theMeansofInformation
Friends' Entries 
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
Editor of NaturalNews.com

[Read the article here to click on the author's embedded links: http://www.naturalnews.com/025662_civilization_food_social_sciences.html]


(NaturalNews) Jared Diamond is no doom-and-gloomer; he's a Pulitzer Prize winning author of thoughtful, carefully researched books about the rise and fall of societies. Diamond is best known for Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed (http://www.amazon.com/Collapse-Soci...) and Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies (http://www.amazon.com/Guns-Germs-St...), both of which are among my top-recommended books of all time.

When you read these books, you'll quickly realize that Diamond is perhaps the world's top expert on what might be called the "holistic, interdependent nature of complex societies." Rather than limiting his perspective to immediate, short-term actions and consequences (as most national leaders and corporations do), Diamond intelligently examines the long-term, interdependent factors that lead to any society's success or failure.

I've personally read both of Diamond's books mentioned above, and they have strongly influenced my own views about the future (or lack thereof) of western civilization. What Diamond and I both agree on is that complex civilizations are quite fragile, and short-terming thinking can easily doom a society or civilization to irreversible collapse. (Another interesting book to read on this subject, although it's quite technical and a bit older, is The Collapse of Complex Societies by Joseph Tainter.)

Collapse can come from many vectors. Many collapses are environmental, such as the collapse of the Anasazi Indians in North America or the collapse of the Tiwanaku in South America (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiwanaku).

Other causes of collapse include man-made accelerations of environmental change; the classic example being the rampant deforestation of Easter Island by its inhabitants (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Easter...).

It is the Easter Island example that perhaps most closely resembles the short-sightedness of modern western civilization. At the expense of future generations, today's CEOs, bankers and politicians are destroying our future in so many ways (financial, chemical, environmental, plundering of fossil fuels, etc.) that it is a challenge to imagine a scenario where western civilization even survives in its current form.

Jared Diamond, in fact, has publicly declared he sees only a 51 percent chance of western civilization surviving. You can hear this from his own mouth in this video interview: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bnZg...



Peak Oil and other threats to human civilization


This is no casual number-tossing game from a newbie. Jared Diamond has studied the success and failure of world societies more closely than anyone living today. He describes himself as "cautiously optimistic" but worries that the outlandish financial decisions being made by the world's leaders have put us all in a precarious position from which western civilization may not emerge intact.

In my own view, the financial challenges facing our world are, indeed, quite severe. And they may yet bring down the entire global banking system. But in the medium term, I see Peak Oil as being the far greater threat to the continuation of human civilization as we know it. Cheap, plentiful fossil fuels discovered in the last hundred years (or so) spurred a food bubble, which led to a population bubble. Cheap oil, in other words, created the temporary conditions necessary to support a runaway population explosion that is, without question, unsustainable without cheap energy.

But cheap oil is finite. And based on all reasonable accounting, world oil production is already in a state of substantial decline. That means oil will become increasingly scarce and expensive with each passing year, precisely as the world's hunger for oil reaches unprecedented heights (cars in China, India, etc.).

When the era of cheap oil ends, the food bubble made possible by mechanized agriculture will also end. And that will usher in an era of rapid human depopulation. Long-term, in a post-Peak Oil scenario, most experts expect the planet to only be able to support about one billion people.


Massive depopulation of the human species

The current population on the planet is about 6.7 billion people (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_...). That means we are likely to see a die-off of about 5.7 billion people, or roughly 6 out of every 7 people.

A loss of 6 out of 7 people -- even in the long run -- means a great de-specialization of complex societies and a return to a far more agrarian society. There is only ONE nation on Earth that has the experience and culture to handle this transition without much loss of life, and that's Papua New Guinea (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papua_...). Many nations like Ecuador, Panama, Peru, Bolivia and certain Pacific Island nations may also fare well, given that gardening is still a way of life that's taught there (and their climates are especially conducive to easy food production).

For everybody else, the transition will be quite devastating.

