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How to Prepare for Social Collapse (article)

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Home › Forum Online Discussion › Philosophy › How to Prepare for Social Collapse (article)

  • This topic has 2 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 3 months ago by Dog.
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  • February 20, 2009 at 6:37 pm #30599
    Michael Winn
    Keymaster

    note: the old ways are definitely collapsing, but I doubt it will unfold the same as in russia, the model cited below. And new technologies – notably the nano-wheel motor, will make dramatic changes, as like more doomdayers, his end is caused by lack of OIL. But still a useful exercise in releasing fear to imagine what he is saying happens. – Michael

    ————

    SOCIAL COLLAPSE BEST PRACTICES
    PoorBest
    By Dmitry Orlov
    Culture Change
    February 14, 2009

    http://culturechange.org/cms/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=325&I
    temid=1

    The following talk was given on February 13, 2009, at Cowell Theatre in Fort
    Mason Center, San Francisco, to an audience of 550 people. Audio and video
    of the talk will be available on Long Now Foundation web site:

    http://www.longnow.org/

    …………….

    Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for showing up. It’s certainly
    nice to travel all the way across the North American continent and have a
    few people come to see you, even if the occasion isn’t a happy one. You are
    here to listen to me talk about social collapse and the various ways we can
    avoid screwing that up along with everything else that’s gone wrong. I know
    it’s a lot to ask of you, because why wouldn’t you instead want to go and
    eat, drink, and be merry? Well, perhaps there will still be time left for
    that after my talk.

    I would like to thank the Long Now Foundation for inviting me, and I feel
    very honored to appear in the same venue as many serious, professional
    people, such as Michael Pollan, who will be here in May, or some of the
    previous speakers, such as Nassim Taleb, or Brian Eno — some of my favorite
    people, really. I am just a tourist. I flew over here to give this talk and
    to take in the sights, and then I’ll fly back to Boston and go back to my
    day job. Well, I am also a blogger. And I also wrote a book. But then
    everyone has a book, or so it would seem.

    You might ask yourself, then, Why on earth did he get invited to speak here
    tonight? It seems that I am enjoying my moment in the limelight, because I
    am one of the very few people who several years ago unequivocally predicted
    the demise of the United States as a global superpower. The idea that the
    USA will go the way of the USSR seemed preposterous at the time. It doesn’t
    seem so preposterous any more. I take it some of you are still hedging your
    bets. How is that hedge fund doing, by the way?

    I think I prefer remaining just a tourist, because I have learned from
    experience — luckily, from other people’s experience — that being a
    superpower collapse predictor is not a good career choice. I learned that by
    observing what happened to the people who successfully predicted the
    collapse of the USSR. Do you know who Andrei Amalrik is? See, my point
    exactly. He successfully predicted the collapse of the USSR. He was off by
    just half a decade. That was another valuable lesson for me, which is why I
    will not give you an exact date when USA will turn into FUSA (“F” is for
    “Former”). But even if someone could choreograph the whole event, it still
    wouldn’t make for much of a career, because once it all starts falling
    apart, people have far more important things to attend to than marveling at
    the wonderful predictive abilities of some Cassandra-like person.

    I hope that I have made it clear that I am not here in any sort of
    professional capacity. I consider what I am doing a kind of community
    service. So, if you don’t like my talk, don’t worry about me. There are
    plenty of other things I can do. But I would like my insights to be of help
    during these difficult and confusing times, for altruistic reasons, mostly,
    although not entirely. This is because when times get really bad, as they
    did when the Soviet Union collapsed, lots of people just completely lose it.
    Men, especially. Successful, middle-aged men, breadwinners, bastions of
    society, turn out to be especially vulnerable. And when they just completely
    lose it, they become very tedious company. My hope is that some amount of
    preparation, psychological and otherwise, can make them a lot less fragile,
    and a bit more useful, and generally less of a burden.

    Women seem much more able to cope. Perhaps it is because they have less of
    their ego invested in the whole dubious enterprise, or perhaps their sense
    of personal responsibility is tied to those around them and not some
    nebulous grand enterprise. In any case, the women always seem far more able
    to just put on their gardening gloves and go do something useful, while the
    men tend to sit around groaning about the Empire, or the Republic, or
    whatever it is that they lost. And when they do that, they become very
    tedious company. And so, without a bit of mental preparation, the men are
    all liable to end up very lonely and very drunk. So that’s my little
    intervention.

    If there is one thing that I would like to claim as my own, it is the
    comparative theory of superpower collapse. For now, it remains just a
    theory, although it is currently being quite thoroughly tested. The theory
    states that the United States and the Soviet Union will have collapsed for
    the same reasons, namely: a severe and chronic shortfall in the production
    of crude oil (that magic addictive elixir of industrial economies), a severe
    and worsening foreign trade deficit, a runaway military budget, and
    ballooning foreign debt. I call this particular list of ingredients “The
    Superpower Collapse Soup.” Other factors, such as the inability to provide
    an acceptable quality of life for its citizens, or a systemically corrupt
    political system incapable of reform, are certainly not helpful, but they do
    not automatically lead to collapse, because they do not put the country on a
    collision course with reality. Please don’t be too concerned, though,
    because, as I mentioned, this is just a theory. My theory.

    I’ve been working on this theory since about 1995, when it occurred to me
    that the US is retracing the same trajectory as the USSR. As so often is the
    case, having this realization was largely a matter of being in the right
    place at the right time. The two most important methods of solving problems
    are: 1. by knowing the solution ahead of time, and 2. by guessing it
    correctly. I learned this in engineering school — from a certain professor.
    I am not that good at guesswork, but I do sometimes know the answer ahead of
    time.

    I was very well positioned to have this realization because I grew up
    straddling the two worlds — the USSR and the US. I grew up in Russia, and
    moved to the US when I was twelve, and so I am fluent in Russian, and I
    understand Russian history and Russian culture the way only a native Russian
    can. But I went through high school and university in the US. I had careers
    in several industries here, I traveled widely around the country, and so I
    also have a very good understanding of the US with all of its quirks and
    idiosyncrasies. I traveled back to Russia in 1989, when things there still
    seemed more or less in line with the Soviet norm, and again in 1990, when
    the economy was at a standstill, and big changes were clearly on the way. I
    went back there 3 more times in the 1990s, and observed the various stages
    of Soviet collapse first-hand.

    By the mid-1990s I started to see Soviet/American Superpowerdom as a sort of
    disease that strives for world dominance but in effect eviscerates its host
    country, eventually leaving behind an empty shell: an impoverished
    population, an economy in ruins, a legacy of social problems, and a
    tremendous burden of debt. The symmetries between the two global superpowers
    were then already too numerous to mention, and they have been growing more
    obvious ever since.

    The superpower symmetries may be of interest to policy wonks and history
    buffs and various skeptics, but they tell us nothing that would be useful in
    our daily lives. It is the asymmetries, the differences between the two
    superpowers, that I believe to be most instructive. When the Soviet system
    went away, many people lost their jobs, everyone lost their savings, wages
    and pensions were held back for months, their value was wiped out by
    hyperinflation, there shortages of food, gasoline, medicine, consumer goods,
    there was a large increase in crime and violence, and yet Russian society
    did not collapse. Somehow, the Russians found ways to muddle through. How
    was that possible? It turns out that many aspects of the Soviet system were
    paradoxically resilient in the face of system-wide collapse, many
    institutions continued to function, and the living arrangement was such that
    people did not lose access to food, shelter or transportation, and could
    survive even without an income. The Soviet economic system failed to thrive,
    and the Communist experiment at constructing a worker’s paradise on earth
    was, in the end, a failure. But as a side effect it inadvertently achieved a
    high level of collapse-preparedness. In comparison, the American system
    could produce significantly better results, for time, but at the cost of
    creating and perpetuating a living arrangement that is very fragile, and not
    at all capable of holding together through the inevitable crash. Even after
    the Soviet economy evaporated and the government largely shut down, Russians
    still had plenty left for them to work with. And so there is a wealth of
    useful information and insight that we can extract from the Russian
    experience, which we can then turn around and put to good use in helping us
    improvise a new living arrangement here in the United States — one that is
    more likely to be survivable.

