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chervilant

(8,267 posts)
35. I've been saying much the same thing for a while now...
Thu May 3, 2012, 01:01 PM
May 2012

I am 56 years old. I read Rachel Carson's Silent Spring when I was 12 years old. When I finished her iconic treatise, I made two fundamental decisions: 1) I would not bear children, and 2) I would be an activist for the rest of my life. I am so glad that I achieved both those goals, especially considering where humanity finds itself at present...

During my brief tenure on this planet, I've witnessed:

--the heavy metal pollution of this planet's groundwater

--the nationwide existence of 'Superfund Sites' that are so toxic, massive amounts of our tax dollars have been allocated to 'clean up' these abandoned, hazardous areas (visit Superfund websites and you'll find "Superfund for Kids!&quot

--an exponential increase in diabetes, heart disease, and other diseases directly linked to the consumption of refined sugars and animal products (let's not even BEGIN to discuss hydrogenated oils...)

--the 'War on Drugs' (an ironic ploy that benefits the uber wealthy in two primary ways: more money, more money, more money; and keeping the hoi polloi distracted and addicted)

--a pile of floating garbage--in surface area, the size of the state of Texas--in the doldrums of the Pacific Ocean AND in the Atlantic

--a measurable decline in the amount of food fish we pull out of our oceans and lakes

--the steady decline of the honeybee population worldwide (called "Colony Collapse Disorder" by the scientists who are 'struggling' to identify the causes)

--nutritional deficiencies in almost every fruit or vegetable harvested since the 70s

--vast swaths of soil erosion and silt runoff

--measurable declines in the quality and flavor of most produce

--GLOBAL monopolies on seed stocks

--Genetically modified foods (should I mention Pink Slime?)

--cross contamination of vegetable foodstuffs from cattle and dairy operations

--inhumane treatment of cattle, sheep, goats, pigs, calves, chickens, turkeys, geese and ducks

--Bhopal

--Three Mile Island

--the BP disaster in the Gulf of Mexico

--Chernobyl

--Fukushima

--Monsanto (need I say more?)

--Global Climate Change

--a growing percentage of adults (as of the 90s, this figure was forty percent) who are functionally illiterate (thus, easily manipulated)

--a now ubiquitous 'message delivery system' (television) that has turned a significant number of humans into distracted, misinformed zombies

--a toxic, dangerous economic system that has concentrated the wealth of this planet into the hands of a minuscule fraction of our planet's global population (writing the representative percentage requires scientific notation with a large negative exponent).

--destructive, endless 'wars' based on lies and profitability (and, don't even get me started about Depleted Uranium)

--a radical shift to exponential growth (read 'change') that few recognize and even fewer discuss.

Sigh...

I don't have time to list all of the other issues I've been witnessing. This would take weeks, if not months.

I'm watching as more and more of us resort to 'react' mode, letting our inchoate fears and frustrations manifest as road rage, name-calling, sarcasm, and other forms of mental, emotional and physical violence. Do I think we humans are experiencing a critical tipping point in our evolution as a species? You bet. Do I think we can do anything about it? I'm skeptical, although #Occupy gives me a modest measure of hope.

We’ve reached a stage in our evolution where the tiniest stressors create the most enormous fissures. I find it disheartening that some among us dismiss concerns about these events as “end time fear.” The grim fact remains: we have no frame of reference for what IS happening.

(BTW, I don’t think we’re witnessing ‘end times,’ because this incredible planet WILL survive our species’ vile, narcissistic hedonism.)