The loss of population density and specialization means a collapse of technology multipliers such as mechanized agriculture, just-in-time manufacturing systems and complex industrial logistics that manufacture and deliver products quickly and cheaply. The long, complex supply lines that characterize modern society will collapse, becoming local. For example, right now fish caught in Canada are shipped to China to be filleted by low-cost laborers, then they are shipped back to Canada to be sold as fish fillets. Such outrageous examples of the wasteful use of energy (and long supply lines) will vanish almost overnight in a post-Peak Oil scenario.

Unless some cheap energy supply is quickly discovered that can magically replace oil, virtually all food will eventually become local, which means that anyone living in a region that cannot produce its own food will either starve or leave. Las Vegas, Phoenix and virtually the entire American Southwest will be mostly abandoned by humans. You can expect a mass exodus of people from virtually all cities. Los Angeles would likely become a gang-infested war zone that resembles Somalia more than America.

Those who master the skills of agriculture (and who can protect themselves from the desperate masses leaving the cities) will live and reproduce. Those who deny reality and hope for some government to save them with silly economic stimulus bills will starve and die. It is the ultimate application of Darwinian Natural Selection, on a grand and merciless scale.

In the end, about 1 out of 7 people will remain. They will be the healthy, resourceful people who are willing to work in order to survive. The masses of medicated, junk-food-eating, entitlement-minded citizens of western nations who insist someone else should save them will be removed from the human gene pool through natural processes.

Deniers who foolishly think oil will never run out, or that the global banking system can be saved by printing free money from nothing, or that western civilization will last forever will also be removed from the human gene pool.


Can it be prevented?

A dire scenario? No more dire than all the previous civilization collapses that have occurred on our planet. The history of human life on Earth is full of arrogant, short-sighted societies that believed they would last forever. Arrogance quickly crumbles into dust in the face of ecological reality (or perhaps in this case, economic reality).

Of course, all of this could be prevented if the leaders of modern nations had any real intelligence (defined as having long-term vision and understanding the future implications of present-day decisions). Human life CAN be sustainable on our planet, but only if the people are willing to elect leaders who make decisions today that protect the future instead of selling it out. Such decisions, however, are never popular with the short-sighted people living today.

Sadly, there is hardly a single example of a future-minded politician in America today. Rep. Dennis Kucinich may be one of the rare ones on ecological issues, and Rep. Ron Paul is of course right-minded on financial issues. I cannot think of another elected representative (nor any Senator) that has any real long-term view of a sustainable society.

Nor do most people think beyond their own paychecks and immediate circumstances. How many people are actually taking great steps to reduce their ecological footprint? How many are investing in nutrition and superfoods for healthy babies? How many are truly growing their own food and solving the problems of seed saving, irrigation, food storage and soil erosion?

Remarkably few. Most people in society today live in artificial worlds defined by indoor lighting, air conditioning, processed foods, chemical medicines, artificial wood furniture, television programming and online social networking.

None of these have anything to do with reality.

Reality is the soil, the rivers, the air, sunlight, plants and seeds. It is found in the animals, microbes, forests and aquatic ecosystems. Reality cannot be negotiated with, nor bargained with, nor put off. Reality is shaped by our decisions and actions, and what we see unfolding in the world right now -- global warming, chemical contamination, depletion of fossil fuels -- is merely a reflection of the destructive actions being mindlessly taken by people living today.

It is often said that in a Democracy, people get the government they deserve.

On a large scale, this related thought is also true: On our planet, the people get the results they create!

And it is this choice that Jared Diamond so graciously reminds us to consider. We have a choice to decide our collective future. Today's decisions create tomorrow's results.

There is absolutely no question that the decisions being made right now across the nations of western civilization will create a future world with a greatly reduced capacity for human population. If that is what modern people wish to create, they are right on track with it.

But if modern people want to create a different outcome -- a sustainable world that future generations might enjoy without a population collapse and all the suffering that goes with it -- serious changes in behavior are immediately needed in many areas: Economic, ecological, cultural, medicine, agriculture and more.

Do not be led to believe that modern civilization is anything more than an erratic blip of temporary insanity on the chart of human history.

