Collapse is the word on the street (just not online)

Every 4 months or so, the Deep Adaptation Review is released as a free summary of recent and relevant information on collapse risk, readiness and response. 12,000 people receive it. Past issues can be accessed as well as the new September review. My editorial follows below.

Collapse is the word on the street (just not online)

Continue reading “Collapse is the word on the street (just not online)”

Let’s meet in 2024?

Although I resigned my academic position to increasingly focus on local resilience efforts in the country I have now emigrated to, Indonesia, during 2024 I will continue to share thoughts on collapse risk, readiness and response. I will do that in four ways – essay writing, podcast interviews, public lectures, and short courses. As long as world systems hold together until March 2025, and I stay fit and well (!!), then I will be speaking and teaching in Australia, Belgium, Hungary, Mexico, Switzerland, Germany, UK and the USA. In Belgium in March, I will be joined by Satish Kumar and Pablo Servigne. In April in Budapest I will be celebrating 5 years of the Deep Adaptation movement in the country with the largest national group.

My keynote talk Mexico in October will mark the launch of the Spanish language version of Breaking Together. Then I will head to Oakland (California) that month to teach. In November I will present at some international NGOs and the United Nations, in Geneva, which will also include the launch the French version of the book, before I head to Berlin to present there. I will conclude my book tour in Brazil in early 2025, to launch the Portuguese translation of the book.

Aside from events in those locations, I will teach an online course “Leading Through Collapse” twice a year, scheduled to be suitable for any time zone. Any income from these activities already has a destination… the regenerative farming school I’m co-developing here in Bali.

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Read more: Let’s meet in 2024?

My aim with these events around the world is to support people who are bringing collapse-awareness to their professions and public, in different regions and languages. This is the first international tour I am doing for 7 years, and I don’t intend to do another for many years, if ever. Therefore, I don’t feel guilty about the flying involved, as, like me, I still encourage people to fly less and fly effectively i.e. we should think about what we are trying to accomplish. Of course, that is how we can reflect on why we do anything that has an impact on the environment. Having a better reason to travel than the largest polluter in the world, which is the US military (not including proxy wars), probably isn’t a high enough bar to set for ourselves, although puts things in perspective 😉

If you would like to receive information on my events or courses in one of the countries I just mentioned, then please sign up to the relevant notification list below.

Jem in Brussels, Geneva, Berlin, and Budapest, 2024

Jem in Mexico, October 2024

Jem in California, October 2024

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Central Bankers v The World

“The Governor of the Bank of England has warned of “apocalyptic” global food price rises and said he is “helpless” in the face of surging inflation” reported The Daily Telegraph newspaper in the UK last year.

It feels a little odd when a central banking head uses words associated with doom-mongers like me. Governor Andrew Bailey was making headlines for describing his difficulties with managing inflation. The news coverage was a stark, if momentary, reminder that we exist in a living world, where our health and nutrition come from the soil, water, plants and animals, and not the abstract digits that pass across our screens. No, we can’t eat money, as Native Americans elders pointed out to the genocidal invaders centuries ago. Governor Bailey’s comment revealed how environmental change is impacting on modern societies in tangible ways. In my book Breaking Together, I marshal evidence that the fall in standard of living in most countries prior to the pandemic was partly the result of the fracturing biophysical foundations such societies. However, I can’t claim ‘I told you so’ as I disagree with the Governor on the key causes of inflation. Although the war in Ukraine matters greatly to grain markets, recent inflation has had little to do with our damaged global environment. Instead, as I describe in detail in Chapter 2 of my book, inflation since 2020 has been the result of the cavalier policies that central bankers, including Bailey himself, launched under the cover of the pandemic. The impacts of environmental change on prices are only now beginning to be felt. Because central bankers caused a wave of inflation prior to ecologically-driven inflation, the longer-term situation is going to be worse than the Governor claimed. So, I want to share with you what I think the implications are for those of us who care about both environmental and economic justice. But first, let’s go a little deeper into the inflation situation.

