Sunday, June 30, 2019

Topic: Geoengineering

first posted April 2017; updated June 2019


A Disappointing New Problem With Geo-Engineering. Robinson Meyer, The Atlantic. Aug. 8, 2018.
Dimming the sky won’t save the world’s harvests. 

Geoengineering is no closer to working. Tim Radford, Climate News Network. Oct 30, 2018.
Scientists have established a strategic error in one version of the climate change debate: they still say geoengineering is no guarantee of a cooler world. 
There is no practical technology available to cool the Earth, they say – except the obvious one of ceasing to stoke the fires with fossil fuels. 
One new study looks at all the tested and yet-to-be-explored mechanisms for either lowering global temperatures by reducing sunlight, or by harnessing new and old ways to capture the extra carbon dioxide released by two centuries of industrial growth. 
And, the authors report, the sure way to reduce the dangers of global warming and keep the planetary temperature increase to 2°C or lower by 2100, is to switch to wind and solar energy sources and drastically cut fossil fuel emissions. 
A second, separate study looks closely at an often-proposed form of geoengineering – the injection of sulphate aerosols into the stratosphere to intercept sunlight and shade the planet – and delivers a cautious verdict.

“None of the proposed technologies can realistically be implemented on a global scale in the next few decades”

For Geoengineers, a Scientific Existential Crisis. Dave Levitan, UnDark. Jan. 16, 2019.
Technofixes for the climate crisis are no one’s first choice. What is it like to study something you wish would disappear?

A Best-Case Scenario for Putting Carbon Back Underground. Holly Jean Buck. Science for the People. Special Issue, Summer 2018.
If we buy into thinking of carbon removal technologies as substitutes for reducing carbon output, then industrial interests have already won: they have set the narrative and the framing, where carbon capture exists so that they can continue to emit. But we should demand more from these technologies. Industrial carbon capture technologies could instead be used as an extension of decarbonization—mitigation to get us to zero, and carbon removal going a step further to take emissions negative and address some of the climate impacts already being felt. It won’t be easy. But climate science suggests it’s a challenge the Left must take up. 
Climate change has already warmed the planet over 1°C relative to pre-industrial levels. Paradoxically, cleaning up the air pollution that’s currently masking some of the global warming in the pipeline would raise temperatures another 0.5 – 1.1 degrees.1 This means that if we waved a magic wand and suddenly (1) stopped using fossil fuels, and (2) cleaned up air pollution, we would already be breaching 1.5°C, the amount of warming that most climate advocates have argued for. The carbon budget is not an exact science, but it seems we are hovering at the point where 1.5°C of warming is locked in by what has already been emitted. Put differently, the most recent scientific evidence suggests we have zero to five years before every additional ton of carbon dioxide emitted would need to be compensated by a ton of negative emissions to stay below 1.5°C.2 
In fact, the scenarios used in the fifth Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report rely on massive amounts of negative emissions to curb warming to 1.5°C, primarily via a method known as bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS). This led a team of modelers to try and see what it would take to achieve 1.5° without BECCS. Even a scenario where renewables, electrification, and energy efficiency were aggressively pursued—as well as replacing 80 percent of meat and eggs with cultivated meat, flying less, and eliminating tumble dryers—could not eliminate the need for carbon removal. This scenario still required about 400 billion tons (Gt) of carbon dioxide removed via reforestation


Can we build power plants that actually take carbon dioxide out of the air? Brad Plumer, vox. Mar. 11, 2015.


Why has carbon capture and storage not taken off yet? Michael McDonald, via naked capitalism. Nov 4, 2015.

To meet the Paris climate goals, do we need to engineer the climate? Simon Nicholson and Michael Thompson, The Conversation. Feb 23, 2016.



It's time to start talking about "negative" carbon dioxide emissions. David Roberts, vox. Aug. 18, 2017.
We have to bury gigatons of carbon to slow climate change. We’re not even close to ready.


A geophysiologist's thoughts on geoengineering. James Lovelock, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. Nov. 13, 2008.

Abstract

The Earth is now recognized as a self-regulating system that includes a reactive biosphere; the system maintains a long-term steady-state climate and surface chemical composition favourable for life. We are perturbing the steady state by changing the land surface from mainly forests to farm land and by adding greenhouse gases and aerosol pollutants to the air. We appear to have exceeded the natural capacity to counter our perturbation and consequently the system is changing to a new and as yet unknown but probably adverse state. I suggest here that we regard the Earth as a physiological system and consider amelioration techniques, geoengineering, as comparable to nineteenth century medicine.
... 
Whatever we do is likely to lead to death on a scale that makes all previous wars, famines and disasters small. To continue business as usual will probably kill most of us during the century. Is there any reason to believe that fully implementing Bali, with sustainable development and the full use of renewable energy, would kill less? We have to consider seriously that, as with nineteenth century medicine, the best option is often kind words and pain killers but otherwise do nothing and let Nature take its course. 
... 
Had we heeded Malthus’s warning and kept the human population to less than one billion, we would not now be facing a torrid future. Whether or not we go for Bali or use geoengineering, the planet is likely, massively and cruelly, to cull us, in the same merciless way that we have eliminated so many species by changing their environment into one where survival is difficult.





Human intervention with the climate system has long been viewed as an ill-advised and risky step to slow global warming. But with carbon emissions soaring, initiatives to study and develop geoengineering technologies are gaining traction as a potential last resort.

Once seen as spooky sci-fi, geoengineering to halt runaway climate change is now being looked at with growing urgency. A spate of dire scientific warnings that the world community can no longer delay major cuts in carbon emissions, coupled with a recent surge in atmospheric concentrations of CO2, has left a growing number of scientists saying that it’s time to give the controversial technologies a serious look.

“Time is no longer on our side,” one geoengineering advocate, former British government chief scientist David King, told a conference last fall. “What we do over the next 10 years will determine the future of humanity for the next 10,000 years.”

King helped secure the Paris Climate Agreement in 2015, but he no longer believes cutting planet-warming emissions is enough to stave off disaster. He is in the process of establishing a Center for Climate Repair at Cambridge University. It would be the world’s first major research center dedicated to a task that, he says, “is going to be necessary.”

Technologies earmarked for the Cambridge center’s attention include a range of efforts to restrict solar radiation from reaching the lower atmosphere, including spraying aerosols of sulphate particles into the stratosphere, and refreezing rapidly warming parts of the polar regions by deploying tall ships to pump salt particles from the ocean into polar clouds to make them brighter.

U.S. scientists are on the case, too. The National Academies last October launched a study into sunlight reflectiontechnologies, including their feasibility, impacts and risks, and governance requirements. Marcia McNutt, president of the National Academy of Sciences, said: “We are running out of time to mitigate catastrophic climate change. Some of these interventions … may need to be considered in future.”

The study’s prospective authors held their first meeting in Washington, D.C., at the end of April. Speakers included David Keith, a Harvard University physicist who has developed his own patented technology for using chemistry to remove CO2 directly from the atmosphere, and Kelly Wanser of the Marine Cloud Brightening Project, which is studying the efficacy of seeding clouds with sea salt and other materials to reflect more sunlight back into space. The project is preparing for future field trials.

China too has an active government-funded research program. It insists it has no current plans for deployment, but is looking, among other things, at how solar shading might slow the rapid melting of Himalayan glaciers.

Geoengineering the climate to halt global warming has been discussed almost as long as the threat of warming itself. American researchers back in the 1960s suggested floating billions of white objects such as golf balls on the oceans to reflect sunlight. In 1977, Cesare Marchetti of the Austria-based International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis discussed ways of catching all of Europe’s CO2 emissions and injecting them into sinking Atlantic Ocean currents.

In 1982, Soviet scientist Mikhail Budyko proposed filling the stratosphere with sulphate particles to reflect sunlight back into space. The first experiments to test the idea of fertilizing the oceans with iron to stimulate the growth of CO2-absorbing algae were carried out by British researchers in 1995. Two years later, Edward Teller, inventor of the hydrogen bomb, proposed putting giant mirrors into space.

Still, many climate scientists until recently regarded such proposals as fringe, if not heretical, arguing that they undermine the case for urgent reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. A group of scientists writing in Nature as recently as April last year, called solar geoengineering “outlandish and unsettling … redolent of science fiction.”
But the mood is shifting. There is broad, international scientific agreement that the window of opportunity to avoid breaching the Paris climate target of staying “well below” 2 degrees C (3.6 degrees F), is narrowing sharply. A pause in the rise in CO2 emissions that brought hope in 2015 and 2016 has ended; the increase has resumed at a time when we should be making progress toward a goal of halving emissions by 2030, says Johan Rockstrom, science director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impacts Research. CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere — the planetary thermostat — are now at 415 parts per million (ppm) and rising by almost 3 ppm each year, reaching levels that have not been seen in 3 million years.“We have two years left to bend the curve” downward, says Rockstrom.

Some experts contend we may be approaching a moment when nothing other than geoengineering can meet the international community’s promise — made when signing the U.N. Climate Change Convention at the Earth Summit in 1992 — to prevent “dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system.” Myles Allen of Oxford University’s Environmental Change Institute says: “Every year we are not even trying to reduce emissions is another 40 billion tons of CO2 dumped into the atmosphere that we are blithely committing future generations to scrub out again.

Possible geoengineering schemes and schedules are now being discussed. Take this plan published last fall by Gernot Wagner, executive director of Harvard University’s Solar Geoengineering Research Program:

In 15 years’ time, as the impacts of warming worsen, planes loaded with sulphate particles start taking off from airfields around the world. They fly to 65,000 feet, well above existing air lanes, and spray their loads into the stratosphere: 4,000 flights in the first year, 8,000 in the second, 12,000 in the third, and so on until, after another 15 years, fleets of purpose-built, high-altitude tankers are making 60,000 flights annually.

The thickening shroud of particles would fight climate change by mimicking the output of volcanic eruptions that deflect solar radiation streaming into the atmosphere. Famously, the eruption of sulphate particles from Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines in 1991 caused a global cooling of up to 0.6 degrees C for the following two years. The planned 15-year human-made “eruption” would shave 0.3 degrees C off warming, halving the likely increase during that time.

The sulphate spraying would, Wagner and a coauthor said, be “remarkably inexpensive,” at not much above $2 billion a year over the first 15 years of deployment. Much cheaper than actually cutting emissions. So mission accomplished? Not quite. In fact, arguably not at all.

For one thing, most of the sulphate particles, like those from Pinatubo, would not stay aloft for more than a couple of years. Planes would have to keep flying and spraying ever-larger quantities essentially forever, or the world would resume warming with redoubled force.

For another, while the sulphate shroud might keep down global temperatures, the suppression of solar radiation could well create massive changes in weather systems and rainfall patterns, which are mostly driven by solar energy. The Asian monsoon, on which 2 billion people depend for their food crops, might shut down. The accumulating carbon dioxide in the atmosphere would have many other effects, such as acidifying the oceans.

“The fact that researchers at one of the world’s top universities are costing the deployment of such a radical scheme shows how urgent the climate change problem has become,”says Peter Cox of the University of Exeter in England. It also underlines concerns about who would be in charge of such endeavors.