    The mid-1990s did not seem to me as the right time to voice such ideas. The
    United States was celebrating its so-called Cold War victory, getting over
    its Vietnam syndrome by bombing Iraq back to the Stone Age, and the foreign
    policy wonks coined the term “hyperpower” and were jabbering on about
    full-spectrum dominance. All sorts of silly things were happening. Professor
    Fukuyama told us that history had ended, and so we were building a brave new
    world where the Chinese made things out of plastic for us, the Indians
    provided customer support when these Chinese-made things broke, and we paid
    for it all just by flipping houses, pretending that they were worth a lot of
    money whereas they are really just useless bits of ticky-tacky. Alan
    Greenspan chided us about “irrational exuberance” while consistently
    low-balling interest rates. It was the “Goldilocks economy” — not to hot,
    not too cold. Remember that? And now it turns out that it was actually more
    of a “Tinker-bell” economy, because the last five or so years of economic
    growth was more or less a hallucination, based on various debt pyramids, the
    “whole house of cards” as President Bush once referred to it during one of
    his lucid moments. And now we can look back on all of that with a funny,
    queasy feeling, or we can look forward and feel nothing but vertigo.

    While all of these silly things were going on, I thought it best to keep my
    comparative theory of superpower collapse to myself. During that time, I was
    watching the action in the oil industry, because I understood that oil
    imports are the Achilles’ heel of the US economy. In the mid-1990s the
    all-time peak in global oil production was scheduled for the turn of the
    century. But then a lot of things happened that delayed it by at least half
    a decade. Perhaps you’ve noticed this too, there is a sort of refrain here:
    people who try to predict big historical shifts always turn to be off by
    about half a decade. Unsuccessful predictions, on the other hand are always
    spot on as far as timing: the world as we know it failed to end precisely at
    midnight on January 1, 2000. Perhaps there is a physical principal involved:
    information spreads at the speed of light, while ignorance is instantaneous
    at all points in the known universe. So please make a mental note: whenever
    it seems to you that I am making a specific prediction as to when I think
    something is likely to happen, just silently add “plus or minus half a
    decade.”

    In any case, about half a decade ago, I finally thought that the time was
    ripe, and, as it has turned out, I wasn’t too far off. In June of 2005 I
    published an article on the subject, titled “Post-Soviet Lessons for a
    Post-American Century,” which was quite popular, even to the extent that I
    got paid for it. It is available at various places on the Internet. A little
    while later I formalized my thinking somewhat into the “Collapse Gap”
    concept, which I presented at a conference in Manhattan in April of 2006.
    The slide show from that presentation, titled “Closing the Collapse Gap,”
    was posted on the Internet and has been downloaded a few million times since
    then. Then, in January of 2008, when it became apparent to me that financial
    collapse was well underway, and that other stages of collapse were to
    follow, I published a short article titled “The Five Stages of Collapse,”
    which I later expanded into a talk I gave at a conference in Michigan in
    October of 2008. Finally, at the end of 2008, I announced on my blog that I
    am getting out of the prognosticating business. I have made enough
    predictions, they all seem very well on track (give or take half a decade,
    please remember that), collapse is well underway, and now I am just an
    observer.

    But this talk is about something else, something other than making dire
    predictions and then acting all smug when they come true. You see, there is
    nothing more useless than predictions, once they have come true. It’s like
    looking at last year’s amazingly successful stock picks: what are you going
    to do about them this year? What we need are examples of things that have
    been shown to work in the strange, unfamiliar, post-collapse environment
    that we are all likely to have to confront. Stuart Brand proposed the title
    for the talk — “Social Collapse Best Practices” — and I thought that it
    was an excellent idea. Although the term “best practices” has been diluted
    over time to sometimes mean little more than “good ideas,” initially it
    stood for the process of abstracting useful techniques from examples of what
    has worked in the past and applying them to new situations, in order to
    control risk and to increase the chances of securing a positive outcome.
    It’s a way of skipping a lot of trial and error and deliberation and
    experimentation, and to just go with what works.

    In organizations, especially large organizations, “best practices” also
    offer a good way to avoid painful episodes of watching colleagues trying to
    “think outside the box” whenever they are confronted with a new problem. If
    your colleagues were any good at thinking outside the box, they probably
    wouldn’t feel so compelled to spend their whole working lives sitting in a
    box keeping an office chair warm. If they were any good at thinking outside
    the box, they would have by now thought of a way to escape from that box. So
    perhaps what would make them feel happy and productive again is if someone
    came along and gave them a different box inside of which to think — a box
    better suited to the post-collapse environment.

    Here is the key insight: you might think that when collapse happens, nothing
    works. That’s just not the case. The old ways of doing things don’t work any
    more, the old assumptions are all invalidated, conventional goals and
    measures of success become irrelevant. But a different set of goals,
    techniques, and measures of success can be brought to bear immediately, and
    the sooner the better. But enough generalities, let’s go through some
    specifics. We’ll start with some generalities, and, as you will see, it will
    all become very, very specific rather quickly.

    Here is another key insight: there are very few things that are positives or
    negatives per se. Just about everything is a matter of context. Now, it just
    so happens that most things that are positives prior to collapse turn out to
    be negatives once collapse occurs, and vice versa. For instance, prior to
    collapse having high inventory in a business is bad, because the businesses
    have to store it and finance it, so they try to have just-in-time inventory.
    After collapse, high inventory turns out to be very useful, because they can
    barter it for the things they need, and they can’t easily get more because
    they don’t have any credit. Prior to collapse, it’s good for a business to
    have the right level of staffing and an efficient organization. After
    collapse, what you want is a gigantic, sluggish bureaucracy that can’t
    unwind operations or lay people off fast enough through sheer bureaucratic
    foot-dragging. Prior to collapse, what you want is an effective retail
    segment and good customer service. After collapse, you regret not having an
    unreliable retail segment, with shortages and long bread lines, because then
    people would have been forced to learn to shift for themselves instead of
    standing around waiting for somebody to come and feed them.

    If you notice, none of these things that I mentioned have any bearing on
    what is commonly understood as “economic health.” Prior to collapse, the
    overall macroeconomic positive is an expanding economy. After collapse,
    economic contraction is a given, and the overall macroeconomic positive
    becomes something of an imponderable, so we are forced to listen to a lot of
    nonsense. The situation is either slightly better than expected or slightly
    worse than expected. We are always either months or years away from economic
    recovery. Business as usual will resume sooner or later, because some
    television bobble-head said so.

    But let’s take it apart. Starting from the very general, what are the
    current macroeconomic objectives, if you listen to the hot air coming out of
    Washington at the moment? First: growth, of course! Getting the economy
    going. We learned nothing from the last huge spike in commodity prices, so
    let’s just try it again. That calls for economic stimulus, a.k.a. printing
    money. Let’s see how high the prices go up this time. Maybe this time around
    we will achieve hyperinflation. Second: Stabilizing financial institutions:
    getting banks lending — that’s important too. You see, we are just not in
    enough debt yet, that’s our problem. We need more debt, and quickly! Third:
    jobs! We need to create jobs. Low-wage jobs, of course, to replace all the
    high-wage manufacturing jobs we’ve been shedding for decades now, and
    replacing them with low-wage service sector jobs, mainly ones without any
    job security or benefits. Right now, a lot of people could slow down the
    rate at which they are sinking further into debt if they quit their jobs.
    That is, their job is a net loss for them as individuals as well as for the
    economy as a whole. But, of course, we need much more of that, and quickly!

    So that’s what we have now. The ship is on the rocks, water is rising, and
    the captain is shouting “Full steam ahead! We are sailing to Afghanistan!”
    Do you listen to Ahab up on the bridge, or do you desert your post in the
    engine room and go help deploy the lifeboats? If you thought that the
    previous episode of uncontrolled debt expansion, globalized Ponzi schemes,
    and economic hollowing-out was silly, then I predict that you will find this
    next episode of feckless grasping at macroeconomic straws even sillier.
    Except that it won’t be funny: what is crashing now is our life support
    system: all the systems and institutions that are keeping us alive. And so I
    don’t recommend passively standing around and watching the show — unless
    you happen to have a death wish.