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It’s true that environmental degradation, including a destabilized climate, is beginning to impact on the production and distribution of everything that we consume in a modern society. There is only one future for that trend, whatever we do with carbon emissions during this decade. By recognising this situation publicly, Bailey was aligning with alert economists like James Meadway and his colleagues at The Progressive Economy Forum. Since 2021, they have described the ways that climate change and environmental degradation are affecting the quality and availability of many products, and will do so increasingly in future. Meadway summarises this thesis in a recent episode of Planet Critical. I agree with their analysis of what is ahead, but it seems premature to blame the higher inflation of the last few years on environmental disruption. For instance, one key input is oil, which has often been identified as likely to ‘peak’ and drive inflation. In Chapter 2, I note that the price of a barrel of oil was much higher for consecutive years in the past without that impacting significantly on the price of food and other products. Instead, monetary policies launched during the pandemic caused a flood of money into economies around the world. That chapter is now available as a free audio, as well as a discussion paper. In it, I detail how the central bankers justified their novel purchasing of bonds issued by the largest companies in their countries as a sensible response to the economic impacts of lockdowns, and that story was accepted uncritically by the world’s business and financial press. However, I provide the evidence that the central bankers had the policy ready to go before the lockdowns were announced, and launched them when the lockdowns were expected to only be for a few weeks (so not presenting a significant impact economically). Moreover, anyone who knows the first thing about business could see that money given to corporations would not be used by them to keep staff employed to serve customers that didn’t exist anymore. Instead, they took the money, sacked thousands of people, and invested in foreign acquisitions. I perceived this as a neo-colonial dash for corporate territory, perhaps as a hedge by the ruling class against future currency declines or collapses.  

I know James Meadway from when we were working for the Labour Party under Jeremy Corbyn in 2017 and he was advancing bold policies for a more environmentally-smart economy. He continues to be an important voice on economic affairs through his Macrodose podcast. Although we might disagree on the extent of ecological contributions to past inflation, I think his analysis of what is ahead for societies is spot on, and he powerfully challenges the basis of economics as an anthropocentric discipline. That is how economists stupidly assume the wider world to be infinite. Unfortunately, leftist intellectuals in the West have generally been timid, or absent, in critiquing the orthodox policy agenda on the pandemic. Therefore, a ‘disaster capitalist’ form of feasting on society by Big Pharma, Big Tech, and Big Finance, went largely unchallenged by those best equipped to do so. For some, that might have been due to a fear of being labelled as disrespectful to medical staff, arrogant about science, or lacking concern for the vulnerable. Such labels of disdain for people who questioned the narrative were promoted by politicians and mass media. They were then falsely promoted to us as widely-held opinions as US Big Tech platforms choose what we all saw, and did not see, from our friends and colleagues online. One doesn’t need to endorse any conspiracy theory about the pandemic to see that the dates and impacts of monetary decisions do not fit with the official explanations (as I detail in my book), and instead the situation was used an excuse for an agenda that the ruling class already had in mind.

Unfortunately, the ecological drivers of inflation will kick in over the coming years, especially given the recent acceleration of global warming. That inflation begins from a baseline of prices forced higher by the policies of central banks. But that isn’t where the crimes of the bankers end. Astonishingly, given their claims to take climate change seriously, they dished out huge amounts of pandemic cash to corporations in the oil sector as well as those sectors that consume large amounts of oil. More deeply, they continue to oversee an expansionist monetary system. That is one where over 97% of all money in circulation in modern economies is issued by private banks in the form of interest-bearing debt. In Chapter 10 of my Breaking Together, I explain how that monetary system requires the ever-increasing consumption of natural resources to enable economic growth, rather than allowing for a steady-state economy. That pressure to grow is exactly what we don’t need in an era when we are hitting the limits of the Earth to provide our resources and process our wastes.