Steve Rayner of the Oxford Geoengineering Program at Oxford University says “the technology’s potential to promote conflict … is likely to be substantial.” A decade ago, he helped draw up the Oxford Principles, which call for “public participation on geoengineering decision-making” and its regulation “as a public good.” But when push comes to shove, how would that work? Which world leaders would we trust with our climate?

Critics say even researching such technologies creates a moral hazard, because by suggesting an easy fix for global warming, it encourages delay in ending our addiction to fossil fuels. The stratospheric sulphate plan “may well encourage weaker action on emissions reduction,” says Joanna Haigh, an atmospheric physicist at Imperial College London.

Geoengineering is defined by the Oxford Geoengineering Program as “the deliberate large-scale intervention in the Earth’s natural systems to counteract climate change.” There are two main types. One is shading the earth from solar radiation, of which the shroud of sulphates in the stratosphere is emerging as the quickest, most effective, and least costly. The other is to remove more CO2 or other greenhouse gases from the atmosphere than nature currently achieves — so-called negative emissions.

Right now the oceans absorb a lot of CO2. One way of helping them take more is likely to be on the Cambridge unit’s agenda. It involves seeding the oceans with iron to stimulate growth of marine algae. The resulting algal blooms would, the theory goes, soak up CO2 from the water and cause more to be absorbed from the atmosphere. Concerns range from the effects that such blooms of algae could have on the marine food web to uncertainty about whether such local absorption would actually increase the ocean’s total uptake of carbon.

A second, more measurable idea involves removing carbon from the atmosphere, either by the massive deployment of devices to extract CO2 from the ambient air — known as direct air capture — or by more natural methods. One of those would be to turn large areas of land over to carbon-absorbing crops, probably trees. The harvested biomass could then be used as fuel in power stations, and the emissions from burning them reabsorbed by new crops. The net emissions could be zero.

If biomass burning were combined with technology to capture and bury the carbon emissions from the power plants — delivering a technological combo known as Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS) — emissions could be negative. In theory, the more you burned, the more CO2 you would suck from the air.

The U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) enthusiastically adopted BECCS in its fifth assessment, published in 2014. It said most scenarios for keeping warming below 2 degrees C would require “the availability and widespread deployment of BECCS and afforestation in the second half of the century.”

It could happen. Biomass burning is increasingly popular in power stations. And carbon capture and storage (CCS) is a proven technology, though not yet adopted at scale. That could soon change, following the announcement this month that industrial emitters in the European ports of Rotterdam, Antwerp, and Ghent plan to join forces to pump 10 million tons of CO2 a year into adjacent offshore gas fields.

But critics say the problems with BECCS are manifold. The land requirement would be huge. And the forests created to provide the fuel would be monocultures of fast-growing tree species like eucalyptus and acacia. If the land were taken from farmers, then who would feed the world? And if it were taken from existing natural forest areas, the carbon benefits of BECCS would largely disappear, says Simon Lewis of University College London. That’s because plantation forests typically hold only 5 percent as much carbon as mature natural forests.

Maybe there is a simpler solution. Maybe the most promising answer lies in going back to nature — in restoring natural forests. A broad coalition of environmentalists — from those who embrace corporate environmentalism, such as The Nature Conservancy (TNC), to the British anti-capitalist columnist George Monbiot — have recently endorsed this “natural” climate solution.

Their touchstone is a 2017 paper by Bronson Griscom of TNC and 24 others, which concluded that a third of the measures required between now and 2030 to keep the world on track to stabilize climate could be achieved cost-effectively by boosting natural ecosystems. They could take an extra 11 billion tons more CO2 out of the air each year. This could be done mostly by reforestation, but also by better soil management, the protection of carbon-rich wetlands such as peatlands, and growing more trees on farmland.

Proponents see this not as a substitute for emissions reductions, but as a “biological bridge … to a zero-emissions economy.” The plan fits the Oxford definition of geoengineering, though they avoid using the term.

The scientific case for this route is compelling. Most of it could be achieved on existing damaged and degraded forests. The World Resources Institute estimates that globally there are 7.7 million square miles of forests degraded by logging or shifting cultivation that could be restored. That is an area twice the size of Canada.

Some planting, especially of nitrogen-fixing species in poor soils, could help speed up the restoration, says Robin Chazdon, an ecologist at the University of Connecticut and author of an influential book called Second Growth. But mostly, given the chance, forests will regrow naturally.

In fact, natural regrowth is usually better than planting, since “allowing nature to choose which species predominate during natural regeneration allows for local adaptation and higher functional diversity,” she says. A study published in March by 87 researchers, including Chazdon, concluded that “secondary forests recover remarkably fast” with 80 percent of their species typically back in 20 years and 100 percent in 50 years.

It looks like it could be a win-win, delivering a climate payoff on the scale of geoengineering without any of the downsides. Tim Lenton of Exeter University, a proponent of research into geoengineering, says it could be an ideal solution. “I am against introducing new forces such as sulphate aerosol injection in the stratosphere,” he says. “But I am in favor of emulating and enhancing natural feedback loops and cycles, such as regenerating degraded forests.”

It would, he says, strengthen the biosphere’s natural forces of self-regulation that British scientist James Lovelock has termed “Gaia.” Lenton has a new term for what is required. Not geoengineering, but “Gaia-engineering.”



Feature Reference Article: 200 & 1 essentials

200 and 1 Essentials to Navigate the Doomosphere Map... for the Novice (and the Obsessed!) The Apocalypsi Library at the End of the World. Doom For dummies. Gail Zawacki.



Surely you can't have failed to notice the bellicose headlines warning of various and sundry paths that lead inexorably to Apocalypse Soon? Perhaps you want to know more, but just don't have time to sort it all out? Maybe you can't decide what is worse - disappearing bees, bats and frogs; rising seas or lowered sperm counts... droughts, floods, hailstorms, tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes and tsunamis; exorbitant prices; or just ordinary pollution (and lots of it)?

Welcome and rejoice, doomer fans and neophytes too, you have found the most capacious and concise virtual map of converging catastrophes ever devised - a dynamically current compendium... because YOU can add to it!

Don't be mad about redundancies, or annoyed about omissions, or perplexed by non sequiturs. It's a BIG subject, and it is presented unfinished (because it will never be finished, until the grid goes down). Contribute, don't - whine. And do it soon, before the lights go out for good and this list is lost forever!


Hope
~ George Frederic Watts, 1886

Now that you've started to suspect that humanity is FUBAR (f*cked up beyond all repair) don't be intimidated! This, as a public service, is your official guide to the avalanche of resources, links, citations, quotes and insider terminology you'll need to for quick access in order to fully comprehend the epic dimensions of our imminent demented end.

At last, with a minimum of effort and no research on your part, you can impress your friends when you display your in-depth familiarity with immortal quotes, your dazzling facility with doomer intellectual history, cheesy movies, profoundly dreary books, and egomaniacal pontificaters... PLUS the scientific basis for Doom - once they too, finally, start to wake the hell up!

Coming to terms with the inevitability of planetary ecosystem collapse, and the inescapable verity that it has been caused by humanity's barbaric rampage through nature, can be a challenge. Accepting the human propensity for terminal overshoot is usually shunned as too dismal, but for those who seek truth, it is essential. This compilation explores the reasons our degenerate species is incapable of intelligent choices that might have spared us from compulsively unraveling the fabric of life on our home, Earth... as elucidated by the greatest thinkers (and plenty of the lesser), who expound on the topic.

And cheer up. It may be the beginning of the end, but of all times in human history, you have the privilege and dumb luck to be situated here as the converging catastrophes jostle for pre-eminence, where from your vantage of ringside seats at the finish line, most likely you will see which prevails. Unless there's a tie.



There are several categories that delineate our path to destruction - yes, that Apocalypsi in the title is plural... but oh, none of them include survivalists/gun lovers/truthers/haters.... Because. They are stupid. And none of them include state surveillance and fascism - because George Orwell and Aldous Huxley and Noam Chomsky and a bunch of guys from the Stalin reign covered that ages ago - nor do we include the threat (certainty?) of WWIII or a nuclear holocaust, because those potentials are merely the consequence of terminal overshoot. And we don't worry about AI either, because we are all going to be dead before robots get smart enough to self-replicate.

Ready??



1. The #1 indispensable symbol:



...it's an hourglass shape, because...time has run out - get it???



7 major scourges of Doom (and why their adherents squabble over the scraps rather than accomplish anything useful together whatsoever).


1. Peak Oil (rarely recognizes peak anything else, generally fixated on doomsteading)

2. Ecosystem Collapse (an ecological perspective about pollution, whole systems destruction)

3. Climate Change (yes, it's real, it's caused by humans, and it's an existential threat)

4. Overpopulation (no, the world doesn't need your offspring because you're "special")

5. Habitat Destruction (deforestation, mining, fracking, drilling, paving, etc)

6. Economic - (includes debt Ponzi schemes and inequality, social justice issues)

7. The death of the Oceans (from agricultural runoff, warming, overfishing and acidification)


Here's why none of the activists, scientists, and followers of these disparate but interconnected sources of potential doom can work together - Everyone who discovers that we are on an unstoppable trend towards global collapse becomes instantly enamored of two overpowering, egotistical (and often remunerative) convictions... first, they are sure they have defined the precise problem (which usually has to do with how they came about to notice) and second, they are sure they, and they alone, know the solution (ditto). Nobody will ever cooperate to fix the problems, because their ego won't let them. Plus ça change, as they say in France!!






Nomenclature and acronyms in the Doomer lexicography you'll need to know if you don't want to drown in alien, perplexing terminology

1. The Anthropocene - a new geological epoch following the Holocene, in which human activity now influences global systems... and another more alarming related concept, the Anthropozic, a major new era in which human activity dominates natural processes. Some say the Anthropocene began with the Industrial Revolution, the smart money puts it back to the extinction of the megafauna... or maybe thediscovery of fire.

2. TEOTWAWKI - The End of the World As We Know It... a bit passé, goes back to Y2K but still a good shorthand reference to what is going to happen when Ayn Rand acolytes have their heads explode

3. NTE, NTHE - Near Term Extinction; for extra pizzazz, Near Term Human Extinction

4. CliFi - a genre of fiction based on climate change, see an interview with Dan Bloom on the emerging canon, much more listed on the fiction page

4. Energy slaves - the amount of work performed for us by fossil fuels, converted to the human equivalent of effort - 22 billion, by one estimate

5. VHEMT - Voluntary Human Extinction Movement - "may we live long and die out" - so far no members have volunteered to go first

6. BAU - Business As Usual... generally used in the context of, we are screwed if we continue

7. MPP - Maximum Power Principle

8. Hospice - Where you are now, you just don't know it


Zdzisław Beksiński

9. Doomstead - The well-stocked hideaway where silly people think they can escape the zombie hordes

10. Positive/amplifying feedback - effects that dwarf the initial forcing of CO2, making climate change non-linear and rapid - such as the albedo effect...

11. Albedo effect - reflective ice melts, which leads to dark water that absorbs more radiation, that causes more warming, which results in more melting, etc etc.

