Archive for the 'Empire' Category

Book Review - World Made by Hand

World Made by Hand - a Novel

Author: James Howard Kunstler
336 pages
ISBN: 0-87113-978-2
2008, Atlantic Monthly Press
www.worldmadebyhand.com

This book could more precisely, but less poetically, be named “World Made by Kunstler”. Author and Peak Oil commentator James Howard Kunstler has written a novel that brings to life a community and world that Kunstler himself has created. It’s not just any creation, however, because what he has created is informed by his many years of study of our society, its built environment, and the Peak Oil threat.

As a novel it’s entertaining and interesting. As a demonstration of Kunstler’s vision for the post-Peak Oil future, it’s vivid and compelling. Kunstler imagines a time where all systems have broken down because of Peak Oil, climate change, economic collapse, apparent nuclear war—a number of U.S. cities are gone—and, of course, famine and pestilence. In short, it’s a world ravaged by the Four Horsemen and a bunch of their close friends.

Needless to say, things aren’t quite the same after all this. Kunstler’s protagonist, Robert Earle, moved with his wife to her home town of Union Grove in upstate New York after “the bomb went off in Los Angeles”. Robert, a former software marketing executive whose job became rather superfluous, now supports himself as a carpenter, living alone while grieving for his dead wife and daughter, and his long-missing son.

His community is not thriving, but it is surviving. Nearby is another sort of community, run by wealthy and enterprising land-owner Stephen Bullock, who has created his own fiefdom, a plantation where industrious workers labor in the various farm and manufacturing enterprises their “manor lord” has created. It is a totally self-contained community, as sustainable on its own resources as was any such community in early 1800s America. That is, it still depends on trade with the outside for the things it cannot grow or make itself.

Into the town of Union Grove comes a sizable religious sect—the “New Faithers”—led by Brother Jobe, a charismatic and increasingly mysterious leader who purchases the town’s former high school as a center for his flock. That flock is interesting in itself, being decidedly non-pacifist and equally non-puritanical.

Another community just outside of town is led by Wayne Karp, who with his hardcore biker followers has taken over the town’s former refuse dump, and now “mines” it for salvage materials. With these four examples of possible post-Peak Oil communities—small town New England, religious sect, back-to-the-1800s plantation dwellers, and hard-drinking Mad Max ex-bikers—the scene is now set for Kunstler to lead his protagonist Robert through what is in effect a coming-of-(a new)-age novel for both Robert and his town.

Kunstler suggests that all of these types of communities are likely to occur in the not-distant future, although he obviously favors the small town community that by the end of the novel comes together stronger and closer, experiencing a simpler and more meaningful life. It’s democracy with a little “d”, in which people work out problems because it’s too destructive to their community if they don’t. It’s also a restoration of an earlier America.

Union Grove is hardly a utopia, and Kunstler has no illusions that creating—or ending up with—such a community is an easy thing. But as his other writings also show, he does believe that such communities can be brought about in this real world, preferably earlier than later.

Kunstler has spent many years justifiably ranting about the anti-human aspects of our suburbs, the destruction of our cities, and the resulting decline in our civility and way of life. He has emerged as a major, and very vocal, spokesman for the Peak Oil movement; one who calls on us all to repent, mend our ways and forsake our dependence on “Happy Motoring” and the strip mall cul-de-sac suburbs that have resulted.

Now Kunstler has written a novel—I’d call it more a novella, a moving snapshot—of what he envisions may be our future. Despite a couple of bizarre scenes which remain frustratingly undeveloped, and a line or two of dialogue fraught with a meaning that is never revealed (although perhaps other, smarter readers than I will decipher them)—he has created a vivid depiction of what he envisions may be, can be, and should be, our future.

Just as the communities are varied, so are the book’s characters. Kunstler has tempered his usual neo-Gonzo writing style and created interesting characters with depth and complexity who inhabit a world which is described quite lyrically at times. There are no stereotypes here; the “good” guys have flaws, the “bad” guys have their strengths. World Made By Hand is well worth reading. After you read this book, you can decide which, if any, of those communities you’d like to work toward. And if none of them, you may at least see more clearly your own image of the future.

Kunstler has taken a major step by providing us with a detailed vision of a very possible future. It gives us a starting place for a very important, and long avoided, discussion. Give it a read.

Mick Winter (www.DryDipstick.com) is the author of Peak Oil Prep: Prepare for Peak Oil, Climate Change and Economic Collapse (www.peakoilprep.com)

Irony Upon Irony - Former Jewel of the Empire buys former symbols of the Empire

Empires come. Empires go. If there’s any doubt that the British Empire is long past–and the American Empire headed downhill–it’s dispelled in this article in today’s New York Times:
Ford Sells Luxury Brands for $1.7 Billion.

