Not Extinction Rebellion, But Extinction Reconciliation

Yes, we must continue to rebel against the structures of power which have brought us to the brink of near-term extinction. At the same time, we must prepare for "inevitable collapse, probable catastrophe and possible extinction". We can prepare by practicing Resilience, Relinquishment, Restoration, and--above all--Reconciliation.

“I Only Have One Prediction for You … We Are All Going to Die” by Dougald Hine

All enduring human cultures have been shaped by the need to be worthy of what we take. Either we make our lives a part of a cycle of gift, or we become an engine of depletion, bringing about a desolation from which we will not escape. The fossil economy breaks the possibility of such a cycle. How many million years of dying in the forests and seas of the ancient world goes into one generation of living the way we have been doing around here lately?

“We have met the deniers, and they are us” by Adam Sacks

We’re deniers every time we say “80 percent by 2050,” or even “80 percent by 2020”; every time we refer to tipping points in the future tense; every time we advocate substituting “clean” energy for “dirty” energy; every time we buy a squiggly light bulb or a hybrid vehicle; every time we advocate for cap-and-trade, or even a carbon tax; every time we countenance the mention of loopy geoengineering schemes; every time we invoke the future of our children and grandchildren and ignore the widespread suffering from global climate disruption today.

New Michael Moore-backed documentary “Planet of the Humans” questions the false promises of the environmental movement

“It was kind of crushing to discover that the things I believed in weren’t real, first of all, and then to discover not only are the solar panels and wind turbines not going to save us ... but (also) that there is this whole dark side of the corporate money ... It dawned on me that these technologies were just another profit center.”

“The Fallacy of Climate Activism” by Adam Sacks

Carbon emissions are a symptom, not a cause. The cause is 300 years of relentlessly exploitative, extractive, and exponentially growing technoculture, against the background of ten millennia of hierarchical and colonial civilizations. We must leave behind 10,000 years of civilization. We have to figure out again how to live locally.

“It’s Already Too Late: Reflections at the End of the Decade” by Ian MacKenzie

The following is an excerpt. You can read the whole article here. We are being asked to bear witness to the ending of days. Lest I find myself categorized immediately as a ‘doomist’, I wish to say up front that I am not suggesting hopelessness. I am agreeing, as Martin Shaw has said, that we areContinue reading "“It’s Already Too Late: Reflections at the End of the Decade” by Ian MacKenzie"