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About the author: Mike Adams is a natural health author and technology pioneer with a mission to teach personal and planetary health to the public He is a prolific writer and has published thousands of articles, interviews, reports and consumer guides, reaching millions of readers with information that is saving lives and improving personal health around the world. Adams is an honest, independent journalist and accepts no money or commissions on the third-party products he writes about or the companies he promotes. In 2007, Adams launched EcoLEDs, a manufacturer of mercury-free, energy-efficient LED lighting products that save electricity and help prevent global warming. He's also a successful software entrepreneur, having founded a well known email marketing software company whose technology currently powers the NaturalNews email newsletters. Adams is currently the executive director of the Consumer Wellness Center, a 501(c)3 non-profit, and practices nature photography, Capoeira, Pilates and organic gardening. Known on the 'net as 'the Health Ranger,' Adams shares his ethics, mission statements and personal health statistics at www.HealthRanger.org
10th-Dec-2009 11:36 am - restaurant.com code?
Anyone got the current one? I'd like to use this to buy some certificates to some [insert Austin content] Austin restaurants.
10th-Dec-2009 10:38 am - After-hours donations?
I have a car full of men's and women's clothing, towels, and some assorted odds and ends that I would like to donate to a group who will give it out for free, meaning not Goodwill. I don't need a tax deduction or anything, just to get this stuff to people who need it rather than have it taking up the backseat of my car.

Or... if you happen to know of a place in Elgin where I could drop this stuff off during a lunch break, that would be awesome too.

Cheers.
Hi all,

I've recently published a graphic novel dealing with a teenage girl's struggle to cope with her mom's schizophrenia. Titled the road to god knows..., it's very much a slice of life story and is probably closest in theme to Bryan Talbot's The Tale of One Bad Rat and Nate Powell's Swallow Me Whole. There's a dedicated website for the book at http://trtgk.vonallan.com/ if you'd like to learn a little more. Austin's Dragon's Lair Comics and Austin Books & Comics are both carrying my book.

Cover, trailer and whatnot under the cut! )

Von
10th-Dec-2009 07:14 am - Frames
Does anybody know where in town I can find frames that are 16x24 (2:3 aspect ratio) or the next size up to be matted into.

Jerry's Artorama has 16x20 or 18x24 (but having a mat on 2 sides and not all 4 looks kind of silly).

Thanks for the help.
10th-Dec-2009 05:53 am - Casual Sex is Emotionally Healthy
        Below from [info]lassiter on FaceBook.   

        Study was done on college age people, but I'll bet casual sex is also good for 14 year olds too, but they were afraid to ask the teens.   This culture has a big taboo about teens having sex.

======================================

Results of a study on casual sex among young adults surprise U researchers.
By JOSEPHINE MARCOTTY, Star Tribune
Last update: December 9, 2009 - 8:24 AM
 
  As most every parent knows, hooking up for casual sex is bad for young people because it causes emotional or psychological damage.

Right?

Well, actually, no. At least not for young adults between the ages of 18 and 24, according to a new study by University of Minnesota researchers.

Even they found the results startling.

They asked more than 1,300 young Minnesota adults about their most recent sexual encounters, their self-esteem and their emotional well-being. Interestingly, only about one-fifth of the subjects said their last encounter was casual. But their overall emotional status was no different than the four-fifths who said they were in committed relationships with their most recent sexual partner.

"We were so surprised," said Marla Eisenberg, an assistant professor at the university's School of Public Health who studies adolescent and young adult health.

"The conventional wisdom is that casual sex, 'friends with benefits,' and hooking up is hurtful. That's what we've been teaching kids for decades," especially in the federally funded abstinence-only sex education programs, she said.
10th-Dec-2009 05:21 am - Stare at boobs for longer life
        I can handle this kind of exercise every day!  I wonder if Lesbians would get the same benefit.   I wonder if any health plans would cover the cost of going to strip clubs?

        Below from [info]fulguritus on FaceBook.

================================================

<strong>Frankfurt, Germany, December 6 --</strong> A rather bizarre study carried out by German researchers suggests that staring at women's breasts is good for men's health and increases their life expectancy.

Frankfurt, Germany, December 6 -- A rather bizarre study carried out by German researchers suggests that staring at women's breasts is good for men's health and increases their life expectancy.

