The cure for a failing empire
If you were a druid from 180 AD and had Merlin's insight, what could you tell the emperor Marcus Aurelius about the coming collapse of the Roman Empire, and how to avoid it? That is the question raised and answered by Ugo Bardi, a professor of chemistry at the University of Firenze (Florence, Italy). Prof. Bardi is also an active writer on the problem of "Peak Oil" and its consequences for our civilization. His essay on Peak Civilization, delivered first as a talk to the Association for the Study of Peak Oil, was reprinted by the Financial Sense blog (here: http://www.financialsense.com/contrib... ). It runs 24 pages and bears a complete reading.
http://www.financialsense.com/contrib...
http://www.financialsense.com/contrib...
Bottom line is that improved communication and better transmission of information are essential for holding an empire of that size together.
As I have said before, I think that political models may be overturned by new technology, even as fracking has overturned the concept of the amount of petroleum products that are left.
Jan
Jan
What is wrong with this picture?
You are correct in that you can make yourself a target. (I once tried to convince a Mormon friend that Grateful Dead t-shirts should be part of the survival cache that he kept. Otherwise Mormon == target.) But, by planning ahead you can see that this does not happen.
It is important to realize that perimeter control is a good way to keep your house from being burglarized AND a good precaution to take in case of emergency situations. Similarly, having food on hand lets you get in a mood for cooking and not have to go to the store at 10PM. Good curtains and shutters help with temperature control. Nothin' for you here, move on along now.
Jan
300lb of GSDs does not hurt either. One of them is curled up on my feet as I type this. Such a warm puppy.
'we're from the governmement.
we are here to help you, might we inspect the premises." Excuse me.
"You need to let us inspect the premises.":
Your emails have inspired me to increase the priority for 'gates across my main driveway', however. I used to have some gates there [insert long story] but now do not. I will see if I can rectify that again, since having them really does help in perimeter security.
Jan
Jan
Jan
That is all that that is: noise. New technologies are deeply endemic in our culture today. It may be centuries before they all gel and stultify into some kind of socio-political stasis. I mean, that would have to include the miners in the asteroid belt, and I do not see that happening soon.
Ten years from now, if they lock down the Internet, it might be equivalent to currently 'stopping the mail' and assuming you have therefore cut off communication.
Jan
I'm with you all the way. Those of us who have built and maintain those libraries of truth have only to keep them hidden and dispense then in what ever ways will do the most good.
Viva la countere revolution.
... In fact, it may be that becoming totally interconnected is the new danger on the event horizon: one planet, one mind...
Jan, typing in the Gulch
Nothing was blocked. Nothing.
I'm with you all the way. Those of us who have built and maintain those libraries of truth have only to keep them hidden and dispense then in what ever ways will do the most good.
Viva la counter revolution.
Quantum Physics suggests that if the outcome of some past action or even your actions in the present, is unknown...it can be changed. As soon as the outcome IS known...it's history and cannot be changed.
EXP's were done in some universities where some students studied before an exam and others only studied after...both groups were not told the outcome. After the second group studied after the results were tallied and the group that studied after got the highest marks as a whole.
I think it's too late to study after because we've seen the outcome of past falls.
What we might try is that which has never been tried then study after the fact to see if we changed the past...which of course was once out present.
Jan, brain hurts now
Jan
Jan
Jan
Then I would run and hide to avoid crucifixion.
I agree with your premise, of course. In fact, I believe that this is the fatal flaw on the theory presented. We can create not only new wealth, but new forms of wealth creation if we are free to do so.
It is too easy to read the headlines and accept them as social reality. I recommend that you visit the Ayn Rand Institute's Essay Contest pages. They have been running these for 20 year or more. Many of those who enter come from Catholic schools. Think about that.
The undercurrent of change is only not yet perceived.
We are waging a philosophical war. If we had another 'new world' open to us, it would be possible to shed the accumulated parasites and power groups, and start over. We can improve on the Constitution, because we now have 200 years of watching what parts of it do not work.
We do not have the option of just taking flight and starting anew, so we have to deal with the fact that much of our population is so removed from reality that they do not see the cause-and-effect relationship between freedom and progress. But this may not matter. If we have sufficient technological momentum, we may be able to make non-production meaningless. We may, simply speaking, be able to out-produce the ballast of society.
Jan
12th Amendment basically ensconces political parties by gutting the effects of a Presidential Impeachment and Conviction.
14th has been perverted to imply that non-citizens should enjoy the same rights as citizens.
15th has been used to bludgeon Southern States into getting their voting precincts overseen by a Federal elections board.
16th institutes the personal income tax. As soon as they did this they enabled a whole host of side-effects including the incentive for inflation, graduated tax rates to disincentivize producers and enable moochers, political persecution of dissenting opinions, government confiscation of money without due process, etc.
