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What Comes After "Collapse"?

If you are through speculating, this is the place to discuss actions you are taking.

Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby AgentR11 » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 10:27:55

vtsnowedin wrote:The food may be fresher but how safe is the water to drink, and the shops are empty but the streets are full of crap from the draft animals that are pulling the carts.


Cistern + fire = safe water.
Shovel helps with the poop when it falls in the wrong place.
But why would the shops be empty?
Yes we are, as we are,
And so shall we remain,
Until the end.
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby AgentR11 » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 10:39:27

Heineken wrote:
vtsnowedin wrote:It's all fine and dandy until you get sick or are injured and need an ER or a real hospital. That's where the die off part will come in for each of us .

Yes, this is a central truth that receives entirely too little play on the pages of PO.com.


Why is it so much worse to die of an injury or Influenza as opposed to Alzheimers? Everyone gets to die.
Personally, I'd rather not do it in a hospital. (unless they bribe me with LOTS of morphine, then we can talk...)

A sadder side though, is that surviving to twenty will once again be a challenge. Without medical care, I myself would have been toast at least four times before twenty. Just something to think about.
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby Lore » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 11:06:19

AgentR11 wrote:
Heineken wrote:
vtsnowedin wrote:It's all fine and dandy until you get sick or are injured and need an ER or a real hospital. That's where the die off part will come in for each of us .

Yes, this is a central truth that receives entirely too little play on the pages of PO.com.


Why is it so much worse to die of an injury or Influenza as opposed to Alzheimers? Everyone gets to die.
Personally, I'd rather not do it in a hospital. (unless they bribe me with LOTS of morphine, then we can talk...)

A sadder side though, is that surviving to twenty will once again be a challenge. Without medical care, I myself would have been toast at least four times before twenty. Just something to think about.



Because disease of this nature, left unchecked, effects everyone regardless of age. It can devastate populations and peel away people living in their most productive years, leaving critical gaps in societal support.
The things that will destroy America are prosperity-at-any-price, peace-at-any-price, safety-first instead of duty-first, the love of soft living, and the get-rich-quick theory of life.
... Theodore Roosevelt
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby PrestonSturges » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 11:16:42

A number of practices should reermerge which were common in 19th century America.

    Company towns where the workers are paid in script. Canadian Tire Dollars anyone?

    Shantytowns of day laborers, many formerly middle class.

    Orphanages of children that are abandoned because their parents are broke, and child labor masked as "job training."

    Tenant farming with local people rather than migrant labor, particularly in the south where there is a winter growing season.

    The return of the boarding house, because wages only pay for a room, maybe with multiple bunk beds.

    Home businesses that violate zoning or licensing laws - cheap haircuts, simple bicycle repair, food.

    A return to the day when driving 45 minutes was a big deal, a sort of agoraphobia compare to today. Communication should still be good so we won't see people saying "There's a phone call and it's long distance."

    Continued dismantling of the public schools.

    Very visible ethnic criminal subcultures that take care of day to day policing like the mafia or the Klan.

    Visibly fortified gated communities, maybe with landscaping to conceal the triple razor wire.

    Increasing alcoholism and suicide as people in their 50's and 60's realize that they are end of their ropes economically, and employers refuse to hire people that age.

    Increasing segregation.

    The revival of old trades like shoemakers, rag pickers, peddlers. Baltimore's "Arabs" were black men with produce carts. I remember the "umbrella man" who would take away umbrellas for repair and he carried a small grindstone wheel on folding tripod for sharpening scissors. He rang a brass bell as he walked. I wonder how far he walked a day?

Some clues would come from old street scenes and photos. The movie "The Naked City" was innovative for taking the cameras to the streets of NYC. There were people elaborate pushcarts and I have no idea what some of those things were. You can also see some interesting snapshots in The Twilight Zone which frequently showed hillbilly culture without electricity and the old folks home of healthy middle class people who could not support themselves in retirement (people like teachers).
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby PrestonSturges » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 12:01:45

There are a couple excellent blogs about collapse in Argentina and Ecuador. Besides the usual stuff about concealed carry, guard dogs, malnourished children, and barred windows, a couple things stood out.

