerly about the conquest of Iran and the remaking of the Middle East along the same lines as post-Soviet eastern Europe.

Unfortunately for these fond daydreams, what happened instead was a vortex of sectarian warfare and anti-American insurgency.

You might think, dear reader, that the cascading failures of US policy in Iraq might have caused second thoughts in the US political and military elites whose uncritical embrace of neoconservative rhetoric let that happen.

You might be forgiven, for that matter, for thinking that the results of US intervention in Afghanistan, where the same assumptions had met with the same disappointment, might have given those second thoughts even more urgency. If so, you’d be quite mistaken.

According to the conventional wisdom in today’s America, the only conceivable response to failure is doubling down.

“If at first you don’t succeed, fail, fail again” thus seems to be the motto of the US political class these days, and rarely has that been so evident as in the conduct of US foreign policy.

The Obama administration embraced the same policies as its feckless predecessor, and the State Department, the CIA, and the Pentagon went their merry way, overthrowing governments right and left, and tossing gasoline onto the flames of ethnic and sectarian strife in various corners of the world, under the serene conviction that the blowback from these actions could never inconvenience the United States.

That would be bad enough. Far worse was the effect of neoconservative policies on certain other nations: Russia, China, and Iran.

In the wake of the Soviet Union’s collapse, Russia was a basket case, Iran was a pariah nation isolated from the rest of the world, and China had apparently made its peace with an era of American global dominance, and was concentrating on building up its economy instead of its military.

It would have been child’s play for the United States to maintain that state of affairs indefinitely.

Russia could have been helped to recover and then integrated economically into Europe; China could have been allowed the same sort of regional primacy the US allows as a matter of course to its former enemies Germany and Japan; and without US intervention in the Middle East to hand it a bumper crop of opening wedges, Iran could have been left to stew in its own juices until it imploded.

That’s not what happened, though. Instead, two US adminstrations went out of their way to convince Russia and China they had nothing to gain and everything to lose by accepting their assigned places in a US-centric international order.

Russia and China have few interests in common and many reasons for conflict; they’ve spent much of their modern history glaring at each other across a long and contentious mutual border; they had no reason to ally with each other, until the United States gave them one.

Nor did either nation have any reason to reach out to the Muslim theocracy in Iran—quite the contrary—until they began looking for additional allies to strengthen their hand against the United States.

One of the basic goals of effective foreign policy is to divide your potential enemies against each other, so that they’re so busy worrying about one another that they don’t have the time or resources to bother you.

It’s one thing, though, to violate that rule when the enemies you’re driving together lack the power to threaten your interests, and quite another when the resource base, population, and industrial capacity of the nations you’re driving together exceeds your own.

The US government’s harebrained pursuit of neoconservative policies has succeeded, against the odds, in creating a sprawling Eurasian alliance with an economic and military potential significantly greater than that of the US.

There have probably been worse foreign policy blunders in the history of the world, but I can’t think of one off hand.

You won’t read about that in the mainstream news media in the United States. At most, you’ll get canned tirades about how Russian president Vladimir Putin is a “brutal tyrant” who is blowing up children in Aleppo or what have you. “Brutal tyrant,” by the way, is a code phrase of the sort you normally get in managed media.

 In the US news, it simply means “a head of state who’s insufficiently submissive to the United States.” Putin certainly qualifies as the latter; first in the Caucasus, then in the Ukraine, and now in Syria, he’s deployed military force to advance his country’s interests against those of the United States and its allies.

I quite understand that the US political class isn’t pleased by this, but it might be helpful for them to reflect on their own role in making it happen.

The Russian initiative isn’t limited to Syria, though. Those of my readers who only pay attention to US news media probably don’t know yet that Egypt has now joined Russia’s side.

Egyptian and Russian troops are carrying out joint military drills, and reports in Middle Eastern news media have it that Egyptian troops will soon join the war in Syria on the side of the Syrian government.

If so, that’s a game-changing move, and probably means game over for the murky dealings the United States and its allies have been pursuing in that end of the Middle East.

China and Russia have very different cultural styles when it comes to exerting power. Russian culture celebrates the bold stroke; Chinese culture finds subtle pressure more admirable. Thus the Chinese have been advancing their country’s interests against those of the United States and its allies in a less dramatic but equally effective way.