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Speaking of the many intersecting factors driving inflation, the Governor of the Bank of England joked that he had ‘run out of horsemen’. Yet all he had to do was look in the mirror for a little longer. Central bankers have neither the skills nor the legitimacy to shape any society’s response to the global predicament. Will anything change? There is zero evidence of that, despite the valiant efforts of people engaged in The Progressive Economy Forum, and similar groups worldwide. Therefore, the most likely scenario is that the monetary system will collapse in on itself. We don’t know when. Perhaps the bankers do. Nevertheless, we won’t need to wait that long: in Chapter 1, I pull together the data that indicates the breakdown of modern societies has already begun.

So, what can we do? Some socialists are discussing whether future persistent and even runaway inflation, especially for food, that is caused by environmental pressures will radicalise populations. Disgruntlement is inevitable, but channelling that into a coherent political agenda that includes changing monetary systems is extremely unlikely (and I am not aware of it happening before). I would be ecstatic if a political party could be elected on an agenda to take over central banks and make them serve the public again. That agenda would also require recognising the era of societal disruption and decline that we now face and reshaping monetary systems accordingly. Sadly, all evidence in my lifetime, and in history, is that the ‘powers-that-be’ won’t allow such fundamental change. Perhaps our only solace is knowing that during collapse, the bankers have further to fall. I say that without wishing to accelerate a collapse… in their hubris the bankers have that well covered themselves. Instead, it is time for more of us to turn away from the suits administering destructive systems and their stenographers in media. Instead, we can turn to each other. In Chapter 12 of Breaking Together, I describe a range of community economy initiatives, seeking to re-localise production, consumption, and exchange systems. Key to their efforts is that they are developing alternative means of exchange that do not rely on the banking system. I was therefore pleased to see the book reviewed by Shareable, an organisation that is promoting such local-scale initiatives, including those that are explicitly aimed at restoring or protecting the common ownership of shared resources. This perspective is why I will be promoting local exchange systems between small regenerative businesses here in Indonesia, alongside our training centre at Bekandze Farm. If successful, we won’t need to eat the rich. Which might be another reason to channel philanthropic funds to the project?! I’ll be talking about these ideas at the Ubud Writers and Readers festival on October 19th, as well as with Gaia Education, online on September 9th.

Perhaps you want to ‘up your game’ during the unravelling of modern societies? If so, please consider studying with me.

Donate to keep Jem writing / Read his book Breaking Together / Read Jem’s key ideas on collapse / Subscribe to this blog / Study with Jem / Browse his latest posts / Read the Scholars’ Warning / Visit the Deep Adaptation Forum / Receive Jem’s Biannual Bulletin / Receive the Deep Adaptation Review / Watch some of Jem’s talks / Find Emotional Support / Jem’s actual views on Covid

Critical theory ain’t woke

Last week I released a free audio of my chapter on the need for ‘critical wisdom’ in an era of societal disruption and collapse. I linked to it from an essay on a counterproductive phenomenon I refer to as ‘conspiracy porn,’ which has taken off as Big Oil seeks to capture widespread and justified anxieties about regulatory capture and government overreach during the last few years. The outlandish theories about the causes of disasters, promoted through social media, are just the latest efforts of a sector that has spent decades and millions of dollars in promoting denial of climate change (e.g. see here and here). As anxieties grow, people will be more vulnerable to manipulation of all kinds, with both mass media and social media providing avenues for ‘psychological warfare’ on the public by different factions of capital.

Continue reading “Critical theory ain’t woke”

#ConspiracyPorn hits Hawaii and the world

Look at those trees! Unburned! That proves weapons were used and it’s a conspiracy!

Oh, wait, that is a picture of a fire from a decade ago, before any ‘Directed Energy Weapons’ had been trialled. The unburnt trees are standing next to burned out houses in Valparaiso because that’s what happens with urban fires. Wooden houses catch fire easily from being hit by burning embers blown on the wind. But green leaves on living trees don’t catch fire so easily from those embers. Have you ever tried putting green leaves on a bonfire? It might get a bit smoky, but they don’t burn easily. In case you’re in any doubt, you could pick from a list of major fires in the 2010s, and search for images to discover how many of the trees ‘mysteriously escaped’ any of laser beams (which didn’t exist).

