The
irreconcilable acceptance of near-term extinction
28
April, 2013
by
Daniel A. Drumright, a lifelong radical environmentalist who has
followed climate science for the last 24 years, and has been a feral
“collapse theorist” for the last 12 years
Considering
this very long essay attempts to address what is without a doubt, the
greatest phenomenal event in the recorded history of our species, I
will definitely fall quite short in the endeavor. And this would
still be true even if this essay were a hundred times in length.
This
essay is written in acceptance that humanity has now crossed numerous
irreversible climatic thresholds. It is also written from the
perspective that by so doing, we have ushered in intractable near
term extinction (NTE) of most of life within the next several
decades. (If nature fails to bat last, nuclear containment pool
fallout from grid collapse surely will.)
I
have absolutely no interest in attempting to persuade anyone of this
conjecture being either true or false. No one should allow themselves
to be persuaded by anyone regarding this subject matter. The decision
to accept this, is ours and ours alone. Anyone who is putting the
onus of NTE on Guy’s shoulders, or anyone else for that matter, is
doing a great disservice to both Guy and themselves. The available
evidence is easily accessible, the writing on the wall doesn’t need
to be deciphered. The theory of runaway climate change has been
around for decades, and now the whole world is able to watch this
catastrophe unfold in real-time. But this by no means implies the
world is watching.
This
essay is SOLELY written for those who are already familiar with a
majority of the available evidence, and who’ve subsequently come to
a similar conclusion for themselves. As such, this essay is not
intended to be informative, but rather entirely commiserative.
I
am of the opinion that all dialog post-acceptance of NTE is
manifestly commiserative. Post-acceptance of NTE, as opposed to our
pre-vacillating acceptance, logically equates to defeatism, plain and
simple. This is a critical distinction, and probably represents a
primary schism within this new body of awareness. The post aspect of
acceptance could be consider THE critical distinction, for it’s the
difference between the sublimation of having come to terms with what
we consider to be inevitable, compared to our wavering refutation of
such inevitability, which still affords us a great many fantasies.
It’s the acceptance of the inevitability of NTE which lays waste to
all else, which is why this is a key factor in determining how we
live our lives from here on out.
What
is the meaning of NTE? Literally, we all know what those three words
connote when strung together. But we don’t live in a literal
reality, we live in a wholly subjective interpretive culture, where
the red pill literalism of something like NTE rarely sees the light
of day. This disparity obviously has a massive influence on our bias
as to how we interpret everything, including the science contributing
to our understanding of the significance of tipping points.
I
suspect most criticism of this essay will come from those who have
yet to fully accept NTE … and rightly so! But please be mindful,
the following is written from a post-acceptance perspective. If this
is a judgment you do not share, then the commiserative intent within
this essay will simply elude you.
As
of right now, the entire concept of NTE is still the most profound
abstract concept the human race has ever been confronted with. Even
though the signs are everywhere one decides to look, the totality of
its cumulative impact is still enough off in the distance for
entrenched self-preservation to render it an abstraction in our daily
lives. So again, the following is written from the viewpoint as to
when this is no longer true, when NTE breaks through abstraction, and
detonates in full acceptance of the most profoundly devastating
reality we’ve ever had to both live with and through.
(Disclaimer:
I no more want to be writing this, than you probably want to be
reading it, however, as curious disciples of ferocious truth, here we
are … where none of us ever expected or wanted to be.)
*
I
may be wrong about this, and as with almost everything concerning
NTE, I very much wish I am, but as far as I’m able to discern, the
comment threads on Nature Bats Last (NBL) might be the only place
within the English language that are rationally and emphatically
discussing the near term extinction of most of life on earth — at
least in the public domain. What a dubious and overwhelming prospect
that truly is, if it is in fact the case, or for that matter anywhere
close to it.
It
is not surprising that Guy’s blog, which has for years been
dedicated to collapse preparedness, would eventually serve as the
springboard into the deep end of the recognition of NTE, given we’ve
already done our share of quantifying the minutia of contributing
factors to the collapse of industrial civilization.
However,
NTE is a classic example of emergence, where something becomes
greater than the sum of its parts. It has now become an event unto
itself, irrespective of its causation. I believe this is just one of
the many aspects that makes this new reality difficult for us to
fully comprehend, because our past precedence is, and has been,
completely focused on the individual linear contributing factors,
which have now compounded in creating this emergent nonlinear post
threshold paradigm. The amalgam of discoveries leading up to this
moment in time, are now effectively immaterial, which is the actual
consequence of tipping points.
Hence,
it’s not the potential of extinction that is foreign to us, but
rather the “acceptance” of the near term timing of it. In my
opinion, it is our highly subjective and indeterminate acceptance of
NTE, which again, is the crucial distinction of how we frame our
responsiveness to the ominous implications.
This
dire acquiescence has now effectively catapulted “us” even
further out unto the barren wastelands of the radical fringe. But for
many, this has been our masochistic stomping grounds for quite some
time, whereby we are most likely the first embattled assemblage of
like minds in the history of our species to seriously attempt to
elucidate the meaning of life amidst the ever-increasing probability
of our pending disappearance.
If
this is indeed so, it only stands to reason that we are as well, the
first to propose what might be considered the greatest conundrum in
history: How do we live out the rest of our lives in light of such
acceptance? Especially, when it undermines every aspect of our
future-oriented culture, as well as our private life.
While
many of us here have written extensively in attempting to accurately
describe the sheer scale of the dilemma we’re facing, the
staggering severity of the circumstances before us has made this
nearly impossible for us to accurately surmise. Its inference is so
emotionally ruinous, with the precise timing being impossible to
predict — thus making it highly suspect — our sense of
uncertainty can’t help but override our better judgment, in
demanding a degree of assurance that we rationally know doesn’t
exist.
However,
we’re all too aware that the evidence is quite explicit in
detailing that the Holocene is exponentially drawing to a close. The
geological epoch which has housed the entire history of civilization
… is ending, if it hasn’t ended already. We are literally looking
at losing the entire arctic ice cover — one of our planet’s
primary thermal regulators — during the melting season, within only
a few years … if not this year!
We
could write similar words to those above a thousand times, and still
be suspended in utter disbelief, for we are attempting to detail an
event that is so remarkably outside any form of past human awareness,
it’s either just a passing idea that flies through our minds like a
frightened bird, or it levels everything like a daisy cutter. There
is no in-between, it’s either a fleeting thought or it’s
absolutely devastating.
Every
single story we’ve ever been told, in effect, just careened into
the underworld. Everyone’s Rube Goldberg collapse preparedness
scheme, just theoretically failed right out of the gate. What part of
our lives didn’t just suffer a massive body blow from which we will
honestly never recover?