While distracting Washington’s attention with a precisely measured game of “chicken” in the South China Sea, the Chinese have established a line of naval bases along the northern shores of the Indian Ocean from Myanmar to Djibouti, and contracted alliances in East Africa and South Asia.

Those of my readers who’ve read Alfred Thayer Mahan and thus know their way around classic maritime strategy will recognize exactly what’s going on here.

Most recently, China has scored two dramatic shifts in the balance of power in the western Pacific.

My American readers may have heard of President Rodrigo Duterte of the Phillippines; he’s the one who got his fifteen minutes of fame in the mainstream media here when he called Barack Obama a son of a whore. The broader context, of course, got left out.

Duterte, like the heads of state of many nominal US allies, resents US interference in his country’s affairs, and at this point he has other options. His outburst was followed in short order by a trip to Beijing, where he and China’s President Xi signed multibillion-dollar aid agreements and talked openly about the end of a US-dominated world order.

A great many Americans seem to think of the Phillippines as a forgettable little country off somewhere unimportant in the Third World. That’s a massive if typical misjudgment. It’s a nation of 100 million people on a sprawling archipelago of more than 7,000 islands, commanding the entire southern end of the South China Sea and a vast swath of the western Pacific, including crucial maritime trade routes.

As a US ally, it was a core component of the ring of encirclement holding Chinese maritime forces inside the island ring that walls China’s coastal waters from rest of the Pacific basin. As a Chinese ally, it holds open that southern gate to China’s rapidly expanding navy and air force.

Duterte wasn’t the only Asian head of state to head for Beijing in recent months.

Malaysia’s prime minister was there a few weeks later, to sign up for another multibillion-dollar aid package, buy Chinese vessels for the Malaysian navy, and make acid comments about the way that, ahem, former colonial powers keep trying to interfere in Malaysian affairs.

Malaysia’s a smaller nation than the Phillippines, but even more strategically placed. Its territory runs alongside the northern shore of the Malacca Strait: the most important sea lane in the world, the gateway connecting the Indian Ocean with the Pacific, through which much of the world’s seaborne crude oil transport passes.

All these are opening moves. Those who are familiar with the rise and fall of global powers know what the next moves are; those who don’t might want to consider reading my book Declineand Fall, or my novel Twilight’s Last Gleaming, which makes the same points in narrative form.

Had Hillary Clinton won this month’s election, we might have moved into the endgame much sooner.

Her enthusiasm for overthrowing governments during her stint as Secretary of State, and her insistence that the US should impose a no-fly zone over Syria in the teeth of Russian fighters and state-of-the-art antiaircraft defenses, suggests that she could have filled the role of my fictional president Jameson Weed, and sent US military forces into a shooting war they were not realistically prepared to win.

We seem to have dodged that bullet. Even so, the United States remains drastically overextended, with military bases in more than a hundred countries around the world and a military budget nearly equal to all other countries’ put together.

Meanwhile, back here at home, our country is falling apart.

Leave the bicoastal bubble where the political class and their hangers-on spend their time, and the United States resembles nothing so much as the Soviet Union in its last days: a bleak and dilapidated landscape of economic and social dysfunction, where the enforced cheerfulness of the mainstream media contrasts intolerably with the accelerating disintegration visible all around.

That could have been prevented. If the United States had responded to the end of the Cold War by redirecting the so-called “peace dividend” toward the rebuilding of our national infrastructure and our domestic economy, we wouldn’t be facing the hard choices before us right now—and in all probability, by the way, Donald Trump wouldn’t just have been elected president.

Instead, the US political class let itself be caught up in neoconservative fantasies of global dominion, and threw away that opportunity. The one bright spot in that dismal picture is that we have another chance.

History shows that there are two ways that empires end. Their most common fate involves clinging like grim death to their imperial status until it drags them down.

Spain’s great age of overseas empire ended that way, with Spain plunging into a long era of economic disarray and civil war.

At least it maintained its national unity; the Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian empires both finished their imperial trajectories by being partitioned, as of course did the Soviet Union. There are worse examples; I’m thinking here of the Assyrian Empire of the ancient Middle East, which ceased to exist completely—its nationhood, ethnicity, and language dissolving into those of its neighbors—once it fell.

Then there’s the other option, the one chosen by the Chinese in the fifteenth century and Great Britain in the twentieth.

Both nations had extensive overseas empires, and both walked away from them, carrying out a staged withdrawal from imperial overreach.