The reason a wildfire can burn many trees in a forest, not an urban area, is because the fire can pass through the canopy, so an actual flame passes from tree to tree. Crucial to such wildfires is the amount of dry matter on the forest floor, and the number of dead trees due to disease – as they can catch fire easily. Extremes of heat and cold, dry and wet, as well as the shrinking of forest area due to felling, are all known to increase the number of diseased trees, and therefore the likelihood of localised fires becoming massive wildfires. That is the best explanation for why, globally, forest fires have roughly doubled in the last 20 years. In case you didn’t know it yet, I am writing about these fire dynamics because of the tragic fires in Hawaii. In particular, there is strangely popular theory about the deadly fire in the town of Lahaina. The theory has meant that popular youtubers with massive audiences have chosen to ignore the reasons why forest fires became worse in recent years, and what we could be doing to try to reduce that in future. The conspiracy theory goes like this: the fires are started by Directed Energy Weapons (DEW), to create panic about climate change, and to force cities that resist adoption of ’15-minute smart city’ policies to curb private vehicle use. Some of the conspiracy theories also like to claim that the 15-minute smart cities agendas will curb personal movement rather than just cars (although there have been no such proposals or initiatives). The ‘evidence’ put forward for this view of the fires in Hawaii, includes: the fires only burned properties not trees, that the ashes look weird, boats were burned in the water, there are images of Direct Energy Weapons being used, and that Hawaii is hosting a 15-minute smart cities conference. Writing more than a week later, there are still many videos being widely shared on TikTok and other platforms that make some or all of these claims (see the ‘screen grab’ one of the most popular).

Continue reading “#ConspiracyPorn hits Hawaii and the world”

Jem’s summary of the past months, compiled Aug ’23

Every 5 months or so I send out a summary of some of what I’ve been doing. Last weekend I sent the latest. It follows below. If you would like to get the next into your inbox in about 5 months, sign up here.

How is your experience of social media these days? There is quite a lot of stress-inducing news and modes of interaction online. In my case, being kicked off Twitter a month ago with no explanation has had an upside – and not just less screen time! It has given people the opportunity to express their views on dialogue and censorship. Friends and colleagues have sent me messages from all kinds of people who are saying my account should be restored, as well as senior-ranking academics who are actually celebrating me being censored. That’s quite revealing, isn’t it?

Psychologists know how our fear of feeling painful emotions can lead to us suppressing them by directing our anger at people whose existence reminds us of the reason for our painful emotions (they call that response ‘experiential avoidance’). If you disagree or deny that environmental disruption is already so severe and self-reinforcing that the breakdown of industrial consumer life is unavoidable, then you may feel more uncomfortable as reality hits home. The world is witnessing major disruptions, ocean temperatures are freakish, and the month of July was globally 1.5C degrees above pre-industrial temperatures, indicating that many self-reinforcing feedbacks are likely [see endnotes]. As I describe in my book’s chapter on the food system, a ‘multi-breadbasket failure’ with huge implications for grain markets has been calculated as near certain within 3 years of such a global temperature rise. In response, many senior ranking climatologists are doubling down on criticising those of us who warned 5 years ago, or more, that the current situation was the most likely scenario. In my book chapter on climate, there is a section where I revisit the claims in my Deep Adaptation paper of 2018, and show that 2023 observational data and climate science corroborates what I concluded back then (you can listen to the chapter for free, or get the whole audiobook).

Continue reading “Jem’s summary of the past months, compiled Aug ’23”

Regenerative Farming – it’s time!

Bekandze Farm School – growing healing with local partners

Our crowdfund is live! Visit: https://chuffed.org/project/bekandze

The following text is from August 2023, announcing the launch of the project.