Nonetheless,
our desire for doubt still rages against the evidence. Our past moral
imperatives still rile against corporatism’s fait accompli in spite
of ourselves. But it’s not as if we’re fabricating either the
facts or the science. It’s not as if we’ve unknowingly cloistered
ourselves in solipsistic groupthink. It’s not as if we’re not all
desperate to have someone/something prove us wrong. I mean who in the
hell wants to be right about near term extinction!?! It’s just that
the degree of acceptance, which we are being forced to bear,
completely undermines the very act of acceptance itself. If this
isn’t the greatest cause of universal cognitive dissonance, then I
don’t know what could be.
The
less-than-subtle shift in our thinking on a subject we’ve all
thought very long on, has had an enormous — albeit understated —
side effect on our past “ecological moral imperatives.”
Deliberating on the inevitability of collapse, has for many of us,
strangely been the force that has given us meaning in life over the
last decade(s). But now having to accept that the rates of climatic
change have greatly superseded even the most dire predictions of only
a few years ago has effectively dissolved the impetus of our past
imperatives, mutated all sense of urgency and completely redefined
the very concept of time itself.
*
It’s
a self-determined path that leads one to the comprehension that our
culture is addicted to hopium. It’s a path that also continues to
lead us far from almost everything in our culture. But it’s quite a
different course to attempt to live outside the garden of
anticipation, where hopium has flowered for all of our lives.
As
with most addictions, it’s seldom the drug itself that’s the
cause of our dependence, but rather any number of undisclosed
societal factors that drove us to it in the first place. This is what
makes kicking the habit incredibly difficult, for once our system is
“clean,” all the reasons for having been under the influence to
begin with come rushing back with a vengeance.
Kicking
the drug is the comparatively easy part, kicking the habit of
dependence is far more challenging. And the same is to be said about
hopium. Knowing our culture is addicted is one thing, living without
it, just might prove to be impossible … even for a motley crew of
cynics such as ourselves.
Curiosity
could easily be considered one of our species’ greatest traits, but
in many ways, acceptance of NTE with its relentless correlation to
every aspect of our lives could be considered anathema to the very
driving force behind our desire to be informed. And it is this
unfolding psychological dilemma that I believe is quite new to many
of us, for how could it not be?
Sometimes
even the slightest hope can be enough to sustain us, but once even
the dimmest light has been statistically snuffed out, we suddenly
find ourselves in an exceptional kind of darkness, unlike anything
even us denizens have ever experienced. NTE is the antithesis of
Plato’s cave. It’s as if we stumbled out of the shadows, only to
blindly stare directly into the sun. I wonder how long it will take
for the long-term consequences of such overwhelming contrarian
awareness to eventually take its pound of flesh?
Therein
lies another unbelievable fact, that “we” here, at the dawn of
the greatest transgressive discovery ever made, might represent the
first generation in the history of our species who have ever
attempted to reconcile such irreconcilable academic despair.
No,
we aren’t being tortured, nor put to death. We aren’t imprisoned
in some hellish hole. We aren’t starving in a refugee camp. We
aren’t having to kill our children to end their suffering. We’re
not being ganged raped or hounded in a genocidal “cleanse.” No,
we are “currently” living out none of these brutal existences,
which have always been a facet of civilization. We’re on the other
end of the disparate spectrum; we’re the terribly privileged folk,
still basking in the relative afterglow of global empires, who have
had the opportunity to know more than most of the people who have
ever inhabited this planet. We have had the wealth and time to build
our own cerebral constructs/prisons.
The
precipice before “us” today, is but the ledge of the
idiosyncratic ivory towers we’ve constructed for ourselves. It has
allowed us to see further than anyone has ever seen before. However,
the universe has an inherent equilibrium to it, and as with most
things, there is a price to be paid for such excessive and fruitless
erudition. We are in the throes of a superlative first-world cultural
dilemma, of what it truly means to know too much. The tsunami we can
clearly see rushing toward us from our lofty perspectives might as
well be a raindrop in a puddle as far as our dominant culture is
concerned. Therein lies the root of most of our frustration and our
ever-ascendant alienation.
*
I
don’t believe anyone here, including myself, is honestly capable of
accurately framing the very ethos we’ve created at NBL, given it is
unconscionably unprecedented to the very letter of the word. This
becomes painfully obvious, every time, anyone of us finds ourselves
in any group of people. For there is only one thing that is more
maddening than NTE, which is that for whatever reason, the vast
majority of our fellow citizens just aren’t capable of caring
beyond their immediate needs, which is probably why we find such
solace at NBL — even if it’s a remorseful succor.
This
is why I suspect that probably no one here would respond well to
someone telling you/us to be careful, that maybe we’re wrestling
with a deceptive awareness, which very well could prove to be beyond
all of us. There must be any number of unidentified limits to what
our tribal minds can endure, and we here, are surely in the process
of testing those boundaries, without having much of a clue as to its
intuitive repercussions.
I
often now have the sense of receiving some subliminal transmission
with my daily dose of disaster, as if “we” are now playing with
an extraordinary internal bonfire, which could have within its
conflagration, a latency that’s keeping us from realizing we’re
being burned alive.
I
suspect that for many of us, through all our past tribulations,
activism, adversity and endless cultural negation, see ourselves as
possessing some kind of hard-bitten warrior spirit. Call it the
environmentalist’s thousand-yard stare. We are all too aware that
the path of a self-anointed “truth seeker” — that trespassing
inclination that has consequently led us here — isn’t a gentle
winding path through a spring meadow. It isn’t the road less
traveled. It’s not a revolutionary act. It’s not measured by
greatness. It’s just a cruel bottomless hole that once ventured
into, eventually leaves the light of modernity, but a pinprick in the
night sky for anyone hoping to return to the complicity of our
dominant cultural pretense.
Truth
is a life sentence for anyone who values it, and this was
self-evident, well before we happened upon nonlinear rates of
climatic change. Now, we are being challenged in a way that no
minority faction has ever been before.
Again,
the shift in our thinking has been profoundly acute: Being aware of
the potential of an unprecedented future reality is one story. Living
in full acceptance that the unprecedented has come to pass is poles
apart from anything that came before. It’s the difference between
objectively analyzing lab rats as they run through a maze, and
running either to or from what remains of our life in an inescapable
labyrinth.
There
are thousands of literary quotes, which either exalt or disparage our
perception of TRUTH, yet not one infamous citation was ever written
in context to the Gordian knot of existing empirical evidence of our
species near term extinction. We are truly in a place, where
literally no one has ever been before.