Everyone wanted to buy an SUV. The price of gas was less important than owning a vehicle that could push aside a vehicle stopped in your path.

Employers still expected workers to show up on time, and to do the work of three employees with a smile, becaue they had their pick of employees. If someone was late because of gunfire in the street, well too bad. This became significant because you would have to go to work even if there was a suspicious van that kept driving slowly past your house. Waiting to size up the situation was not an option.

One blog mentioned that having a just couple fruit trees made a big difference in terms of having something to give or barter and avoiding malnutrition.
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Unread postby Whitefang » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 13:39:27

We humans are not helpless leaves in the wind, that is but self pity.
We drain our energy with a self dialogue high on importance, full of indulgencies and that makes us bleed energy needed for this strategic play, a personal world, a stage, a set up.

Brains are no help, just look at the great Gould, this man is huge!!!!!!! Biologically speaking.
This idiot has no intelligence to control his own bodyweight.
Okay, he fought against cancer and won the battle this time, he survived. No judgement, no excuse for idiocy since I know I am very indulgent and just plain late to do what I should have done decades ago.
It does not matter that you can read books, do you know how and do you do save energy is what matters.
This is not even the world that matters for all fading, dying around us anyway.
We have a hidden option though, a link with the Spirit. Your body of feelings made concreet, another real you that does not talk about his life, your lives.
We all talk to ourselves, that is our disease, the outer forms are those concerns we have, we worry, indulge and then die from routines and bad habits like pity and importance.
Natural to prepare on things coming at you.
You will be dead or reawake when this is all over.

Odds are against anyone now, at best hunter gatherer for years, decades maybe before something new if at all.
PO and abrupt CC
Last edited by Whitefang on Sun 15 Jan 2012, 13:58:28, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby vtsnowedin » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 13:52:37

AgentR11 wrote:[But why would the shops be empty?

Well you said they weren't full of crap and I expect that they won't be adequately full with quality essentials. Failed systems see a lot of empty store shelves.
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby AgentR11 » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 14:04:32

vtsnowedin wrote:
AgentR11 wrote:But why would the shops be empty?

Well you said they weren't full of crap and I expect that they won't be adequately full with quality essentials. Failed systems see a lot of empty store shelves.


It was another poster that wrote that, however, lacking crap in a smaller shop, is not really equivalent with empty shelves. For a Walmart, sure, there aren't enough essential type stuff to fill all that space; but for a smaller shop, swapping in local product and owner-produced merchandise does not equal empty shops. It does equal less variety. Having some empty shelf space, is more probable; with a restricted wholesale net to pull from, it'd be harder to keep a consistent amount of stock, without improperly upsizing your inventory. Might be able to get some slack out of non-perishables, but there are only so many bags of dried fruit and fish that you can keep on the shelves and still hope to move product.
Yes we are, as we are,
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Until the end.
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby Pops » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 14:38:55

If you're just really looking to kill some time this afternoon, here is a 15 page paper titled

Peak Oil, Energy Descent, and the Fate of Consumerism

Short Form: Preemptive simplicity.
“Quite simply, we are looking at the highest average price since the age of oil began.”
-- Daniel Yergin

The only substitute for cheap energy is expensive energy. -- Me
Make a plan and work it. -- Me again
¡Where the heck are the pitchforks! www.MoveToAmend.org
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby Heineken » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 18:47:20

Lore wrote:
AgentR11 wrote:
Heineken wrote:
vtsnowedin wrote:It's all fine and dandy until you get sick or are injured and need an ER or a real hospital. That's where the die off part will come in for each of us .

Yes, this is a central truth that receives entirely too little play on the pages of PO.com.


Why is it so much worse to die of an injury or Influenza as opposed to Alzheimers? Everyone gets to die.
Personally, I'd rather not do it in a hospital. (unless they bribe me with LOTS of morphine, then we can talk...)

