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September 15 2019
Seems I've not posted in a while.  Partly it's that I've been doing more
stuff outside in the Summer.  But there's another reason; it seems the
taboo of discussing the dire yet increasingly more probable outcomes of
humanity's failure to address our planetary overshoot has been lifted.
More and more articles are appearing in major media outlets exploring
the myriad of ways things could go sideways.  They still for the most
part focus almost exclusively on climate and apparently it's still taboo
to bring up population reduction as a mitigation strategy but still,
it's sort of a remarkable change.

I haven't really read any doomish books lately other than David Rice's
self-published memoir Desert Soliloquy [0]. The first few chapters seem
more fiction than fact but onward it was an engaging enough chronicle of
his roughly two years living in a cave in the Mojave desert of California
in the 1990s.  Rice has a YouTube channel under the same title of his
memoir which has an eclectic mix of stuff.  He has been a ranch hand in
northern New Mexico for several decades which seems to provide him with
sufficient solitude, enough to keep his misanthropic nerves in check.

A sampling of stuff read or watched recently that seem worth a mention:

 - -

What Is Energy Denial? - Don Fitz / Resilience.org - September 12, 2019
https://www.resilience.org/stories/2019-09-12/what-is-energy-denial/

A list of "The 15 Unstated Myths of Clean, Renewable Energy", complete
with links to back up the arguments. A nice concise piece to forward
to your favorite techno-optimist that still thinks all we have to do is
switch everything to electric power derived from wind and solar.

 - -

What If We Stopped Pretending? - Jonathan Franzen/The New Yorker - September 8, 2019
https://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/what-if-we-stopped-pretending

The sub-title pretty much sums what's to follow:

"The climate apocalypse is coming. To prepare for it, we need
 to admit that we can't prevent it."

It's actually a well-researched article and actually avoids that little
bit of hopium that until only recently was always found in article of
this genre.  After outlining an all-inclusive to-do list needed to meet
the latest IPCC target of 2 degree C comes this:

"Call me a pessimist or call me a humanist, but I don't see human
 nature fundamentally changing anytime soon. I can run ten thousand
 scenarios through my [mental] model, and in not one of them do I
 see the two-degree target being met."

I concur, unfortunately.

 - -

Climate 'catastrophe-check' for UN Aid Agencies - John Doyle / UPFSI - May 2019
https://youtu.be/_Deaz3UN0rw (YouTube, 24:50)

Came across this video recording of a UPFSI [1] hosted conference on the
Arctic News Blogspot [2].  Never heard of John Doyle before; apparently
he is some sort of staffer with the EU in Brussels.  Searching around
I found another video recorded conference he moderated for DG Connect
[3] which is really quite good but an epic 3.5 hours long. In the intro
Doyle gives a nod to Guy McPherson and "Sam Carana", a pseudonym used
to mask the various posters on the Arctic News Blogspot, so I am a bit
reluctant to take his word for the exceedingly bleak "facts" laid out in
his catastrophe-check.  Nonetheless, it was nice to see a rather diverse
group, including several from governing entities, discussing the coming
challenges in the DG Connect conference.  It's worthwhile just watching
the last presentation plus the Q & A and maybe the closing statements
starting at 1:50:00.  Too bad the video is so tiny.

--
References:
[0] http://desertphile.org/
[1] http://www.upfsi.org/
[2] https://arctic-news.blogspot.com
[3] https://vimeo.com/337506486/eb0bfe09eb