Saturday, July 31, 2021

Were fossil fuels just a bridge?

July certainly has been an interesting month this year: record-setting heat waves, wide-spread drought, smoke-filled skies from hundreds of wildfires in Canada, and a third surge of the COVID-19 virus, Delta variant this time. Now that the Democrats are letting the federal eviction ban expire, the homeless population is likely to expand or we'll see a strange case of musical chairs, but, as I've read, landlords are hesitant to rent to those who've been evicted so I can't begin to guess how that may play out.

Is it possible that  we've reached a point at which the  new normal is that there is no normal, and won't be for some time? A dictionary definition if normal is "conforming to a type, standard, or regular pattern characterized by that which is considered usual, typical, or routine." Do you foresee a near future in which  we can characterize anything as usual, typical or routine? The "rock" is the need to transform our society and economy to become carbon-neutral within a generation or so. The "hard place" will be found as the consequence of not rapidly completing those transformations, plus the continuing disruptions to what was considered normal during  the last millennium. We're caught between them. Some may think we are approaching the time of the rapture or the end of days. I'm wondering if genesis might not be a better model to consider.

Western "civilization" is being cast out of its paradise founded on fossil fuels, which supplied energy to do the work of moving and warming things between the time of feudalism and whatever comes after where we are. We may have initially responded to the discovery of how to use oil in a manner similar to that of animals no longer constrained by predators or food shortages. [See, e.g., Kaibab Deer Herd and table below] 

World population milestones in billions (Worldometers estimates)
Population12345678910
Year1804192719601974198719992011202320372057
Years elapsed1233314131212121420




 The question now becomes, will we exhibit enough sense and cooperation and collaboration to structure a soft landing, or will we resolve our  imbalances through a devastating crash. The choice is ours.

Image Credit: NASA/NOAA/GSFC/Suomi NPP/VIIRS/Norman Kuring
Image Credit: NASA/NOAA/GSFC/Suomi NPP/VIIRS/Norman Kuring

I'm old enough to remember Paul Ehrlich's Population Bomb. I found the approach and analysis in Limits to Growth to be more persuasive. In fact, "In 2020, analysis by Gaya Herrington (Sustainability and Dynamic System Analysis Lead at KPMG in the United States but in a personal capacity) found that current empirical data is broadly in line with the 1972 projections.[50][51]" Unfortunately, our "world leaders" seem more interested in contesting who's going to get to be the captain of our Titanic earth as it sinks, rather than checking the radar screen and the rearview mirror. As Yogi Berra has told us, "You've got to be very careful if you don't know where you are going, because you might not get there."


Olympic Drive



Los Angeles

Across from the gorgeous dog park,
men dream against poodle-pissed trees — 
their pillows made from breath captured
in milk cartons. Only arid, temperate
climate offers respite. Let us suppose
they have tales, here in this city
where filmed stories turn a mint.
All around, one wide screen — the dark hills
due north pixel-pocked with villa lights.
Below, streets hemmed with haggard
brown men — jack-in-the-box bodies
ever unfolding. Who is pitching
this script? Title: “The Child of 1968.”
Voiceover: After the Integration Apocalypse,
one man must find his way in a land
where the sole survivors who look or speak
like him are those rendered disturbed
and indigent. Assume the Motion Picture
Association eager to levy a “Rated R,”
then remember that those who judge
violence never shared your definition
of savagery. A culling is all your eyes
decipher — your herd thinned. No urban
wildlife anywhere to be found,
yet hunger for a hunt remains.
Tagline: A hero must choose — 
between starving or bartering one’s own
skin. Plot: Amidst the solar famine, bio-
electric studies revealed melanin’s subtle
charge — the brown population gone
mad from being sapped like CopperTops.
Imagine The Matrix without the extra-
terrestrial machines. Imagine that among us
there have lived men churning statistics,
devising a human harvest, a brutal method
to subsist off fellow men and leave their bones
for the gnawing of next century’s mutts.


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