A sadder side though, is that surviving to twenty will once again be a challenge. Without medical care, I myself would have been toast at least four times before twenty. Just something to think about.



Because disease of this nature, left unchecked, effects everyone regardless of age. It can devastate populations and peel away people living in their most productive years, leaving critical gaps in societal support.


I think Vermont's point was that a paucity of basic medical care in the future will be a key factor in a rising death rate.
"Actually, humans died out long ago."
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"Things have entered a stage where the only change that is possible is for things to get worse."
---I & my bro.
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby Shaved Monkey » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 19:01:12

The world needs a rising death rate and a falling birth rate.
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby vtsnowedin » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 19:10:33

Heineken wrote:[
Personally, I'd rather not do it in a hospital. (unless they bribe me with LOTS of morphine, then we can talk...)

quote]

I think Vermont's point was that a paucity of basic medical care in the future will be a key factor in a rising death rate.

In the last week my family has dealt with the passing of my beloved mother-in-law who succumbed to her third bout with cancer only after completing her personal bucket list by holding her twelfth grandchild (11 lbs. 5 oz.)by hanging on more then six months past what any professional thought was possible. With the aid of palliative care and the visiting nurse association (and as much morphine as was needed) she died at home in the arms of her eldest daughter (my wife) and surrounded by half a dozen other family members. She had enough notice to get all her affairs in order and did everything as she wanted it done. We should all be so lucky.
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby careinke » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 19:56:44

Loki wrote:Here's something I posted a few months ago (updated a bit) about what economic decline will look like for most Americans:

--Economic malaise (stagflation) for next several years, then rapid decline to Great Depression or worse with no end in sight—1930s-level depression within 5 years (10 at the most), even worse by the 2020s

--30-50%+ unemployment, rapid decline of the middle class to working poor (if they're lucky)—current working poor decline to shantytown status or worse

--Employment becomes more informal and precarious (odd jobs, part-time, under the table, bartering, etc.)

--Multi-family / extended family living situations become the norm

--Even more radical polarization of wealth in US society, most rich stay rich, middle class dissipates to near nothing, ranks of poor explode

--Shantytowns spring up around the country, growing year by year

--Food becomes a much more significant expense, especially for the newly impoverished, supplies are far more irregular, dependence on food banks much greater, national waistline shrinks

--Air travel again becomes a luxury for the wealthy only

--There are still cars on the road, but they're older and usually packed with paying passengers

--Bare grocery and other store shelves, marked decline in availability of imported goods, collapse of regular supply chains, regular shortages of some consumer goods

--Open air gray markets and bartering become a regular part of life, people rely on swap meets, Craigslist, and backyard gardens more than Walmart

--Possible fedgov rationing of essentials + associated hoarding and blackmarket activity

--Equivalent of $10+/gal gasoline/diesel/propane, if you can get it (twice that on the black market, which some times may be the only place to get it)

--Electricity becomes more expensive, and supply becomes more unstable, regular brownouts and rolling blackouts as economy declines

--Real estate market declines to next to nil, abandonment of commercial and residential property in some areas (perhaps most markedly in suburbs)

--Massive currency devaluation (hyperinflation?), which may mean less reliance on cash transactions for day-to-day living


Pretty much the way I envision it, except I would add a totalitarian government. A toss up right now between a Fascist or a socialist one, but totalitarian none the less.
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby careinke » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 20:04:38

Lore wrote:
AgentR11 wrote:
Heineken wrote:
vtsnowedin wrote:It's all fine and dandy until you get sick or are injured and need an ER or a real hospital. That's where the die off part will come in for each of us .

Yes, this is a central truth that receives entirely too little play on the pages of PO.com.


Why is it so much worse to die of an injury or Influenza as opposed to Alzheimers? Everyone gets to die.
Personally, I'd rather not do it in a hospital. (unless they bribe me with LOTS of morphine, then we can talk...)

A sadder side though, is that surviving to twenty will once again be a challenge. Without medical care, I myself would have been toast at least four times before twenty. Just something to think about.