    Right now the Washington economic stimulus team is putting on their Scuba
    gear and diving down to the engine room to try to invent a way to get a
    diesel engine to run on seawater. They spoke of change, but in reality they
    are terrified of change and want to cling with all their might to the status
    quo. But this game will soon be over, and they don’t have any idea what to
    do next.

    So, what is there for them to do? Forget “growth,” forget “jobs,” forget
    “financial stability.” What should their realistic new objectives be? Well,
    here they are: food, shelter, transportation, and security. Their task is to
    find a way to provide all of these necessities on an emergency basis, in
    absence of a functioning economy, with commerce at a standstill, with little
    or no access to imports, and to make them available to a population that is
    largely penniless. If successful, society will remain largely intact, and
    will be able to begin a slow and painful process of cultural transition, and
    eventually develop a new economy, a gradually de-industrializing economy, at
    a much lower level of resource expenditure, characterized by a quite a lot
    of austerity and even poverty, but in conditions that are safe, decent, and
    dignified. If unsuccessful, society will be gradually destroyed in a series
    of convulsions that will leave a defunct nation composed of many wretched
    little fiefdoms. Given its largely depleted resource base, a dysfunctional,
    collapsing infrastructure, and its history of unresolved social conflicts,
    the territory of the Former United States will undergo a process of steady
    degeneration punctuated by natural and man-made cataclysms.

    Food. Shelter. Transportation. Security. When it comes to supplying these
    survival necessities, the Soviet example offers many valuable lessons. As I
    already mentioned, in a collapse many economic negatives become positives,
    and vice versa. Let us consider each one of these in turn.

    The Soviet agricultural sector was plagued by consistent underperformance.
    In many ways, this was the legacy of the disastrous collectivization
    experiment carried out in the 1930s, which destroyed many of the more
    prosperous farming households and herded people into collective farms.
    Collectivization undermined the ancient village-based agricultural
    traditions that had made pre-revolutionary Russia a well-fed place that was
    also the breadbasket of Western Europe. A great deal of further damage was
    caused by the introduction of industrial agriculture. The heavy farm
    machinery alternately compacted and tore up the topsoil while dosing it with
    chemicals, depleting it and killing the biota. Eventually, the Soviet
    government had to turn to importing grain from countries hostile to its
    interests — United States and Canada — and eventually expanded this to
    include other foodstuffs. The USSR experienced a permanent shortage of meat
    and other high-protein foods, and much of the imported grain was used to
    raise livestock to try to address this problem.

    Although it was generally possible to survive on the foods available at the
    government stores, the resulting diet would have been rather poor, and so
    people tried to supplement it with food they gathered, raised, or caught, or
    purchased at farmers’ markets. Kitchen gardens were always common, and, once
    the economy collapsed, a lot of families took to growing food in earnest.
    The kitchen gardens, by themselves, were never sufficient, but they made a
    huge difference.

    The year 1990 was particularly tough when it came to trying to score
    something edible. I remember one particular joke from that period. Black
    humor has always been one of Russia’s main psychological coping mechanisms.
    A man walks into a food store, goes to the meat counter, and he sees that it
    is completely empty. So he asks the butcher: “Don’t you have any fish?” And
    the butcher answers: “No, here is where we don’t have any meat. Fish is what
    they don’t have over at the seafood counter.”

    Poor though it was, the Soviet food distribution system never collapsed
    completely. In particular, the deliveries of bread continued even during the
    worst of times, partly because has always been such an important part of the
    Russian diet, and partly because access to bread symbolized the pact between
    the people and the Communist government, enshrined in oft-repeated
    revolutionary slogans. Also, it is important to remember that in Russia most
    people have lived within walking distance of food shops, and used public
    transportation to get out to their kitchen gardens, which were often located
    in the countryside immediately surrounding the relatively dense, compact
    cities. This combination of factors made for some lean times, but very
    little malnutrition and no starvation.

    In the United States, the agricultural system is heavily industrialized, and
    relies on inputs such as diesel, chemical fertilizers and pesticides, and,
    perhaps most importantly, financing. In the current financial climate, the
    farmers’ access to financing is not at all assured. This agricultural system
    is efficient, but only if you regard fossil fuel energy as free. In fact, it
    is a way to transform fossil fuel energy into food with a bit of help from
    sunlight, to the tune of 10 calories of fossil fuel energy being embodied in
    each calorie that is consumed as food. The food distribution system makes
    heavy use of refrigerated diesel trucks, transforming food over hundreds of
    miles to resupply supermarkets. The food pipeline is long and thin, and it
    takes only a couple of days of interruptions for supermarket shelves to be
    stripped bare. Many people live in places that are not within walking
    distance of stores, not served by public transportation, and will be cut off
    from food sources once they are no longer able to drive.

    Besides the supermarket chains, much of the nation’s nutrition needs are
    being met by an assortment of fast food joints and convenience stores. In
    fact, in many of the less fashionable parts of cities and towns, fast food
    and convenience store food is all that is available. In the near future,
    this trend is likely to extend to the more prosperous parts of town and the
    suburbs.

    Fast food outfits such as McDonalds have more ways to cut costs, and so may
    prove a bit more resilient in the face of economic collapse than supermarket
    chains, but they are no substitute for food security, because they too
    depend industrial agribusiness. Their food inputs, such as high-fructose
    corn syrup, genetically modified potatoes, various soy-based fillers,
    factory-farmed beef, pork and chicken, and so forth, are derived from oil,
    two-thirds of which is imported, as well as fertilizer made from natural
    gas. They may be able to stay in business longer, supplying
    food-that-isn’t-really-food, but eventually they will run out of inputs
    along with the rest of the supply chain. Before they do, they may for a time
    sell burgers that aren’t really burgers, like the bread that wasn’t really
    bread that the Soviet government distributed in Leningrad during the Nazi
    blockade. It was mostly sawdust, with a bit of rye flour added for flavor.

    Can we think of any ways to avoid this dismal scenario? The Russian example
    may give us a clue. Many Russian families could gauge how fast the economy
    was crashing, and, based on that, decide how many rows of potatoes to plant.
    Could we perhaps do something similar? There is already a healthy gardening
    movement in the United States; can it be scaled up? The trick is to make
    small patches of farmland available for non-mechanical cultivation by
    individuals and families, in increments as small as 1000 square feet. The
    ideal spots would be fertile bits of land with access to rivers and streams
    for irrigation. Provisions would have to be made for campsites and for
    transportation, allowing people to undertake seasonal migrations out to the
    land to grow food during the growing season, and haul the produce back to
    the population centers after taking in the harvest.

    An even simpler approach has been successfully used in Cuba: converting
    urban parking lots and other empty bits of land to raised-bed agriculture.
    Instead of continually trucking in vegetables and other food, it is much
    easier to truck in soil, compost, and mulch just once a season. Raised
    highways can be closed to traffic (since there is unlikely to be much
    traffic in any case) and used to catch rainwater for irrigation. Rooftops
    and balconies can be used for hothouses, henhouses, and a variety of other
    agricultural uses.

    How difficult would this be to organize? Well, Cubans were actually helped
    by their government, but the Russians managed to do it in more or less in
    spite of the Soviet bureaucrats, and so we might be able to do it in spite
    of the American ones. The government could theoretically head up such an
    effort, purely hypothetically speaking, of course, because I see no evidence
    that such an effort is being considered. For our fearless national leaders,
    such initiatives are too low-level: if they stimulate the economy and get
    the banks lending again, the potatoes will simply grow themselves. All they
    need to do is print some more money, right?