But
the more we reflect on this demoralizing reality, the worse it gets.
And yes, this has always been the case with political realism, but
never to the degree it is now — not even close, not even remotely
close. No, we’re initiating a diabolic consciousness to which no
living human being has ever had to bear witness. It is an awareness
which requires a degree of emotional maturity that’s almost
indistinguishable from insanity within western culture.
It
truly does seem like we’ve finally dug deep enough to crawl through
the center of the world like inquisitive children, only to come out
on the other side to discover everything is actually upside down.
Where past concepts of truth play out like every other figment of our
imagination. Where knowledge becomes but a fetish. Where denial comes
to sublimely make sense. Where apathy and hedonism now vie for
ethical stakes. Where somewhere along the way, our moral imperatives
just became another hit of hopium.
Dig
for the truth long enough, and one becomes a miner. And now, decades
down the mine, here we all are, like virtual grave diggers at the
bottom of a hole we’ve dug through the world, gathered around a
cage of canary bones, guessing how long it’s been dead.
*
It’s
as if decades ago we formed an old-fashioned bucket brigade to douse
our burning house. However, all the buckets have always had holes in
them, and they are empty by the time they reach the end of the line.
But, since we’ve no other recourse other than continuing to
reinvent our past theoretical civic daydreams, we just keep passing
the buckets along, while patting ourselves on the back for having
done our little part, pretending that it somehow matters because …
we imagine we couldn’t live with ourselves if we didn’t act as
moral agents in a game we fully know we’ve no agency. Truth no
longer sets us free, and it’s highly debatable if it ever has, or
what from.
The
whole history of social activism has been along for the ride right
into the abyss. While there have always been competing theories as to
“our” underlying nature, there has never been a parallel
terrestrial reality, which civilization has played out. We’ve never
been anything other than violent, avarice primates. Game theory was
probably a dilemma even for Neanderthals. The totality of humanities
generosity, empathy and compassion has already been collectively
factored into our ecological dilemma. Societal capacity to be
sympathetic, curious, informed, proactive and sacrificial has played
alongside all the ruling elites’ abuse, corruption, subterfuge,
violence and death in collectively depositing us pass the thresholds
we’re at today.
*
What
else is NTE other than the final acceptance of the consequences of
our species’ fundamental inability to live in balance with our
environment? The answer to virtually every question we are ever going
to ask, from here on out — post acceptance — can’t honestly be
anything other than: “It no longer matters.”
We
are currently attempting to live through the overlying of two
completely opposing paradigms. The entirety of all our past lived
experiences, identities and vested interests are hopelessly ensnared
in a recalcitrant culture that very much exists, but wholly and
erroneously on borrowed time. All our past wisdom now exists in a
state of unending irrelevancy. Our sense of self, our perception of
reality is entirely deceptive, and this was true long before any of
us were ever born. And now even this fraudulence is flowing away from
us. The observable physical universe is literally passing us by
within our lifetime!
NTE
is a complete intellectual dead end unless we are able to somehow
attempt to creatively manifest this awareness in the time we have
left. Such awareness will most likely come at a great cost to our
existing means … but more about that later.
*
Think
of all our countless past endeavors and harebrained dreams throughout
our lives that we no longer support or believe in for whatever
reason. Think about the source of what originally birthed whatever
moral imperatives we have been compelled by over the years. Then ask
yourself, how does the acceptance of NTE not completely undermine the
basis of that imperative? What becomes of a moral necessity, if the
essence, prospect or vitality that spurs its urgency has been lost
completely? What exactly are we doing, in still attempting to fight
“the good fight,” if we fully accept all has been lost?
And
now, we’re ruminating on the essence of our ethical obligations, in
full acceptance that the whole concept of anthropocentric morality
will soon be completely erased?
All
the lights behind our cultural projectors have burned out, all our
stories will soon be lost. Time to put our sacred cows out to
pasture, for how can our continued belief in the urgency of our past
imperatives — post acceptance of NTE — be considered anything
other than anachronistic?
We
were too late in discovering our species had been unknowingly charged
with the stewardship of maintaining a precious equilibrium, and due
to the absence of our collective wisdom, our remaining time is now
beyond this natural world, where we are but subjects to the wrath of
thermodynamics.
I’m
coming to suspect that the cognitive dilemma of NTE might merit an
entirely new branch of ontology. What does it mean to be present with
NTE? How does one reckon the end of everything? The science has
delivered us, but unto what … other than our knees?
NTE
is a cultural event horizon, that once we allow ourselves to fully
accept it, nothing else in this life will be able to escape its
ruthless draw. From a macro perspective, nonlinear rates of climatic
change, as it applies to humanity, is a Singularity. It will in all
probability be the first and last the human race will ever
experience. We are both observers and participants in a game of
incalculable factors against impossible odds with an inescapable
blunt ending. And this is what we’re attempting to make sense of?
This
is not a truth that comes to reveal any hidden sacred bond. It is the
obliteration of all social bonds. It is not just more of the same,
but worse. It is not the past made present, but unprecedented. It is
an acceptance, which is a wholesale life-changing event on an
unfathomable scale that will eventually lead us to ruin, starting
with severe ostracization from everything and everyone within our
culture … as many here can already attest.
The
fumes from our vested interests and our past ethical bearing can
sustain us for only so long, until the very fabric of our presumed
consciousness starts to unravel in light of such disquieting
imminence. The entire conversation on NBL in regard to NTE is an
evolutionary process in reverse. We will not continue to evolve under
its appalling shroud, but digress over time into incomprehensible
states of being.
We
can only contemplate such staggering amounts of present and future
death up to a point, until we start to thoroughly emulate it in our
private lives. But this isn’t necessarily something we should
avoid. It might just be a step within a process that leads us to a
degree of equanimity we can’t yet perceive. But then again, it
could easily lead us in the opposite direction.
Either
way, the time before us now will soon be considered the halcyon days
of sweet objective conjecture, where we “the randomly statistical
chosen few” deliberate on the greatest catastrophic event in human
history while we still have the luxury and methodology to do so. Not
unlike some virtual reenactment of Boccaccio’s The Decameron, where
instead of waiting out a medieval plague, which is ravaging the
masses, we are prognosticating our encroaching demise from a virtual
safe distance.
This
moment, right now, is but a very short window in time. There isn’t
a soul here who hasn’t battled a legion of closed minds by now. All
of our backs are against the same damn immovable wall, and no matter
how informed we are, or imagine ourselves to be, that entrenched wall
is tumbling us off the cliff along with everything and everyone else.
