July 16, 2012
newyorker:

Cartoon of the Night. For more: http://nyr.kr/LlVKkH

newyorker:

Cartoon of the Night. For more: http://nyr.kr/LlVKkH

February 10, 2012
The Future

lolatconsumerism:

Cheap oil is the backbone of modern societies. It sparked the creation of the metropolis and access to a quality of life our ancestors could not conceive. The relations between the oil industry and the political realm spawned the mismanagement of the commodity, manifesting itself in deliberate planning to leave the present and future without an alternative to the product. We’ve achieved a level of (ever-increasing) demand requiring the near depletion of the world’s reserves to match the unreasonable and unsustainable expectations for energy and petrochemical products in Western society. Yet mainstream media and politics fail to convey the urgency of the tightening supply, and the immediate drastic measures that must be undertaken to slow a seriously devastating supply shock. Our ability to rely on oil is over. Peak oil has happened, yet the subject does not receive the attention it deserves because it’s easier to forget about problems of the future and focus on trivialities of the present. Emotional and consumeristic distractions keep us contemplating our individual realities in place of societal welfare.

The officially sanctioned mainstream knowledge base of Western societies has removed and demonized social morality to such an extent that our societies consistently reward capitalistic individualism over collective consciousness. The showcasing of entrepreneurs and corporations that publicly promote consumerism and privately sponsor it through the degradation of humans and the environment have brought about what is the irony of the human condition in the modern era. In an effort to secure the future for their children by amassing wealth and resources, the generations of industrialization have jeopardized the future of mankind.

The leaders of humanity have set on course it’s suicide, brought on by gross disregard for our host organism. The paradox of the present is an interesting one: slipping into the passiveness with which the future is approached because it’s easier than standing firmly against the mainstream laissez-faire approach behind the end of humanity.

Every society, every organic entity, experiences the cycle of birth, growth, maturation, decline, and death. Our collective arrogance through the advancement of technology leads us to think that because we can master nature, we have permission to exploit it. Conquering nature has served as a license to its destruction. We’ve forgotten that humans lived symbiotically in nature, as opposed to the alienated from it in the metropolis, for 99% of human existence, and that our survival remains directly tied to understanding, preserving, sustaining, and respecting our natural environment. Because of the way we’ve mismanaged finite resources and irresponsibly approached the necessary and immediate transition to sustainable energy sources, I’m doubtful that global geography as little as 100 years from now will resemble that of todays, and of the planet successfully harboring the projected ~9 billion of us. 

1:06pm
  
Filed under: oil consumerism capitalism earth 
February 8, 2012
lol@consumerism: An Introduction.

lolatconsumerism:

We have allowed it, we’ve welcomed it. Our laziness has always pushed us in the direction of the easier choice. Until reason kicks in and tells us that perhaps society won’t view us as highly if the lazy option is taken. Motivation through societal consciousness, it’s a real thing, but you’re lazy, because you’re distracted. Diverted. Misdirected towards the consumerism that drives the gluttony that is the lifeblood of industrialization, the recklessly managed capitalist-inspired globalization. Because you have to consume. It’s the culture, a culture based on petrochemicals, and overindulgence. Oil is in everything around you, from your medicine, to the plastic all around, it’s what drove the American dream, and propelled phenomenal technological innovation. But the tragedy is in the design. Capitalism, socialism, communism, are all created with the flaw of not accounting for finite resources; the fundamental principles and guidelines for the organization of our societies incorrectly assume an ever-growing and ever-plentiful access to energy. 

Human laziness gives birth to faith, and allows it to overtake reason. Faith is easy because it absolves us of critical thought. Faith cushions the believer with confidence that the worshipped is an agent of their best interests. Faith is a creation of the powerful to continue the belief in an ideal that clever people shouldn’t accept; its principle tool is emotion, and the elicitation of emotional responses to cloud reason-based judgement. Faith is dangerous, and detrimental to progress.

How have we let oil and its by-products define Westernization, without accounting for its depletion? Why do automakers continue to create combustion engines when alternative, zero-emission technologies have existed since 1842? (You shouldn’t have faith that I’m telling you the truth, verify my claims for yourself) Why are humans incapable of long-sighted action to thwart the externalities of the poor decisions made by our predecessors? Perhaps because it’s easier to forget about the problems of others and continue allowing ourselves to be distracted. Distraction trumps action. 

According to the official United Nations climate data, if we don’t adapt quickly enough and stay below a 2.0C rise in global average temperature, we cannot ensure the survival of the majority of the people on this planet. And we sure as hell are not adapting fast enough. You know it, but it’s a problem for the governments to solve, isn’t it. 

Revolution is overdue. Revolutions achieve. We’ve been coaxed into thinking that civil unrest is unpatriotic, yet if you believe that a nation should be a reflection of the citizenry, the citizenry must exert itself to the forefront of the political arena. The birth of the military industrial complex facilitated nations in the pursuit of the interests of an elite, to the detriment of the citizenry, at an unprecedented scale. Fortunately, when the  awareness finally spreads, anger and frustration will surely be packaged into the final deal that liberates the consumer from the shackles of “civilized society” to return the consumer to the original model: the citizen. 

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