    Moving on to shelter. Again, let’s look at how the Russians managed to
    muddle through. In the Soviet Union, people did not own their place of
    residence. Everyone was assigned a place to live, which was recorded in a
    person’s internal passport. People could not be dislodged from their place
    of residence for as long as they drew oxygen. Since most people in Russia
    live in cities, the place of residence was usually an apartment, or a room
    in a communal apartment, with shared bathroom and kitchen. There was a
    permanent housing shortage, and so people often doubled up, with three
    generations living together. The apartments were often crowded, sometimes
    bordering on squalid. If people wanted to move, they had to find somebody
    else who wanted to move, who would want to exchange rooms or apartments with
    them. There were always long waiting lists for apartments, and children
    often grew up, got married, and had children before receiving a place of
    their own.

    These all seem like negatives, but consider the flip side of all this: the
    high population density made this living arrangement quite affordable. With
    several generations living together, families were on hand to help each
    other. Grandparents provided day care, freeing up their children’s time to
    do other things. The apartment buildings were always built near public
    transportation, so they did not have to rely on private cars to get around.
    Apartment buildings are relatively cheap to heat, and municipal services
    easy to provide and maintain because of the short runs of pipe and cable.
    Perhaps most importantly, after the economy collapsed, people lost their
    savings, many people lost their jobs, even those that still had jobs often
    did not get paid for months, and when they were the value of their wages was
    destroyed by hyperinflation, but there were no foreclosures, no evictions,
    municipal services such as heat, water, and sometimes even hot water
    continued to be provided, and everyone had their families close by. Also,
    because it was so difficult to relocate, people generally stayed in one
    place for generations, and so they tended to know all the people around
    them. After the economic collapse, there was a large spike in the crime
    rate, which made it very helpful to be surrounded by people who weren’t
    strangers, and who could keep an eye on things. Lastly, in an interesting
    twist, the Soviet housing arrangement delivered an amazing final windfall:
    in the 1990s all of these apartments were privatized, and the people who
    lived in them suddenly became owners of some very valuable real estate, free
    and clear.

    Switching back to the situation in the US: in recent months, many people
    here have reconciled themselves to the idea that their house is not an ATM
    machine, nor is it a nest egg. They already know that they will not be able
    to comfortably retire by selling it, or get rich by fixing it up and
    flipping it, and quite a few people have acquiesced to the fact that real
    estate prices are going to continue heading lower. The question is, How much
    lower? A lot of people still think that there must be a lower limit, a
    “realistic” price. This thought is connected to the notion that housing is a
    necessity. After all, everybody needs a place to live.

    Well, it is certainly true that some sort of shelter is a necessity, be it
    an apartment, or a dorm room, a bunk in a barrack, a boat, a camper, or a
    tent, a teepee, a wigwam, a shipping container… The list is virtually
    endless. But there is no reason at all to think that a suburban
    single-family house is in any sense a requirement. It is little more than a
    cultural preference, and a very shortsighted one at that. Most suburban
    houses are expensive to heat and cool, inaccessible by public
    transportation, expensive to hook up to public utilities because of the long
    runs of pipe and cable, and require a great deal of additional public
    expenditure on road, bridge and highway maintenance, school buses, traffic
    enforcement, and other nonsense. They often take up what was once valuable
    agricultural land. They promote a car-centric culture that is destructive of
    urban environments, causing a proliferation of dead downtowns. Many families
    that live in suburban houses can no longer afford to live in them, and
    expect others to bail them out.

    As this living arrangement becomes unaffordable for all concerned, it will
    also become unlivable. Municipalities and public utilities will not have the
    funds to lavish on sewer, water, electricity, road and bridge repair, and
    police. Without cheap and plentiful gasoline, natural gas, and heating oil,
    many suburban dwellings will become both inaccessible and unlivable. The
    inevitable result will be a mass migration of suburban refugees toward the
    more survivable, more densely settled towns and cities. The luckier ones
    will find friends or family to stay with; for the rest, it would be very
    helpful to improvise some solution.

    One obvious answer is to repurpose the ever-plentiful vacant office
    buildings for residential use. Converting offices to dormitories is quite
    straightforward. Many of them already have kitchens and bathrooms, plenty of
    partitions and other furniture, and all they are really missing is beds.
    Putting in beds is just not that difficult. The new, subsistence economy is
    unlikely to generate the large surpluses that are necessary for sustaining
    the current large population of office plankton. The businesses that once
    occupied these offices are not coming back, so we might as well find new and
    better uses for them.

    Another category of real estate that is likely to go unused and that can be
    repurposed for new communities is college campuses. The American 4-year
    college is an institution of dubious merit. It exists because American
    public schools fail to teach in 12 years what Russian public schools manage
    to teach in 8. As fewer and fewer people become able to afford college,
    which is likely to happen, because meager career prospects after graduation
    will make them bad risks for student loans, perhaps this will provide the
    impetus to do something about the public education system. One idea would be
    to scrap it, then start small, but eventually build something a bit more on
    par with world standards.

    College campuses make perfect community centers: there are dormitories for
    newcomers, fraternities and sororities for the more settled residents, and
    plenty of grand public buildings that can be put to a variety of uses. A
    college campus normally contains the usual wasteland of mowed turf that can
    be repurposed to grow food, or, at the very least, hay, and to graze cattle.
    Perhaps some enlightened administrators, trustees and faculty members will
    fall upon this idea once they see admissions flat-lining and endowments
    dropping to zero, without any need for government involvement. So here we
    have a ray of hope, don’t we.

    Moving on to transportation. Here, we need to make sure that people don’t
    get stranded in places that are not survivable. Then we have to provide for
    seasonal migrations to places where people can grow, catch, or gather their
    own food, and then back to places where they can survive the winter without
    freezing to death or going stir-crazy from cabin fever. Lastly, some amount
    of freight will have to be moved, to transport food to population centers,
    as well as enough coal and firewood to keep the pipes from freezing in the
    remaining habitable dwellings.

    All of this is going to be a bit of a challenge, because it all hinges on
    the availability of transportation fuels, and it seems very probable that
    transportation fuels will be both too expensive and in short supply before
    too long. From about 2005 and until the middle of 2008 the global oil has
    been holding steady, unable to grow materially beyond a level that has been
    characterized as a “bumpy plateau.” An all-time record was set in 2005, and
    then, after a period of record-high oil prices, again only in 2008. Then, as
    the financial collapse gathered speed, oil and other commodity prices
    crashed, along with oil production. More recently, the oil markets have come
    to rest on an altogether different “bumpy plateau”: the oil prices are
    bumping along at around $40 a barrel and can’t seem to go any lower. It
    would appear that oil production costs have risen to a point where it does
    not make economic sense to sell oil at below this price.

    Now, $40 a barrel is a good price for US consumers at the moment, but there
    is hyperinflation on the horizon, thanks to the money-printing extravaganza
    currently underway in Washington, and $40 could easily become $400 and then
    $4000 a barrel, swiftly pricing US consumers out of the international oil
    market. On top of that, exporting countries would balk at the idea of
    trading their oil for an increasingly worthless currency, and would start
    insisting on payment in kind — in some sort of tangible export commodity,
    which the US, in its current economic state, would be hard-pressed to
    provide in any great quantity. Domestic oil production is in permanent
    decline, and can provide only about a third of current needs. This is still
    quite a lot of oil, but it will be very difficult to avoid the knock-on
    effects of widespread oil shortages. There will be widespread hoarding,
    quite a lot of gasoline will simply evaporate into the atmosphere, vented
    from various jerricans and improvised storage containers, the rest will
    disappear into the black market, and much fuel will be wasted driving around
    looking for someone willing to part with a bit of gas that’s needed for some
    small but critical mission.

    I am quite familiar with this scenario, because I happened to be in Russia
    during a time of gasoline shortages. On one occasion, I found out by word of
    mouth that a certain gas station was open and distributing 10 liters apiece.
    I brought along my uncle’s wife, who at the time was 8 months pregnant, and
    we tried use her huge belly to convince the gas station attendant to give us
    an extra 10 liters with which to drive her to the hospital when the time
    came. No dice. The pat answer was: “Everybody is 8 months pregnant!” How can
    you argue with that logic? So 10 liters was it for us too, belly or no
    belly.