According to Dr. Karen Weatherby, a gerontologist and author of the study, gawking at women’s breasts is a healthy practice, almost at par with an intense exercise regime, that prolongs the lifespan of a man by five years.

She added, "Just 10 minutes of staring at the charms of a well-endowed female, is roughly equivalent to a 30-minute aerobics work-out."

A five-year research on 500 men
Researchers at three hospitals in Frankfurt, Germany did an in-depth analysis of 200 healthy males over a period of five years. Half the volunteers were instructed to ogle at the breasts of women daily, while the rest were told to refrain from doing so.

At the close of the study, the researchers noted that the men who stared at the breasts of females on a regular basis exhibited lower blood pressure, slower resting pulse rates and lesser episodes of coronary artery disease.

Sexual desire linked to better blood circulation
The researchers declared that sexual desire gives rise to better blood circulation that signifies an overall improved health.

Weatherby explained the concept stating, "Sexual excitement gets the heart pumping and improves blood circulation. There's no question: Gazing at breasts makes men healthy.

"Our study indicates that engaging in this activity a few minutes daily cuts the risk of stroke and heart attack in half. We believe that by doing so consistently, the average man can extend his life four to five years."

In addition, she also recommended that men over 40 should gaze at larger breasts daily for 10 minutes.

The German research is believed to be published in the New England Journal of Medicine.


http://www.themedguru.com/20091206/newsfeature/stare-boobs-longer-life-study-86131320.html
10th-Dec-2009 04:58 am - The Hubble Ultra Deep Field in 3D 
        Below from Richard Green on FaceBook.

=======================================


 

10th-Dec-2009 04:03 am - from Natural News
        I really wish I was not sensitive to dietary oxalates.   Nuts are so healthful and I can't eat them!

        Below from Natural News.

==================================================

Just how big of a rip-off is the modern cancer industry? A new chemotherapy drug costs an astonishing $30,000 a month. Per patient.</span>

 

In today's story, I explain why this sort of drug pricing is actually a profiteering scam that preys on sick elderly people:

http://www.naturalnews.com/027705_chemotherapy_fraud.html

 

 

Speaking of cancer treatments, did you know that 50% of breast cancer patients suffer long-term, chronic pain after radiation, surgery or chemo? Read the disturbing facts your oncologist won't tell you right here:

http://www.naturalnews.com/027704_brst_cancer_chronic_pain.html

 

 

Also: You can cut cholesterol by eating walnuts!

http://www.naturalnews.com/027699_walnuts_cholesterol.html


Big Pharma greed: drugs are being pushed on the Internet to hook consumers

(NaturalNews) If you have a common condition like high cholesterol or asthma, you'll probably surf the Internet for info -- and odds are you'll be directed to a slick Big Pharma-sponsored Web homepage. It will appear to be oh-so-helpful. In fact, the...

Discover the Secrets of Anti-Aging Adaptogenic Herbs, Part II

There are several adaptogenic herbs from traditional Chinese medicine that can be used as tonics safely and economically to maintain youthful vigor and health. Because virtually everyone can benefit, the Reishi mushroom will be discussed...

Patients choose alternative therapies when granted more personal responsibility by doctors

(NaturalNews) The December issue of Arthritis Care & Research contains a study showing that, when given the option to choose an alternate treatment, patients are more likely to refuse high-risk treatments recommended to them and pursue something...

Eating Walnuts Cuts Cholesterol

(NaturalNews) Eating a diet high in walnuts may decrease cholesterol and fight inflammation, two major risk factors for cardiovascular disease, according to a study conducted by researchers from Harvard University and published in the American Journal...

Snack Your Way to Health with Pistachio Nuts

Whether you are trying to lose weight or just eat a healthier diet, snacking can be a huge problem. No matter how hard you try to plan your day out and have healthy meals on hand, there are always times where you just need a snack. Pistachio...

Drug resistant staph infections on the rise in U.S. hospitals

(Natural News) The CDC has declared staphylococcus aureus infections are increasing to the point that 20,000 people a year die from staph infections, usually when the bacteria infiltrate the bloodstream or lungs. Many survive staph infections in wounds...