*
But
even as the endless futility mounts, where some of us are still
imagining “resistance to be fertile,” there is a growing concern
in the back of my mind, that by way of our compulsive truth seeking,
we are closing in on upending our ability to continue to function in
this world for whatever amount of time we have left. And I suspect
that it is the psychosomatic blowback — for lack of a better term —
from having become aware of NTE, that is coming to primarily occupy
our thoughts as we reluctantly settle into the surreal parameters of
this new paradigm.
Without
a doubt, there is no going back. The clichés are running rampant, a
parade of metaphors is spilling out of our collective imagination in
attempting to make sense of what is otherwise unfathomable. No, we
can’t un-see what has been seen. We can’t undo what has been
done. All we can do is attempt to live with knowing that we will not
live through it. But I’m not convinced this is even possible,
unless one is already well advanced in age.
Concerning
NTE, what wisdom can an old rich white man possibly have for a young
mother of three? While NTE is universal, how it personally manifests
in each of our lives is anything but.
The
understanding we are attempting to ascertain will make it absurd for
having sought it out, the moment we find “it.” We might as well
be nakedly roaming the quarantined grounds of Chernobyl with Geiger
counters looking for the hottest spots.
We’re
currently inhabiting a state of theoretical prospective famine, which
will seem serene once civil chaos and genocide resulting from both
starvation, and just the threat of it, starts to eventually decimate
our world city by county, state by region, country by continent.
NTE
is an cerebral journey into a vacuum. The surreality is replete with
epic vistas and abysmal depths, but how can the final destination be
anything other than an indescribable black hole of resignation that
will eventually steal all meaning from our lips?
*
A
part of me almost feels obligated to re-frame any conversation about
NTE as an impossible warning for anyone to heed, but one I believe
must be acknowledged nonetheless. The forewarning would read as an
epitaph over the entrance to a tomb: “The analysis of NTE is the
path to your eventual suicide.” For I would wager that anyone who
bears the cognizance capable of accepting NTE, today, is seriously
undermining their self-preservation in ways not yet known to us. As
Montaigne figured out centuries ago, all philosophy does is prepared
one for death … and we’re all reluctant philosophers now.
We
have inoculated our hearts with an insidious realization, that will
eventually devour everything we hold dear … even our children. How
long will it be before the ethical dilemma of infanticide starts
being seriously discussed, given it’s already on our minds?
We
have inadvertently and figuratively stumbled into our own La Brea Tar
Pit. Our prescience of the full scale of the dilemma we’re in will
not serve us well if it has no passage. I wonder if it will serve us
at all as the news only continues to confirm our greatest fears.
Knowing both the short and longer term consequences, eventually will
become an insufferable burden to carry. I suspect that for many, it
already is.
We’re
dealing with a discovery of such epic proportion that it simply
reduces EVERYTHING in existence to nothing. It is literally
impossible to overstate what we’re currently in the process of
attempting to delineate.
*
Aside
from perennial Malthusianism, our awareness that we have the
potential of self-extinction has only been with us for about a half
century, give or take. It’s hypothetically the default bases of the
entire environmental movement. All that’s effectively changed over
these last fifty years, is that we’ve watched in horror that
potential become an ever increasing reality. And where starting
around thirty years ago, we discovered the ultimate cause of our
extinction would be climatic.
Around twelve years ago, we realized
the climate Leviathan would most likely rise out of the Arctic.
Around 3-6 years ago, we discovered that it had already awakened. And
only about 9 or 10 months ago did it become empirically probable that
our extinction could transpire within our lifetimes. (And again,
that’s not even talking about nuclear containment pools.)
We
have witnessed over just the last three years, hypothetical Abrupt
Climate Change become empirical, where the evidence is so
overwhelming, it barely has anything to do with actual observable
science anymore, and has everything to do with human psychology, or
rather, our shared pathology in the hopium of indefinite growth and
progress. And this is why the whole concept of climate change will
be, very soon, completely refashioned in context to geo-engineering,
if for no other reason, than it sadly now has both the logical and
moral high ground compared to doing nothing. Amazing!
Though
it seems as if 2,500 years of pessimism has finally come home to
roost, nothing could have prepared us for this! While to some degree,
the concept of NTE is nothing new for many of us — it now has its
own wiki page — this however, is a false sense of familiarity. Our
entire framing of this approaching cataclysm has always been couched
in a degree of emotional immunity, simply because none of us ever
thought we would actually live to see it, not alone, have to live
through it. Of the parade of elephants in the climate change room,
this one just spit in our face.
It’s
as if some apparition has just passed through our soul, and has left
us but a shell of our former selves. Though we are all still acting
as if NTE is just another sad fact to be compartmentalized amidst the
litany of dismal daily news, we are in fact dealing with a monstrous
cultural disconnect, which is wholly impossible for any of us to
either resist or rise above, although this is exactly what we are all
desperately attempting to do.
*
What
difference exists between a known end, and it’s ending, but time?
But what is the value of such time? The momentary appreciation as to
our fortune of being able to die, because we were fortuitous enough
in beating the incomprehensible odds in having existed? That is a
degree of philosophical reflection that eventually leads to economic
destitution in this culture. Fully live with that realization for too
long, and one will end up quoting Diogenes while sleeping with dogs
under an overpass, or find ourselves on an unsolicited express
elevator to Sannyasa.
The
irony of honest living is it rarely pays the bills. A fairly high
level of self-deception has always been required for Homo economicus
to make ends meet. It is not by accident that the majority of
contributors to NBL are the equivalent to retired landed gentry,
which affords some of us the relative detachment from the daily mind
numbing demands of capitalism. This seriously taints any presumed
wisdom we might be projecting. In our culture, destitution is a fate
almost worse than death, and often it is far more terrifying.
We
obviously are all in different living arrangements with entirely
different responsibilities. We all have different coping mechanism
that unconsciously keep us persevering in this life, even while we
seek to prove its utter meaninglessness. We are all trapped by any
number of demands, limitations as well as illusions.
The
financial stress of staying in the rat race is easy to rebuke, if
we’ve now a large enough nest egg as a buffer. However, the
crucible of NTE makes playing the game nearly impossible, and this is
the reality for the vast majority of humanity.
Plant
the seed of NTE in the mind of someone who is economically under the
thumb of the system, and it could very easily grow to poison them.
What “we” often fail to acknowledge is that over the years of our
Mithridatic pre-TSD and depression, we’ve unknowingly developed a
certain immunity to otherwise fatal truth.