    So, what can we do to get our little critical missions accomplished in spite
    of chronic fuel shortages? The most obvious idea, of course, is to not use
    any fuel. Bicycles, and cargo bikes in particular, are an excellent
    adaptation. Sailboats are a good idea too: not only do they hold large
    amounts of cargo, but they can cover huge distances, all without the use of
    fossil fuels. Of course, they are restricted to the coastlines and the
    navigable waterways. They will be hampered by the lack of dredging due to
    the inevitable budget shortfalls, and by bridges that refuse to open, again,
    due to lack of maintenance funds, but here ancient maritime techniques and
    improvisations can be brought to bear to solve such problems, all very
    low-tech and reasonably priced.

    Of course, cars and trucks will not disappear entirely. Here, again, some
    reasonable adaptations can be brought to bear. In my book, I advocated
    banning the sale of new cars, as was done in the US during World War II. The
    benefits are numerous. First, older cars are overall more energy-efficient
    than new cars, because the massive amount of energy that went into
    manufacturing them is more highly amortized. Second, large energy savings
    accrue from the shutdown of an entire industry devoted to designing,
    building, marketing, and financing new cars. Third, older cars require more
    maintenance, reinvigorating the local economy at the expense of mainly
    foreign car manufacturers, and helping reduce the trade deficit. Fourth,
    this will create a shortage of cars, translating automatically into fewer,
    shorter car trips, higher passenger occupancy per trip, and more bicycling
    and use of public transportation, saving even more energy. Lastly, this
    would allow the car to be made obsolete on the about the same time scale as
    the oil industry that made it possible. We will run out of cars just as we
    run out of gas.

    Here we are, only a year or so later, and I am most heartened to see that
    the US auto industry has taken my advice and is in the process of shutting
    down. On the other hand, the government’s actions continue to disappoint.
    Instead of trying to solve problems, they would rather continue to create
    boondoggles. The latest one is the idea of subsidizing the sales of new
    cars. The idea of making cars more efficient by making more efficient cars
    is sheer folly. I can take any pick-up truck and increase its fuel
    efficiency one or two thousand percent just by breaking a few laws. First,
    you pack about a dozen people into the bed, standing shoulder to shoulder
    like sardines. Second, you drive about 25 mph, down the highway, because
    going any faster would waste fuel and wouldn’t be safe with so many people
    in the back. And there you are, per passenger fuel efficiency increased by a
    factor of 20 or so. I believe the Mexicans have done extensive research in
    this area, with excellent results.

    Another excellent idea pioneered in Cuba is making it illegal not to pick up
    hitchhikers. Cars with vacant seats are flagged down and matched up with
    people who need a lift. Yet another idea: since passenger rail service is in
    such a sad shape, and since it is unlikely that funds will be found to
    improve it, why not bring back the venerable institution of riding the rails
    by requiring rail freight companies to provide a few empty box cars for the
    hobos. The energy cost of the additional weight is negligible, the hobos
    don’t require stops because they can jump on and off, and only a couple of
    cars per train would ever be needed, because hobos are almost infinitely
    compressible, and can even ride on the roof if needed. One final
    transportation idea: start breeding donkeys. Horses are finicky and
    expensive, but donkeys can be very cost-effective and make good pack
    animals. My grandfather had a donkey while he was living in Tashkent in
    Central Asia during World War II. There was nothing much for the donkey to
    eat, but, as a member of the Communist Party, my grandfather had a
    subscription to Pravda, the Communist Party newspaper, and so that’s what
    the donkey ate. Apparently, donkeys can digest any kind of cellulose, even
    when it’s loaded with communist propaganda. If I had a donkey, I would feed
    it the Wall Street Journal.

    And so we come to the subject of security. Post-collapse Russia suffered
    from a serious crime wave. Ethnic mafias ran rampant, veterans who served in
    Afghanistan went into business for themselves, there were numerous contract
    killings, muggings, murders went unsolved left and right, and, in general,
    the place just wasn’t safe. Russians living in the US would hear that I am
    heading back there for a visit, and would give me a wide-eyed stare: how
    could I think of doing such a thing. I came through unscathed, somehow. I
    made a lot of interesting observations along the way.

    One interesting observation is that once collapse occurs it becomes possible
    to rent a policeman, either for a special occasion, or generally just to
    follow someone around. It is even possible to hire a soldier or two, armed
    with AK-47s, to help you run various errands. Not only is it possible to do
    such things, it’s often a very good idea, especially if you happen to have
    something valuable that you don’t want to part with. If you can’t afford
    their services, then you should try to be friends with them, and to be
    helpful to them in various ways. Although their demands might seem
    exorbitant at times, it is still a good idea to do all you can to keep them
    on your side. For instance, they might at some point insist that you and
    your family move out to the garage so that they can live in your house. This
    may be upsetting at first, but then is it really such a good idea for you to
    live in a big house all by yourselves, with so many armed men running
    around. It may make sense to station some of them right in your house, so
    that they have a base of operations from which to maintain a watch and
    patrol the neighborhood.

    A couple of years ago I half-jokingly proposed a political solution to
    collapse mitigation, and formulated a platform for the so-called Collapse
    Party. I published it with the caveat that I didn’t think there was much of
    a chance of my proposals becoming part of the national agenda. Much to my
    surprise, I turned out to be wrong. For instance, I proposed that we stop
    making new cars, and, lo and behold, the auto industry shuts down. I also
    proposed that we start granting amnesties to prisoners, because the US has
    the world’s largest prison population, and will not be able to afford to
    keep so many people locked up. It is better to release prisoners gradually,
    over time, rather than in a single large general amnesty, the way Saddam
    Hussein did it right before the US invaded. And, lo and behold, many states
    are starting to implement my proposal. It looks like California in
    particular will be forced to release some 60 thousand of the 170 thousand
    people it keeps locked up. That is a good start. I also proposed that we
    dismantle all overseas military bases (there are over a thousand of them)
    and repatriate all the troops. And it looks like that is starting to happen
    as well, except for the currently planned little side-trip to Afghanistan. I
    also proposed a Biblical jubilee — forgiveness of all debts, public and
    private. Let’s give that one… half a decade?

    But if we look just at the changes that are already occurring, just the
    simple, predictable lack of funds, as the federal government and the state
    governments all go broke, will transform American society in rather
    predictable ways. As municipalities run out of money, police protection will
    evaporate. But the police still have to eat, and will find ways to use their
    skills to good use on a freelance basis. Similarly, as military bases around
    the world are shut down, soldiers will return to a country that will be
    unable to reintegrate them into civilian life. Paroled prisoners will find
    themselves in much the same predicament.

    And so we will have former soldiers, former police, and former prisoners: a
    big happy family, with a few bad apples and some violent tendencies. The end
    result will be a country awash with various categories of armed men, most of
    them unemployed, and many of them borderline psychotic. The police in the
    United States are a troubled group. Many of them lose all touch with people
    who are not “on the force” and most of them develop an us-versus-them
    mentality. The soldiers returning from a tour of duty often suffer from
    post-traumatic stress disorder. The paroled prisoners suffer from a variety
    of psychological ailments as well. All of them will sooner or later realize
    that their problems are not medical but rather political. This will make it
    impossible for society to continue to exercise control over them. All of
    them will be making good use of their weapons training and other
    professional skills to acquire whatever they need to survive. And the really
    important point to remember is that they will do these things whether or not
    anyone thinks it legal for them to do be doing them.

    I said it before and I will say it again: very few things are good or bad
    per se; everything has to be considered within a context. And, in a
    post-collapse context, not having to worry whether or not something is legal
    may be a very good thing. In the midst of a collapse, we will not have time
    to deliberate, legislate, interpret, set precedents and so on. Having to
    worry about pleasing a complex and expensive legal system is the last thing
    we should have to worry about.