Beginning in February 2023, our farming project is proceeding at pace, having confirmed the land lease, farm infrastructure, family involvement, staff profit sharing, organic NGO partnership, and local temple involvement. But we aren’t doing this project just to enjoy a little bit of farming. Our plan is to work with our local NGO partner to support small holders in the area around Tampaksiring (Bali) to convert to, or take up, collapse-ready regenerative farming. Our local partner is achieving this around Kedisan, a neighbouring town, with 30 families switching production methods so that they regenerate soils and biodiversity, reduce toxicity and capture carbon. Together, our new initiative will provide the basis for a collapse-ready regenerative business network that will enable the re-localisation of a range of production. 

Continue reading “Regenerative Farming – it’s time!”

What I tweeted the day I disappeared (from Twitter)

As it is coming up to a month since I was suspended from Twitter, without any explanation or any response to my immediate appeal, I went into my account and looked at what I tweeted just before I was suspended. It might have been a complaint, or a hack, or an algorithm… but someone didn’t want me tweeting. It had been an uneventful day online, with limited visibility and only a few reactions to my tweets on corporate irresponsibility, radical environmentalism, wise women, climate data, military profiteering and US government involvement in online censorship. What has surprised me since the suspension is that all my past tweets, since 2009, are no longer visible to anyone but me. All the immense wisdom and verifiable foresight, distilled into tweets like botanical gardens into essential oils.. all gone in an instantaneous digital bonfire! I jest. But some of what I shared was a bit nice. For instance, my very last tweet before suspension was on the short talk at my book launch, by the wonderful Satish Kumar. It read:

#SatishKumar has been a thought leader & heart leader in #environmentalism for decades. In this 5 minute share, he asks us to recognise the demise of industrial consumer societies & get on with creating the new. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LDMSFT23YLw

I recommend you see his magical 5 minute talk. I have screen shot that tweet along with the other essential oils from that fateful day. If you feel like using them as pictures in your own tweets, that would be great. And I shall pray that you don’t get banned. In the meantime, I recommend subscribing to this blog, where I intend to keep sharing ideas on collapse readiness and response. As I am now leaving my employment, I would also welcome any financial support to encourage me to keep writing essays on such topics.

Update: as there is some amusing projection happening on twitter by folks who don’t know me (unlike how they know their inner repertoire of human characters) at the end of this blog I append a screenshot of my updated appeal, where I ask for any info on why this suspension occurred.

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Screen shot of my repeat appeal after a month…

Let’s tell the moodsplainers they’re wrong and then get back to work

As we reel from the impacts of strange weather and the news of unprecedented ocean temperatures around the world, the moodsplainers are out in force. They tell us we are right to be anxious but wrong to not believe that our way of life can be saved. In our favourite news outlets, they tell us that it is both morally and practically important to stay positive, stem panic and bypass despair. They warn us not to abandon fairytales of change and salvation. It might be OK if they wanted to live in a self-protective bubble of delusion. But in their public advocacy, they’re dangerously suppressing necessary dialogue that might help us all to reduce harm in this era of societal disruption and collapse.

Continue reading “Let’s tell the moodsplainers they’re wrong and then get back to work”

Loving being human, despite a fracturing world

Last week in London I began my talk about Breaking Together by asking the people gathered to raise their hand if they felt proud of being human. Only a couple of people did. I then asked for a show of hands on the question on whether humans are inherently destructive to nature. A small majority supported that idea. I asked these questions to get to the heart of the issue of how environmentally-conscious people understand our situation. Because I know how sadness, anxiety and frustration pulse through us in regular waves. I wanted to explore how we can love ourselves and each other, fully, despite the destruction that has been caused by modern societies – and how that can guide our future action as situations become more difficult. 

I shared some lines from Chapter 9 of my book, where I use the latest archeology and anthropology to debunk some of the assumptions that help people to conclude that humanity is inherently bad for nature, and that ecocide was in some way a ‘choiceless’ destiny for homo sapiens. The chapter is now available as a free audio on soundcloud. In it I explain some of the following insights. 

Continue reading “Loving being human, despite a fracturing world”