17th neuters the States as a check on a rampaging Federal Government. The Senate was always supposed to represent the States - not the People. As a result, States have nearly lost their sovereignty and Nullification ability.
Then there is the Commerce Clause, the Necessary and Proper Clause, the General Welfare Clause and many others which have been perverted to further the growth of government.
If I had a re-write coupon for the Constitution, I would add things such as a 'definitions' page: man = sentient being (irrespective of race, religion, species, gender); tax = money taken by force for use by any level of government (including fees, permits, tariffs, etc); war = any encounter to which the US sends men or equipment for other than health related purposes.
I would also add that all government departments must use good accounting practices, those budgets are on public record annually; no bill may be modified in any respect after it is voted on; any public vote for an allocation of money for a particular purpose must be used for that purpose, even if it is not specifically so stated in the individual bill; all judgements are subject to appeal, even if the individual regulations do not include an appeal process.
Jan
Lust for power and ill-gotten gains has Roman kinda put the USA on its death bed.
Romans hated druid priests for stirirng up Gauls, Brit tribes and so forth.
I believe that is what Merlin was, though he lived after the fall of Rome or so his legend goes.
- impaled: stakes were commonly driven through either the hands or wrists (and sometimes both) but also the feet simultaneously (the feet being placed on top of each other). The stakes were of such size that they forced the bones in the feet and wrists apart, causing tremendous pain.
- sensory-deprived: the large nails were usually driven through the nerve centers in the wrists, severing or crushing their connections to the fingers.
- dehydrated/starved
- strangled - the arms were suspended at an angle that inhibits breathing. In order to struggle for breath, the subject would be forced to push up on the impaled feet.
- sleep-deprived: in addition to the pain from the constant agony of impalement and strangulation, there was no way to relax or rest as every movement caused agony
A subject of crucifixion was in constant, unbearable torture - sometimes for days. Many died from inflammation in the lungs and subsequent asphyxiation. Others died from shock. Not a pleasant way to go.
I've also read that victims were provided a little slack so they were forced to pull with their impaled hands/wrists and push up with their impaled feet in order to breathe.
Sometimes victims were impaled through the ankles on both sides of the support beam or post. I kinda felt a shudder go through me when I learned that.
Hercules may have started out as some mighty warrior mortal of the dim past that fireside poet storytellers turned into a demigod and made further exaggerations. .
"So, we need something more graphical, easier to understand, especially if we have to show these things to politicians."
Now back to the article. LOL....
Edit: Oh! There is this a little further......
"There remains a problem with politicians. Their attention span is more of the order of thirty seconds or less. But that is another problem." Just too funny.
But I'm a Visual kind of guy and pictures can often have a LOT higher data-density than written words.
I'm reminded of the story about Helen Keller, when asked which 'sense' she'd most like to have if she could have only one restored, and she answered 'hearing.'
While 'hearing' has a LOT of good points, the communications bandwidth of it pales in front of 'vision.' But having experienced neither, her answer remains 'her answer.'
(1)"... certainly several tens of thousands of individuals, and sometimes apparently a hundred thousand plus-strong. The basic political economy of the Empire – powered by unmechanised agricultural production in a world of low overall population densities – meant that there was always a demand for labour, and..." http://www.rsc.ox.ac.uk/events/refuge...
(2) "Over a century later, the Roman emperor Valens struck a deal with the Goths, allowing some of them to settle in the Roman provinces of Moesia and Thrace (modern Hungary and Bulgaria) in exchange for the provision of soldiers to the much depleted Roman army. The Goths were not treated well by Valens’ officials and in 378 they revolted. Valens undertook a campaign against them which ended in a major defeat in the Battle of Adrianople on 9 August, 378. Nearly 20,000 Roman soldiers were killed and Valens himself died in the battle."
-- https://betweenromeandpersia.wordpres... (Not that this is a second-hand interpretation, not an original source. The salient point is one of semantics. You claim that they wanted welfare. This writer claims that they suffered abuse. That is why I ask you for better sources.)
(3) Your assertion at best falls within the much larger phenomenon of the "Volkswanderung" http://www.ancient.eu/Migration_Age/
:)
I have always thought that the ability to place into their proper context, when "filling in" the endless "blanks-of-knowledge" in the crossword puzzle of life, to be the hallmark of both intelligence and wisdom.
The failure to properly do so precipitates a perspective that, by endless variability, produces a mental reality that invariably is proven to be "out-of-context."
As a personal example of this, I have concluded that had I been alive in 1933, with the knowledge and values I possessed just a few years ago, I would have concluded, in response to FDR's "gold raid" of 1933, that it (the country) would be quickly(??) finished!
Another example is the very idea of "peak oil" itself. While is it certain that there is a finite amount of hydrocarbons to be found in the earth's crust, the proper context to understand such a postulate, as a practical matter, is determined by Science, Economics, and Politics.