    Some legal impediments are really small and trivial, but they can be quite
    annoying nevertheless. A homeowners’ association might, say, want give you a
    ticket or seek a court order against you for not mowing your lawn, or for
    keeping livestock in your garage, or for that nice windmill you erected on a
    hill that you don’t own, without first getting a building permit, or some
    municipal busy-body might try to get you arrested for demolishing a certain
    derelict bridge because it was interfering with boat traffic — you know,
    little things like that. Well, if the association is aware that you have a
    large number of well armed, mentally unstable friends, some of whom still
    wear military and police uniforms, for old time’s sake, then they probably
    won’t give you that ticket or seek that court order.

    Or suppose you have a great new invention that you want to make and
    distribute, a new agricultural implement. It’s a sort of flail studded with
    sharp blades. It has a hundred and one uses and is highly cost-effective,
    and reasonably safe provided you don’t lose your head while using it,
    although people have taken to calling the “flying guillotine.” You think
    that this is an acceptable risk, but you are concerned about the issues of
    consumer safety and liability insurance and possibly even criminal
    liability. Once again, it is very helpful to have a large number of
    influential, physically impressive, mildly psychotic friends who, whenever
    some legal matter comes up, can just can go and see the lawyers, have a
    friendly chat, demonstrate the proper use of the flying guillotine, and
    generally do whatever they have to do to settle the matter amicably, without
    any money changing hands, and without signing any legal documents.

    Or, say, the government starts being difficult about moving things and
    people in and out of the country, or it wants to take too much of a cut from
    commercial transactions. Or perhaps your state or your town decides to
    conduct its own foreign policy, and the federal government sees it fit to
    interfere. Then it may turn out to be a good thing if someone else has the
    firepower to bring the government, or what remains of it, to its senses, and
    convince it to be reasonable and to play nice.

    Or perhaps you want to start a community health clinic, so that you can
    provide some relief to people who wouldn’t otherwise have any health care.
    You don’t dare call yourself a doctor, because these people are suspicious
    of doctors, because doctors were always trying to rob them of their life’s
    savings. But suppose you have some medical training that you got in, say,
    Cuba, and you are quite able to handle a Caesarean or an appendectomy, to
    suture wounds, to treat infections, to set bones and so on. You also want to
    be able to distribute opiates that your friends in Afghanistan periodically
    send you, to ease the pain of hard post-collapse life. Well, going through
    the various licensing boards and getting the certifications and the permits
    and the malpractice insurance is all completely unnecessary, provided you
    can surround yourself with a lot of well-armed, well-trained, mentally
    unstable friends.

    Food. Shelter. Transportation. Security. Security is very important.
    Maintaining order and public safety requires discipline, and maintaining
    discipline, for a lot of people, requires the threat of force. This means
    that people must be ready to come to each other’s defense, take
    responsibility for each other, and do what’s right. Right now, security is
    provided by a number of bloated, bureaucratic, ineffectual institutions,
    which inspire more anger and despondency than discipline, and dispense not
    so much violence as ill treatment. That is why we have the world’s highest
    prison population. They are supposedly there to protect people from each
    other, but in reality their mission is not even to provide security; it is
    to safeguard property, and those who own it. Once these institutions run out
    of resources, there will be a period of upheaval, but in the end people will
    be forced to learn to deal with each other face to face, and Justice will
    once again become a personal virtue rather than a federal department.

    I’ve covered what I think are basics, based on what I saw work and what I
    think might work reasonably well here. I assume that a lot of you are
    thinking that this is all quite far into the future, if in fact it ever gets
    that bad. You should certainly feel free to think that way. The danger there
    is that you will miss the opportunity to adapt to the new reality ahead of
    time, and then you will get trapped. As I see it, there is a choice to be
    made: you can accept the failure of the system now and change your course
    accordingly, or you can decide that you must try to stay the course, and
    then you will probably have to accept your own individual failure later.

    So how do you prepare? Lately, I’ve been hearing from a lot of high-powered,
    successful people about their various high-powered, successful associates.
    Usually, the story goes something like this: “My a. financial advisor, b.
    investment banker, or c. commanding officer has recently a. put all his
    money in gold, b. bought a log cabin up in the mountains, or c. built a
    bunker under his house stocked with six months of food and water. Is this
    normal?” And I tell them, yes, of course, that’s perfectly harmless. He’s
    just having a mid-collapse crisis. But that’s not really preparation. That’s
    just someone being colorful in an offbeat, countercultural sort of way.

    So, how do you prepare, really? Let’s go through a list of questions that
    people typically ask me, and I will try to briefly respond to each of them.

    OK, first question: How about all these financial boondoggles? What on earth
    is going on? People are losing their jobs left and right, and if we
    calculate unemployment the same way it was done during the Great Depression,
    instead of looking at the cooked numbers the government is trying to feed us
    now, then we are heading toward 20% unemployment. And is there any reason to
    think it’ll stop there? Do you happen to believe that prosperity is around
    the corner? Not only jobs and housing equity, but retirement savings are
    also evaporating. The federal government is broke, state governments are
    broke, some more than others, and the best they can do is print money, which
    will quickly lose value. So, how can we get the basics if we don’t have any
    money? How is that done? Good question.

    As I briefly mentioned, the basics are food, shelter, transportation, and
    security. Shelter poses a particularly interesting problem at the moment. It
    is still very much overpriced, with many people paying mortgages and rents
    that they can no longer afford while numerous properties stand vacant. The
    solution, of course, is to cut your losses and stop paying. But then you
    might soon have to relocate. That is OK, because, as I mentioned, there is
    no shortage of vacant properties around. Finding a good place to live will
    become less and less of a problem as people stop paying their rents and
    mortgages and get foreclosed or evicted, because the number of vacant
    properties will only increase. The best course of action is to become a
    property caretaker, legitimately occupying a vacant property rent-free, and
    keeping an eye on things for the owner. What if you can’t find a position as
    a property caretaker? Well, then you might have to become a squatter,
    maintain a list of other vacant properties that you can go to next, and keep
    your camping gear handy just in case. If you do get tossed out, chances are,
    the people who tossed you out will then think about hiring a property
    caretaker, to keep the squatters out. And what do you do if you become
    property caretaker? Well, you take care of the property, but you also look
    out for all the squatters, because they are the reason you have a legitimate
    place to live. A squatter in hand is worth three absentee landlords in the
    bush. The absentee landlord might eventually cut his losses and go away, but
    your squatter friends will remain as your neighbors. Having some neighbors
    is so much better than living in a ghost town.

    What if you still have a job? How do you prepare then? The obvious answer
    is, be prepared to quit or to be laid off or fired at any moment. It really
    doesn’t matter which one of these it turns out to be; the point is to
    sustain zero psychological damage in the process. Get your burn rate to as
    close to zero as you can, by spending as little money as possible, so than
    when the job goes away, not much has to change. While at work, do as little
    as possible, because all this economic activity is just a terrible burden on
    the environment. Just gently ride it down to a stop and jump off.

    If you still have a job, or if you still have some savings, what do you do
    with all the money? The obvious answer is, build up inventory. The money
    will be worthless, but a box of bronze nails will still be a box of bronze
    nails. Buy and stockpile useful stuff, especially stuff that can be used to
    create various kinds of alternative systems for growing food, providing
    shelter, and providing transportation. If you don’t own a patch of dirt free
    and clear where you can stockpile stuff, then you can rent a storage
    container, pay it a few years forward, and just sit on it until reality
    kicks in again and there is something useful for you to do with it. Some of
    you may be frightened by the future I just described, and rightly so. There
    is nothing any of us can do to change the path we are on: it is a huge
    system with tremendous inertia, and trying to change its path is like trying
    to change the path of a hurricane. What we can do is prepare ourselves, and
    each other, mostly by changing our expectations, our preferences, and
    scaling down our needs. It may mean that you will miss out on some last,
    uncertain bit of enjoyment. On the other hand, by refashioning yourself into
    someone who might stand a better chance of adapting to the new
    circumstances, you will be able to give to yourself, and to others, a great
    deal of hope that would otherwise not exist.

    ………….