12. Peak Oil - NO - Not when it runs out, but rather, the point where EROEI becomes unprofitable - soon, in other words...(but not soon enough to save us from catastrophic climate change)

13. EROEI - Energy Return on Energy Invested... how much it costs to extract energy compared to how much energy is obtained

14. HIPPO - Habitat loss, population, pollution, overshoot... adds up to a whole lotta trouble

15. Hubbert's Curve - graphs the inevitable decline of resources, originally for oil wells

16. Seneca Cliff - a graph showing that things go downhill much faster than they went up

"It would be some consolation for the feebleness of our selves and our works if all things should perish as slowly as they come into being; but as it is, increases are of sluggish growth, but the way to ruin is rapid." Lucius Anneaus Seneca, Letters to Lucilius, n. 91


17. The Tragedy of the Commons - scenario formulated by economist Garrett Hardin in which individual short-term interest depletes common resources. Call it a Law.

"Each man is locked into a system that compels him to increase his herd without limit -- in a world that is limited. Ruin is the destination toward which all men rush, each pursuing his own best interest in a society that believes in the freedom of the commons. Freedom in a commons brings ruin to all."


Banksy


18. Fermi Paradox - Q: Where are the Aliens? A: Just when they approached the technological ability to communicate or travel in space, they went extinct... just as we are about to. Article ~ Why Habitable Exoplanets are Bad News for Humanity's Future


19. Dystopia - an imaginary place or time that is horrible, often following collapse when the state has become fascist or totalitarian and the environment is ruined. Or maybe a real place and time.

20. Apocalyptic Anxiety [also known as PRE-traumatic stress syndrome]: "The destruction of human civilization would also terminate the historical process—the sense of human history stretching along from the distant past to an open future—through which we make sense out of our individual existences. I want to call the horror that announces such a possibility apocalyptic anxiety. Apocalyptic anxiety anticipates the collapse of all meaningfulness."~ Robert D. Stolorow, Ph.D.

21. Dunbar's Number - with more than 150 members of a tribe, people lose the ability to empathize so... they start killing each other, why not? For a most entertaining explanation read the Cracked.com article "What is the Monkeysphere?"

22. Jevon's Paradox - (aka the rebound effect) is the observation that increasing energy efficiency ultimately leads, not to conservation, but to more use.

23. Apocaloptimist - A person (or organization) that makes a powerful case that Armageddon is nigh, but posits unsubstantiated hope that human ingenuity will solve the problems in time. NOTE: despite being categorized as Doomers, virtually every single person in this Encyclopedia is an overt or covert apocaloptimist (with one or two exceptions) who are either selling snake oil, or they believe their own BS - but primarily, for the simple reason that true doomers are rarely read and NEVER published. So the distinctions are broad and suspect. (There are also other self-explanatory distinctions, such as Apocalopportunist and Apocaloptimystic.)

24. Hopium - arguably coined by Lonewolf back in 2000 on the Survival Acres forum, designating that deranged condition in which a person is deluded into thinking humanity will survive omnicide.

25. Greenwashing - When corporations collaborate with "green" activist groups to market their products as sustainable. Some greenwashing is wishful thinking... but usually it is contemptibly unscrupulous.

26. Faustian Bargain - as described by The Agonist:

"Humanity is doubling down on its Faustian climate bargain by pumping up fossil fuel particulate and nitrogen pollution... Humans have been pumping both greenhouse gases (mainly CO2) and aerosols (fine particles) into the atmosphere for more than a century. The CO2 accumulates steadily, staying in the climate system for millennia, with a continuously increasing warming effect. Aerosols have a cooling effect (by reducing solar heating of the ground) that depends on the rate that we pump aerosols into the air, because they fall out after about five days... Reduction of the net human-made climate forcing by aerosols has been described as a “Faustian bargain” because the aerosols constitute deleterious particulate air pollution. Reduction of the net climate forcing by half will continue only if we allow air pollution to build up to greater and greater amounts. More likely, humanity will demand and achieve a reduction of particulate air pollution, whereupon, because the CO2 from fossil fuel burning remains in the surface climate system for millennia, the “devil’s payment” will be extracted from humanity via increased global warming."


The Vision of Faust ~ Luis Ricardo Falero, 1878


27. Trifuckta - As in, the race to see which of the three predominant converging catastrophes will be the first trigger total collapse and doom - Energy (peak oil, coal and gas), Environment (pollution, overpopulation and climate), and Economy (over-extraction, income inequality and poverty, financial ponzi scheme, corruption). As stated by the Curator, aren't we lucky to have ringside seats at the finish line?

28. Methane, get used to it - a much more potent greenhouse gas than CO2... and there is lots of it locked up (or at least, it HAS BEEN locked up) in the permafrost and under the oceans in clathrates, see The Giant Methane Monster Lurking with the ludicrous suggestion at the end - The time for a carbon tax is now! [haha!]



Will we look back on this hole in Siberia as the beginning of the end?

29. WooWoo - Any type of spiritualism that enables the devout to think that there is an alternative to total, incipient annihilation... closely related to Hopium. Woofuckery is when an apocaloptimist makes a convincing case for doom, and then slips some WooWoo hopium in at the end, to make you feel better.






14 Distinguished Cassandras from the past, whose warnings we shouldn't have ignored - but did! Because people are selfish, greedy egomaniacs. (...altho we love them anyway, honest!)





1. When man interferes with the Tao

the sky becomes filthy,

the earth becomes depleted,

the equilibrium crumbles,

creatures become extinct.

~ Lao Tzu, Tao Te Ching, 500 BCE, appx


2. "When the last tree has been cut down, the last river has been polluted, and the last fish has been caught, only then do you realize that money can't buy everything." ~ Native American Proverb


3. Thomas Malthus ~


"The power of population is so superior to the power in the earth to produce subsistence for man, that premature death must in some shape or other visit the human race." - An Essay on The Principle of Population, First Edition 1798


4. Thomas Hobbes , English philosopher 1588-1679 and author of Leviathan. He famously said that in the absence of rule of a monarch, the original, natural condition of humanity was to live in perpetual warre - "the war of every man against every man." The lives of men were destined thus to be "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short." He also noted "...in the first place, I put forth a general inclination of all mankind a perpetual and restless desire of power after power, that ceaseth only in death." Although this might not quite be true, it is probably more accurate a portrayal than that of Rousseau (1712 - 1778) who posited that "nothing could be more gentle" than the "Noble Savage" whilst at peace in primitive circumstances (when he wasn't raiding the neighboring village, bludgeoning a rival and kidnapping his wife).


5. Fairfield Osborne, author of Our Plundered Planet, 1948

"The tide of the Earth's population is rising, the reservoir of the earth’s living resources is falling. Technologists may outdo themselves in the creation of artificial substitutes for natural subsistence, and new areas, such as those in tropical or subtropical regions, may be adapted to human use, but even such recourses or developments cannot be expected to offset the present terrific attack upon the natural life-giving elements of the earth. There is only one solution: Man must recognize the necessity of cooperating with nature. He must temper his demands and use and conserve the natural living resources of this earth in a manner that alone can provide for the continuation of his civilization. The final answer is to be found only through comprehension of the enduring processes of nature. The time for defiance is at an end."


6. Rachel Carson, author of Silent Spring, 1962

“Why should we tolerate a diet of weak poisons, a home in insipid surroundings, a circle of acquaintances who are not quite our enemies, the noise of motors with just enough relief to prevent insanity? Who would want to live in a world which is just not quite fatal?”


7. E.F. Shumacher, author of Small is Beautiful, 1973

“An attitude to life which seeks fulfilment in the single-minded pursuit of wealth - in short, materialism - does not fit into this world, because it contains within itself no limiting principle, while the environment in which it is placed is strictly limited.”


8. Wendell Berry, author of The Unsettling of America, 1974

“When despair for the world grows in me and I wake in the night at the least sound in fear of what my life and my children's lives may be, I go and lie down where the wood drake rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds. I come into the peace of wild things who do not tax their lives with forethought of grief.”


9. Aldo Leopold, author of A Fierce Green Fire -

I am glad I will not be young in a future without wilderness.” and “One of the penalties of an ecological education is that one lives alone in a world of wounds. Much of the damage inflicted on land is quite invisible to laymen. An ecologist must either harden his shell and make believe that the consequences of science are none of his business, or he must be the doctor who sees the marks of death in a community that believes itself well and does not want to be told otherwise.” ~ A Sand County Almanac


10. Edward Abbey, author of The Monkey Wrench Gang "Growth for the sake of growth is the ideology of the cancer cell."


11. Jacques Cousteau - once an avid sports fisherman, Jacques was horrified when he saw the degraded condition in the Mediterranean Sea after a long absence, and devoted the rest of his life to conservation "Water and air, the two essential fluids on which all life depends, have become global garbage cans."


12. Isaac Asimov - Professor of Biochemistry, author of many books of science fiction. From the transcription of a lecture in 1974, The Future of Humanity: "People are stupid… We wouldn't be in the mess we're in if that weren't so. Because believe me, we're in a mess. Now, it isn't very difficult to see that we're in a mess, or even to see years ago that we were in a mess.... There are always people who think that all we have to do, after all is abandoned, all this foolish technology that we've made ourselves slave to, and go back like our ancestors and live close to the soil with the good things of nature. That would be great if we could do it. If we could go back to the way it was before World War II, technologically, we could support all the people that lived on Earth before World War II. The catch is that in these last thirty years one billion and a half people have been added to the population of the Earth. And we have been feeding them largely because of all these things that we have done in these last thirty years, the good weather, the fertilizers, and the pesticides, and the irrigation, and the green revolution, and all the rest of it. If we abandon that, we also have to abandon a billion and a half people; and there are going to be very few volunteers for the job.... There is no need to decide whether the population will be lowered or not. It will, it will!

... The only thing mankind has to decide is whether to let it be done in the old inhumane method that nature has always used, or to invent a new humane method of our own. That is the only choice that faces us; whether to lower the population catastrophically by a raised death rate, or to lower it humanely by a lowered birth rate. And we all make the choice. And I have a suspicion that we won't make the right choice, which is the tragedy of humanity right now."



13. Carl Sagan, The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark, 1997 - "We have also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology. This is a prescription for disaster. We might get away with it for a while, but sooner or later this combustible mixture of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces."




1 Closest Corollary to our Situation (other than a petri dish):

St. Matthew Island reindeer! - And thank you for being sentient creatures that illustrate overpopulation so we don't have to always be compared to bacteria. For a complete but quick story of the scientific research, read this.


View full comic depiction




A Parable for Humanity? Cartoonist Stuart McMillen reflects on "the fragile basis of our prosperity":

Brought to paradise, the reindeer herd soared to an unsustainable number and then crashed. The irony is that the seemingly ‘perfect’ conditions of St Matthew Island (abundant food, no predators) were the very seeds of the reindeer’s demise... A non-scientific criticism of the comic is the ‘humans aren’t reindeer’ argument. I don’t think this argument debunks the comic. Yes, the human mind is capable of reason beyond any other creature on Earth. Yes, we have had a remarkable history of technological inventions. But these facts aren’t Get Out of Jail Free cards. Despite our creativity, despite our inventions, our success remains based on unsustainable habits and non-renewable resources. Humans aren’t reindeer for sure, but it’s dishonest for critics to ignore the fragile basis of our prosperity.


source



6 most poignant essays about extinction


1. Learning to Die in the Anthropocene (New York Times) ~ Roy Scranton

"The human psyche naturally rebels against the idea of its end. Likewise, civilizations have throughout history marched blindly toward disaster, because humans are wired to believe that tomorrow will be much like today — it is unnatural for us to think that this way of life, this present moment, this order of things is not stable and permanent. Across the world today, our actions testify to our belief that we can go on like this forever, burning oil, poisoning the seas, killing off other species, pumping carbon into the air, ignoring the ominous silence of our coal mine canaries in favor of the unending robotic tweets of our new digital imaginarium. Yet the reality of global climate change is going to keep intruding on our fantasies of perpetual growth, permanent innovation and endless energy, just as the reality of mortality shocks our casual faith in permanence."