Ford Motor Company, once great automobile company in the former British colony now known as the United States, is selling the Jaguar and Land Rover brands that once belonged to England, the former homeland of the British Empire, to new owner Tata Motors Limited, of Mumbai, in a country once known as the Jewel of the British Empire and better known these days as simply “India”. It must be very sweet for Tata and the Indian nation as a whole. The 1.7 billion is roughly a third of the $5.2 billion Ford had paid to buy the brands.

Tata had recently announced that it would be soon selling the Tata Nano, the world’s cheapest car, priced at $2,500.

George W. Bush - A Man of his Word

George W. has been badly misjudged by many people. He has been accused of acting against his campaign promise in 2000 that he would not be a “nation builder”. Many consider his efforts to create democratic, capitalist governments in Afghanistan and Iraq as “nation building”.

Not so. George W. is a man of principle. He is not a nation builder; he is a “nation destroyer”. He singlehandedly took a country that had one of the lowest standards of living in the world and reduced it to the absolute lowest in the world. And that was only a start.

Recognizing that his mission in Afghanistan was fairly easy, he next moved on to Iraq, where he took the most sophisticated, advanced and secular country in the Middle East and destroyed its infrastructure, governmental system, cultural heritage, health and education services, indeed the entire country from top to bottom.

There are now more than 4,000,000 refugees, 1,000,000 dead and hundreds of thousands maimed in that country. What was once a secular country where neighbors and even families were a mixture of Shia, Sunni, Kurd, Christian and other groups, is now divided into fiefdoms where ethnic and religious groups vie with one another for power and even existence. Nation building? No way. Not from George W. Bush. Not from the man who promised America that he would never build nations.

But George W. wasn’t satisfied with even Iraq. He wanted more. And, by God, he did it. In a breathtaking leap of imagination and courage, he managed to destroy (not build) his own country, gutting its educational and health systems, destroying the financial system (including the worldwide standard the petrodollar), helping banks and other financial institutions throw millions out of their homes, and then, in a stunning burst of inspiration, destroying those very banks and financial institutions as well. Granted, much of what Bush accomplished had been started by Ronald Reagan, but Reagan never had the imagination to take it as far as George W. has.

By destroying the United States, George got a two-fer. He also brought down the most powerful empire the world had ever seen, something no other country, even the Soviet Union, had been able to do. The U.S. Army and Marine Corps have been nearly destroyed, the U.S. is reviled throughout the world, the image of America as the symbol of everything good and moral is gone forever, its once-powerful economy is shattered and the dollar will soon be worthless, not even worth the bits it is imprinted on.

Did George W. stop there? Not this president. Along the way he managed to speed up the possible destruction of the entire planet by fighting international efforts to slow down and reverse global warming and pollution. No planet builder, he.

Is he resting on his laurels? Not yet. He has his heart set on targeting yet another country in which he will not build a nation. That next country is Iran, yet another sophisticated country that he believes deserves to not experience nation building. Bush has just less than a year in which not to build a nation in Iran. Only time will tell if he can succeed.

As promised, no nation building has taken place on George W. Bush’s watch. George W. Bush is a man who stuck to his values and campaign promises. To those who voted for him in 2000 and 2004, we can only say: “Well done. You got what you voted for.”

What a Way to Go - Life at the End of Empire

This was previously posted at DryDipstick but the movie is so good and, I think, so important that I want to post it here as well.

A DryDipstick Movie Review

Documentary - 123-minute DVD
www.whatawaytogomovie.com

five oil well review

A two-hour poem of great power and beauty. The story of a personal journey; yet a journey that is also deeply universal. As humanity rushes towards a nexus of catastrophe, is there a world beyond denial and despair? The film suggests the possibility.

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“What a Way to Go” is a 123-minute ode to life as it could be, as it should be, as it has been in a distant past, and in some way, as it is now, as rejective of reality as that may be. We, who should be stewards of the earth, have instead tragically become its dominators, bending the rest of life to our will. But there remains the hope that within us are the seeds of wiser people and a better world.

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There’s a Choo-Choo Train A-Comin’

There’s a train speeding toward me. Toward all of us, actually. I’m aware of the train. A number of people are. Far more people aren’t. But it is coming, regardless of awareness or non-awareness.

I can see it coming. So how do I deal with this approaching train? I have a comfortable chair and a computer and I sit in the middle of the tracks with a cup of coffee and I read about the speeding train.

There’s lots to read about the speeding train. I read reports from people who also know about the speeding train. They like to write about it. And go to meetings and conferences about it. They even write books about it that are purchased by other people who also know the train is coming.

I enjoy reading these reports. There are reports from people who see it speeding toward us and like to describe how the train looks, its size, its strength. Others conduct informed—and not so informed—discussions on the speed of the train and whether or not it’s accelerating, slowing down or simply going at a steady rate, and when it might be expected to arrive.

Continue reading ‘There’s a Choo-Choo Train A-Comin’’