"I'm an entropy fan"
-George Carlin
"Its the end of the world as we know it, and I feel fine"
-Michael Stipe
My Friends,
You just missed it, but I had the most awesome end-of-the-world boner ever. It all started on a night like tonight. More specifically it was tonight. Here in Hamilton, the lights all of a sudden went out whilst I was browsing a forum dedicated to cheating all government and confiscatory bureaus out of my hard-earned skrilla.
Suddenly everything went black and after a split-second of thinking, "Ain't this some inconveneient shit?" I suddenly thought, "Hey, this could be exactly what I have been waiting for! XD" I shut my laptop and walked out onto the balcony just to confirm that all the neighbourhood lights were off.
They were. So far, so good.
Quickly I went back indoors and sent out a mass text message to my parents and siblings in other cities and provinces asking them if they were having a blackout. Hoping beyond hope that the message would not send because cell phone towers were out of commission too, I was somewhat disheartened when the message was received by all recipients.
No matter; perhaps the cell phone towers were on emergency power for just such an eventuality.
I waited.
I went out back out on the balcony.
Then I waited some more.
I started receiving scattered messages to the negative and realized with a heavy heart that this particular loss of power was no widespread precursor of societal collapse, but simply a symptom of our outdated, inefficient and obsolete power infrastructure.
My dad responded, wondering what I was talking about. I responded to him thusly:
Or maybe not...
Now, here tonight in the darkness of the street, vaguely aware of excited murmurs from others obscured from sight by the night, this thought of rebuilding the world even better from the ashes of what we have today was at the forefront of my mind; all romanticized survivalist notions were absent from my consciousness, notwithstanding the prudent concern of procuring groceries to weather the storm.
"There is no reason to fear the imminent, global financial collapse."
-Unknown
To be clear, I look at the societal collapse I have been referring to as a direct result of the financial collapse this quotation alludes to. But society is not really going to be a collapse even when the financial system does. Rather, I think it will change. After all, as long as we're here there is a society in some form. And while society is always/has always been emergent (changing), I see a clearly marked period of more dramatic transition on the horizon where circumstances will force us to make use of our stifled ingenuity and compassion, currently yoked by a competitive and uncaring system which forces us to sacrifice a bit of our humanity every day in order to thrive.
When that unknown speaker says there is no reason to fear the collapse, he is right in ways you might not have even considered. Most people's immediate concern, if they are selfish assholes with narrow aims in life, will be, "Oh noes, what about all my delicious monies!?!?" Relax, when all your money is rendered worthless it will also wipe out all your debt and obligations too.
Or think of it like this: Every dollar will be put out of its misery too.
See, I liken every dollar to a sick person who gets weaker and frailer every day due to a sickness called inflation. Every day your dollars degenerate further, laying in bed on a respirator, shitting into a bag and you are forced to watch as they become more weak, but you never actually get the closure of seeing them pass on and finally be at peace. Like a terminally-ill person, their time has passed, and though the death will be an initial shock, you can not rightly say it was wholly unexpected and not for the best.
"Put on your sunglasses; the future is lookin' bright!"
See, I liken every dollar to a sick person who gets weaker and frailer every day due to a sickness called inflation. Every day your dollars degenerate further, laying in bed on a respirator, shitting into a bag and you are forced to watch as they become more weak, but you never actually get the closure of seeing them pass on and finally be at peace. Like a terminally-ill person, their time has passed, and though the death will be an initial shock, you can not rightly say it was wholly unexpected and not for the best.
As the great warrior-poet, Christopher "Ludacris" Bridges once said, "Drink some prune-juice and let the shit go."
Others among you who are rightly less concerned with your delicious currencies than you are with your safety, but you should not worry too much either. After all, nobody is out to get you who is simply being kept at bay by the current social order and its laws. I too fall into this fearful category from time to time although I should know better; having been all of over the world and having met many different people, I know that the fear-mongering which we see on television is just that, and that people more or less just want to happily co-exist. So no, I don't worry about roving gangs of raider/cannibals marauding when things go sour, acting like a dark cloud trying to steal the sunshine from my apocalypse.