    Dmitry Orlov is author of Reinventing Collapse, New Society Publishers
    (2007). His website is cluborlov.blogspot.com, where the above article is
    also featured. His articles on Culture Change include The New Age of Sail,
    The Despotism of the Image, and That Bastion of American Socialism.

    ————

    __,_._,___

    February 22, 2009 at 11:10 am #30600
    Michael Winn
    Keymaster

    This drought-economic depression scenario is a more likely scenario in my opinion than the Peak Oil doomsayers. I accept the probability of channeled predictions that one third of the human population may ascend during the re-birthing of Gaia (to assist its process, as old patterns get released and transformed at oment of death). But that’s something to celebrate, whether you are dead or alive. Enjoy your salad days, while they last….
    -michael

    NOBODY KNOWS HOW DRY WE ARE
    By Tom Engelhardt
    Utne Reader
    March/April 2009

    http://www.utne.com/print-article.aspx?id=25495

    It turns out that you don’t want to be a former city dweller in rural parts
    of southernmost Australia, a stalk of wheat in China or Iraq, a soybean in
    Argentina, an almond or grape in northern California, a cow in Texas, or
    almost anything in parts of east Africa right now. Let me explain.

    As anyone who has turned on the prime-time TV news these last weeks knows,
    southeastern Australia has been burning up. It’s already dry climate has
    been growing ever hotter. “The great drying,” Australian environmental
    scientist Tim Flannery calls it. At its epicenter, Melbourne recorded its
    hottest day ever this month at a sweltering 115.5 degrees, while
    temperatures soared even higher in the surrounding countryside. After more
    than a decade of drought, followed by the lowest rainfall on record, the
    eucalyptus forests are now burning. To be exact, they are now pouring vast
    quantities of stored carbon dioxide, the greenhouse gas considered largely
    responsible for global warming, into the atmosphere.

    In fact, everything’s been burning there. Huge sheets of flame, possibly
    aided and abetted by arsonists, tore through whole towns. More than 180
    people are dead and thousands homeless. Flannery, who has written eloquently
    about global warming, drove through the fire belt, and reported:

    “It was as if a great cremation had taken place… I was born in Victoria, and
    over five decades I’ve watched as the state has changed. The long, wet and
    cold winters that seemed insufferable to me as a boy vanished decades ago,
    and for the past 12 years a new, drier climate has established itself… I had
    not appreciated the difference a degree or two of extra heat and a dry soil
    can make to the ferocity of a fire. This fire was different from anything
    seen before.”

    Australia, by the way, is a wheat-growing breadbasket for the world and its
    wheat crops have been hurt in recent years by continued drought.

    Meanwhile, central China is experiencing the worst drought in half a
    century. Temperatures have been unseasonably high and rainfall, in some
    areas, 80% below normal; more than half the country’s provinces have been
    affected by drought, leaving millions of Chinese and their livestock without
    adequate access to water. In the region which raises 95% of the country’s
    winter wheat, crop production has already been impaired and is in further
    danger without imminent rain. All of this represents a potential financial
    catastrophe for Chinese farmers at a moment when about 20 million migrant
    workers are estimated to have lost their jobs in the global economic
    meltdown. Many of those workers, who left the countryside for China’s
    booming cities (and remitted parts of their paychecks to rural areas), may
    now be headed home jobless to potential disaster. A Wall Street Journal
    report concludes, “Some scientists warn China could face more frequent
    droughts as a result of global warming and changes in farming patterns.”

    Globe-jumping to the Middle East, Iraq, which makes the news these days
    mainly for spectacular suicide bombings or the politics of American
    withdrawal, turns out to be another country in severe drought. Americans may
    think of Iraq as largely desert, but (as we were all taught in high school)
    the lands between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, the “fertile crescent,”
    are considered the homeland of agriculture, not to speak of human
    civilization.

    Well, not so fertile these days, it seems. The worst drought in at least a
    decade and possibly a farming lifetime is expected to reduce wheat
    production by at least half; while the country’s vast marshlands, once
    believed to be the location of the Garden of Eden, have been turned into
    endless expanses of baked mud. That region, purposely drained by dictator
    Saddam Hussein to tame rebellious “Marsh Arabs,” is now experiencing the
    draining power of nature.

    Nor is Iraq’s drought a localized event. Serious drought conditions extend
    across the Middle East, threatening to exacerbate local conflicts from
    Cyprus and Lebanon to Gaza, the West Bank, and Israel where this January was
    reported to have been the hottest and driest in 60 years. “With less than 2
    months of winter left,” Daniel Pedersen has written at the environmental
    website Green Prophet, “the region has received only 6%-50% of the annual
    average rainfall, with the desert areas getting 30% or less.”

    Leaping continents, in Latin America, Argentina is experiencing “the most
    intense, prolonged and expensive drought in the past 50 years,” according to
    Hugo Luis Biolcati, the president of the Argentine Rural Society. One of the
    world’s largest grain exporters, it has already lost five billion dollars to
    the drought. Its soybeans — the country is the third largest producer of
    them — are wilting in the fields; its corn — Argentina is the world’s
    second largest producer — and wheat crops are in trouble; and its famed
    grass-fed herds of cattle are dying — 1.5 million head of them since
    October with no end in sight.

    Dust Bowl Economics

    In our own backyard, much of the state of Texas — 97.4% to be exact — is
    now gripped by drought, and parts of it by the worst drought in almost a
    century. According to the New York Times, “Winter wheat crops have failed.
    Ponds have dried up. Ranchers are spending heavily on hay and feed pellets
    to get their cattle through the winter. Some wonder if they will have to
    slaughter their herds come summer. Farmers say the soil is too dry for seeds
    to germinate and are considering not planting.” Since 2004, in fact, the
    state has yoyo-ed between the extremities of flood and drought.

    Meanwhile, scientists predict that, as global warming strengthens, the
    American southwest, parts of which have struggled with varying levels of
    drought conditions for years, could fall into “a possibly permanent state of
    drought.” We’re talking potential future “dust bowl” here. A December 2008
    U.S. Geological Survey report warns: “In the Southwest, for example, the
    models project a permanent drying by the mid-21st century that reaches the
    level of aridity seen in historical droughts, and a quarter of the
    projections may reach this level of aridity much earlier.”

    And talking about drought gripping breadbasket regions, don’t forget
    northern California which “produces 50 percent of the nation’s fruits, nuts
    and vegetables, and a majority of [U.S.] salad, strawberries and premium
    wine grapes.” Its agriculturally vital Central Valley, in particular, is in
    the third year of an already monumental drought in which the state has been
    forced to cut water deliveries to farms by up to 85%.

    Observers are predicting that it may prove to be the worst drought in the
    history of a region “already reeling from housing foreclosures, the credit
    crisis, and a plunge in construction and manufacturing jobs.” January,
    normally California’s wettest month, has been wretchedly dry and the
    snowpack in the northern Sierra Mountains, crucial to the state’s water
    supplies and its agricultural health, is at less than half normal levels.

    Northern California, in fact, offers a glimpse of the havoc that the extreme
    weather conditions scientists associate with climate change could cause,
    especially when combined with other crises. In a Los Angeles Times
    interview, new Secretary of Energy Steven Chu offered an eye-popping warning
    (of a sort top government officials simply don’t give) about what a
    global-warming future might hold in store for California, his home state.
    Interviewer Jim Tankersley summed up Chu’s thoughts this way:

    “California’s farms and vineyards could vanish by the end of the century,
    and its major cities could be in jeopardy, if Americans do not act to slow
    the advance of global warming… In a worst case… up to 90% of the Sierra
    snowpack could disappear, all but eliminating a natural storage system for
    water vital to agriculture. ‘I don’t think the American public has gripped
    in its gut what could happen,’ [Chu] said. ‘We’re looking at a scenario
    where there’s no more agriculture in California.’ And, he added, ‘I don’t
    actually see how they can keep their cities going’ either.”