"The biggest problem climate change poses isn’t how the Department of Defense should plan for resource wars, or how we should put up sea walls to protect Alphabet City, or when we should evacuate Hoboken. It won’t be addressed by buying a Prius, signing a treaty, or turning off the air-conditioning. The biggest problem we face is a philosophical one: understanding that this civilization is already dead. The sooner we confront this problem, and the sooner we realize there’s nothing we can do to save ourselves, the sooner we can get down to the hard work of adapting, with mortal humility, to our new reality."


2. Paul Kingsnorth ~ Confessions of a Recovering Environmentalist published in Orion Magazine - A bit too precious, perhaps, but still a jewel with rare purity.

"I look out across the moonlit Lake District ranges, and it’s as clear as the night air that what used to come in regular waves, pounding like the sea, comes now only in flashes, out of the corner of my eyes, like a lighthouse in a storm. Perhaps it’s the way the world has changed. There are more cars on the roads now, more satellites in the sky. The footpaths up the fells are like stone motorways, there are turbines on the moors, and the farmers are being edged out by south-country refugees like me, trying to escape but bringing with us the things we flee from."

(Also, part of a protracted exchange with Wen Stephenson about hope v. defeatism.)


3. Christy Rodgers, The Bellwethers, published November 2013 ~


"Sometimes I stand at my back door in the twilight, with the noise of the television a senile murmur in the background, and wait, and listen. I know I am listening for the faint sound of a distant crash, a kind of final sound reverberating through layers of time, to tell me that a vast and seemingly monolithic absurdity, an old empire of illusion, has collapsed under its own weight and is crumbling back into life. And I know I will never hear it, because that isn’t the way it works, but still, for a little while as the day is ending, I listen, and I wait."


4. The Irreconcilable Acceptance of Near Term Extinction ~ Daniel Drumright, published at Nature Bats Last, an essay which has engendered countless discussions on and off the web, about suicide as a legitimate response to extinction when collapse gets underway - everything from whether to discuss it at all... and how best to do it.



Benjamin the Donkey's limerick in response:

A year ago Daniel came;

Made our cares up till then appear tame:

NTE, well defined,

Blew everyone’s mind,

And since then we’ve not been the same.



5. At Love in a Time of Cataclysm, by JP Greenhouse - Okay, Doomers, Let's March



Hope in the Prison of Despair - Evelyn de Morgan



6. (blush) if you count mine, published July 2014 in OpEdNews - In a Fine Frenzy - the universal dance of delusion, and the paucity of hope

"There is a man who lives on the other side of my village (it is said) who one day, setting out for errands, inadvertently ran over his child as he backed out of the driveway. Ever since I heard this tragic tale, I have thought I can imagine the moment that, thunderstruck with horror and frozen in disbelief, he gazed upon that little mangled body. I think I know the ferocious dread that overcame him when first he realized that the car of which he was so proudly enamored - that quintessential symbol of success, the pinnacle of modern technology and shiny avatar of individual freedom - was the very same mighty instrument of folly that had literally crushed the one thing most important to him - his progeny, his future.

I suffer his tumultuous and inconsolable grief because that is how I greet every new day since abruptly I came to understand that the splendid, intricate, exquisitely entwined tapestry of life is unraveling."



From 2018/2019, a Newly Emerging Gaggle of *Celebrity Apocalypsists*™ - expect many more as the masses panic and seek soothing gurus!


1. David Wallace Wells infuriated the scientific community with his article in New York magazine, "The Uninhabitable Earth" and continues with further writings to annoy the optimists, as self-anointed bringer of environmental doom. To read him you would never know it was already a hot topic, for years, amongst the alarmists.

2. Jem Bendell self-published a paper in 2018 (Deep Adaptation) that had been rejected by a journal as too doomy, and he quickly became a darling of the newly-terrified awoken with mushrooming videos, articles, and interviews. He also offers seminars in exotic locations to help the people cope with never being able to have nice things again, never ever ever.

3. The Extinction Rebellion movement, while having some admirable ambitions, seems oblivious to the irony that when teenage spokesperson Greta says she wants her generation's hopes and dreams back, those hopes and dreams aren't possible to fulfill - because, unless the hopes and dreams include 6.6 billion fewer people, it's all based on burning fuel. Also, encouraging celebrities to fly to London to disrupt traffic accomplishes little other than opening ER to ridicule with accusations of hypocritical elitism.



43 (count 'em!) contemporary Doomsayers - their books and blogs and scariest quotes (lots more here)


1. E.O.Wilson, Professor Emeritus in Entomology for the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University, the Father of Sociobiology ~ 

"The one process now going on that will take millions of years to correct is the loss of genetic and species diversity by the destruction of natural habitats. This is the folly our descendants are least likely to forgive us."

2. Al Bartlett, Professor Emeritus in Physics and population control crusader, author of The Essential Exponential for the Future of our Planet ~ 


"Unfortunately, both smart growth and dumb growth destroy the environment. The only difference is that smart growth destroys the environment with good taste. It's like buying a ticket on the Titanic, if you're smart you go first class. But the outcome is the same... the boat still sinks."...from a 2009 interview where he explains why technology cannot save us.

3. Herman E. Daly (born 1938) is ecological economist and professor who was Senior Economist in the Environment Department of the World Bank. He was a co-founder and associate editor of the journal, Ecological Economics ~

 "There is something fundamentally wrong in treating the Earth as if it were a business in liquidation." and "...as the economy grows, it displaces, it encroaches upon the biosphere, and this is the fundamental cost of economic growth. It's what you give up when you expand. You give up what used to be there."

4. David Attenborough, British nature broadcaster best known for the BBC Life On Earth series ~ 

 "We are a plague on the earth...Either we limit our population growth or the natural world will do it for us."

5. Joseph Tainter, anthropologist and author of The Collapse of Complex Societies - "Complex societies collapse through the complexity that created them."

6. Ernst Mayr - a leading evolutionary biologist who wrote "Systematics and the Origin of Species". See a thoughtful examination here.

7. Jared Diamond, Collapse...and

8. Ronald Wright, A Short History of Progress  ~

Make it easy on yourself, just read:

9. Dave Pollard's brilliant review of the two writers ~

"While Diamond suggests the errors of excess and foolishness that led to previous collapses were unwitting, and well-intentioned, Wright describes human society-building as steeped in violence, genocide and savagery, and demonstrates that evolutionary success of human cultures has been proportional to their readiness and willingness to exterminate or subjugate ‘competitors’ (plants, animals, other human cultures and members of their own culture) with deliberate, zealous and ruthless barbarity. The consequence is that human evolution has self-selected for savagery and bred compassion out of the gene pool, and has consistently provided the most ruthless members of our society (psychopaths, megalomaniacs, war-mongers and power-crazies) the method, the motive and the opportunity to seize control and establish rigid and vicious hierarchies that entrench and reinforce extreme inequality, hold power by the threat of violence (sacrificing subordinates in wars and in prisons to keep others in line) and anchoring their authority by claims of divine right."




10. Paul Ehrlich, professor and author (with his wife Anne) of The Population Bomb, published 1968.

11. Club of Rome, international thinktank that commissioned the Limits to Growth report published in 1972, garnering instant condemnation and shocked disbelief. The computer models were meant to portray trends, not exact predictions for timing but still... pay particularly close attention to that black line below. Dennis and Donatella Meadows, Jørgen Randers, and William W. Behrens III. A 2004 update confirms the general gloomy prospects expounded upon in the original.




13. A 2012 Scientific American update on the Limits to Growth model - Apocalypse Soon - Has Civilization Passed the Environmental Point of No Return? - answers that rhetorical question in the first paragraph: "Remember how Wile E. Coyote, in his obsessive pursuit of the Road Runner, would fall off a cliff? The hapless predator ran straight out off the edge, stopped in midair as only an animated character could, looked beneath him in an eye-popping moment of truth, and plummeted straight down into a puff of dust. Splat!"

14. Fred Pearce, author of the terrifying book, With Speed and Violence. Paleoclimate beats the pants off models...but then he went over to the dark side and went all optimistic - see this smackdown of his puerile recanting.

15. Reg Morrison, Australian environmentalist and author of The Spirit in the Gene - Humanity's Proud Illusion and the Laws of Nature which deftly and persuasively makes the case for the evolutionarily determined human propensity for overshoot, read a free summary and online excerpts.

16. Tyrone Hayes, UC Berkeley professor of Integrative Biology who has taken a huge amount of industry criticism for presenting the terrifying facts about atrazine altering hormones, recounted in a New Yorker Magazine article.

17. Paul Hawken, environmentalist and entrepreneur ~ 

"The problem that confronts us is that every living system in the biosphere is in decline and the rate of decline is accelerating. There isn't one peer-reviewed scientific article that's been published in the last 20 years that contradicts that statement. Living systems are coral reefs. They're our climatic stability, forest cover, the oceans themselves, aquifers, water, the conditions of the soil, biodiversity. They go on and on as they get more specific. But the fact is, there isn't one living system that is stable or is improving. And those living systems provide the basis for all life."

18. Elizabeth Kolbert, author, "Field Notes From a Catastrophe" and "The Sixth Extinction - an Unnatural History", staff writer at The New Yorker...see her on The Daily Show because hey, extinction is funny!

19. Chris Martenson, selling his "Crash Course", maintains the website Peak Prosperity

20. Gail Tverberg aka Gail the Actuary - maintains the blog Our Finite World, with a primary focus on peak oil and economics. Ms. Tverberg has the reassuring, non-threatening demeanor of that aunt from Ohio you rarely see, or perhaps a rather prim librarian, which conceals a laser vorpal sword that demolishes the most cherished economic illusions. She does kind of miss the terminal nature of climate change already baked in the cake, because she thinks peak oil will stave off the worst projected emissions scenarios by the IPCC - but don't let that stop your from following her analysis. Latest advice: "Pray".

21. Peter Ward, author of several books including Under a Green Sky, and The Medea Hypothesis: Is Life on Earth Ultimately Self-Destructive, paleontologist at the University of Washington - HuffPo Interview 2011

"My view of life on Earth is that it's a huge board game, and every species has but one goal: To take over the planet. And every species that could, would, if it got the chance. So we're just doing what evolution has pounded into us: Produce as many of yourselves as you can. Make sure that, as you produce, you aren't threatened in your production, and co-opt all the planet's resources. Kill any competitors and spread to every place that you possibly can. We're doing all of that. We get the prize, ironically, because of the brains that we have."