Both nations not only survived the process but came through with their political and cultural institutions remarkably intact.

This latter option, with all its benefits, is still available to the United States.

A staged withdrawal of the sort just described would of course be done step by step, giving our allies ample time to step up to the plate and carry the costs of their own defense.

Those regions that have little relevance to US national interests, such as the Indian Ocean basin, would see the first round of withdrawals, while more important regions such as Europe and the northwest Pacific would be later on the list.

The withdrawal wouldn’t go all the way back to our borders by any means; a strong presence in the Atlantic and eastern Pacific basins and a pivot to our own “near abroad” would be needed, but those would also be more than adequate to maintain our national security.

Meanwhile, the billions upon billions of dollars a year that would be saved could be put to work rebuilding our national infrastructure and economy, with enough left over for a Marshall Plan for Mexico—the most effective way to reduce illegal immigration to the United States, after all, is to help make sure that citizens of the countries near us have plenty of jobs at good wages where they already live.

Finally, since the only glue holding the Russo-Chinese alliance together is their mutual opposition to US hegemony, winding up our term as global policeman will let Russia, China and Iran get back to contending with each other rather than with us.

Such projects, on the rare occasions they’re made, get shouted down by today’s US political class as “isolationism.” There’s a huge middle ground between isolationism and empire, though, and that middle ground is where most of the world’s nations stand as they face their neighbors.

One way or another, the so-called “American century” is ending; it can end the hard way, the way so many other eras of global hegemony have ended—or it can end with the United States recognizing that it’s a nation among nations, not an overlord among vassals, and acting accordingly.

The mainstream news media here in the United States, if they actually provided the public service they claim, might reasonably be expected to discuss the pros and cons of such a proposal, and of the many other options that face this nation at the end of its era of global hegemony.

I can’t say I expect that to happen, though. It’s got to be far more comfortable for them to blame the consequences of their own failure on the supposed Boris Badenovs of the blogosphere, and cling to the rags of their fading role as purveyors of a failed conventional wisdom, until the last of their audience wanders away for good.

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Lost in the Blogosphere?

SUBHEAD: It's hard to tell if spending my mornings on the keyboard is better than catching up on yard work.

By Juan Wilson on 21 August 2016 for Island Breath -
(http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2016/08/lost-in-blogosphere.html)


Image above: Squash harvested from a food-forest project that Arius Hopman and I have been working on in our "spare time". Detail of photo by Arius Hopman.

Every once in a while I feel the need to vent a bit. It usually produces personal article for this blog (http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/).  Many of those articles have taken on the format of a warning, a prediction, advise or even sermon.

Over the years the nature of the pieces has changed. At first they looked to the future and warned of trouble ahead. Like the first seaman's call on the Titanic that there was a iceberg dead ahead.

Later the articles were ways of mitigating the damage to come in order to maintain some sustainable level of civilization. Then is was climbing down from the limb we were on and accepting a less techno-centric life. More recently, the focus is on maintaining a oasis in the desert. Below is a sampling.

Of course, the very means I've used to get these messages out is a techno-centric enterprise. I'm mostly communicating with others of the same mindset as well. Is this so we can just lick our wounds together?

Working on the website takes a few a hours a day. And as I slow down with the addition of years, a few hours a day means lots of work not done in the yard and lots of small repairs waiting to be done... and that's not even counting the bigger projects that are in a holding pattern.

When there have been major problems we have faced together on Kauai, like the resistance to the SuperFerry and GMO pesticide spraying Bill 2491, this website has had the highest readership and served a real purpose.

But readership has been on a slow downhill over the last few years. There will come a point where I decide to move on to other activist work.

I have prepared for some possible contingencies. For example, I've been preparing an electric free office. Ive bought two 60 year Royal typewriters, a A. B. Dick mimeograph machine that could continue "Island Breath" as a neighborhood printed handout.

The pre-internet paraphernalia I've gathered includes drafting equipment and supplies to replace the Computer-Aided-Design-and-Drafting software that I currently use for planning and mapping.

So in a sense, I'm prepared (although not quite ready) to move to a much lower level of technological gadgetry for working on the Big Issues.

In the meantime, I would ask you blog-reader - If this daily website work continues what would you find useful subjects to pursue? One area that seems to hold sustained popularity is 'How To" and "Recipes" articles as well as older Hawaiian "Nature" articles.