Because disease of this nature, left unchecked, effects everyone regardless of age. It can devastate populations and peel away people living in their most productive years, leaving critical gaps in societal support.


Perfect!! Exactly what the earth needs.
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby Lore » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 21:09:23

careinke wrote:Perfect!! Exactly what the earth needs.


Who's earth are you talking about, yours, mine or someone else's? Seems to be a rather subjective conclusion. As for the earth itself, it really doesn't care.
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby Serial_Worrier » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 21:50:14

The "earth" couldn't care less one way or another.
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby vtsnowedin » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 22:10:00

Serial_Worrier wrote:The "earth" couldn't care less one way or another.

Perhaps Carinke means "what the rest of the living organisms upon the planet earth need" , as in the less of us there are the better off all the other living things will be.
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby Thralen » Sun 15 Jan 2012, 23:11:30

Loki wrote:
Thralen wrote:After the fact, and in my opinion that fact will include a large percentage of die-off in the USA, people will start trying to get it together again. If, and only if, the .gov is reformed to be smaller and less of a leech on the taxpayer then it may well be possible to get a functional society going again in the USA.

The federal government is not the all-powerful demon god that right-wing propagandists pretend it is. At this point it seems to be primarily an appendage of Wall Street. Contrary to the pronouncements of “conservative” demagogues, government is not the average American's primary problem. The economic aristocracy is.


I never claimed that the .gov was all powerful. I was pointing out the fact that if you barely have enough to get by and then someone taxes you, you are sunk. I am pretty sure that if there is a collapse, a lot of those still alive will have only barely enough to get by. Therefore my "less of a leech" comment.

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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby Shaved Monkey » Mon 16 Jan 2012, 00:54:05

Post War(and even during War) England is a pretty good scenario were rationing is introduced,all available land and able bodies are used to grow food.
Government employees inspect farms and catalogue how much live stock you have.People would try and hide pigs,subsidies where given to people to grow certain thing like pigs.
I was watching the Turn Back Time The High Street War episode
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jQ6s1p3I ... re=related
basically your priority as a shop keeper wasnt to make a profit but to monitor rationing.
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Re: What Comes After "Collapse"?

Unread postby radon » Mon 16 Jan 2012, 03:39:28

Loki wrote:I think the aristocracy will likely finalize its cooptation of the federal government within the decade...
Sounds like Marx.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rail_transport_in_the_Soviet_Union

The Soviet Union had a non-industrial railway network of 147,400 kilometres (91,600 mi), of which 53,900 kilometres (33,500 mi) were electrified...
For the USSR in 1989 (shortly before the collapse), the railroads hauled nearly eight times as much ton-km of freight by rail as they did by highway truck...
As a result of having a shorter rail system plus more freight traffic, the USSR had a freight traffic density (in ton-km per km of line) 6-7 times higher than the US...


There is so much fat to cut. I did not find the exact number, but my recollection is that in the Soviet times 70-80% of all SU transportation was done by rail. Car ownership was rare, roads were empty and enjoyable to ride. My guess that in the US the rail transportation ration has been roughly reverse and most transportation was done by truck (like 80%).

The "reformist" economists here (including my economics professor) argued years ago that the Soviet system was dumb and that everything should be transported by highways rather than railroads, pointing to the US example.

So now we have hordes of car owners spending their weekends in the city traffic jams for having nothing better to do. While Russia's population declined some 10m during the last couple decades, Moscow's grew some 4-5m. The people keep coming in and buying/renting in the remote suburbs as they are unable to afford a city dwelling. Of course, they need a car to get by.

Many buy really expensive cars, locking into many year car loans eating like 80% of their disposable income (of recruiters/waiters etc.), while sharing a room somewhere in the slums - usual thing these days. Because the ad says to them that this is their chance to get a decent date partner. So they date each other.

If the collapse means that these butterflies go to their hometowns and play computer games instead of congesting the city roads during the weekends...

Back in 1989 the main problem was empty shelves, rather than the transportation mode.
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