22. George Monbiot, who writes on the environment for the UK Guardian. His best post ever, titled Destroyer of Worlds, covered the 3 day workshop in March 2014 presenting research about the extinction of the megafauna that conclusively demolished the fairy tale that humans weren't behind it...his next best is The Kink in the Human Brain (except it's no "kink" it's JUST US).

23. William R. Catton, Sociologist, author of Overshoot and a second book, Bottleneck: Humanity’s Impending Impasse.
One review sums them up with a quote from George Mobus: 
"In the sequel [to Overshoot], Bottleneck: Humanity’s Impending Impasse, [Catton] drops the part about we can evade the worst. The subtitle says it all. Now he concludes that it is already too late to mend our ways and somehow avoid the collapse of civilization."

24. Guy McPherson - maintains Nature Bats Last, the originator of NTHE meme, beloved by his readers - a lanky personable renegade professor emeritus, a voluntary exile full of regret...who might be mistaken as an intellectual frat boy if it weren't for his soulful sorrow and sincere kindness. Find all his books, posts, videos and most vitally important, his "climate change summary and update" at his website.

25. John Gray, author of Straw Dogs: Thoughts on Humans and Other Animals ~

“...humankind's presence on Earth is nothing but a cancer...” and ... “The destruction of the natural world is not the result of global capitalism, industrialisation, “Western civilisation” or any flaw in human institutions. It is a consequence of the evolutionary success of an exceptionally rapacious primate. Throughout all of history and prehistory, human advance has coincided with ecological devastation.”


26. Jay Hanson (in 2019, now deceased, RIP) - cantankerous Hawaiian, produced the encyclopedic DieOff.org and more recently published a condensed update and summary at "The Loop" ~

"Since natural selection occurs under thermodynamic laws, individual and group behaviors are biased by the MPP to generate maximum power, which requires over-reproduction and/or over-consumption of resources[4] whenever system constraints allow it. Individuals and families will form social groups to generate more power by degrading more energy. Differential power generation and accumulation result in a hierarchical group structure.

Overshoot eventually leads to decreasing power attainable for the group with lower-ranking members suffering first. Low-rank members will form subgroups and coalitions to demand a greater share of power from higher-ranking individuals who will resist by forming their own coalitions to maintain it. Meanwhile, social conflict will intensify as available power continues to fall.

Eventually, members of the weakest group (high or low rank) are forced to “disperse.”[5] Those members of the weak group who do not disperse are killed,[6] enslaved, or in modern times imprisoned. By most estimates, 10 to 20 percent of Stone-Age people died at the hands of other humans. The process of overshoot, followed by forced dispersal, may be seen as a sort of repetitive pumping action—a collective behavioral loop—that drove humans into every inhabitable niche."

27. Alice Friedemann - a stunningly shrewd, savvy lady who knows all about peak oil, and cooking multi-grain, nourishing snacks with long shelf life - see her book Crunch! and her blog Energy Skeptic, and her many book reviews such as this one, about The Race For What's Left: the Global Scramble for the World's Last Resources.




28. Desdemona Despair - a discerning selection of horrendous contemporary news you won't want to miss!


29. The Daily Impact - subscribe for unparalleled weekly analysis of the latest absurd disaster

30. Ugo Bardi - blogger at Cassandra's Legacy, now known as Resource Crisis- started out with a peak oil perspective, but woke up to climate change. See an excerpt from his recent book here.

31. Richard Duncan, who formulated the Olduvai Theory, from wiki: "The Olduvai theory holds that the ratio of world energy production per capita, which he denotes by the metric e, would begin to decline around 2007 as the extraction rates of fossil fuels fall increasingly behind demand, causing catastrophic social and economic collapse, starting with massive electrical blackouts worldwide. He suggests that humans would eventually revert to a stone-age style of living after the majority of the world's population dies off over the coming century."

32. Paul Chefurka - Buddhist, writer, describes the MPP and why it matters at his blog.

33. Carolyn Baker - a self-designated "life coach" providing a service that will no doubt be much in demand, helping doomers who feel they are in hospice. New-Agey book titles such as Sacred Demise, Collapsing Consciously, - terrific July 2014 interview with Abby Martin on the book she co-authored, Extinction Dialogs; Living with Death in Mind, read her blog here. Also hosts the weekly show The Lifeboat Hour.

34. Tenney Naumer - curates climate science and news at ClimateChangePsychology

35. DOTE - Decline of the Empire... Dave Cohen, a peak oil veteran, is cynical with a special dose of bitterness only Pittsburgh can produce. An incisive commenter with unparalleled savagely misanthropic gallows humor, and a notorious temper. Check out the archives, and follow - but comment with caution. From possibly his best post on delusional optimism and free will: "If free will is largely an illusion, if much of human cognition consists of post-hoc rationalizations, we bump up against the idea of hard limits on human behavior, an idea which makes humans very, very uncomfortable, so uncomfortable, in fact, that nearly all such suggestions are immediately rejected, when they are considered at all." Don't miss Part II, now published!

36. Collapse of Industrial Civilization - XRay Mike is a skilled writer with a talent for interweaving doom with gloom from diverse sources - but the "blame it on the capitalists!!" theme gets tedious considering humanity started trashing the planet - and each other - long before capitalism emerged. Read the blog here.

37. Global Risk Report - Assimilation of all the bad headline news in a great format

38. Survival Acres (no longer in 2019 defunct, check the archives - one of the most outrageously honest, blunt original doomers on the web and still one of the best)

39. Derrick Jensen, author of numerous books and magazine articles about how bad civilization is (Endgame, The Culture of Make Believe, A Language Older Than Words), see them all at his website. Advocates violent resistance for others but not himself, and admits he is totally dependent upon industrial civilization. The main problem is he doesn't seem to understand that without any restraints imposed by civilization, humans will completely trash what remains of the natural world. Granted, they're doing that anyway.

40. Climate Emergency Institute - a website with a worthy assortment of links - but complete lack of awareness of any other problems than climate. Habitat destruction? Overpopulation? What's that??

41. WeirdWeather - Facebook group run by a tattooed single mom with astonishing dedication and irascible passion, who provides an unending parade of the craziest and most terrifying weather events around the world. You'll want her updates every day.

42. Eric R. Pianka should be ranked much higher on the list but he has only recently come back into the news (and my laggard attention) because of his brave and controversial 2004 acceptance speech encapsulated as The Vanishing Book of Life on Earth, in which he mentioned Ebola. If you read no other link here at the Library, read that one.

43. The youtube series "Collapse Chronicles" is hosted by Sam Mitchell,a long-time prolific producer of timely topics, and a skilled interviewer of fellow collapsitarians. Here's a link to his conversation with me, natch! But you should subscribe and listen to all his ruminations and ramblings, they are great.



8 Nerds and Geeks We Love


1. Jennifer Francis, Rutgers - in the vanguard of those willing to stick her neck out and say yes, Virginia, climate change IS causing extreme weather! Watch her explain the jetstream.

2. Naomi Oreskes, historian of science at Harvard - a powerhouse who exposed the history of denialism and the interconnections from tobacco to climate in "Merchants of Doubt", co-authored fictionalized version of The Collapse of Western Civilization: A View From The Future.

3. Joe Romm - A physicist, and author of Hell and High Water - a hardheaded scientist who nevertheless harbors a belief that rhetoric will matter. Originator of the Climate Progress blog, where he still takes pleasure in demolishing deniers, to the delight of his fans.

4. Sylvia Earle - Champion of the oceans, in her own words see the film, Mission Blue

5. Richard Alley - Professor at Penn State, expert in glaciology. You gotta love his maniacal laugh! How else to stare down extinction? One of many interviews on youtube is Abrupt Climate Change.

6. Climate Code Red - an Australian website where David Spratt and Philip Sutton tell it like it is for the most part without any sugar coating (at least, compared to all the other information about climate change). Their eponymous book published in 2008 is subtitled "The Case For Emergency Action". Needless to say, no emergency action has been taken in the interim. Don't miss the Dangerous Climate Change: Myths and Reality report.

7 & 8. Kevin Anderson and Alice Bows - climate scientists who ACTUALLY gave up flying because it's, um, unsustainable...you can read about their work in a Grist article Freaked Out Climate Scientists and don't miss the followup story, The Brutal Logic of Climate Change Mitigation.

9. The Climate Science Rapid Response Team founded by John Abraham, Professor at St. Thomas, slayer of climate deniers, along with colleague Scott Mandia. A group effort by 160 volunteers scientists to help media outlets and policy makers sort out fact from fiction on those rare occasions when they are in the mood to do so.

10. Dennis Meadows - one of the authors of the 1972 Limits to Growth - whose current prognosis for civilization is even more dire and imminent. See a recent post about his position Collapse is Inevitable here.

11. Michael Mann - he's cute when he gets mad, see his book The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars - Dispatches from the Front Lines. Dragged out of the Ivory Tower of Academia for committing the unforgivable sin of creating the iconic hockey stick, he has turned into a steady and committed spokesman for reason... even if he almost kinda but couldn't QUITE admit it's too late, in Earth Will Cross the Climate Danger Threshold by 2036

12. Peter Sinclair, host of ClimateDenialCrockOfTheWeek videos...sharpest debunker on the web. Clever, watchable short videos enabling the non-scientist to understand how puerile the denier claims are.

13. All the folks at SkepticalScience - rigorous debunking of pesky deniers and clearinghouse for climate change information by a large cooperative team of mostly apocaloptimists (at least in public).

14. Prince Charles - Climate change sceptics are 'headless chickens'   

 "As you may possibly have noticed from time to time, I have tended to make a habit of sticking my head above the parapet and generally getting it shot off for pointing out what has always been blindingly obvious to me.

"Perhaps it has been too uncomfortable for those with vested interests to acknowledge, but we have spent the best part of the past century enthusiastically testing the world to utter destruction; not looking closely enough at the long-term impact our actions will have."




1 hoard of worthwhile sources of information. Think there is a sinister plot for mainstream media to hide the truth from you? There is!! Even NPR has been a corporate cheerleader for years. This is a list of journalists, video news and radio shows, podcasts and periodicals worth following - (even though they, too, mostly pander to the idea that we can fix the unfixable).


RadioEcoShock, Alex Smith has the best people on his show, here is his interview with David Korowicz on "Rapid Collapse"

DeSmogBlog

UK Guardian Environment Section

Betsy Greenberg

KMO

Democracy Today

Al Jazeera

HuffingtonPost (occasionally)

Grist

Utne

Yes!

Orion

The Nation

Treehugger

Edge.org

The Lifeboat Hour

CounterPunch

Common Dreams

Truthout

Waging Nonviolence

EarthFirst

Utne






22 Apocaloptimists - the Prophets (and some profiters) of doom - devoted to explaining that we're screwed - and then pretend there is salvation [this is actually practically everyone else on the doomsayer list too - but some deserve special mention]


1. James Lovelock, author, The Vanishing Face of Gaia who once said "Man is a tribal carnivore, not a gentle gardener." He has since recanted his worst predictions making him probably the most famous case of "going emeritus". See his website, and an interview.


Gaia


2. Real Climate, a blog written by traditionally no-drama "reticent" climate scientists. It's a matter of some speculation how long it will be before they notice their hair is on fire. This was the introduction to the June open forum: "June is the month when the Arctic Sea Ice outlook gets going, when the EPA releases its rules on power plant CO2 emissions, and when, hopefully, commenters can get back to actually having constructive and respectful conversations about climate science (and not nuclear energy, impending apocalypsi (pl) or how terrible everyone else is). Thanks."