Benefit from Aerobic Exercise

A recent study just found that exercise, particularly aerobic exercise, is connected with having a higher IQ. For the participants that were eighteen, being physically fit was also connected with an increased chance of obtaining a University...
10th-Dec-2009 01:57 am - "Five Guns West" in black and white
A Locally made music video
The Nematoads, Austin Tx's best surf rock band plays "Five Guns West" live at "Dirty Dog Pub"
Read more... )
9th-Jan-2001 06:42 am - 2 Questions...
#1) For Christmas my husband and I want to give my Father In Law and his gf a night in a Bed & Breakfast in the Hill Country Area (think Wimberley/Dripping Springs/San Marcos/New Braunfels?etc). We are trying to convince them to move down here from Virginia and think this will be a good way. HOWEVER, money is tight. I googled my heart out but couldn't find any Bed & Breakfast or cabin type places (or just really good ol' hill country hotels) in that area for less than $80/night. It might be a pipe dream but we were hoping to get away with spending only $70 including fees. Anyone have any suggestions for me? Websites are a bonus.

#2) I have a camera (Kodak Easy Share) and it is broken. I really would like to get it fixed instead of buying a new one (if thats the best price option of course). Anyone have a suggestion for a place to get a camera fixed? Bonus if it is in the NW Austin or Round Rock area since that is where I live/work.

Thanks!
hey austinites -

has anyone seen a desk like this anywhere locally? i don't care if it's pretty; what i care about is adjustable height and casters. i just had surgery and am trying to figure out ways to be able to work comfortably. thanks!
"Too lazy to work, too nervous to steal." Is why a person lives the life of a cowboy.
You get it?
Great ... but you still missed 90% of it.
You missed why you got it: it's authentic.

"Don't lie ... makes for too many things to remember." That's a line from a movie.
"Don't lie ... too much effort keeping track." My 9yr old realization of bodhisattva benefit.

So here's the point: you consume, and dramatize, and confabulate ... why?
1st cuz you're in a culture of cheats and liars, so this passes for "just getting along". Which I could almost buy into.
But 2nd: it's smoke-screen as you scramble to try to keep the bits and pieces of lies together.
Cuz you're enormously false.

/You/ condemn yourself. Not me.

You're hiding from your family, from your co-workers, from your boss, from you're "friends" ...
... from yourself.

Is why you have to ignore me: I'm part of the truth.

In the LJ I've talked about authenticity.
And you hate that. *blink* (Do you, really?)
So you ignore me.

Are you, really, better than Stalinists? Nazis? Fascists?
Are you, really, different from Taliban?

Sorry kiddos ... I know I am ... but you?
*shrug*
You can deny it ... that's what you've practiced, year after year after year: denial.
But that doesn't change the fact of it.

I learned to hate your parents as I watched us kill the planet.
I can learn to hate you as you deny it.

Or I can choose not to.
/I/ can ...
... cuz I've paid the price of autonomy, and authenticity.
Paid ... paid in full.

You rely on denial?
Okie dokie ...
... so now say there's no karma. No individual responsibility.
And, having said that, look to find the joy of yet.another dawn ...
.... the joy will be there for you. But you won't enjoy it.

Because you are sentient beings, denial is poison.

You want to cheat, to profit from cheating, to enjoy the benefits of having cheated ...
... and then to pay no consequence.

You are your parents' children.

How sad.
So much destructive power, and not the wisdom of a gnat.

How sad, to be you.

How sad to be me ... knowing your parents ... watching their chidren.

How terribly tragic.
10th-Dec-2009 01:46 am - It's a guy thing


Thanks to [info]kaligreeneyes for the title.
10th-Dec-2009 01:16 am - Today's weather follies
Follow up to last night's post. Thanks to all of you who expressed your concern; I'll get back to you if I haven't already.

On my Facebook, I posted that I was "not looking forward to the drive today." More than the drive went wrong.

First, I opened my back storm door to go to work this afternoon and the wind caught the door and pulled it out of my hand, opening it all the way and slamming it across my neighbor's door. Two of the three hinge fixtures broke along with the spring that closes the door. The only things holding the door on are the bottom hinge plate/bolt and the chain at the top, which is supposed to prevent the door from being opened this far and fast. This evening, I came in through the front door, which I almost never do. The only good thing about the door is that I don't own it ([info]kaligreeneyes and I rent).