    As for East Africa and the Horn of Africa, under the pressure of rising
    temperatures, drought has become a tenacious long-term visitor. For East
    Africa, the drought years of 2005-2006 were particularly horrific and now
    Kenya, with the region’s biggest economy, a country recently wracked by
    political disorder and ethnic violence, is experiencing crop failures. An
    estimated 10 million Kenyans may face hunger, even starvation, this year in
    the wake of a poor harvest, lack of rainfall, and rising food prices; if you
    include the drought-plagued Horn of Africa, 20 million people may be
    endangered, according to the International Federation of Red Cross and Red
    Crescent Societies.

    Recently, climatologist David Battisti and Rosamond Naylor, director of
    Stanford University’s Program on Food Security and the Environment,
    published a study in Science magazine on the effect of extreme heat on
    crops. They concluded, based on recent climate models and a study of past
    extreme heat waves, that there was “a 90% chance that, by the end of the
    century, the coolest temperatures in the tropics during the crop growing
    season would exceed the hottest temperatures recorded between 1900 and
    2006.” According to the British Guardian, under such circumstances Battisti
    and Naylor believe “[h]alf of the world’s population could face severe food
    shortages by the end of the century as rising temperatures take their toll
    on farmers’ crops… Harvests of staple food crops such as rice and maize
    could fall by between 20% and 40% as a result of higher temperatures during
    the growing season in the tropics and subtropics.”

    Not surprisingly, it’s hard to imagine — perhaps I mean swallow — such an
    extreme world, and so most of us, the mainstream media included, don’t
    bother to. That means certain potentially burning questions go not just
    unanswered but unasked.

    The Grapes of Wrath (Updated)

    Mind you, what you’ve read thus far represents an amateur’s eye view of
    drought on our planet at this moment. It’s hardly comprehensive. To give but
    one example, Afghanistan has only recently begun to emerge from an
    eight-year drought involving severe food shortages — and, as journalist
    Christian Parenti writes, it would need another “five years worth of regular
    snowfall just to replenish its aquifers.” Parenti adds: “As snow packs in
    the Himalayan and Hindu Kush ranges continue to recede, the rivers flowing
    from them will diminish and the economic situation in all of Central Asia
    will deteriorate badly.”

    Nor is this piece meant to be authoritative, exactly because I know so
    relatively little. Think of it as a reflection of my own frustration with
    work not done elsewhere — and, by the way, thank heavens for Google
    University. Yes, Googling leaves you on your own, can be time-consuming, and
    tends to lead to cul-de-sacs (“Nuggets end 17-year drought in Orlando”), but
    what would we do without it? Thanks to good ol’ G.U., anyone can, for
    instance, check out the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s
    Drought Information Center or its U.S.
    Drought Monitor , or the
    National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center
    and begin a self-education.

    Now let me explain why I even bothered to write this piece. It’s true that,
    if you’re reading the mainstream press, each of the droughts mentioned above
    has gotten at least some attention, several of them a fair amount of
    attention (as well as some fine reporting), and the Australian firestorms
    have been headlines globally for weeks. The problem is that (the
    professional literature, the science magazines, and a few environmental
    websites and blogs aside) no one in the mainstream media seems to have
    thought to connect these dots or blots of aridity in any way. And yet it
    seems a no-brainer that mainstream reporters should be doing just that.

    After all, cumulatively these drought hotspots, places now experiencing
    record or near-record aridity, could be thought of as representing so many
    burning questions for our planet. And yet you can search far and wide
    without stumbling across a mainstream American overview of drought in our
    world at this moment. This seems, politely put, puzzling, especially at a
    time when University College London’s Global Drought Monitor claims that 104
    million people are now living under “exceptional drought conditions.”

    Scientists generally agree that, as climate change accelerates throughout
    this century (and no matter what happens from here on in, nothing will
    evidently stop some form of acceleration), extreme weather of every sort,
    including drought, will become ever more the planetary norm. In fact,
    experts are suggesting that, as the Washington Post reported recently, “The
    pace of global warming is likely to be much faster than recent predictions,
    because industrial greenhouse gas emissions have increased more quickly than
    expected and higher temperatures are triggering self-reinforcing feedback
    mechanisms in global ecosystems.”

    Now, no one can claim beyond all doubt that global warming is the cause of
    any specific drought, or certainly the only cause anyway. As with the Texas
    drought, a La Niña weather pattern in the Pacific is often mentioned as a
    key causal factor right now. But the crucial point is what the present can
    tell us about the impact of a global pattern of extreme weather, especially
    extreme drought, on what will surely be a more extreme planet in the
    relatively near future.

    If global temperatures are on the rise and more heat means lower crop
    yields, then you’re talking about more Kenyas, and not just in Africa
    either. You’re probably also talking about desperation, upheaval, resource
    conflicts, and mass out-migrations of populations, even — if scientists are
    right — from the American Southwest. (And in case you don’t think such a
    thing can happen here, remember Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath or think of
    any of Dorothea Lange’s iconic photos of the “Okies” fleeing the American
    dustbowl of the 1930s.)

    Burning Questions

    Right now, the global economic meltdown has massively depressed fuel prices
    (key to farming, processing, and transporting most crops to market) and
    commodity prices have generally fallen as well, including food prices.
    Whatever the future economic weather, however, that is not likely to last.

    So here’s a burning question on my mind:

    We’re now experiencing the extreme effects of economic bad “weather” in the
    wake of the near collapse of the global financial system. Nonetheless, from
    the White House to the media, speculation about “the road to recovery” is
    already underway. The stimulus package, for instance, had been dubbed the
    “recovery bill,” aka the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, and the
    question of when we’ll hit bottom and when — 2010, 2011, 2012 — a real
    recovery will begin is certainly in the air.

    Recently, in a speech in Singapore, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, head of the
    International Monetary Fund, suggested that the “world’s advanced economies”
    — the U.S., Western Europe, and Japan — were “already in depression,” and
    the “worst cannot be ruled out.” This got little attention here, but
    President Obama’s comment at his first press conference that delay on his
    stimulus package could lead to a “lost decade,” as in Japan in the 1990s
    (or, though it went unmentioned, the U.S. in the 1930s), made the headlines.

    If, indeed, this is “the big one,” and does result in a “lost decade” or
    more, here’s what I wonder: Could the sort of “recovery” that everyone
    assumes lies just over a recessive or depressive horizon not be there? What
    if our lost decade lasts long enough to meet an environmental crisis
    involving extreme weather — drought and flood, hurricanes, typhoons, and
    firestorms of unprecedented magnitude — possibly in some of the breadbasket
    regions of the planet? What will happen if the rising fuel prices likely to
    come with the beginning of any economic “recovery” were to meet the soaring
    food prices of environmental disaster? What kind of human tsunami might that
    result in?

    Once we start connecting some of today’s drought dots, wouldn’t it make
    sense to try to connect a few of the prospective dots as well? After all, if
    you begin to imagine what the worst might look like, you can also begin to
    think about what might be done to mitigate it. Isn’t that more sensible than
    looking the other way?

    If the kinds of hits regional agriculture is now taking from record-setting
    drought became the future norm, wouldn’t we then be bereft of our most
    reassuring formulations in bad times? For example, the president spoke at
    that press conference of our present moment as “the worst economic crisis
    since the Great Depression.” On an extreme planet, no such comforting “since
    the…” would be available, nor would there be any historical road map for
    what was coming at us, not if we had already run out of history.

    Maybe the world we knew but scarce months ago is already, in some sense,
    long gone. What if, after a lost decade, we were to find ourselves living on
    another planet?

    Feel free, of course, to ignore my burning questions. After all, I’m only an
    amateur with the flimsiest of credentials from Google U. Still, I do keep
    wondering when the media pros will finally pitch in, and what they’ll tell
    us is on that distant horizon, the one with the red glow.

    ………….

    Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the American Empire Project, runs the Nation
    Institute’s TomDispatch.com. He is the author of The End of Victory Culture,
    a history of the American Age of Denial. He also edited The World According
    to TomDispatch: America in the New Age of Empire (Verso, 2008), a collection
    of some of the best pieces from his site and an alternative history of the
    mad Bush years.

    February 24, 2009 at 9:42 am #30602
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