The Extinction Tariff

The economic war between US and Canada, Mexico or China is only the fine script in the much wider economic war taking place between a bankrupt humanity on one hand, and an equally bankrupt Earth on the other.  The real war of tariffs is taking place between two much less known economies: the human Ponzi … Continue reading The Extinction Tariff

Live Fast, Die Young: The Great Procrastination

The short-term nature of this civilisation is evident in its short-term economic system: impulse buying, instant gratification, single-use commodities and single-use natural resources are all manifestations of a mindset that systematically ignores long-term repercussions.  Our psychological coping mechanisms and addictions seek short term relief in unhealthy foods, drugs, and habits that make us feel good … Continue reading Live Fast, Die Young: The Great Procrastination

Final Destination: Extinction

With a brain no longer fit for a world of scarcity, humans meet the definition of an evolutionary dead-end: a species unable to adapt.  Extinction events occur when environmental conditions change too rapidly for organisms to develop evolutionary adaptations, and this is precisely what is happening to humans.  Runaway climate change is altering Earth too fast … Continue reading Final Destination: Extinction

The longest 10 minutes of your life have just begun

Our powerful, charismatic brain is not designed for long-term planning and projecting.  Its impressive capacity to solve problems is at its peak only when these problems are present right here, right now.  From a survival point of view, the “right here right now” is much more important than 10 years from now, or even 10 … Continue reading The longest 10 minutes of your life have just begun

A Brain from Another Time

Our naturally dismissive attitude towards impending disasters is woven into the geological history of this planet.  Our brain did not evolve in the midst of catastrophes, but during one of the most climatically stable and abundant times in Earth’s history.  Resources were infinitely plentiful in relation to our consumption, and the climate remained stable enough … Continue reading A Brain from Another Time

Collapse Denial and the Trauma Response

Our brain has a dangerous affinity for stability: it desperately wants to believe in an unchanging world, even as the world changes.  This make-believe stability evolved as a survival mechanism that was fundamental to our feelings of safety, allowing us to "keep calm and carry on" even as our world went through mayhem.  Our brain … Continue reading Collapse Denial and the Trauma Response

The Age of the Farmed Consumatron

It is both interesting and terrifying that the survival of this economic system has become more important than the survival of humanity.  The necrosystem only cares about propagating itself, which it achieves by farming more humans and creating more consumer needs.  Human society did not simply invent business.  It has become a business all to … Continue reading The Age of the Farmed Consumatron

Frankenfoods of The Anthropocene

The evolution of our food production over time deserves a prominent place in the long list of technologies whose impact ranged from bad to worse to terrifying. Today's obesity epidemic is the direct result of the incredible changes which took place in our food industry over the course of just a few decades.  Just as … Continue reading Frankenfoods of The Anthropocene

Intergenerational Technological Trauma

Our curiosity into ourselves has been running at a much slower pace than the one at which we have been merging with technology.  Although technology is helping us discover ourselves, it also filters and distorts reality.  There is less and less inquiry about how we, humans, are coping in a rapidly changing world.  Without a … Continue reading Intergenerational Technological Trauma

Happiness In the Machine Age

Genuine forms of happiness have been exchanged for counterfeit versions originating in the world of machines: goods owned, GDP units earned, number of holidays left.  Happiness is being measured in numbers and quantities instead of moments and feelings.  Of all human generations who have lived before us, we are the least capable of answering the … Continue reading Happiness In the Machine Age