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Jan Steinman's avatar

"For now I can only lay out the fundamentals based on what I learned so far:"

I like your list, but it is missing one huge item: community.

For at least some 200,000 years, humans have gathered in groups of 20 to 150 or so. Being exiled from such a group was generally a death sentence.

The days of the "rugged individualist" are over, tied, as they were by either "taking over" so-called "uninhabited" lands occupied by mostly-sustainable indigenous people, or by "drawing down" on the fossil fuel teat, by stocking up on ammunition, survival food, etc.

Whatever future humanity has will be driven by current photosynthesis, and it will be hard work, requiring many hands, with diverse skills.

Beat the rush! Start your tribe today, before it's too late!

"At best, it [conservation] means we will run out of energy a little more slowly." — Ronald Reagan

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Diarmuid's avatar

Good writing as per usual.

Another dent in the CO2 drives heating narrative? :

https://frontline.news/post/new-study-shows-carbon-dioxide-s-impact-on-global-warming-ended-decades-ago

A great interview with Tim Garrett on open systems, thermodynamics, snowflakes, collapse..

According to him the key metric is the rate of change (differential) of global energy consumption that is the indicator of collapse and this has been in decline for over twenty years.

The thermodynamics of collapse

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tN0fal80K1I

Plus he has a new one I haven't yet listened to :

The thermodynamics of degrowth

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M01Q3ZR-Mzs

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