Mothering Forum banner

The Long Emergency

17K views 259 replies 83 participants last post by  salmontree 
#1 ·
(Mods, I would like to have a discussion of the issues in this book relating to finances, rather than a literary discussion.)

Are other mamas here familiar with this book by James Kunstler? (There's an article that very briefly recaps the material in the book here, bear in mind the numbers given in that article are from 2005 and the price of oil is already more than double the value cited there.) I read it a couple years ago and it seriously scared the pants off me. I was horribly depressed for like a month. Then I guess I became resigned, like, whatever's going to happen will happen regardless of how much I fret about it.

We're now IMO well into the beginning stage of the scenario Kunstler outlined, where food prices have skyrocketed partly because of the increased cost of oil, and partly because a large amount of food crop has been diverted into "alternative energy".

When I read some of the other threads on this forum, I'm a little shocked at how a lot of people are perceiving the increased food and energy costs as merely an inflation problem, or signs of a recession. In other words, something that will be tough for a while, but will pass or we'll somehow adjust to. I see threads about what kind of car would be a good purchase, or if increasing gas costs would encourage one to move closer to work, with the pros and cons kind of coming down to budget and lifestyle preferences.

I hate to be all chicken little about it, but under Kunstler's scenario, private vehicles wil become obsolete. Subdivisions located beyond reasonable biking distance (or accessible public transport) from employment centers are predicted to become slums. It just seems like by the point the majority of people realize the severity of the crisis, they are not going to have the availability of choices in housing and transportation they are expecting to have.

We have done what we can. We have chickens, and a garden, and live within walking/biking distance of virtually anywhere we need to go. I still have a car, but only because being that it's paid off and I drive very little, there's no financial gain in giving it up. Might as well hang on to the convenience as long as gas can still be bought.

Just wondering where other MDC families are at on this issue. Do you know about it? Have you made lifestyle choices/changes in anticipation? Do you think we're really now IN "The Long Emergency"? Or do you think the predictions are exaggerated and things will somehow work out?
 
See less See more
#77 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by wombatclay View Post
So anyway, does the book address in more detail how "no gas for car" works with "back to the land for survival"?
The acreage vs. proximity question does pose quite a dilemma, but that's not really the focus of Kunstler's book. It's not a survivalist guide and it doesn't get that much into what people SHOULD do. It more lays out what the issues currently ARE, why people should be concerned and taking notice. That is, with declining oil production and how shortages/higher oil costs will affect the global economy and people's ability to maintain their current lifestyles. He also addresses the weaknesses of various alternative energy sources, basically it comes down to no other energy source being anywhere near as efficient as oil, and the infrastructures of alternative energies not being in place in time to help as much as will be needed.
 
#79 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by wednesday View Post

I hate to be all chicken little about it, but under Kunstler's scenario, private vehicles wil become obsolete. Subdivisions located beyond reasonable biking distance (or accessible public transport) from employment centers are predicted to become slums. It just seems like by the point the majority of people realize the severity of the crisis, they are not going to have the availability of choices in housing and transportation they are expecting to have.
I hope this thread is kept here by the mods. =-)

What you wrote above was also written about in The Washington Post not too long ago. An article said how those gated communities are becoming slums since there's no one to mow the lawns, squatters are moving in and the copper wire is torn out of the walls to be sold by folks.

I probably won't read that book anytime soon, because I am still freaked out about having read Cormac McCarthy's The Road. Talk about depressed. I was depressed for months. Like you, I feel that I am doing what I can -- living close to public transport, starting a garden and learning to grow food, using and reusing as much as possible, etc.
 
#80 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by wombatclay View Post
So anyway, does the book address in more detail how "no gas for car" works with "back to the land for survival"?
Not having read the book, I don't know, but it sounds like not. I would be very interested in knowing if there are books or articles that do address this dilemma.

We are also living rurally, 20 minutes from "anything." And our plan is to buy more workable, lower-mortgage land, but to afford that sort of thing we will need to look outside of town. Is it a catch-22? I don't know.
 
#81 ·
We have decided to sell our home with a large corner lot near the city center because after heloc'ing, we now have a burdensome debt. We do have a good 50k equity in the house though. I am paying a heloc taken out by my dad (dh has a green card and no credit history so it was the only way) at 7% for the balance of the house. The plan? Take our 50k, plus keep out 50k from the heloc we need to pay my father back for, move overseas and buy a small but nice house outright. Doing this would reduce our current payments from 1000.00 a month to about $250.00 a month. I feel that is a lot more doable in a situation where jobs might be hard to come by.

