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Judi Lynn

(160,637 posts)
Thu Apr 10, 2014, 05:11 PM Apr 2014

Culling the Human Herd in the 21st Century

April 10, 2014
The Savage Sorting

Culling the Human Herd in the 21st Century

by JOHN STANTON

“There is a de facto redefinition of “the economy” when sharp contractions are gradually lost to standard measures. The unemployed who lose everything…easily fall off the edge of what is defined as “the economy” and counted as such. So do small shop and factory owners who lose everything and commit suicide. And so do the growing number of well-educated students and professionals who leave…all together. These trends redefine the space of the economy. They make it smaller and expel a good share of the unemployed and poor from standard measures. Such a redefinition makes “the economy” presentable, so to speak, allowing it to show a slight growth of GDP per capita.

The reality at the ground level is more akin to a kind of economic version of ethnic cleansing in which elements considered troublesome are dealt with by simply eliminating them. This shrinking and redefinition of economic space so that economies can be represented as being “back on track” holds for a growing number of economies in the European Union and elsewhere (like the United States)… One indication of a people’s economic despair is a sharp rise in suicide. This trend is evident in several countries worldwide from India to the United States…

The channels for expulsion vary greatly. They include austerity policies that have helped shrink the economies of Greece and Spain, environmental policies that overlook toxic emissions from enormous mining operations in Norilsk, Russia and the American state of Montana…if our concern is environmental destruction rather that interstate politics, the fact that both these mining operations are heavy polluters matters more than the fact that one is in Russia and the other in the United States…The diverse processes and conditions I include under the notion of expulsion all share one aspect: they are acute. While the abjectly poor worldwide are the most extreme instance, I do include such diverse conditions as the impoverishment of the middle classes in rich countries, the evictions of millions of small farmers in poor countries…Then there are the countless displaced people warehoused in formal and informal refugee camps, the minoritized groups in rich countries who are warehoused in prisons and the able bodied unemployed men and women warehoused in ghettoes and slums…Some are new types of expulsions, such as the 9 million households in the United States whose homes were foreclosed…”

Saskia Sassen’s forthcoming book Expulsions: Brutality and Complexity in the Global Economy (Harvard-Belknap Press, May 2014) begins its sobering journey with an Introduction titled, “The Savage Sorting.” The Savage Sorting seems destined to become the short-form description of 21st Century to be remembered, if at all, in some distant future by a genetically reengineered humanity (and biosphere).

More:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/04/10/culling-the-human-heard-in-the-21st-century/

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pscot

(21,024 posts)
2. Globally speaking, minorities are the majority
Thu Apr 10, 2014, 09:28 PM
Apr 2014

and the majority will bear the brunt. When natural forces perform the cull it's called selection. It's a design feature.

RainDog

(28,784 posts)
3. These aren't natural forces
Thu Apr 10, 2014, 09:33 PM
Apr 2014

Those who refuse to deal with what exists at the moment are the ones who are creating "nasty, brutish and short" lives for the many.

pscot

(21,024 posts)
4. But the ones who refuse to deal with what exists at the moment
Thu Apr 10, 2014, 09:47 PM
Apr 2014

is us. It's everybody. We're all guilty. It's a Milo Minderbinder world and everyone has a share, except for childless cave dwellers subsisting on roots and grubs. We've multiplied geometrically until we've far exceeded the carrying capacity of our world. Sure there are greedheads, war lovers and assorted evil doers, but they've always been around. The problem is us. There are just too damned many of us. Malthus was right, at last.

RainDog

(28,784 posts)
5. We could create hydroponic greenhouse skyscrapers
Thu Apr 10, 2014, 10:05 PM
Apr 2014

that use rainwater/filtering system and feed people - the farm can be in the city. They can be fueled with hemp pellets grown on farms - hemp is carbon neutral - there are things we can do but those with power maintain their positions in industry by depleting natural resources rather than use them in ways to create sustainability.

Those in power have made deals to avoid birth control as part of global poverty programs - when limiting the size of a family (by also making living conditions such that a child born will survive) is one of the best things people can do to help decrease population growth.

I'm not responsible for those policies - Republicans are responsible for the second one, in regard to U.S. aid. I don't have the money to invest in a future - those who are privatizing education do, tho, it seems.

I've never voted for a republican - I don't set the parameters for who is acceptable for the ruling class to elect. I limited my reproduction to ZGP for my family. I participate in conservation efforts in various ways in my community.

So, I really think the onus is upon those who have the power to change the course of current political ideology. The U.S. has ignored things like working toward x percent of renewable energy as part of infrastructure - the ptb don't want to invest in upgrading infrastructure with better options for mass transit. etc. etc. etc.

People with political power know what needs to be done - but those who get elected are too beholden to special interests and pretend climate change is a hoax, birth control is a sin, and the fossil fuel and coal industries must be placated.

They don't listen to people like you, or me, or those with some good ideas to mitigate current conditions.

RainDog

(28,784 posts)
7. well, people have talked about this for a while
Fri Apr 11, 2014, 12:42 PM
Apr 2014

we need to stop removing trees to make room to grow food - we need to grow food close to where it will be consumed - farms are great places to grow carbon neutral fuels - like hemp.

http://www.popsci.com/environment/article/2007-07/skyscraper-farms

AndyTiedye

(23,500 posts)
8. No Trees are being Displaced for Our Garden, Only Grass
Sat Apr 12, 2014, 03:25 AM
Apr 2014

The skyscraper gardens envisaged by that article look interesting, have any been built yet?
One problem with going vertical is that you then have a bunch of land behind the things that gets very little sunlight.
Sunlight is a scarce commodity in a city of high-rises. These high-rise farms also look very energy-intensive.

I certainly can't build one. WhatI can do and have been doing is expanding the vegetable garden in our yard instead of trying to maintain a lawn there.

RainDog

(28,784 posts)
9. right. those are for entire cities
Sat Apr 12, 2014, 03:34 AM
Apr 2014

water is derived from the plants themselves, etc. some other designs I have seen use fish along with water.

one, which I looked for but couldn't find, used a pellet feeder for biofuel - and, of course, solar is there too.

they figured out how to feed the entire city of NY, and have water, as well.

something like this would be very expensive - and it would change the way some large-scale ag is done - but commercial ag is the biggest industry for fuels, and changing the way it is done - again, large scale, would be a major investment.

some people in small spaces already do vertical gardening with felt pockets you can hang on fences - and some new buildings are including living walls of plants to enhance the air in buildings.

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