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Coping - Oct 24
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage
Ready to learn everything you need to know about the economy in less than two hours? The Crash Course is a condensed online version of Chris Martenson's "End of Money" seminar. The first chapters of the Crash Course are already available; additional chapters will be added as quickly as time allows. Watch the Blog home page to find out when new chapters are posted. The Crash Course seeks to provide you with a baseline understanding of the economy so that you can better appreciate the risks that we all face. The Intro below is separated from the rest of the sections because you'll only need to see it once...it tells you about how The Crash Course came to be. You will learn about: * Intro (on this page, above) It is a rather left-brain approach (hyper-rational) that would appeal more to readers of The Oil Drum, than to the followers of Sharon Astyk. The last chapter is based on a variation on Pascal's Wager: "even though the existence of God cannot be determined through reason, a person should "wager" as though God exists, because so living has potentially everything to gain, and certainly nothing to lose." In Chris's view, even though we cannot foretell the future, certain courses of action have much better outcomes than others. UPDATE (Oct 24) - some comments EB contributor Christine Robins writes: Editor BA: Christine Robins replies: But he makes three general points that are extremely important and should be considered by every EB reader: 1. The analogy with insurance: It's very important to prepare for low-probability events that would have highly negative effects. I think this is our strongest argument to the mainstream population. 2. Once you've decided to take action, you can become overwhelmed with all the things you could do to prepare. Focus first on what's easiest and will protect you in case of the worst developments (a "crash"). Whether you agree with Martenson about putting a substantial portion of your financial assets into cash and gold is a another question. 3. Community is key. No one family can do everything that's needed, but a community can provide essential emotional support and practical help. For example, I occasionally need a truck for hauling supplies to our urban homestead. But I don't need to buy one, because I have two neighbors who will loan me their vehicles, and probably assist with the physical effort needed as well!
The Financial Permaculture event will be blogged live by bloggers from Gaia University. What is it all about? At its simplest the idea is to withdraw time, money, and attention from Wall Street and DC and to invest locally among family and friends in start-ups that do business the old fashioned way - without fraud, graft, lobbying, malfeasance, fuzzy math accounting, or even a think tank. The event teaches people in rural communities how to start homely green businesses in niches like Ethanol, Incubation, Farm and Food, or Building. You can learn more here. (21 October 2008) Show notes: http://kmo.livejournal.com/377663.html
All the things we learned are going to seem pretty obvious, but remember that it's very hard to think clearly when your life has collapsed. These are what they call the old verities, the truths of life before the middle class was (briefly) in session: Warmth Above all, you need to have a dry, warm place to sleep. We had only an unheated boat, and that was not enough. We woke up to the thump of sea ice banging against the hull and realized that the old world was still very much in session. When we finally fled to stay with family, we stayed in our blankets up against their gas fireplace for weeks. You won't even want food much after a while. You'll want heat itself, not the chemical middleman. You are going to realize that cold is the most frightening thing in the world. In older English dialects, "to starve" meant "to freeze." You will see why. ... But you lose more than that. You change completely, more than you realize, to the point that even if you get a break you can't grab it. After months of applying for teaching jobs without even getting answers, the perfect job opened up for me at a local college. It was half creative writing, half teaching literature and composition -- all my specialties. But when the interview started I realized I was no longer someone who could talk the quiet, polite, oblique version of self-promotion demanded by academic hiring committees. I was too deeply, permanently spooked by our condition. I was just plain wrong, unhireably wrong in every way. No hot water on the boat, and I needed to shave the graying wisps of hair on my big bald head, so I'd shaved in the McDonald's men's room on the way to the interview, with a cheap Bic shaver. You can guess the results: I looked like a bobcat had tried to roost on my scalp and been evicted after a violent struggle. ... If you have an out -- a relative or friend who can lend you money to find a place to live -- take it now. And as soon as you get an offer -- some old friend has a ski cabin nobody's using, or a small unit behind their house -- take it, as long as it's heated. The old world is very much alive, and has it in for you. Do anything to keep it from killing you. The only reason I haven't endorsed crime here is that from what I saw, paupers are not in a good position to try it. Like so much else, crime is for the big people. From my experience, the key to staying off the street is to maintain connections with family and friends, and to be willing to do whatever work turns up. -BA
That often manifests itself as a desire to secure basic emergency resources — what survival guru Jim Wesley Rawles describes as “beans, bullets and Band-Aids.” ... Rawles, a self-described Christian conservative, said most of his readers had similar backgrounds when he started his blog in 2005. But he said that as the financial crisis has unfolded — particularly when oil prices began to soar — he started hearing from a much broader segment of the population. “Now it’s the entire political spectrum — far right, far left and everything in between,” said Rawles. “I’m getting over 200 e-mails from readers a day. Now it is quite apparent how many more liberals are writing. Same concerns, different outlook. Greens, for instance, put less emphasis on self-defense and guns.” |
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