As
we continue to role-play our past imperatives in holding the notion
of brutal truth above all else, I suspect that we will soon discover
acceptance of NTE to be a proxy to mental illness, for it is without
a doubt the epitome of inconsolable despair. It is barely a topic
that can be shared among those who even accept it. At some point,
something must succumb in such an incredible conflict of competing
daily interests.
*
I’m
not sure who or what we have a responsibility towards anymore. I
can’t even argue if we have a responsibility to ourselves or the
rest of life at this point. So I write this today as a cautionary
tale for those who may still be circling the rim of the abyss that is
NTE, and only occasionally looking down, while still entertaining the
prospect of more hopeful alternative outcomes.
Acceptance
of NTE is a massively limiting undertaking. It has zero compensation,
unless the acceptance of our inevitable predation, starvation or
suicide (and, my friends, that is all we’re actually enlightening)
can be considered either an interim survivalist fantasy, or a means
to peaceful quite resignation … for there are no other outcomes.
“All
ye who enter this ethos, will most likely, eventually take their own
life.” If this account can in some way be considered offensive,
then in my opinion “you” most likely have no business being
“here.” Especially those with youth still on their side. In fact,
“you” should take what love you have, and run as far from here as
you can … and learn from the error of Lot’s wife and never look
back.
For
this is a place, whether we’re conscious of it or not, that’s
engaged in meticulously eroding the very essence of our Being, no
matter how we choose to define it.
*
Again,
I am of the opinion that all future discussion post-acceptance of
NTE, is now an inherently commiserative experience for no other
reason than it’s inevitability.
The
moment we truly accept NTE is not the overwhelming sensation of
excruciating sadness, but the eventual release that comes after.
Acceptance of NTE is nothing but surrender. A surrendering of our
life force. We are now speaking of two entirely different world
views. Our pre-acceptance arguments are non-transferable, they do not
translate. Everything post-acceptance becomes meta-physical. It’s
all mysticism from here on out, and I say this as a staunch atheist.
But
old habits are hard to break, our combative intellects probably make
for much of our identities after years of needless acrimony and
cultural resistance. But because “our acceptance” is totally
subjective, in a collective forum such as this (NBL), our collective
understanding of NTE will probably be kept in a permanent embryonic
state, as a constant stream of new adherents reluctantly, haphazardly
and gradually come to terms at whatever pace our individual
acceptance takes to run its grieving course.
Whereby,
as everyone’s mind implodes at different times and at varying
degrees, it will effectively keep the conversation in a nascent stage
of maturation. Our shared patterned behavior will repeat again and
again, as we all jump back and forth between the oscillating highs
and lows, where some days we achieve a peak of lucidity, only to lose
ourselves in a trough of despair as we attempt to wrestle with the
unfolding magnitude of the discovery we’ve unearthed.
But
I suspect a time will eventually arrive, where the totality of NTE
will have finally worn through all of our emotional defenses, washed
away all anticipation, utterly crushed our egos, rendered our past
intellects redundant and finally deposited us unto an alluvial plan
of resignation of there being no way of escaping a brutal end, once
global famine is set upon us. There truly is no preparing for what is
coming.
But
today, we are still recoiling, we need to catalog the destruction, we
still bear enough incredulity that we need support, validation,
confirmation and commiseration as our past paradigm continues to play
scrimmage with all of this unprecedence. It’s still enough of a
novelty for disbelief to keep a foothold. Even as we attempt to wrap
our minds around this, I suspect we are still far from grasping “it.”
I
like to imagine that when that time finally arrives, when all hope
truly fades, when even the remote prospect of rural tranquility is
lost, we will have come to terms with our personal ending and see the
concept of suicide, not as a stigma of cowardice, or a failure of
character, but as altruism in the last ethical act left us.
*
Carpe
diem sounds exquisite — it always has — but it’s just another
illusion, especially in a world of debt. We can pretend that we are
living in the moment, all the while worrying how we will continue to
afford the roofs over our heads, but honestly, we know deep down that
carpe diem demands wild abandon and mindfulness that there may be no
tomorrow. Carpe diem does not facilitate mortgage payments.
If
we are to truthfully “seize” the time we have left, from the
clutches of what now appears to be a hopelessly inane future, this
will be, as it has always been, impossible to achieve while being
overly concerned with the future of money. This is just a ubiquitous
fact that most us try to ignore the best we can, because the only
alternative, is the risk of destitution. This dilemma has always been
present in a culture dominated by capitalism, it’s just more
apparent now as we come to terms with the fact that every narrative
has ended, and regardless of our means, they no longer justify any
end.
Money
is still the force that gives us shelter. It is what keeps us fed and
warm at night, regardless of who we are, or where we live. Therefore,
for us to embrace our inner Epicurean, truly, we must first come to
terms with our inevitable destitution, or rather, we must overcome
our fear of destitution, if we’re to grasp whatever “meaning”
there is to be had in the face of NTE, beyond just writing about it
today.
In
our hyper-monetized culture, this is obviously easier said than done,
but this is where the perception of suicide can, once again,
eventually come to be seen as an elemental gift from the universe.
NTE is unprecedented in every sense. It completely alters our opinion
of everything, including the end of our life. It’s highly debatable
whether there has ever been “meaning.” Many would argue, there is
nothing but what IS, completely indifferent to any human moral
valuation.
So,
what becomes of the meaning of suicide in the face of NTE? As with
everything else, it clearly isn’t what it was before. It too has
been altered. I believe the concept of suicide — a chosen death —
will over time, prove to be one of the only fertile grounds of
self-discovery still open to us. As Vaclav Havel said, “Sometimes I
wonder if suicides aren’t in fact sad guardians of the meaning of
life.”
Of
course, I’m not speaking of how we’ve come to frame this
exceptionally taboo subject in the past, but how — in light of our
incredibly recent acceptance of brutal extinction — there will be a
considerable semantic shift in the very meaning of the word/act.
In
light of NTE, think of suicide as a double negative.
I
believe that this acceptance will not only become the gateway that we
must all one day pass through to fully live with the recognition of
NTE, but where ultimately it will be seen as our last chance at some
semblance of salvation amidst the ensuing chaos. Or rather, NTE is
what frees us completely from the concept of salvation. In the words
of E.M. Cioran, “The certitude that there is no salvation, is a
form of salvation, in fact, it is salvation ….”
There
is an emergent ethical imperative surrounding suicide in context to
NTE that can’t be denied, no matter how disreputable we still
considered it be. Its importance will only continue to grow as
society slowly comes to terms with the incredibly limited choices
within the dilemma now before us. Again, NTE ends in only one of
three ways for everyone: predation, starvation or suicide.