As for college for my kids, I am not planning for it. I am way turned off by the costs these days. Dh and I both have BAs and we can impart a lot of knowledge to our children and I envision having book clubs and stuff like that if my adopted community is game for it, not to mention a lot of hands-on learning experiences. I owe 14k in student loan debt for an Writing degree that hasn't helped me career-wise at all. I imagine the world in 20 years will be full of foreign graduates eager to work for far less than Americans and in all fields. I just don't know that a degree will have the same value it has now, and right now I feel it has lost so much value in the real world. Education in and of itself is great though. I just can't help but think that by then a lot of kids will be living at home permanently, which I don't think is a bad thing! Dh and I think we'll want our girls to stay with us as long as possible. They may not have a choice.

Am I the only one who feels that it might be best to advise our children not to get married and have kids? I know it sounds so gloomy, but I do believe we are in for major transformations that will make our kids' lives much harder than ours were economically speaking, and their best chance at a decent life may be to not have children. It pains me to feel this way but I already worry about the grandchildren I don't have! Dh lost a really crappy job and begged for it back out of desperation and they never called him back. I must have applied at 30 places and never got one call for an interview. Can things get better in an increasingly globalized world with drastic power shifts occurring? It is hard to imagine it.
 
#82 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by OceansEve View Post
I asked my gmother today if she has ever seen the economy looking worse than now and her response spoke mounds to me - She told me what she remembers of the depression as a child. This may all be fun theoretics to some, but to others it is a frightening horizon that is very, very visable.
I think this depends on the person, though. Both of my parents were born before the depression and have memories of it. I grew-up with depression-era stories and frugal parents. My mother is relentlessly optimistic about the future. But then she was never one to denigrate the younger generation. My father isn't that introspective but I like to tell him that he was the original reduce-reuse man.

I agree with you about the huge split between the have and the have-nots and the disappearing middle class. And I see an economic crisis - but not "devolution" - and dissolving of society like Jared Diamond describes in Collapse. I think it will be more like the Great Depression.

As far as things being set in motion-
And people thought the nuclear bomb issue was already set in motion, too. I think apparently since the Soviet Union dissolved there are a lot of unaccounted for nukes out there. What if Bin Laden got ahold of one? But see, these are the fears I grew up with. This is what my generation fears.
 
#83 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by henhao View Post

I probably won't read that book anytime soon, because I am still freaked out about having read Cormac McCarthy's The Road. Talk about depressed. I was depressed for months. Like you, I feel that I am doing what I can -- living close to public transport, starting a garden and learning to grow food, using and reusing as much as possible, etc.

Yeah, and when you combine The Long Emergency AND The Road............you get seriously depressed!!!!!!!! (I do, anyway.)
 
#84 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by wednesday View Post
The acreage vs. proximity question does pose quite a dilemma,
Yes and No. Kunsler's point is that subdivisions have neither the benefits of the rural areas NOR the benefits of the city. So, "suburbia" is the WORST of both worlds. I think Kunsler actually leans toward rural living.......where supposedly less violence will take place because you'll have fewer people.
 
#85 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by A&A View Post
I think Kunsler actually leans toward rural living.......where supposedly less violence will take place because you'll have fewer people.
He is relying on the theory of scalar stress - the less interactions there are between indiviuals in a day = less violence, the same with the opposite. I can understand that in theory, but don't totally agree either.

Ellien - a bomb is still intangible (sp?). I do not see it, I don't know who has one, or where it might be. (haha the scene from robin williams live just popped in my head... I wonder if anyone will get that) An empty wallet and bank account are a little more threatening. Everyday that I work I hear of someone else being laid off (my job gets me a lot of interaction with different people each week). There are very few families that are not being affected, nearly everyone I talk to, mostly all middle class, have a family member that is jobless. A woman I know just had both her adult daughters (along with their children) move back in with her because they both got laid off.
 
#86 ·
I didn't make it through the whole thread, but I've been thinking about this a lot. I'd be interested in what other "how to" or green/sustainable books you all found helpful. We are thinking of building a home sometime in the next 2 years, and want it to be sustainable amap.
 