3. Mark Lynas, author, Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter Planet - How he could write this terrifying assessment in 2007 and still think there is any surviving it remains a mystery. Like others who have recanted early dire predictions, it appears he scared the wits out of himself. Great example of how a purely climate-oriented activist misses the big picture with his advocacy of nuclear power and GMO crops.

4. Richard Heinberg - Senior Fellow-in-Residence of the Post Carbon Institute, prolific writer and lecturer about the energy and environmental crises, website and interview onRadioEcoshock "What to do While Your Waiting for the Crash" - an excellent recent article in Resilience.

5. Nafeez Ahmed - UK Guardian writerwho specializes in sophisticated, comprehensive warnings about the colossal wreck we are making; and how we can fix it.

6. David Suzuki, the father of Canadian environmentalism, and also, one of many environmental luminaries who has four or more children (you'd be surprised!). A recent interview with him that chronicles the inexcusably virulent smears against him (everyone knows that Canada is now a petrostate that has shifted firmly to the dark side) says that, despite his sense that environmentalism has failed: "Some of his compatriots believe it’s already too late to save our species. Suzuki is more optimistic. Nature, if given the chance, will be more forgiving than we deserve, he says. All humans have to do is start paying attention to the flashing warning signs." Isn't it nice to know that's "all we have to do"!

7. "One can see from space how the human race has changed the earth. Nearly all of the available land has been cleared for agriculture or urban development. The polar ice caps are shrinking and the desert areas are increasing. At night the earth is no longer dark, but lit up. All this is evidence that human exploitation of the planet is reaching a critical limit, but human demands and expectations are ever increasing." —Stephen Hawking, cosmologist. So let's go colonize another planet and ruin that one, too!

8. Bill McKibben - author of countless books and articles who founded probably the largest climate activist movement in the world, 350.org...a number that is now ironic to say the least since we permanently exceeded 400 ppb in 2014 - and there's no viable plan to lower it. But still he exhorts his followers to march and wave signs (in properly "serious" attire, no hippy tree-hugger garb, thank you) and sign petitions and whine about divesting from fossil fuel companies. Yeah, that'll work.

9. Clive Hamilton, excellent writer, truculently optimistic, check out his book Requiem for a Species and this misguided article, The New Environmentalism Will Lead Us To Disaster, in which his admirable zeal to expose the "pragmatists" leads him to miss the worldwide significance of megafauna extinction as elucidated in this study (okay that is getting a bit arcane but here is an excerpt anyway):

DEFAUNATION IN THE ANTHROPOCENE

“So profound is this problem that we have applied the term “defaunation” to describe it. This recent pulse of animal loss, hereafter referred to as the Anthropocene defaunation, is not only a conspicuous consequence of human impacts on the planet but also a primary driver of global environmental change in its own right. In comparison, we highlight the profound ecological impacts of the much more limited extinctions, predominantly of larger vertebrates, that occurred during the end of the last ice Age. These extinctions altered ecosystem processes and disturbance regimes at continental scales, triggering cascades of extinction thought to still reverberate today.”

10. Chris Hedges - a veteran reporter who takes courageous stances and writes brilliantly from perilous locations, author of War is a Force That Gives Us Meaning. He has a tendency to preach, but oh what sermons he publishes weekly in Truthdig!


Source: Inside a reader's kitchen cupboard


11. Citizens Climate Lobby - a rather sad but determined group with chapters in the US that seem to retain faith that working within the political process will be successful in thwarting disaster. Quaint.

12. Robert Scribbler - prolific and cleverly eloquent compiler of the latest doomy news but still insists there is a way to evade the worst. Follow his blog here.

13. Arctic News and other blogs hosted by Sam Carana, who predicts extinction without geoegineering. Of course, geoengineering won't do a thing for overshoot, but whatever.

14. Arctic Methane Emergency Group - AMEG - warns of abrupt climate change and runaway warming once the Arctic is ice-free in summer - 2015?

15. John Michael Greer, aka The Archdruid (no, he actually calls HIMSELF that) - a peak oil wizard (yes, he actually believes in magic) who would love to sell you some salvation. DON'T visit his blog unless you are prepared to genuflect. oh wait did I forget to put the link? darn...

16. Dmitry Orlov - a blogger (ClubOrlov) and author (Five States of Collapse; Communities That Abide) who extrapolates the future from the collapse of the Soviet Union - he seems to have barely comprehended that political episode is nothing but a blip on the horizon compared to global ecosystem collapse. Okay for the humor if you can ignore the spitefulness.


17. Doomstead Diner - despite the name, which must be just for giggles, the main author (RE) is convinced living in Alaska puts him out of reach of the zombie hordes. Podcasts and forums here.

18. Nate Hagens - peak oiler who thinks climate change is exaggerated and holds out hope that humans will change, even though his website is named The Monkey Trap "...we humans have never known and been aware scientifically about ourselves and our natural world the way we are now– there are emergent properties bubbling up at the intersection of our morality and our knowledge. Things might look dark, but there is always a chance for benign and fantastic trajectories for the future – and the odds increase slightly with every person that acknowledges this truth."

[That of course would assume humans possess free will, which, contrary to popular opinion, we do not.]

Contrary evidence notwithstanding, Nate illustrates his conviction that we can escape the monkey trap with the following cartoons because, we're not monkeys! So we must be smarter!



He writes: "The beliefs in powerlessness, futility, and nihilism are powerful ones. They are nearly as powerful as denial of scientific facts in rationalizing personal inaction. Ergo, deciding to spend all of ones time finding personal peace and dancing around a campfire wearing a badger mask accomplishes as much for the future we care about as a full-on life of fossil fueled smorgasboard, imo. Nothing. Our situation calls for dignity, integrity, creativity and probably some discomfort....What we do, what we think, and how we live our lives matters." 

Sure it matters - to us. It matters not a whit to Mother Nature though.




19. Naomi Klein - author of The Shock Doctrine and soon to be released This Changes Everything; capitalism vs. the climate. Another enterprising apocaloptimist in a crowded field - in fact, she advocates a collapse of capitalism and growth - but had a baby because it signifies "hope". Good luck baby.


See a devastating critique of her fuzzy thinking by Elizabeth Kolbert, from the NYRB 12/14.


[Starting to see a pattern among the apocaloptimists? By blaming capitalism and focusing on just one problem, whether it's peak oil or the staggering economy or climate change, they leave open an escape hatch when in fact, each is but ONE symptom of overshoot among others (pollution, ocean acidification, habitat destruction, logging, and pollution, pollution, pollution) that are also existential threats to life on earth. Well, I guess you can't very well point a finger at the real driver of the coming collapse - OVERPOPULATION and OVERCONSUMPTION - and continue to fly, or have babies, without revealing that you think it is poor people who should stay poor, or are having too many babies - not you! because you can afford a plane ticket and Montessori school, with the proceeds from your bestselling book.]


20. Noam Chomsky - Professor at MIT, author of many books ripping "American Exceptionalism". From an interview with Hedges "If Mayr was right, we are at the tail end of a binge, accelerated by the Industrial Revolution, that is about to drive us over a cliff environmentally and economically. A looming breakdown, in Chomsky’s eyes, offers us opportunity as well as danger. He has warned repeatedly that if we are to adapt and survive we must overthrow the corporate power elite through mass movements and return power to autonomous collectives that are focused on sustaining communities rather than exploiting them. Appealing to the established institutions and mechanisms of power will not work." June 15 2014

21. James Kunstler, collapsitarian author, and blogger at Clusterf*ck Nation with a primary focus on the unsustainability of modern suburban living arrangements, often avoided by people of the feminist persuasion for exhibiting a slightly misogynist flare in his fiction. See for example this review of his most recent novel, World Made By Bigots.

22. George Mobus - an academic who suspects we are dancing off a cliff but posits that we will overcome our more destructive tendencies, somehow, by evolving our minds (?), blogs at Question Everything.



9 idiotic conspiracy theories to assiduously ignore - DON'T GO THERE! We refuse to even provide links to this hysterical junk.

1. Chemtrailers, otherwise known as "TrailerTrash" (okay okay we relent -here is everything you need to know about chemtrails...and cats...)

2. HAARP

3. Second Coming

4. New World Order/Agenda 21 - Especially the revolting anti-Semites

5. Illuminati - ditto

6. Invisible Planet Nibiru - aka Planetards

7. Magnetic Poles Flipping - SO WHAT?

8. Fukushima radiation is killing everything

9. Cell phone towers are destroying life on earth



7 in the Rogues' Gallery of Deniers, Dissemblers, Equivocators and promoters of dangerously false solutions


Source


1. Just about any politician, with special opprobrium towards the leaders of the US, Australia, Canada and the UK


2. Any climate denier, especially the slick ones...like Bjørn Lomborg as described in a Scientific American article that PRAISES the false choices he presents! BARF!...and those that are educated enough to know better, like physicist Happer of Princeton, who compared CO2 bashing to Jewish victims of the Nazi's (did he hafta?). There are too many dumb ones to mention - Cliff Mass, Anthony Watts, etc etc.


3. Eco-pragmatists such as environmental scientist Erle Ellis


4. The Heartland Institute, funded by fossil fuels corporations and anyone who speaks there, see their list of 2014 speakers. They are all putzes and should be shunned.


5. Their Canadian equivalent, Friends of Science - Canada


6. Any climate equivocator - mainly, Andy Revkin, from his NYT blog ghetto DotEarth. Read Clive Hamilton's essay wherein he takes Revkin and his fellow "eco-pragmatists" to the woodshed for a good thrashing. Throw in Judith Curry, too.


7. Advocates of geoengineering and nuclear power. We're looking at you, Ken Caldeira and Peter Wadhams. They don't get it!!! It's not just the temperature, or even mostly the temperature, so geoengineering is just a distraction, and a really scary one at that.



1 Book on Philosophy and The End


See the Amazon description.




22 funniest, snarkiest most relentlessly Gallows Humor doomer comedians and cartoons and sites (you will die laughing!)


1. For the first Earth Day:



2. Astonishingly well-done cartoon video, Runaway Train

from the maker:
“The metaphor of this film is that, whether you notice the jeopardy or not, everybody is trapped on this track, and we’re all going to the same place,’ Barker explains. ‘I’m a bit of a Cassandra. I’m always feeling like I’m looking around and seeing this really apparent jeopardy. But a lot of people I know [have] that kind of disbelief that anything can shake their normal day-to-day life,’ he says. ‘I keep thinking, ‘Man, we’re doomed.’”


3. Cartoon video from Steve Cutts, simply titled Man - quite possibly the BEST summation ever of human barbarity, and no self-respecting doomer has a complete portfolio without it.