The
Absolute-ism of humanity’s collective ecological destruction has
always been a bur under the saddle of moral philosophy. Those who are
inclined towards biophilia sadly understand that it is simply a
value/desire that is not universally shared within western culture …
by any stretch of the imagination. It just isn’t something you can
teach someone. It’s a “value set” that might as well be
considered a talent; something inherited by chance. One either
possesses it, or they don’t. After decades of being in the
ideological trenches of radical environmentalism, I have finally lost
all faith that the essence of biophilia is something that can either
be taught or learned, and the few exceptions that exist, are just
that: exceptional.
So,
now here we biophiliacs are, having to finally accept what we’ve
probably long suspected to be true, that the human race has so run
amok through the vertical ascension of exponential growth that we’ve
irreversibly destroyed our planet’s habitable biosphere. Yes, it
took us 200, 5,000, 12,000, or 300,000 years to finally achieve it,
but whether or not this is something “we” could have avoided, is
beside the point … at least at this point. Damage long done, the
latest web of life has been broken yet again.
Lamenting
as to the cause is irrelevant as well, other than attempting to
personally alleviate our sense of culpability in choosing to believe
it was inevitable one way or the other. Attempting to deduce exactly
when Homo sapiens fell from earth’s grace has the familiar stench
of original sin. And given that many, if not most, here are more
driven by fiery belief in morality, rather than cool apathetic
indifference, the emergent ethical imperative of suicide, is going to
gain ever greater currency over the coming years for anyone who has
been burdened with having once cared about wilderness. In fact, it’s
impossible for it not to. In the words of Friedrich Nietzsche, “It
is always consoling to think of suicide: in that way one gets through
many a bad night.”
It
might sound strange — how could it not — but I believe the
question of what suicide becomes, is what circuitously guides us
through the cacophony of dead and dying dreams and leads us to
whatever “magic” is left to be found in this disintegrating
world. The cultural emancipation that comes from overcoming our fear
of death, in accepting that we will eventually choose our death, is
what ultimately frees us from all attachment, particularly, the fear
of destitution and the tyranny of what we consider NOW constitutes
our immediate needs.
We
must remember that every single vested interest we possess was formed
prior to acceptance of NTE. The entirety of our physical existence
exists in opposition of the acceptance we’ve now initiated … and
it is far from its finality.
In
knowing that whatever may come, that it simply doesn’t matter, is
the freedom that will allow us to truly leave everything behind,
which is what we all must eventually do. Frankly, I don’t believe
it’s actually possible to “let go” without having done this.
There
is a significant difference between knowing that tomorrow could be
our last, and living in full acceptance that if tomorrow is indeed
our end, that we know we are ready to go. That knowing is what will
allow us to live without fear and truly be present in whatever amount
of time we do have left, whether it be a few weeks or a few decades.
Once the undulating emotional trauma of NTE runs its acidic course,
we begin to glimpse that such forced perverse acceptance, remarkably
has within it, the capacity to become the most profound
numinous/existential experience the human race has ever “produced.”
*
What
makes something tragic? Isn’t the whole notion of tragedy an
anthropocentric cultural construct?
Could
the past five extinction events be considered a tragedy? Is the cycle
of life a tragedy?
What
separates expected loss from unexpected loss, other than what we’ve
been conditioned to expect?
How
do we reconcile our sense of the tragic loss of life, resulting from
human activity, with the fact that the vast majority of life on earth
has already succumbed to extinction, and where if it hadn’t, we
most likely wouldn’t exist?
Are
other life forms blameworthy for having driven their competitors into
extinction, or do we somehow morally hold our selves apart/above, in
believing “we” had a choice, due to our higher cognitive faculty?
Is
NTE only a tragedy, because we’re aware of our culpability?
And
exactly, who is “we”? What evidence is there of our species
possessing the necessary collective wisdom capable of overcoming our
collective destruction of the natural world? Is there any evidence
that our species possesses collective wisdom at all?
Or
more importantly, when has the ruling elite ever acted
altruistically, since the entire history of civilization has always
been controlled by a ruling class? Whatever exceptions may have
existed for a brief time, there’s an obvious reason they are
statistically irrelevant.
Therefore,
is NTE only a tragedy, because “we” presume it could have been
prevented? This is a crucial question in regard to our acceptance of
NTE, for if it couldn’t have been prevented, can it still be
considered tragic? Because how much does our sense/belief that it
could have somehow been averted, still affect our sense of
culpability in dictating our moral imperatives? And if we do believe
it could have been prevented, how is this anything other than just a
fantastic article of faith in Utopianism? And how could such a
utopian society been effective without becoming an oppressive
totalitarian State?
I
ask these questions having spent decades foolishly projecting my
ecological values unto an utterly indifferent citizenry. It is all
too easy for us to isolate ourselves in minority enclaves and
overlook that the vast majority of our species has, nor will they
ever, possess the macro ecological values capable of overriding our
biological imperative.
In
my opinion, the degree we continue to measure NTE in
preventable-tragic terms, will mostly likely determine our sense of
moral imperative vs. hedonic resignation.
As
radicals, at what point does our sense of culpability as to the
crimes of empire just become a shell game because our past
identity/vested interests can’t let go of what we know is
completely lost, or that regardless of our morality, it couldn’t
have been prevented?
*
But
hold on, what of our personal responsibility to the natural world,
whose destruction we’ve all profited from? What right do any of us
first-worlders have in being able to seek enjoyment, in light of an
extinction event we’ve all done more than our share in creating?
What of all the life under our collective industrial thumb, still
struggling to exist? What right do we thieves have to go quietly into
that good night? Can’t the remnants of our past imperatives still
find more proactive forms of dissent, civil disobedience and
rebellion even in acceptance of NTE? Wouldn’t the most ethical
choice be to dedicate our lives in helping ease the suffering of the
less fortunate? As moral agents, are we not obligated to swim
upstream to the bitter end, regardless? Isn’t “secular morality”
solely based on the righteousness of the act itself, despite its
outcome?
Are
the answers to these questions obvious to anyone who considers
themselves to be driven by a moral imperative that is rooted in a
sense of culpability? It has been the driving force in my life, for
my entire adult life. I have by no means painlessly come to the
acceptance I can no longer deny.
The
driving wedge of course is NTE, which completely flips the script as
to the “meaning” of everything, including what is and isn’t an
ethical act. For how ethical is it, for us privileged few to actually
continue to live, full well knowing that it is our relatively obese
existences that are the ultimate causality of the degradation of the
natural world? As ecologically minded moral agents, what right do we
have to continue to consume … anything, in full acknowledgment that
we’ve already consumed far too much? In a world of permanent
scarcity, what isn’t stolen from someone who has been victimized by
our empire? How much more energy will all of us consume from here on
out, in spite of how we live? How much basic material goods will we
continue to plunder while we breath, regardless of the morality of
our behavior?
