Questions and Answers

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Published : December 28th, 2015
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( 14 votes, 3.1/5 ) , 2 commentaries
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T he really big item in last night’s 60-Minutes newsbreak was that the latest Star Wars movie passed the billion dollar profit gate a week after release. That says just about everything you need to know about our floundering society, including the state of the legacy news media.

The cherry on top last week was Elon Musk’s SpaceX company’s feat landing the first spent stage of its Falcon 9 rocket to be (theoretically) recycled and thus hugely lowering the cost of firing things into space. The media spooged all over itself on that one, since behind this feat stands Mr. Musk’s heroic quest to land humans on Mars. This culture has lost a lot in the past 40 years, but among the least recognized is the loss of its critical faculties. We’ve become a nation of six-year-olds.

News flash: we’re not going Mars. Notwithstanding the accolades for Ridley Scott’s neatly-rationalized fantasy, The Martian (based on Andy Weir’s novel), any human journey to the red planet would be a one-way trip. Anyway, all that begs the question: why are we so eager to journey to a dead planet with none of the elements necessary for human life when we can’t seem to manage human life on a planet superbly equipped to support us?

Answer: because we are lost in raptures of techno-narcissism. What do I mean by that? We’re convinced that all the unanticipated consequences of our brief techno-industrial orgy can be solved by… more and better technology! Notice that this narrative is being served up to a society now held hostage to the images on little screens, by skilled people who, more and more, act as though these screens have become the new dwelling place of reality. How psychotic is that?

All of this grandstanding about the glories of space goes on at the expense of paying attention to our troubles on this planet, including the existential question as to how badly we are fucking it up with burning the fossil fuels that power our techno-industrial activities. Personally, I don’t believe that any international accord will work to mitigate that quandary. But what will work, and what I fully expect, is a financial breakdown that will lead to a forced re-set of human endeavor at a lower scale of technological activity.

The additional question really is how much hardship will that transition entail and the answer is that there is plenty within our power to make that journey less harsh. But it would require dedication to clear goals and the hard work of altering all our current arrangements — and giving up these childish fantasy distractions about space and technology

Dreaming about rockets to Mars is easy compared to, say, transitioning our futureless Agri-Biz racket to other methods of agriculture that don’t destroy soils, water tables, ecosystems, and bodies. It’s easier than rearranging our lives on the landscape so we’re not hostage to motoring everywhere for everything. It’s easier than educating people to both think and develop real hands-on skills not dependent on complex machines and electric-powered devices.

But we’re not interested and that is why we’re going to be dragged kicking and screaming into a very different future, not riding rockets to the new mall on Mars. I’m not religious, but maybe there is something like Providence at work foisting all these space fantasies on us at the very end of the year, allowing us to get all this stupid shit out of the way so we can prepare for the banking and political tribulations to come in 2016. Speaking of which, next week I will publish my forecast for the twelve-month roller-coaster ahead. Happy New Year, one and all.

 

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James Howard Kunstler has worked as a reporter and feature writer for a number of newspapers, and finally as a staff writer for Rolling Stone Magazine. In 1975, he dropped out to write books on a full-time basis. His nonfiction book, "The Long Emergency," describes the changes that American society faces in the 21st century. Discerning an imminent future of protracted socioeconomic crisis, Kunstler foresees the progressive dilapidation of subdivisions and strip malls, the depopulation of the American Southwest, and, amid a world at war over oil, military invasions of the West Coast; when the convulsion subsides, Americans will live in smaller places and eat locally grown food.
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Well, this is nonsense from Kunstler. He's been predicting the demise of civilization and the depletion of oil for decades. This modern luddite ignores the technology - shale - that revolutionized oil production in this country. We are almost oil independent and in the face of stiff opposition from the Obama administration. Interestingly he use the very modern technology he decries to criticize technology!
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I saw the first Star Wars movie and thought it was a bit of a hoot. Haven't seen any of the others and quite frankly I can't see much fun in getting dressed up and going to see a movie at midnight. Folks..its a movie!
So they have more than a billion dollars profit.
Is that not supposed to be a good thing in America?
As for technology..I am writing on a piece now. Nothing wrong with that but I agree a lot of people seem to be overly caught up in it and are wasting a lot of dollars on gizmos.

Speaking of wasting a lot of money. Climate change believers came up with a proposal to spend $23,000,000,000,000 to stop the Earth's temperature rising more than 2 deg C. Why not zero?
The Egos of these 'well intentioned' but grossly misinformed fanatics knows no bounds.
Who is making the profits on those Techno Scams?
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Well, this is nonsense from Kunstler. He's been predicting the demise of civilization and the depletion of oil for decades. This modern luddite ignores the technology - shale - that revolutionized oil production in this country. We are almost oil inde  Read more
Jim C. - 1/5/2016 at 12:13 AM GMT
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