#87 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by avendesora View Post
...Late 1700's: Slavery was the norm, and it really didn't occur to anyone (with just a handful of exceptions) that it might be terribly immoral. Analogy to: Many American's driving gas-guzzling SUV's without a CLUE that it might be harmful to the environment.
...
*jaw drops*

Quote:

Originally Posted by yukookoo View Post
well we are at war you know. We have been for years now. Even though its not in our back yards. People ibn this country seriously think we can be at war with big power countries or groups and not feel any economic decline? They hit our financial heart and brought it down in flames! This wasnt supposed to effect our economy?
...
If by "they", you mean Bush and cronies, I agree.

Quote:

Originally Posted by monkey's mom View Post
...
And we've really lived (collectively) above our means via credit cards.

We've really had quite the extravagant time of it for the past couple decades. And now the pendulum has to swing back a little. ...
Bread and circus. Time-honored political strategy. The difference this time is that the politicos convinced the serfs to pay for their own circus, directly.

Quote:

Originally Posted by savithny View Post
...Alternatively, the entire United States forest stock of hardwoods contains 364 billion cubic feet of wood, or 2.84 billion cords which would throw off 24,024 Trillion BTUs (note, this is only 24% of the total annual energy usage of the country). ....
Isn't your math backwards? 1/4 of our annual energy requirement means the entire forest would suffice for about 3 months.
 
#88 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by A&A View Post
Yeah, and when you combine The Long Emergency AND The Road............you get seriously depressed!!!!!!!! (I do, anyway.)
Okay, so I read the synopsis of The Road on wikipedia after it was mentioned upthread, and yes, it's extremely grim. However, it's *general* post-apocalypse fiction, right? It doesn't really have anything to do with peak oil? And cannibalization took place and became organized because there was NO other animal life? That's science fiction.

If you want your post-apocalypse fiction to be a little more uplifting, try Alas, Babylon. It's a post nuclear holocaust story set in, I think, the 50s. Good people come together as a community to form self-sufficient households, and bad people are driven off or reach their just desserts through their own actions.
 
#89 ·
really fascinating topic! I read all 5 pages with great interest. And since everyone has been posting their opinions (no one here a futurist right?), thought I would add my $.02.

Firstly it may be worth remembering that until recently, life for most humans was a miserable and mean existence. You start working very young, you do alot of work while there is light, then you go to bed when dark and repeat when the sun again rises. You do this 7 days a week (weekends being a recent phenomenon) and die sometime in your 30's-40's. Food and shelter were the main goals and hunger was a common feeling.

(shifting gears...) The people who survive and prosper, will be similar to those in the past who succeeded ... by having a desired commodity --> whether it is land, power, food or water sources, or knowledge. Or money to lend, you name it. And here I would argue and disagree with the education naysayers and say that education, i.e. knowledge, may be one's most valuable asset. Especially starting off in adult life.

Anyone, yes anyone, with at least average intelligence can learn to be self sufficient. And those are useful, and probably one day mandatory survival skills. But that will at most probably earn you only a subsistence living. I believe you must have something that others do not have, but need or want, in order to dictate the standard of living that you want. And not be at the mercy of whatever circumstances are.

If you own lots of prime real estate, or arable land, or rights to waterway access, then great, you may be set. Otherwise, I think this means careful deliberation of what type of knowledge to accumulate/ learn. You love art? Fabulous. But if you choose to study or major in it, know that the vast majority who do so earn a poor living from it. Come from a privileged background, with connections, and savy in the lifestyle of the moneyed? Then art may be a reasonable choice, b/c one will be familiar with the nuances of a class that actually buys art. Being practical will help one make wiser choices. If your art degree is from some non-desirable school and you grew up poor, it's unlikely one will land a job at Sotheby's.

I think the comfortable middle class is morphing into the lower upper class and the upper lower class, the latter who are struggling to maintain a semblence of middle class life and comprise the bulk of the prior middle class. The rich are definitely getting richer, and by a dispproportionate amount to what American history has seen for the past 100 years.
 
#91 ·
Quote:
If you want your post-apocalypse fiction to be a little more uplifting, try Alas, Babylon
Or The Gate to Women's Country or Fifth Sacred Thing.