Even when apocalypse is frowning (always), he is still kinda smiling.
And what about the for realz bad guys; you know, the prison population? You just know that when people barricade their doors and stop going to work that the prison guards and administrators will do the same. Rather than leave them to rot in their cages, some well-meaning, compassionate souls will probably try to release them so they have a chance at survival. Should we be afeared of pissed-off convicts swelling the ranks of the aforementioned marauders? Methinks not. If crimes are not committed for monies (and the vast majority are, so there would really be no incentive for them in the post-dollar world) then they are typically perpetuated by so-called "sickos" who don't do bad things for sane reasons like monetary gain. Well research has shown that these sickos are people who are likely to respond violently when they feel looked down upon and feel they have no other remedy for the shame they feel, whether that be amends, recompense, or simply some other aspect of their life which they feel proud of and can mentally cling to in their darker moments. If everyone loses everything and is (gasp!) reduced to being equal, it will be hard for anyone to look down on anyone else in the first place.
Besides, if theres anything the Christopher Nolan Batman trilogy has taught me, its that convicts, when they are pushed to the brink of survival will act honourably, like they did when they were trapped on the ferry in The Dark Knight and the Joker set it up so that they would have to blow up the ferry beside them full of civilians by midnight or risk being blown up themselves.
You've come a long way, DeeBo
Then again, in Batman Begins Nolan showed convicts as looking for retribution against Gothamites when a paranoid frenzy was induced in the population by Ra's al-Ghul's fear toxin.
And then he (Nolan) howed them (SPOILER ALERT!!) as all too willing to take control of society and hold mock trials against their former societal oppressors (which invariably ended in death sentences) when Bane freed them from Blackgate Prison in The Dark Knight Rises.
So I'm not sure where Nolan actually stands on prisoners to be honest.
But I digress. I hadn't actually meant to go on a tangent dispelling the likely fears people have about the inevitable collapse. Rather I wanted to extol the benefits and the positives. But in the same way we define our freedom as not being held captive, and heaven as being absent of the horrors of hell, perhaps it would be more effective if I made a short list of negative aspects of our society which are actually exacerbated by our system. Which of these system-induced features of our lives could you do without?:
The stress of always feeling inadequate because you don't have as much money as the next person, your big, fat junk-food addicted kids, war, most crime, parking tickets, most neuroses which come as a result of the psycho-social stress of living in a stratified society, not being able to trust anyone you don't know (and even some you do), taxes, politics, child prostitution/slavery, etc...
The list could go on but whether you realize it or not, there is not one problem you face which does not relate back to our monetary-market paradigm in some way (Someone call me out on this please!!). Therefore I say we welcome with open arms our impending financial ruin, and call it what it actually is, our impending rebirth. When I say it is an exciting time to be alive, I truly mean it. In fact the worst thing that could happen at this point to me personally is that things go on more or less as they have for the rest of my life, I put money away for retirement, have a comfortable existence, sire a couple kids out of boredom and become a depressed geriatric because all of my doom-saying was for naught. So when I look forward to ruin I don't look forward to it in the religious "I want the rapture so I can meet Jesus" way, or the "Hey Allah, where the virgins at?" way, I mean it in the "Oh man, building a new and better world is gonna be dope as fuck!" way.
I'll leave you with two things. First, one of my favourite George Carlin bits (and the source of one of the quotations I led in with).
George's insights are as relevant as ever in these wacky, exciting times, and although he would probably call me a fucking liar, I would like to see us work together to mitigate the loss of life which could likely occur during a societal collapse. But before the collapse anyone is fair game because its just more evidence of the system breaking down lol.
The second thing I want to leave you with is an idea my younger brother left me with. I asked him how he would deal with society collapsing a while back (yeah, I think about it a lot). I asked him, "Would you stock up on food?" "Would you fortify your house?" "Would you get out of the city?" His response stuck with me: "Naw brother, I'd get a table and a pot and go out into the street and serve soup to people as they were running around scared & panicking."
More thinking like that is needed and we'll be able to weather any storm.
Stay Thirsty,
-Andre Guantanamo
P.S. The power is back on fml
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