Technology really is the only way out. Nothing else acts fast enough. If you're trying to start some sort of religion of post-capitalist sustainable permaculture, good for you, but religions take centuries to establish, not decades.
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My planning scenario: we've already effectively signed up for some significant transient climate change >1.5, to let significant populations die (10x covid toll at least), and take on a tech-stack transformation to unknown-unknown state equivalent to terraforming.
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This is a max-likelihood prediction/bet. Not a desired scenario. I try not to waste time on wishful thinking about how the consciousness of 7 billion people might get transformed fast enough to open up weird options. In the time-frame of relevance, people aren't going to "change"
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So things are going to get acutely bad for a couple of decades (think perma-Covid x 3), starting in the late 2020s/early 2030s probably, completely restructuring civilization. So working with shallow layers like politics and corporations is sort of irrelevant.
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I don't think it's a doomsday scenario, but it's definitely severe rewriting of civilizational firmware, with only 2-3 comparables in history. Bronze Age collapse maybe.
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There's probably a non-zero chance (notionally ~1% chance) of catastrophic changes that destroy all life or something (like those shellfish that got cooked alive in PNW in current heatwave), but those are probably not super survivable except by bottleneck populations.
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I’m not wasting time thinking about those 1% Noah’s ark scenarios even though they’re the most fun as stories. Its the boring mild-to-medium catastrophe scenarios that are in the likelihood band worth prepping for.
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Another great macro-perspective view so you don't get distracted by silliness... a whole-shebang type sankey diagram
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I’d really like to develop a course titled something like “Climate preparedness: a fermi estimation approach”
Starting where I am now it would take about a 3-4 months of full time research and thinking. Or a year at a realistic 25% effort.
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2/3 of all energy produced in the US gets lost along the way to its point of use. In 2010 it was only half. Source: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
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