The first deals with a limited nuclear strike scenario in which population size/resources are significantly limited. The "solutions" offered in that one involve very careful social organizations built on gender segregation, feast/famine behaviors, and agriculture/skill based education with an emphasis on history. The second book is more "modern" with biological warfare and militaristic religious groups. "Our heros" demonstrate how an urban center (San Francisco) can be retro-fitted to survive in a "limited resources/no fossil fuel" scenario.

As such, it may be a sort of uplifting follow up to The Long Emergency... it doesn't have the "how to" element, but it does provide ideas (food, social organization, government, community, medicine) for living in a population center following a techno-collapse.
 
#92 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by p.s View Post
Firstly it may be worth remembering that until recently, life for most humans was a miserable and mean existence. You start working very young, you do alot of work while there is light, then you go to bed when dark and repeat when the sun again rises. You do this 7 days a week (weekends being a recent phenomenon) and die sometime in your 30's-40's. Food and shelter were the main goals and hunger was a common feeling.
p.s., I totally agree with most of your post except the above-quoted. There's actually a lot of good archaeological evidence that that wasn't the case at all -- except for much of Western Europe. Have you read 1491 by Charles C. Mann? (A really fascinating read if you're interested in societal collapse, and in possibilities for how societies could work!) Many pre-Columbian societies in the Americans lived very comfortable lives, in a huge array of ways. There's also some statistic that I haven't got time to track down right now, about the amount of leisure time experienced in hunter-gatherer societies vs. agricultural societies (they had a LOT more).

Yes, most societies historically haven't had a long, workless childhood period, nor weekends, but it hasn't been constant backbreaking labor either. A lot of work was done communally and was as much a social activity/normal fabric of the day as it was "work," you know?

I just think for us (as a culture) to get anywhere (as the oil goes away/fertilizer supply shrinks/etc), we have to drop this idea that it's SUVs or 12 hours of rock-breaking a day, you know? It's not as though life sucked globally until about 1895. (Not saying that's what you're saying, but it's an argument I've heard elsewhere.)
 
#93 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by leerypolyp View Post
p.s., I totally agree with most of your post except the above-quoted. There's actually a lot of good archaeological evidence that that wasn't the case at all -- except for much of Western Europe. Have you read 1491 by Charles C. Mann? (A really fascinating read if you're interested in societal collapse, and in possibilities for how societies could work!) Many pre-Columbian societies in the Americans lived very comfortable lives, in a huge array of ways. There's also some statistic that I haven't got time to track down right now, about the amount of leisure time experienced in hunter-gatherer societies vs. agricultural societies (they had a LOT more).

It's not as though life sucked globally until about 1895. (Not saying that's what you're saying, but it's an argument I've heard elsewhere.)
I haven't read Mann's work, but I would guess that except for the Americas, life was very hard, i.e. sucked. The histories of most known cultures (Asian, Indian, Russian, African, Scandinavian, etc) was, and sometimes still is very hard. The Americas are unique in being very rich in natural resources and plenty of arable land.
 
#94 ·
Haven't read the book. We though feel the same way about how the country is turning. My Grandmother actually was always thinking this would happen but she thought it was biblical. She didnt get the whole picture.

What scares me is my parents live out in the country. Family farms grow corn or soy beans for the industrial market. There are little in the way of farms that grow food for eating. Or for their own families. The neighbors of theirs are in their 90's the farm is paid for and has been for sometime. They aren't worried about drought or floods ( well not anymore so then before) its the chemicals they use to grow the corn etc that they cant afford...the problem is they don't know "HOW" to farm. The know how to spray chemicals and plow...This year is probably the last year they will farm..they ( their kids...the owners are in their 90's
) almost didn't this year because of the gas they need to farm, the extra grants from the government went to the chemical company and not them this year. If they cant afford to farm think how most other farms that aren't paid for are doing.

I think our lifestyle is a large part to blame.

We just sold our house and are moving near my parents on 3 acres.
 
#95 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by wednesday View Post
Okay, so I read the synopsis of The Road on wikipedia after it was mentioned upthread, and yes, it's extremely grim. However, it's *general* post-apocalypse fiction, right? It doesn't really have anything to do with peak oil? And cannibalization took place and became organized because there was NO other animal life? That's science fiction.

If you want your post-apocalypse fiction to be a little more uplifting, try Alas, Babylon. It's a post nuclear holocaust story set in, I think, the 50s. Good people come together as a community to form self-sufficient households, and bad people are driven off or reach their just desserts through their own actions.