You can either email me at juan@islandbreath.org or leave a comment on this post.

See below are a sampling my previous articles:

Oases on a future Eaarth
http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2015/06/oases-on-future-eaarth.html
It may seem like slow motion, but the unraveling is happening as quick as it can go.


A Case for Autonomy
   
We're not in Kansas anymore. Or more to the point - Kansas isn't Kansas anymore.

The New Game
 
We're past the fork in the road. Anything beyond will be made up from local efforts.

From Here on Down
 http://www.islandbreath.org/2015Year/08/x150804waydown.jpg 
Keep your head down, your nose clean and your hands busy! Get used to it and thrive!

The Titanic or Noah's Ark

In these times I'd rather be aboard the maiden voyage of Ark than the Titanic.

The Hero's Way
http://www.islandbreath.org/2015Year/08/x150804waydown.jpg
Technoptimists, politicians and apocalyptos won't matter as we get down to survival.

All Aboard!
 http://www.islandbreath.org/2015Year/08/x150804waydown.jpg

Obama needs to get back to Mother Earth by getting out of his bubble and touching down.

Here the Deal!
  
There are ways forward while we live through rough times. Those ways are for you to find.

Embrace the Change
 
Considering the available alternatives, there really isn't that much choice.

The American Century
 
The end of Pax Americana will be a good thing for everybody concerned.

Soylent Grain

Besides sweetening cheese dogs & tomato paste, GMO corn is the primary US food crop.

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Ebbing the Blog

SUBHEAD: On reducing time sitting in front of a computer hoping to change the world.

By Juan Wilson on 10 May 2014 for Island Breath -
(http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2014/05/ebbing-blog.html)


Image above: Bounty of the day from our yard on September 16, 2013. Two eggs, two avocados, a papaya and a basket of macadamia nuts. Since then we added a few more chickens, built a raised bed garden, and began growing a small food forest in the woods at the side of our house. Photo by Juan Wilson.

If you are a regular, or even infrequent, reader of this website you may have noticed that the frequency of posts has been reducing for some time. The peak year for the number of posts was 2010 with 1118 posts. At the time there were five contributing editors that included David Ward, Brad Parsons and Jonathan Jay. Now there are only the founding editors, myself and my wife Linda Pascatore.

Since 2008 there have been 5,010 previous articles posted through (islandbreath.blogspot.com) into (www.islandbreath.org). I discount that number by 20 because the first twenty articles are merely lists of previous articles in the previous format of IslandBreath that began in january of 2004.

So the 5,000 article odometer really rolls over in 10 more posts. I am considering quitting regular daily posting then. This kind of site that aggregates news, opinions, and ideas does best with daily refreshing. I don't think I want to continue spending as much daily time to the effort as I have in the past.

This is for more than the reason reason of the time needed to produce and collect new material. Another reason is that in the 5,000 posts to date is just about everything we have needed to say. There is and an old saying about delivering a message properly:
Tell them what you're going to say.
Say it.
Then tell them what it is you said.
Well, I think we've done that here. It kind of boils down to:
Peak Everything
Self-Delusion
Climate Change
Collapse
Alternative Energy
De-Industrialize

Self Reliance

Sustainability
Permaculture
Rinse and repeat.

 We have written some of it, but over the years we have heavily relied on other voices to fill out the picture: the likes of James Kunstler, John Michael Greer, Charles Hugh Smith, Dmitry Orlov, Guy McPherson, Nicole Foss, Gail Tverberg, Sharon Astyk, and Carolyn Baker among many others.

These sources have seen into the future clearly. Sometimes that have used a telescope that makes things look closer than they are; but in general they have seen accurately what we are facing now.

It will take a lot of work to get through it - a lot of it physical work. Maintenance and repair will be daily tasks for us all. 

At the beginning of this month I wrote Kicking the KIUC habit and pointed out.
It's like sailing a boat, instead of driving a car. Trim the sails, check the sky, feel the waves. You're closer to the source of power - and responsible for it. Therefore, you have to be more careful with the use of power. It's on you!
As we increase our self-reliance I realize that it really becomes a full time job. And that's how it was for thousands of years before agriculture and industrialization. And so it will be again.

I hope to spend more time in our gardens trying to make healthy food as well as trying to make the place around us thrive with plants, insects, birds, amphibians, reptiles, and even the occasional mammal.