Knowledge is, of course, always primary, but all knowledge is contextual. Reason is, after all, Man's only absolute.
Obviously, the country was not finished at all. Is that what you mean. FDR's gold raid, as you call it, affected only the banks. Most private individuals were not affected. Anyone could hold up to three ounces of gold. Numismatists were limited only in the number of $3 gold coins they could hold: one from each date and Mint. Otherwise, no restrictions applied. (See "Gold Was Never Illegal" here: http://www.objectivistliving.com/foru... )
Look at the continual devaluation of the US currency since some of those early events... and current complaints of how slow 'the wheel turns for many citizens today...' !
It is easy to blame the government. I will not stop you from that. However, I do point out that early in The Wealth of Nations Adam Smith writes that seldom does any group of tradesmen meet for dinner without discussing how to restrict commerce for their own benefit.
Finally, maybe we are different in the oil patch, but when we meet we don't talk about how to tilt the playing field. We talk about getting the government out of the way, so we can fight fairly and compete in the free marketplace.
Either that, or the world is.
"The same kind of reasoning holds for other "causes" that have been singled out for the fall of Rome. Think, for instance, of climatic change. Also here, there is evidence that the fall of the Roman Empire was accompanied by droughts. That may surely have been a problem for the Romans. But, again, we might fall in the same mistake of a future historian who might attribute the fall of the American Empire - say - to hurricane Katrina. (I have nothing special against the American Empire, it is just that it is the current empire)
"The point that Tainter makes, quite correctly, in his book is that it is hard to see the fall of such a complex thing as an empire as due to a single cause. A complex entity should fall in a complex manner, and I think it is correct. In Tainter's view, societies always face crisis and challenges of various kinds. The answer to these crisis and challenges is to build up structures - say, bureaucratic or military - in response. Each time a crisis is faced and solved, society finds itself with an extra layer of complexity. Now, Tainter says, as complexity increases, the benefit of this extra complexity starts going down - he calls it "the marginal benefit of complexity". That is because complexity has a cost - it costs energy to maintain complex systems. As you keep increasing complexity, this benefit become negative. The cost of complexity overtakes its benefit. At some moment, the burden of these complex structures is so great that the whole society crashes down - it is collapse."
In addition, there is the psychological effects of socialism in terms of reducing the amount of work that people want to do (since so much of what is done gets squandered by the government).
I am about ready to shrug myself. I am tired of it all.
Fortunately, we are both younger than Rome and higher tech. We still have some time.
Jan
As to the subject at hand. Having got off the grid permanently and as the proud owner of a new solar panel array thanks to the latest technology it's easy for me to take two co equal viewpoints. Eventually oil will run out. In practical terms it's a non-newable resource. Which is where my non-hysterical view of nuclear produced electricity comes into play. Assuming you don't build o fault lines. Electrical transmission of energy is certainly a more efficient way to go regardless of the basic source.
Second among other products made from oil the use of diesel at present in heavy cargo transportation of any kind is a better use than gas guzzling with it's built in ethanol caused problems.
So add a third..want food prices to drop. Ban ethanol. Corn is needed for turkeys and other ham producers and oh yes....people food and fuel taxes.
Jan
cheers
MichaelA
Also, in 2006, I had an undergraduate class in macroeconomics. Also in the class was another patroller from campus safety. She later went federal. We were given a list of topics for term papers and she chose "Federal Energy Policy." Her paper was about the Federal Energy Policy of the Civil War which raised the taxes on alcohol, killed alcohol lamps, and brought in kerosene lamps. How a nation of Jeffersonian yeoman farmers producing their own fuel would have evolved is an interesting question. The federal roads projects enabled the automobile which was powered by petroleum. I think of the ending of Roger Rabbit: ... a city of freeways and fast food drive throughs? Only a toon would think of that...
Irkutsk said when the road and train service does arrive his old home town would be connected to the world for the first time. That breeds trade and trade makes jobs.
On the other hand, there is a theory that petroleum is constantly produced as a geophysical phenomenon. See http://www.livescience.com/9404-myste...
and see also
http://www.wnd.com/2008/02/45838/
But petroleum is just one factor. Culture is more important than "stuff." We adapt too easily, and we Americans too easily forget the past. Arab/Islamic terrorism must be pegged to the 1972 Munich Olympics. This is not today's news or yesterday's headlines. It is a significant trend, that, of necessity cannot continue, any more than the Mongol Golden Hoard could conquer Eurasia to the Atlantic Ocean. Even so, in the process, much was destroyed.
And we argue about the death penalty!
If I were Merlin giving advice to Marcus Aurelius, I would be telling him that Rome was doomed to fall without a wholesale ideological change. I would tell him it wouldn't happen in a day or a year, but it would culminate in a massive societal breakdown.
I'm not at all sure who will win, but I'm not optimistic. Both the US and Europe have become police states that the average person isn't willing to defend.