On the way into work, I saw one car off the road. On the way back, the freeway was in better shape most of the way, but I saw eight cars off the road. I also had to get off the freeway and take surface streets because the freeway had turned into a skating rink and traffic slowed to a crawl for two miles about 10 miles from home.

Welcome to winter in Michigan!
9th-Dec-2009 10:15 pm - Spiral blue light above Norway
“We do NOT know the past in chronological sequence. It may be convenient to lay it out anesthetized on the table with dates pasted on here and there, but what we know we know by ripples and spirals eddying out from us and from our own time.”

Ezra Pound quotes (American Editor, Poet, Translator and Critic, 1885-1972)



Ok Fellow Occultists- have you followed THIS story???
What do you think it is/was?
It was NOT a f-ing missile, that is for sure....

Looks like an empowerment to me...

It IS very close to Copenhagen where the global summit is being held.....

Here is a link to video and awesome pics...

131



<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1234430/mystery-spiral-blue-light-display-hovers-norway.html>


Anyone for some Arctic roll? Mystery as spiral blue light display hovers above Norway

By MAIL FOREIGN SERVICE

Last updated at 12:53 AM on 10th December 2009
Comments (439)
Add to My Stories
What's blue and white, squiggly and suddenly appears in the sky?
If you know the answer, pop it on a postcard and send it to the people of Norway, where this mysterious light display baffled residents yesterday.
Curiously, it appears to be unconnected with the aurora borealis, or northern lights, the natural magnetic phenomena that can often be viewed in that part of the world.

Strange spiral: Residents in northern Norway were left stunned after the lightshow, which almost looked computer-generated, appeared in the skies above them

Curious: A blue-green beam of light was reported to have come shooting out the centre of the spiral
The mystery began when a blue light seemed to soar up from behind a mountain in the north of the country. It stopped mid-air, then began to move in circles. Within seconds a giant spiral had covered the entire sky. Then a green-blue beam of light shot out from its centre - lasting for ten to 12 minutes before disappearing completely.
Onlookers describing it as 'like a big fireball that went around, with a great light around it' and 'a shooting star that spun around and around'.
The Norwegian Meteorological Institute was flooded with telephone calls after the light storm.

Confusion: The Norwegian Meteorological Institute was flooded with calls after the light storm
Totto Eriksen, from Tromsø, told VG Nett: 'It spun and exploded in the sky,'
He spotted the lights as he walked his daughter Amalie to school.
He said: 'We saw it from the Inner Harbor in Tromsø. It was absolutely fantastic.
'It almost looked like a rocket that spun around and around and then went diagonally down the heavens.
'It looked like the moon was coming over the mountain, but then came something completely different.'
Celebrity astronomer Knut Jørgen Røed Ødegaard said he had never seen anything like the lights.
He said: 'My first thought was that it was a fireball meteor, but it has lasted far too long.
'It may have been a missile in Russia, but I can not guarantee that it is the answer.'

What could it be? Astronomers say the spectacle did not appear to be connected to the Northern Lights
Air traffic control in Tromsō claimed the light show lasted 'far too long to be an astronomical phenomenon'.
Norwegian defence spokesman Jon Espen Lien also said the lights were probably from a Russian missile test claiming it was normal for Russia to use the White Sea and the Barents Sea as a testing ground.
Tromsō Geophysical Observatory researcher Truls Lynne Hansen agreed, saying the missile had likely veered out of control and exploded, and the spiral was light reflecting on the leaking fuel.
But the mystery deepened last night as Russia denied it had been conducting missile tests in the area.
A Moscow news outlet quoted the Russian Navy as denying any rocket launches from the White Sea area.
Norway should be informed of such launches under international agreements, it was stressed.
The Russian Defence Ministry was unavailable for comment.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1234430/Mystery-spiral-blue-light-display-hovers-Norway.html#ixzz0ZGOEoWOU


9th-Dec-2009 11:44 pm - best way to the airport?
I have to be at the austin airport friday by 5

best route other than a cab?

cap metro?

other ideas?
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