I've read Alas, Babylon. It is a good book. But you can't comment on The Road just by reading a synopsis of it!!!! That's not what great literature is for--watering it down into a few paragraphs!!! The Road just won the Pulitzer; it's beautiful writing about a terribly depressing scenario. You love it and hate it at the same time.
 
#96 ·
I always wonder about the suburban thing. I mean, how can it be better to be rural if you are many, many miles away from town? Many suburban lots are large and sunny enough to accomadate some serious food production (vegetables and small farm animals) and the houses are close enough together to function like a traditional small town. The houses are large enough to house two or even three families easily. The garages are large enough to be converted to general stores and shops so regular deliveries can get made to small economies and be distributed throughout the neighborhood. And the houses are often good candidates for solar power (even community solar) and a community windmill. When I look at suburban lots I see lots of potential for a new model of small town living. I mean, why not? Just change the *&^%& zoning laws!
 
#97 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by p.s View Post
I haven't read Mann's work, but I would guess that except for the Americas, life was very hard, i.e. sucked. The histories of most known cultures (Asian, Indian, Russian, African, Scandinavian, etc) was, and sometimes still is very hard. The Americas are unique in being very rich in natural resources and plenty of arable land.
I don't think this is true at all... I mean, there's the whole "fertile crescent" to start with.

All my books are packed away now 'cause we're moving, but I read an anthropological study of (I think) the !Kung San in southern Africa, done maybe 50 years ago, that found that everyone got more than enough to eat (including enough protein, fat, etc), people under about 18 and over 60 or so didn't really work at all, and the typical adult worked an average of about 18 hours a week. By "work" he meant food gathering, hunting, food preparation. This isn't true of the !Kung San any more, but it was then.

I read recently that the average new single-family house built during the fifties was around 900 square feet, and now it's closer to 2000. Our ideas about what we "need" are very different now...

dar
 
#98 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by WNB View Post

Isn't your math backwards? 1/4 of our annual energy requirement means the entire forest would suffice for about 3 months.

Not my math, that's a quote from the linked page, but IIRC, he's just doing the calculations on heating, not taking into account the need to fuel power plants. I'd have to reread the whole thing.

Still makes the point that wood /= long term solution.
 
#99 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by Dar View Post
I don't think this is true at all... I mean, there's the whole "fertile crescent" to start with.

All my books are packed away now 'cause we're moving, but I read an anthropological study of (I think) the !Kung San in southern Africa, done maybe 50 years ago, that found that everyone got more than enough to eat (including enough protein, fat, etc), people under about 18 and over 60 or so didn't really work at all, and the typical adult worked an average of about 18 hours a week. By "work" he meant food gathering, hunting, food preparation. This isn't true of the !Kung San any more, but it was then.
The ferile crescent is a narrow swath of land that is mostly in the Middle East (which I did not name) and encompasses just a bit of Africa. regarding Africa, there is now debate re: how much of the slave trade 1500-1900's was done via kidnapping vs. tribal leaders or relatives selling people into slavery. I can't believe times were good if it was more expeditious to sell one of your own rather than feed/ house them.
I'll have to read about the !Kung San.
 
#100 ·
The Middle East is part of Asia, which you did name.

If you're talking about the 1500s to 1900s, you're talking about the period when the Europeans came into Africa and messed everything up, to put it mildly. Whether the Europeans were directly kidnapping people or running things behind the scenes by pitting different ethnic groups against each other, the result was the same. Colonialism totally messed things up in Africa, and the whole continent is still suffering the effects.

The !Kung San, however, were a nomadic hunting and gathering society, and the slave trade really didn't have much to do with them. The west african coastal areas were the places most targeted by slavers.

dar
 
#101 ·
Quote:

Originally Posted by Dar View Post
The Middle East is part of Asia, which you did name.

ah, i stand corrected. When I named Asia, I was thinking specifically of China, the largest country in Asia, in which life for the vast majority for millennia has been miserable. An amount of peoples that far outnumber the Americas, plus the !Kung, plus the fertile crescent. Life in Russia nd the steppe has been pretty hard for as long as I know. Still is.

Most of Africa, pre-1900 lived in huts or tents. This is JMHO, but that is a pretty mean existence. I personally have lived in a tent (medium sized, 9 man) for 6 months, and it was pretty miserable to me. By the end I was planning a long vacation in the Tuscan hills, and dreaming of flushing toilets.
 
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Top