From
a purely logical point of view, in a reality of gross ecological
overshoot, isn’t altruistic suicide actually the most ethical act
any of us first-worlders can now affect, or rather, impart? If living
by example is our moral goal, couldn’t it be argued that whatever
ends our continued consumption of the natural world, is actually the
highest ethical objective?
Clearly,
there is no one way of answering any of these questions. Again, even
before the advent of NTE, resolution as to “meaning” itself was
philosophically unquantifiable. What is or isn’t considered
anthropocentric truth has been literally debated for thousands of
years. Hume’s “is, ought” conundrum has never been resolved,
nor will it ever be, and this was true even when humanity at least
had the illusion of “progress.” What physical act, or belief
system regardless of its morality, isn’t hopelessly
anthropocentric?
As
breeding, consuming, polluting animals on a planet choking to death
from our affluence, wouldn’t it be considered the highest display
of human consciousness, to willfully end our self-destructive lives
as a testament to the highest level of anthropocentric
conscientiousness?
*
At
least for me, there is only one question we need to ask ourselves in
attempting to reconcile our past-present-future perspectives: In a
post-acceptance reality of NTE, what doesn’t become relative?
For
me, nothing … anymore. NTE is an astonishing equalizer. Everything,
all of life in existence, just became relative to everything else,
including all the life that has already passed into extinction. Our
presumed disconnect between life today, and the 98% of life that no
longer exists, has ended.
Those
who still continue to hold onto their past
sense/construct/modality/illusion of morality, again, probably have
no business contemplating NTE. All of our past ethical dilemmas were
involuntarily reconciled the moment we accepted it, which is why “our
acceptance” of such an utterly demoralizing event, is/was the
unconscious fulcrum point which leads to the ethical downfall of
every thought here, or thereafter.
*
Once
we begin to frame the meaning of NTE in context to our personal life
choices, it instantly stops being an abstract concept, which again,
is all it’s been up to this point, and we’re forced to seriously
confront the single greatest dilemma in the history of humanity,
whereby face up to the reality that we simply haven’t much longer
to live.
How
do we draw the ultimate conclusion of our life, while we’re still
filled with vitality? When we all still have so much life to live and
share, how do we come to terms with the unprecedented reality that we
will most likely soon be forced to take our life, for the sole reason
of avoiding needless suffering?
Obviously,
it is only natural that we avoid this dreadful conclusion for as long
as we possibly can, which is what most of us are probably going to
do, especially those who haven’t the freedom to act otherwise. We
will all most likely play the waiting game, especially young parents,
and continue on with our lives pretty much as we have up to this
point, for as long as we can, and decide how we’ll roll with the
punches as they come.
When
in doubt, play it safe. Slow and steady wins the race. No point in
making any brash decisions, while there’s still so much room for
doubt. Right?
BUT,
we can only continue to skirt around the issue of what NTE actually
means to us personally for so long. I would suppose that for almost
everyone here, our lives are basically still the same as they were
prior to this dire sublimation. Little has probably physically
changed as a result, yet, we all know that this will only be true for
so long.
The
remainder of this essay is a little more opinionated. It is written
for those of us who have decided to be brash in our acceptance that
we simply haven’t much time left to experience however much time
remains. I have finally left my past moral imperatives to wither in
the solar winds, and have now come down on the side of ethical
hedonism as being the only way “I” can truly be present with NTE.
*
There
is no right or wrong way of attempting to live through what simply
can’t be. It is impossible for our individual sense of morality, to
not be rife with false analogy in context to the incomparable
unprecedence now upon us. We will all be victims of either deliberate
or unintended consequence, some sooner, others slightly later, but
there is no getting out of harm’s way. There’s no there, there.
Again,
for those who consider there “might” still be a chance to turn
this bloody ship around, then it logically makes no sense for those
to even be considering NTE, for not only is it a false pretense, but
its utterly self-defeating. Personally, I would rather the next cadre
of activist know nothing of NTE, where they battled against
themselves to the bitter end, completely blind of the insurmountable
odds. What a far more preferable and enviable way to be alive.
But
those of us who have spent far too much time down the rabbit hole,
where are we in practical terms as to “now what?” If you’re
either physically infirmed, too old to desire making any drastic
changes, or you’ve either young children or elderly dependents in
your care, or for that matter, you’re more than content wherever
you’re at right now, then there really isn’t much left to be
said, other than sit back or stand up, and watch the whole shithouse
go up in flames in whatever manner you choose.
But
I am none of the above, I have no dependents. I’ve seen collapse
coming for a long time, and I have centered my life around it. I have
almost no responsibilities I can’t walk away from. Some might
consider me fortunate, but it’s been quite intentional and it’s
definitely come at a high price. So how I or any of us come to frame
Ragnarok, it’s going to be subjectively unique to our
circumstances. But I suspect my circumstances are also shared by many
here as well.
So,
all things considered, I would suggest we start making plans to sell
off everything we have while we still can, and roam this world and
experience the natural wonder it still possesses, while our existing
civility and privilege still affords us this last opportunity.
The
most essential aspect behind this most unreal understanding, is for
it to be done in full acceptance that when either time, money, or our
Will simply runs out, we’ll have acceded we’ve reached the end of
our personal journey, and it will be time to exercise the only free
will we’ve probably ever had, in choosing whatever exit strategy
we’re most comfortable with. A chosen death is a uniquely vague
timeline for each of us, but one with a very common end.
In
other words, start contemplating your eventual suicide today, so when
the time finally does come, we’ll be able to fearlessly embrace the
moment with open arms, and just maybe, before that day arrives, we
will be able to live with a degree of ontological presence, literally
never experienced across the entire arc of humanity.
For
if we don’t, very soon, we will wish we had.
Here
is why I think this is true.
My
long definition of NTE is both descriptive yet hopelessly indistinct:
It will eventually arise from a sequence of catastrophic global civic
failure stemming from permanent food scarcity, as a consequence of
ever-increasing extreme weather events, due to both the collapse and
predictability of the Northern Hemispheric jet stream, as the
temperature and pressure gradients continue to weaken in the Arctic.
And lest we forget, NTE will be greatly aided and preceded by
humanity’s murderous forte. It can also effectively be summed up in
two words: Permanent drought! And again, I’m intentionally avoiding
the subject of containment pools, which easily merits its own essay.