4. Bizarro.com


5. Two immortal George Carlin routines - It's a big club and you ain't in it and The earth will be fine, it's the humans that are in trouble


6. Doug Stanhope ~ Abortion is Green


7. Apocadocs - humoring the end One Quip at a Time


8. Meet the Percapitas essay by Tim Murry


9. Amusing new age word toy (The Bullshit Generator) that simplifies ridiculing people who blather like this dude.


10. Juice Rap News - Australian comedic team with endearing cynicism and dorky costumes. Try The War on Terra - described as: "It's 2013 and the world did not end by meteorite or by Mayan calendar. But fear not: we might just be able to get the job done ourselves. Join Robert Foster as he sets out to discover where Civilisation™ is making the fastest progress towards annihilation. In this edition of the Civilisation Report, Robert learns about Australia and Canada - two oft-neglected pioneers of peace, progress and prosperity - in conversation with our antipodean colonial correspondent Ken Oathcarn and his Canuck counterpart, Fagin Heighbard. Dear viewers, consider this a fair warning that in terms of language and affront to the dominant culture this could get fucking messy."


11. Henry Phillips - mournful, droll, and sick: What Do You Want Me To Do About It? Or try Baked Spaghetti


12. The Onion online magazine - satire so slick that, in the tradition of Swift'sModest Proposal, idiots often become outraged thinking it's real (see Poe's Law) - sample: Scientists, "Look, One-Third of Human Population has to die for civilization to be sustainable, So How Do We Want To Do This?"


13.


14. The End of the World in under two minutes - old but choice.


15. Bill Hicks, stand-up comedian - "If you're in advertising, kill yourself"





17.


18. Monty Python skits - on denialism, This Parrot is Dead, on delusional optimism, Always Look on the Bright Side, on injustice and exploitation, Constitutional Peasants


19. Lee Camp - subscribe to his Moment of Clarity


20. The Coffee Table Book of Doom ~ Steven Appleby and Art Lester





21. To his everlasting mortification (except he knows no shame) Monkton punked on The Hamster Wheel




22. Robert Mankoff, The New Yorker



15 best worst #doomcandy fiction movies/novels (some are both) that will ruin your plans for the future, forever


1. George Orwell's 1984 (See John Pilger's essay The Return of George Orwell)


2. Dr. Strangelove, Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (see review at The New Yorker)


3. Ishmael, philosophical novel by Daniel Quinn, from wiki: "It examines the mythological thinking at the heart of modern civilization, its effect on ethics, and how this relates to sustainability and societal collapse on the global scale. The novel uses a style of Socratic dialogue to deconstruct the notion that humans are the pinnacle of biological evolution. It posits that anthropocentrism and several other widely-accepted modern ideas are actually cultural myths and that global civilization is enacting these myths with catastrophic consequences." from CultureChange: "Daniel Quinn’s 1992 novel Ishmael is that modern industrialized people do not know how to live. Humans have long been cut off from the contingencies of nature, first as a consequence of discovering the wholly unnatural skill of growing reliable food supplies in one place, and later as a side effect of learning how to manufacture wholly unnatural objects and environments. The resulting alienation from nature and from our ancestors’ nature-adapted ways of life left us clueless and susceptible to being sold ideas about how people should live, usually by the most audacious psychopath in the group." WTF? How can the skill of growing reliable food supplies in one place be "unnatural"?


4. Inferno, by Dan Brown, wiki entry


5. Lars Von Trier's dark family drama - Melancholia

Justine: The earth is evil. We don't need to grieve for it.

Claire: What?

Justine: Nobody will miss it.




6. Children of Men

"Everything is a mythical, cosmic battle between faith and chance."

"Ok, the Human Project gives this great, big dinner for all the scientists and sages in the world. They're tossing around theories about the ultimate mystery: why are all the women infertile? Why can't we make babies anymore? So, some say it's genetic experiments, gamma rays, pollution, same ol', same ol'. So, anyway, in the corner, this Englishman's sitting, he hasn't said a word, he's just tuckin' in his dinner. So, they decide to ask him, they say, "Well, why do you think we can't make babies anymore?" And he looks up at 'em, he's chewin' on this great big wing and he says "I haven't the faintest idea," he said, "but this stork is quite tasty isn't he?"


7. Everything Matters


8. The Matrix


9. The Road, Cormac McCarthy (also a movie)

“He walked out in the gray light and stood and he saw for a brief moment the absolute truth of the world. The cold relentless circling of the intestate earth. Darkness implacable. The blind dogs of the sun in their running. The crushing black vacuum of the universe. And somewhere two hunted animals trembling like ground-foxes in their cover. Borrowed time and borrowed world and borrowed eyes with which to sorrow it.”

also see review with the following quote -

"There's no such thing as life without bloodshed," McCarthy says philosophically. "I think the notion that the species can be improved in some way, that everyone could live in harmony, is a really dangerous idea. Those who are afflicted with this notion are the first ones to give up their souls, their freedom. Your desire that it be that way will enslave you and make your life vacuous."


10. Tribulation: A Novel of the Near Future, by Thomas A. Lewis, Amazon link


11. Dr. Suess, The Lorax

“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot,

Nothing is going to get better. It's not.”


12. Wall-E...a robot tries to clean up earth after humans desert it, Youtube


13. On the Beach, Nevil Shute

"I suppose I haven't got any imagination," said Peter thoughtfully. It's—it's the end of the world. I've never had to imagine anything like that before."


14. The Bay - Famous rich Hollywood movie director Barry Levinson learned to his horror that pollution from chicken farms is causing a dead zone right outside his own luxurious vacation home on the Chesapeake - imagine - and so he made a fictional movie to warn everyone of...radiation.


15. Margaret Atwood, author of numerous books including The Blind Assassin:

“If you knew what was going to happen, if you knew everything that was going to happen next—if you knew in advance the consequences of your own actions—you'd be doomed. You'd be ruined as God. You'd be a stone. You'd never eat or drink or laugh or get out of bed in the morning. You'd never love anyone, ever again. You'd never dare to.”


16. The Lacuna, Barbara Kingsolver

“This is what it means to be alone: everyone is connected to everyone else, their bodies are a bright liquid life flowing around you, sharing a single heart that drives them to move all together. If the shark comes they will all escape, and leave you to be eaten.”


17. Stand on Zanzibar, John Brunner

“True, you’re not a slave. You’re worse off than that by a long, long way. You’re a predatory beast shut up in a cage of which the bars aren’t fixed, solid objects you can gnaw at or in despair batter against with your head until you get punch-drunk and stop worrying. No, those bars are the competing members of your own species, at least as cunning as you on average, forever shifting around so you can’t pin them down, liable to get in your way without the least warning, disorienting your personal environment until you want to grab a gun or an axe and turn mucker.”


18. Snowpiercer, see this laudatory review Snowpiercer: at Last, A Fun Dystopian Sci-Fi Epic

"O dystopia, you have o’erwhelmed our imaginations, transformed our cinemas into charnel houses, our movies into nihilistic dirges. We drink in your ecocatastrophes, your post-apocalyptic death matches, your blood-soaked chasms between haves and have-nots. Now, at last, comes a fun dystopian sci-fi epic — a splattery shambles with a fat dose of social satire and barely a lick of sense. It’s Bong Joon-ho’s Snowpiercer, which must be seen to be disbelieved."



Apocalyptic Visual Art (artists seem especially prone to be steeped in doomerism, we are not sure why. Maybe because they can see?Anyway...there is SO MUCH art, just go here for pictures!)


Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah ~ John Martin, 1852

review of the Tate exhibition




Starr Ockenga




23 documentaries of doom (there are SO MANY and more every day, but these are essential viewing)


1. Everything You Need to Know [in under 15 minutes!] About Mass Extinction, Sea Level Rise and Amplification


2. Thom Hartmann's production of Last Hours ~

“The film Last Hours describes a science-based climate scenario where a tipping point to runaway climate change is triggered by massive releases of frozen methane. Methane, a powerful greenhouse gas, has already started to percolate into the open seas and atmosphere from methane hydrate deposits beneath melting arctic ice, from the warming northern-hemisphere tundra, and from worldwide continental-shelf undersea methane pools.” [A brave start but Hartmann has since folded like a whimpering baby. Where's the sequel you promised, Thom??]


3. The 11th Hour - Leonardo DiCaprio's 2007 production about climate change and species extinction, interviews many experts and finds, according to one critic, that "Thankfully for audiences, "11th Hour" is not without hope." A fawning Vanity Fair review, extolling the heroism of DiCaprio complete with iconic Fannie Leibowitz portrait, gushes: "We're at a point in our history, with 6.4 billion of us, that we have to imagine what it would be like to redesign design itself, see design as the first signal of human intention, and realize that we need new intentions for our future where materials are seen as things that are highly valuable and need to go in closed cycles—what we call cradle to cradle, instead of cradle to grave." Wait what?? 6.4B...and were are now at 7 billion?? Doesn't that mean we're at the 12th hour? 'nuf said


4. Gasland I & II - these two films by Josh Fox, featuring Josh Fox, are emblematic of the fractured environmental movement, which is often propelled by NIMBY's - Not In My Back Yard (but fine in yours) - see also this article about a mountaintop coal removal protest action.




5. The Sixth Mass Extinction - Call of Life...absolutely worth watching


6. Years of Living Dangerously -television series


7. Jeremy Jackson's - Ocean Apocalypse lecture to the Naval Academy


8. DamNation - a film about how dams, whether for water supply or hydropower, are like demons. Beautiful, evocatively filmed


9. Acid Test - Sigourney Weaver narrates this superb documentary on ocean acidification...makes up for watching Alien while pregnant with first daughter...


10. Global Dimming - BBC documentary, about the "insidious soup" in our atmosphere




11. Trashed - We Buy It We Bury It We Burn It - documentary with Jeremy Irons


12. Are we smarter than yeast? Video explains the exponential function - absolutely essential to understand our predicament!


13. VICE - Greenland melting - short and devastating


14. Dave Roberts of Grist makes good on a dare in this TED talk - Climate Change is Simple


15. Any and all of several dolphin/whaling exposés from Ric O'Barry - start with The Cove

and Lolita the Killer Whale (available in parts on Youtube). Heartbreaking.


16. Sea of Slaughter - Farley Mowat's film based on his even more searing book. You will never look at humans as benign again. Have your finger on the pause button - excruciating but must see.


17. The End of the Line - overfishing disrupts the entire food chain with horrific results


18. Blackfish - Seaworld trainer Dawn Brancheau attacked and killed by captive orca, Tilikum. This film has forever tarnished the reputation of water parks for their captivity of sea mammals.


19. The Disappearing Male - whoops!!!


20. Chasing Ice - nothing here to argue with, that's why deniers won't watch it.


21. An Inconvenient Truth - the classic that jolted (some of) the public out of complacency, and the rest into naked, mouth-breathing Al Gore hatred. Almost quaint now.


22. Cowspiracy...The Sustainability Secret exposes the big greenwashing organizations - Sierra Club, Natural Resources Defense Council, Climate Reality Project, Oceana, Amazon Watch, Surfrider Foundation, 350.org and Rainforest Action Network


23. Countdown to Extinction video by Bicyclopolis




Oliver Jeffers


8 redundant greenwashing enterprises who won't tell us how bad it really is - and a couple that call them out

1. The Nature Conservancy - see Green Is Good, an exposé in The New Yorker...What can you expect from a group that chooses as its leader a former partner from Goldman Sachs, Mark Tercek - whose share when the firm went public was $30m, who with his wife and four children has taken so many “nature trips” to places like Belize and the Galápagos Islands that their travel agency used their family photo on a brochure, who as head of TNC makes nearly $700k/year...and counts Cargill Dow - by some measures the largest privately owned company in the world with the possible, debatable exception of Koch Industries - DuPont and Georgia Pacific and Coca-Cola among its sponsors and partners, giving them an annual budget of $600m? Can we say power corrupts?


