(FB 1548890664 Timestamp) THE WORLD FAILS ONE CITY, ONE COUNTRY, AT A TIME. NOT IN A CRASH BUT A DECAY. —“I lived in Milan and Buenos Aires for a while in 1998 and 1999. Young people were more tied to their families and communities, but that was because they were BROKE and there were no decent jobs. I see the same behavior in the Millennial problems of today the problems of these places 20 years ago. Eking out an existence, living in the parents’ basement. Actually it is probably better than that in the US in a lot of cases now. But in Italy and Argentina things are generally worse.”—Michael Churchill
Theme: Crisis
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Curt Doolittle shared a post.
(FB 1548951487 Timestamp) MADNESS AND CIVILIZATION by Hanzi Freinacht and Martin Å tÄpán It seems there’s an intimate relationship between madness and civilization. In recent years, it has become abundantly clear that there is a rising problem of mental health issues among adolescents and young adults in the most advanced economies of the world. We become civilized, and we subtly go batshit crazy. What is it that puts more and more of us, and increasingly often, face to face with madness? On a more general level of analysis, I would argue, it is not so much âcivilizationâ or âmodernityâ, as many classic scholars have suggested, nor âthe postmodern conditionâ or a variety thereof, as the analysts of today suggest. Rather, it is the staggering increase of complexity itself. As society becomes so much more complex, so quickly, it simply becomes more difficult for the mind to reach a somewhat stable âlocal maximumâ or âequilibriumâ. Itâs just more difficult to know who I am, whatâs right and wrong, and whatâs really real in the first place. Even as we are richer and safer than earlier generations, there are also countless social and psychological adaptations that have to be made and the problems we do have are less tangible and direct. Iâve said it before, and Iâll say it again: Weâre not built for this kind of complexity. The rewards are too great, the immediate gratifications too readily available, the threats too nebulous, the world and its horizons too vast. The mysterious relationship between madness and civilization has a name: increasing complexity. Late at night we wake up and face the creeping horror: that life itself as we know it is a social construction, one that ultimately cannot be real, only a fragment on top of an infinite abyss. And handling greater complexity in the world requires not only new ideas; it requires a kind of spiritual development of the average person. Hence, it should be a societal goal to develop not only higher subjective states in each of us, but also to help more of us develop and integrate greater inner depths, andâif possibleâto develop our ability to think more abstract thoughts, to cognitively grasp and relate to more complex realities. –response– by Martin Å tÄpán It’s a part of it. Lack of selection pressures is another. We let all sorts of people live here and reproduce, often even incentivize it, regardless of the effect on the superorganism. Thus you get more and more people with various disorders that would under most conditions be selected out. Worse, adapting the same strategy as cancer starts increasing one’s chance of reproductive success. It turns out you can’t stop selection, you can only push it up a level. If an organism is unable to select out its unfit cells, nature deems the whole organism unfit. If a nation fails to select out its unfit members, nature deems the whole nation unfit.
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Curt Doolittle updated his status.
(FB 1549111936 Timestamp) I am getting increasingly comfortable with generating ‘a statistic’ in the 30-50M range. And that’s probably what’s necessary.
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Curt Doolittle shared a link.
(FB 1549380457 Timestamp) MILITARY OPTIONS IN TIMES OF CIVIL WAR https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/1995/SLP.htm
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Curt Doolittle updated his status.
(FB 1549380093 Timestamp) ( Funny. Running a test the past week or so on civil war and the response is extremely predictable. No skin in the game means coward. Bill was right. )
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Curt Doolittle shared a link.
(FB 1549380457 Timestamp) MILITARY OPTIONS IN TIMES OF CIVIL WAR https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/1995/SLP.htm
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Curt Doolittle updated his status.
(FB 1549380093 Timestamp) ( Funny. Running a test the past week or so on civil war and the response is extremely predictable. No skin in the game means coward. Bill was right. )
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Curt Doolittle updated his status.
(FB 1549400841 Timestamp) —“These guys donât recognize the civil rights movement as an example of 4GW. They are all picking up the wrong historical examples to argue the point that âwe canât win.â … They arenât seeing the new battle space, so they are getting it wrong. … A post comparing and contrasting examples of 4GW with earlier forms of conflict might be goods for a lot of us.”— Daniel Roland Anderson
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Curt Doolittle shared a link.
(FB 1549470260 Timestamp) by John Horatio Fitzgerald –“You know this is a structural problem, not just policy, the polity failed to adapt. As Curt Doolittle explains here, it’s a failure of markets. “You get what you can from the market by voluntary exchange”, “We created a monopoly government and access to power, so we changed everybody from competing in markets in the service of each other to competing by lies deception, propaganda, gossip ridicule, shaming, pseudo science, pseudo rationalism, every possible means of deception so that we could get hold of that power…” — https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JSmtH9ERvUg
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Curt Doolittle updated his status.
(FB 1549424902 Timestamp) —“The liberal islands are three meals from anarchy”—James Knowles