I'll keep working on the site to keep it useful, but more time needs to be spent elsewhere.

Well, you get the picture...

And if you don't it is probably too late to begin trying.



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Valley of the Blogs

SUBHEAD: Larry Summers pilots the garbage scow of American Finance over the Niagara Falls of consequences.

By James Kunstler on 12 August 2013 for Kunstler.com -
(http://kunstler.com/clusterfuck-nation/in-the-valleys-of-blog)


Image above: A garbage scow about to sail over Niagara falls.  Mashup by Juan Wilson.

The psycho-historians must be having a field day with all the “taper” chatter fogging the Valley of the Blogs. The topic certainly presents a sticky hairball of a compound dilemma to anyone who cares about the fate of the nation. 

If the Federal Reserve tapers its monthly purchase of US Treasury debt-paper (plus a nearly equal amount of dodgy mortgage foam frothed up by Washington’s housing bubble machine) well, then, the equity markets will tank - Or so the theory goes. 

If they don’t taper, they’ll permanently disable the function of the financial markets, and possibly blow up the global currency system.

Of course, the Fed recently demonstrated that tapering itself is not necessary to move the markets; a media/blogosphere rumor of tapering will get the job done.  

But it’s only a theory for the moment, too. That's because by merely hinting of a taper, the markets may have already priced-in any actual taper to follow... meaning that taper chatter probably won’t work very well in future applications.

Outside the fetid terrarium where US economists live, like blue tongued skinks kept as pets by bankers, other forces are in motion and there are other economies emerging. 


Image above: Economists like Larry Summers, and this blue tongued skink lizard may have pretty tongues that you don't want to be touched by.  From (http://www.redbubble.com/people/normf/works/6312036-blue-tongued-lizard-tiliqua-scincoides-scincoides).

For instance, there’s the non-theoretical, non-financial economy, which is now apparently based on the Tattoo Economy. It begins with the journey, by automobile, from the nearly foreclosed home to the tattoo studio and then back to home for the beer, pizza, and chicken wings to be consumed. 

Judging from the sheer number of tattoos-per-capita, one might think that a certain tattoo saturation point had been reached in this country. Unless the market can be expanded, say, to maternity wards where newborns can get full “sleeve” and "neck jobs" on a Medicaid card.

Over in Europe, the members of the EU are being eaten alive by a carnivorous sub-species of giant financial hairball. Another theory says that whatever “money” can get out of Europe (while the getting is good) will flood into the USA, and more specifically into those very equity markets spooked by the chatter of tapering QE.

Perhaps the Fed officials (and their pet skinks) are hoping that some of that “money” will sop up whatever US Treasury paper the Fed tapers off buying. 

After all, who else would buy the stuff?

That would only be plausible, though, if the interest rates went up, which they might anyway... and if they do...  the rates will turn around and bite the US Department of the Treasury on its fat butt by increasing the percent of government spending needed to pay interest on its debt. That would effectively put the government out of business — in which case we’d be in the grips of the same carnivorous hairball that’s eating Europe.

And then all that “money” would have to find yet another continent to flee to. You see how complicated it gets? This is giving me the vapors. Anyway, those interest rates on US Treasury paper would have to go up a lot to compete with the allure of an equity market frothing toward the 20,000 hash-mark.

Personally, I would not encumber my view of things-to-come in such a rococo maze of theoretical conjecture. 

Rather, I would settle for the simpler diagnosis that we’re just flat fucked, having made all the wrong choices on just about everything for a very long time. 

Speaking of wrong choices, the smartest money in the betting pool for the next Fed chair pick shifted back last week to the lugubrious figure of Lawrence Summers, who was the longest of long-shots just a week before. 

This is the same Lawrence Summers lately on the payroll of CitiGroup, and other institutions utterly dependent current Federal Reserve policy. 

Obama had to find a revolving door big enough for King Kong to push Larry through. This is the same Larry Summers who remarked not long ago that Quantitative Easing was not an effective way to stimulate the economy. 

Apparently he did not notice that QE is wonderfully effective for juicing the Tattoo Economy because it produces vast new quantities of citizens who perceive themselves to be losers.

Mr. Summers will be entering the scene the way Vincent Price used to enter a Hammer Studio horror film — reliably delivering some deadly unpleasantness. I don’t think a more perfect figure might be found for piloting the garbage scow of American finance over a Niagara Falls of consequences.

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