2. Lester Brown, author, The World on the Edge: How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse


3. NRDC


4. Sierra Club


5. WWF - World Wildlife Fund


6. 350.org


7. Rainforest Action Network - carbon offsets, greenwashing, sustainable tourism, certification for lumber


8. FaceBook group - GWFOTD - that calls itself the Global Warming Fact of the Day. Known by doomers who have been ejected as "Global Warming Fact of Yesterday".


9. Wrong Kind of Green website, takes no prisoners when it comes to calling out greenwashing efforts- see this post for example - The Inside Story of How Greenpeace Built a Corporate Spanking Machine to Turn the Fortune 500 Into Climate Heroes and also The Art of Annihilation, especially the multipart series, Bill McKibben's Divestment Tour, Brought to You by Wall Street.


10. Climate Justice Ecology Project, CJEP website also takes greenwashing to task, see for example the post On Bill McKibben's 'Call to Arms' for the New York Climate Summit




10 Activist Heroes [not complete doomers, probably, or they wouldn't be activists! but you gotta admire them]


1. Judi Bari - a genuine, bonafide martyr to trees - see a post about herhere.


2. Tim DeChristopher, who served jail time for bidding up mining rights on land in an illegal BAL auction


3. Alexandra Morton, a biologist protecting salmon in British Columbia,her blog




3. Tim Hermach, founder and director, since 1988 Native Forest Council


4. Rhett Butler of Mongabay, who has been tirelessly campaigning to save tropical biodiversity


5. James Hansen, scientist and author of the book Storms of my Grandchildren - vilified by deniers and colleagues alike for going further and earlier on climate dangers, and taking a political stance. He has retired from Columbia to be a full-time activist. See his article assessing Dangerous Climate Change.


6. Paul Watson, captain of the Sea Shepherd, saving whales for decades - give his facebook page a like!





8. Center for Biological Diversity - "sue the bastards!" - from their page on extinction:

The current mass extinction differs from all others in being driven by a single species rather than a planetary or galactic physical process. When the human race —Homo sapiens sapiens — migrated out of Africa to the Middle East 90,000 years ago, to Europe and Australia 40,000 years ago, to North America 12,500 years ago, and to the Caribbean 8,000 years ago, waves of extinction soon followed. The colonization-followed-by-extinction pattern can be seen as recently as 2,000 years ago, when humans colonized Madagascar and quickly drove elephant birds, hippos, and large lemurs extinct.



Check out their #CrowdedPlanet campaign.


9. Occupy Wall Street - at least they tried. As I heard Ralph Nadar remark of the movement, "Anytime you feel a pulse, it's a good thing."


10. Squirrel, and ALL the tree-sitters and protesters at RAMPS - Radical Action for Mountain Peoples Survival - as representatives for the countless local groups and indigenous groups risking liberty and even life to halt mountaintop removal, fracking, whaling, dams, tarsands, logging, mining and pipelines.




10 Doomiest Academic/Government/News Publications (the list is endless and growing)


1. Professor Pimm's paper on the 6th mass extinction, with species disappearing a rate not seen for at least 65 million years. Oh, and we're causing it. - Reuters interview video

"Current rates of extinction are about 1000 times the background rate of extinction. These are higher than previously estimated and likely still underestimated. Future rates will depend on many factors and are poised to increase." See articles including the UK Telegraph - Creepy crawlies decline as human population soars; UCSB release - Catastrophic Animal Loss; and PhysOrg -Invertebrate Numbers Nearly Halve as Human Population Doubles.


2. Stanford News, August 2013 -

"Not only is the planet undergoing one of the largest climate changes in the past 65 million years, Stanford climate scientists Noah Diffenbaugh and Chris Field report that it's on pace to occur at a rate 10 times faster than any change in that period. Without intervention, this extreme pace could lead to a 5-6 degree Celsius spike in annual temperatures by the end of the century."


4. Union of Concerned Scientists paper warning that we are on track for well beyond 2 degrees - The Climate Policy Narrative for a Dangerously Warming World, March 2014


5. Anthony Barnosky, tipping points, LA Times article


6. Nine Boundaries report published in 2009 by Johan Rockström, et al, in collaboration with many international scientists, establishes nine critical thresholds that must not be breached by humanity. Once these tipping points have been passed, humanity risks triggering irreversible and abrupt environmental change. At the time, three of them were considered already violated on a planetary scale - climate change, biodiversity loss, and the biogeochemical flow boundary.





7. UK Guardian article about study modeling likelihood of irreversible civilization collapse


8. NYTimes article about a June 2014 study reporting that Antarctic ice is in unstoppable, irreversible melt and this August study that the ice sheet there and in Greenland are melting at the fastest rate ever recorded. Ho hum Sea Level Rise...


9. The Brink of Mass extinction, article in Truthout by Dahr Jamail (and there are many others!)


10. the methane problem - See Seven Facts You Need to Know about the Arctic and visit the Global Methane Tracking blog



1 most popular drinking game among doomers



Every time a scientist is *surprised* that empirical changes are faster and worse than models predicted!



8 Surefire cures for faith in a technological fix





1. Ozzie Zehner, author of the book, Green Illusions, terrific interview with ace reporter Steve Horn of Truthout explains it all succinctly.

"The modern environmental movement has rolled over to become an outlet for loggers, energy firms and car companies to plug into. It is now primarily a social media platform for consumerism, growth and energy production - an institutionalized philanderer of green illusions. If you need evidence, just go to any climate rally and you'll see a strip mall of stands for green products, green jobs and green energy. These will do nothing to solve the crisis we face, which is not an energy crisis but rather a crisis of consumption."


2. Professor Tim Garrett in an interview at Radio EcoShock describes why more energy produced translated into more energy used, and not conservation.

ENERGY = WEALTH = INFLATION + RUINED ATMOSPHERE


3. Article, What's Wrong With Renewable Energy


4. Article, the Myth of Renewable Energy


5. Alice Friedemann's EnergySkeptic post Energy Overview. Oil is butter-fried-steak wrapped in bacon. Alternative Energy is lettuce. In spite of the fact that she gets one rather sinister thing slightly wrong, this is a broad and accurate assessment of peak oil. (This is what she gets wrong: "There’s a bright side. The end of the oil age means the end of climate change. The odds are very good we won’t drive ourselves and millions of other species extinct." The end of the age of oil most emphatically does NOT mean the end of climate change. The emissions already released are DWARFED by the natural amplifying feedbacks that have already begun, and are irreversible.)


6. The Downside of Solar Energy, article from LowTech Magazine via SeeMoreRocks


7. MMP - Maximum Power Principle as first articulated by Howard Odom
"Maximum power theory and the proposal for additional laws of thermodynamics/energetics...

In a controversial move, Odum, together with Richard Pinkerton (at the time physicist at the University of Florida), was motivated by Alfred J. Lotka's articles on the energetics of evolution, and subsequently proposed the theory that natural systems tend to operate at an efficiency that produces the maximum power output, not the maximum efficiency.[33] This theory in turn motivated Odum to propose maximum power as a fundamental thermodynamic law.
Environment, Power, and Society ... intended to explain basic concepts of ecology using Odum's energy language. ... It presented a cogent argument for the limits of industrial growth. Circuit diagrams were skillfully used to illustrate the dependence of agricultural ecosystems and industrial societies upon fossil fuel subsidies ... Voting, public opinion, taxes, even revolution and war could be expressed in the language of energy circuits."





8. Techno-Fix: Why Technology Won’t Save Us or the Environment ~ Michael and Joyce Huesemann, New Society Publishers, 2011.




12 Online and Facebook and Real Life support and activist groups [pathetically few, unfortunately]


1. Transition Town Network - too bad there are only 477 in the world


2. Peaceful Uprising


3. Deep Green Resistance - Members typing from laptops call for the dismantling of industrial civilization in order to preserve biodiversity (they seem not to have noticed that all 425 nuclear power plants will promptly melt down). Their leader is Derrick Jensen, author of End Game. The blame is placed solely on civilization, as if people weren't violent long before, see http://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/jul/14/13000-year-old-skeletons-war-dead-british-museum and the book, War Before Civilization


4. Dark Mountain Project - UK literary and artistic baby co-founded by Paul Kingsnorth of "Walking Away from Environmentalism" fame, with Dougald Hine. Americans are way too stupid to have a coalition like this where they use multiple syllables.


5. Stop Making Babies FaceBook Group


6. NTHESG - Face Book group , full name Near Term Human Extinction Support Group. No talk of potential solutions allowed; stick a fork in it, we're done.


6a. Extinction Radio, weekly broadcast since 2015 - check the archives


7. The Panic Room - an unlisted FB group, [email witsendnj at yahoo dot com to request membership] - sample comment from a member: "Aliens, upon visiting the dead earth in 2159, were looking about for the cause of the mass extinction. They were puzzled that such an advanced species such as humans went extinct, so they began searching for clues as to why. After months of combing through dying cities and libraries, and many places, they found a trail that seemed to point to something called "Hopium". After more digging, they found it was the delusional belief that you are outside the laws of nature and can overcome anything because you are so intelligent. They wasted no time in getting back on their ship and getting the hell off earth before they were infected with this horrible Hopium addiction, and upon returning to their home planet, they gravely warned their fellow comrades about this Hopium and what it did to another planet...."





8. Doomer Party 2016, FaceBook group


9. The Club of Assholes - Destroying the Myth of Infinite Growth - FaceBook group, gleefully presided over by a curmudgeonly Canadian farmer


10. Church of Euthanasia (motto: Save the Planet, Kill Yourself), lecture by A. Kent MacDougall, "Humans as Cancer" can be read here


11. VHEMT - Voluntary Human Extinction Movement, on Facebook


12. Whistling in the Dark FaceBook Group - extinction for parents, mostly



1 - and also the only -Limericist of Doom - Benjamin the Donkey

Wait what - you don't know who Benjamin the Donkey is? SHAME ON YOU - go back and reread Animal Farm - and recall Benjamin's surly but true rumination about the aftermath of a revolution: "Life would go on as it had always gone on — that is, badly." Hardcopy print edition of collected verse, available from Amazon for a measly $4.00.

sample:

We’d be smart to shut our damn yaps

And keep this doom stuff under wraps:

If we kept it hush-hush,

We might put off the rush

To inevitable collapse.





1 most obscure, darkest Diva of Doom (yours truly, the Curator)

Blogging at Wit's End with a guest post at Greg Laden's Science Blog -Whispers of the Ghosting Trees...and if that doesn't scare the wits out of you, you're not looking at the forest!





Apocalyptic music and youtube videos - [like visual artists, musicians seem to be far more attuned to the apocalypse than the general population and so this category - from opera to rock'n'roll - also is for too voluminous to even attempt a partial list here so, see the library page for much more], but top contenders have to be...


1. Michael Jackson's Earth

2. Joni Mitchell's Woodstock

3. World Party - Ship of Fools

4. XTC - Dear God