


I don't mean to sound like a pessimist, but what are our chances, realistically, of making it through this?




Pops wrote:..but I don't think we'll necessarily forget everything we've learned in the last few hundred years and revert to clubs and grubs.





I don't mean to sound like a pessimist, but what are our chances, realistically, of making it through this?



Oakley wrote:There is some cushion between today's level of consumption and the level that produces death, and conservation at first is and will continue to act as a pressure relief valve.


JohnRM wrote:Shelter may or may not be as much of a problem. One trend that we saw during the last recessive period was that local authorities began to refuse to evict residents from their homes after foreclosure. To me, this was tantamount to saying to the banks, "Its over." If this becomes more common, shelter may not be an issue, but I won't hold my breath. Ultimately, the banks are only hurting themselves by foreclosing. The market is flooded with empty houses. Each home that is foreclosed on only adds to the downward pressure on housing prices and therefor perpetuates more foreclosures.
Where am I wrong?


Pops wrote:You guys aren't saying anything new, and in fact are making my point exactly. ...
So I know for a fact we aren't going to lose all our knowledge in one generation because we can't drive the 1/4 mile to the Quick Sac for a slushy.


You picked a sentence way out of context. I don't believe Pops meant it that way all. It sounds like you are having a bad day/week. You might want to put down the inhaler, take a few breaths, and come back when you have calmed down. Gotta read what folks say is all.peeker01 wrote:cases of garden trowels? your kids are going to have a good laugh someday when they are having the estate sale. why not stockpile cannned or dehydrated food. if the doom doesn't come, it's easier to eat than cases of garden trowels

peeker01 wrote:cases of garden trowels? your kids are going to have a good laugh someday when they are having the estate sale. why not stockpile cannned or dehydrated food. if the doom doesn't come, it's easier to eat than cases of garden trowels


JohnRM wrote:My concern has much more to do with our ability to get through the dark times ahead without tearing each other to pieces.



JohnRM wrote:My concern has much more to do with our ability to get through the dark times ahead without tearing each other to pieces. I don't expect it to be painless, but is it possible to make it through this transition using our intellect and our ingenuity, or is it too late for that? Will it necessarily have to come to collapse and chaos? Will there have to be massive amounts of suffering before we reach the other side? Is it too late to do this right?


vision-master wrote:I can't recall what happened to the first great library of alexandria, but after they relocated to a backup location the darn Christians burned all the books and that was that.
Yes 6, the Christians burned down the great library of alexandria where much of the Gnostic's knowledge was stored.


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