At
least for me, the meaning of life is completely determined by the
quality of life, which is why I’ve always considered life
imprisonment to be far worse than a death sentence. I have always
known that if the quality of my life was degraded to a point that it
lost all meaning, then life would no longer be worth living.
Enter
NTE. Ergo, enter the almost impenetrable awareness that it’s only a
question of time, before each of us consider life to no longer be
worth living. Aside from that being nearly an impossible acceptance
to attempt to live with, it has become sine qua non from which every
thought I now have must pass through. Therefore, all the remaining
meaning in my life only has a limited amount of time between now, and
some indeterminate point in the very near future for me to consider
life worth living. This novel reality is the actual crux of this
entire essay.
As
cognitive filters go, NTE doesn’t let too much through. In fact,
only one idea as how best to spend my remaining time has made it pass
this mind-boggling juggernaut: Peacefully and quietly leave this
world as a completely carefree drug-addled impoverished vagabond, who
eventually takes a lovely one-way walk into the woods.
I
have already accepted that today is as good as life on earth will
ever be, it’s all downhill from here, the extinction event that is
already terribly advanced can’t be stalled, so the clock as to my
remaining time is already ticking along with all the rest of life.
And
yes, that mortal coil started unraveling at my conception, and this
is why age, will most likely be the greatest factor in determining
the choices we make from here on out. If we feel we’ve plenty of
life still in us, we’ll most likely feel inclined to stuff as many
new experiences in the time we have left, compared to those who are
well pass their prime, and naturally see ease and comfort as their
best available option.
I
am someone who would much rather die from a rattlesnake bite, after
days of hallucinating on mushrooms in the desert, than sit behind my
computer and continue to alphabetize the apocalypse until the power
goes out, as I’ve done for far, far too long already.
All
that is left is for me to discover the courage to truly live with
this morbid conviction, but to be completely honestly, I haven’t
mustered the nerve yet. My behavior is still one of passive
deference, for reasons still unknown to me, but most likely it’s
just a jumble of distraction, guilt, fear, melancholy and a little
laziness thrown in for safe measure.
I’m
still telling myself that I need two more years of trending data sets
to feel confident NTE will transpire much sooner than any of us ever
imagined. Logically, I have accepted it, but I have yet to
emotionally resolve my manifold hypocrisy.
Finding
the courage to willingly embrace our inevitable destitution unto
death is the only purpose of accepting NTE in my opinion. If this is
not our objective, then I can see very little reason for even taking
it into consideration. Why initiate such a ruinous acceptance into
our existing lives, if we’re not going to allow our past lives to
actually be ruined?
I
am not old enough to die of natural causes before global famine
descends across the globe, given it is probably only a few years away
at this point anyhow.
Whether or not most of us die as a direct
result of famine or genocide is a question that simply no longer
interests me. At this stage of the game, it’s all equally horrific.
So what’s the point in continuing to waste our precious time even
thinking about the millennial pernicious power plays of hairless
apes?
For
not unlike our current gross inequality, as long as capitalism rues
the day, and I fear it wretchedly will until the very end, food stuff
will flow in only one direction, towards those who can afford it.
Those who can’t, will either quietly starve, riot or be killed.
Governments
will have only two options in addressing this, either disintegrate
and schism into temporary competing factions, or become brutal
oppressive genocidal police states of in-groups and out-groups, thus
postponing complete civic collapse by a number of years, through
vicious demand destruction.
Governments
with large securities apparatuses will most likely become police
states, while governments without advanced security forces will most
likely collapse. Endless war between competing police states will be
the only perceived surrogate for hope in a world of permanent famine.
The global citizenry will willfully welcome tyranny, much in the same
way we always have. And as many of us have already accredited,
“what’s past is prologue” … it’s just going to be
unbelievably atrocious for the world’s poor in the beginning,
again, much as it is already.
We
live in a hyper-interdependent global market place, completely
irrespective of its sustainability. State currency valuation and
exchange through central banking is the sum total of what our
speculative civilization now reflexively strives to protect. Whatever
means keeps liquidity in the markets and power in the State, will be
kept in play for as long as humanly possible.
Entire
nations will be sacrificed upon the altar of maintaining capital flow
and investment, it’s just a question of trickling economies of
scale on the way down. We inhabit an utterly amoral economic system
that will sacrifice all of life to sustain itself. Capitalism will
double down until it, or we, cease to be. As long as there is enough
energy to allow capitalists to cannibalize all perceived assets in an
indebted world, then even famine on a global scale will just be a
game of attrition controlled by the world’s ruling elite, in a
continuous charade of paying a well-armed Peter to murder an
ever-starving Paul.
It
dawned on me a few years back that after over a decade of intensely
attempting to collectively network with others through a myriad of
preparedness schemes that I had just lost the will to survive in the
collapsing world I was proselytizing. This is quite different from no
longer wanting to live, for I very much love life, and have no desire
to needlessly cut it short. I have just always seen living and
surviving as to two separate entities. I am also at an age where I
feel I’ve already taken more than my share.
I
have decided after decades of feral study, without any sense of
certainty, and based only on my opinion as to what is and isn’t
probable, that when the Arctic sea ice is completely gone during the
summer, when the earth’s Holocene epoch completely loses one of its
primary thermal regulators, we are probably only a few years at best,
before the ruling classes of the world realize global agriculture is
untenable, and at that point, the lack of alternatives will be rather
self-evident. And I simply have no desire to live through that
deleterious fallout, nor do I even feel I have a right to.
What
an endless perverse decay of ideas we now embark, where NTE can be
seen as a bizarre new lease on life for those who are in a position
to access it.
I
can’t yet claim I’ve achieved this, for I’m still terribly
conflicted and immersed in a lifetime of despondent culpability, but
I can see an entirely new transgressive identity rising out of the
ashes of this phenomenal and ominous acceptance.
Only
a few years ago, I would be the first to lead the charge in attacking
the very perspective I now possess. But necessity dictates my moral
imperative, and it requires at least some belief of a viable future
for the remaining life on earth. But I am now without this belief,
and it seems my long personal sense of insignificance, has finally
caught up to my actions. I was weary long before there was no point.
So,
I am not one for skulking through what remains of this life, only to
carefully arrive at extinction. I am going out on my terms, no one
else’s. But until that day comes, I’m going to embrace this
endless redefining of life for as long as I desire, as I hysterically
fall out of this world.
If
NTE is a tsunami, I’m sure in the hell not going to wait for it to
arrive, I’m going to swim out to it across the desert night sky.
While Pakistan faces "biggest energy crisis in history"... from AFP:
ReplyDeletePakistan in energy crisis