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When you lose vital things that are civilization markers the collapse is on lunatica May 2012 #1
In my opinion we are already in the early stages of something resembling GliderGuider May 2012 #2
Reading Orlov would definitely reinforce that point of view pscot May 2012 #8
In all fairness.. Russian history gives Russians little incentive for cheerfulness.. Fumesucker May 2012 #12
Yet the Repubs want to argue about birth control adigal May 2012 #13
Throw in the very real possibility of Fukishima getting worse dixiegrrrrl May 2012 #47
One other ominous sign (oddly enough) is the falling global birth rate. GliderGuider May 2012 #3
The birth rate in the US at least should be reflecting the aging of the baby boomers. They did not jwirr May 2012 #39
Regarding the neighbours GliderGuider May 2012 #40
We are doing that - hoping when they see what we are doing they will follow. So far they think it jwirr May 2012 #54
It's falling as women get empowered--I think it's the opposite of collapse--it's the emergence of diane in sf May 2012 #56
It probably has multiple causes in different places and times. GliderGuider May 2012 #58
Yet none of us will see major effects of the collapse in our lifetimes. cbdo2007 May 2012 #4
I sincerely doubt that it will take that long. marmar May 2012 #5
Au contraire, mon frere GliderGuider May 2012 #6
Efficiency is but a secondary effect, the primary cause is greed and profit.. Fumesucker May 2012 #14
I agree, but the motive isn't the big issue for me -the effect is. GliderGuider May 2012 #15
If you don't know first causes it's hard to change the effects.. Fumesucker May 2012 #23
One of the good things about Occupy was that it pointed out that cause. GliderGuider May 2012 #26
The Magistrate made an offhand comment to me once on DU2 Fumesucker May 2012 #28
I've given up thinking we will be able to hold back the tides of destiny GliderGuider May 2012 #30
Yes, in some ways, it's a privilege to be able to witness this period in human history. bemildred May 2012 #73
In looking for the underlying cause of greed do not underestimate fear. But I do not see greed as jwirr May 2012 #41
Humans also have a tendency to assume they are witnessing the end times.... cbdo2007 May 2012 #22
I read the article and the author asserts that cities will fare the best adigal May 2012 #16
Cities will fare better overall until the breakdown becomes severe. GliderGuider May 2012 #18
Yeah, when the infrastructure like sewage treatment and electrical grids start going..... marmar May 2012 #20
Life expectancy is declining KurtNYC May 2012 #17
Yes, those are the signals all right. GliderGuider May 2012 #21
Is EU doing anything to preserve their health care situation that would be of importance to this jwirr May 2012 #42
All of Europe has universal single-payer health care to some degree GliderGuider May 2012 #48
That is what I was afraid of. I think one big problem with a collapse and government programs is jwirr May 2012 #55
No it is not hack89 May 2012 #81
It's best not to over-aggregate things like fertility and life expectancy GliderGuider May 2012 #83
Some groups go up, some groups go down hack89 May 2012 #84
Weather isn't climate, true. GliderGuider May 2012 #86
I agree with you. sendero May 2012 #7
Totally agree but I grew up in the early 40s and did not have a lot of the modern things we have jwirr May 2012 #43
A great many people have not had that knowledge handed down. FedUpWithIt All May 2012 #82
True that. I visited an operating "pioneer village" museum a couple of years ago GliderGuider May 2012 #85
There are still really good sources of that info available FedUpWithIt All May 2012 #87
You are right - I actually began to realize that when I was in college and when I went home I jwirr May 2012 #88
I noticed. Hatchling May 2012 #9
Yep. bemildred May 2012 #10
Oh, you can be sure that the 1 percent knows damn well... RevStPatrick May 2012 #11
Inside the Vortex, life and death for the Brutals doesn't matter. leveymg May 2012 #19
Hmmmm...sounds like the Capital and the Districts... lapislzi May 2012 #25
It also sounds like the situation in medieval Europe GliderGuider May 2012 #27
I think you may be oversimplifying medieval Europe lapislzi May 2012 #29
And it was a time of fun and plunder. The Crusades and intrigues w/ Second Rome at Constantinople leveymg May 2012 #31
Hey, I'm just offering the framework. lapislzi May 2012 #36
Actually yes, thanks. GliderGuider May 2012 #32
I will read this book! lapislzi May 2012 #37
And bubonic plague created new opportunities for the survivors Lydia Leftcoast May 2012 #66
Yes! lapislzi May 2012 #72
One of the themes of the 70s: we can chose between the castle or the tribe. Unfortunately I jwirr May 2012 #45
That's what we're headed for now, with our "civilized" society. Zalatix May 2012 #46
Pls tell me Connery's outfit will not be mandatory when TSHTF big time. dixiegrrrrl May 2012 #49
Naw, we all have to wear those monkey-suits from Planet of the Apes GliderGuider May 2012 #50
That would truly be Shock and Awe - sure to send any enemy running, screaming, pleading for mercy leveymg May 2012 #52
On the other hand, collapses are the best way to get rid of bloated empires starroute May 2012 #24
An orderly collapse gets rid of the working class. Zalatix May 2012 #34
I was thinking this...where I live in upstate NY adigal May 2012 #44
Sometimes you kick, sometimes you get kicked..... marmar May 2012 #33
Well aren't you the sly one:-) GliderGuider May 2012 #38
I've been saying much the same thing for a while now... chervilant May 2012 #35
You said it better than I could today. dixiegrrrrl May 2012 #53
Thanks, chervilant May 2012 #62
Can you please re-post this as a thread so I can K&R it? Thanks!!! Zalatix May 2012 #60
I agree. When you see it all listed out like that it really drives the point home. GliderGuider May 2012 #61
Thanks! chervilant May 2012 #64
Done, and thanks! chervilant May 2012 #63
I'm going to go get drunk. Carpe diem, I say :) Seriously, though, coalition_unwilling May 2012 #65
Despair is one of the big risks of thinking deeply about these problems. GliderGuider May 2012 #68
Interestingly, chervilant May 2012 #70
I moved this comment out to the main line to make it more accessible GliderGuider May 2012 #71
I heartily concur. That honesty about facing our situation head on is coalition_unwilling May 2012 #76
Totally agree... chervilant May 2012 #69
To me it's pretty simple... WCGreen May 2012 #51
I always say that our civilization is like a rabbit shot on the run: tblue37 May 2012 #57
Kicking....this is an important read. dixiegrrrrl May 2012 #59
K&R. n/t Egalitarian Thug May 2012 #67
Can I Kick It? marmar May 2012 #74
I'm absolutely thrilled to be alive at this moment in history. GliderGuider May 2012 #75
This situation might be just more of the same for our generation(s) IDemo May 2012 #77
No question this is far bigger than the past problems we've created. GliderGuider May 2012 #80
great post paulk May 2012 #78
The American empire peaked during the sixties, MadHound May 2012 #79
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