
Dark Age America
Climate Change, Cultural Collapse, and the Hard Future Ahead
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Narrated by:
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Michael Dowd
After decades of missed opportunities, the door to a sustainable future has closed, and the future we face now is one in which today's industrial civilization unravels in the face of uncontrolled climate change and resource depletion.
What is the world going to look like when all these changes have run their course? Author John Michael Greer seeks to answer this question, and with some degree of accuracy, since civilizations tend to collapse in remarkably similar ways.
Dark Age America, then, seeks to map out in advance the history of collapse, giving us an idea of what the next 500 years or so might look like as globalization ends and North American civilization reaches the end of its lifecycle and enters the stages of decline and fall.
In many ways, this is Greer's most uncompromising work, though by no means without hope to offer. Knowing where we're headed collectively is a crucial step in responding constructively to the challenges of the future and doing what we can now to help our descendants make the most of the world we're leaving them.
John Michael Greer, historian of ideas and one of the most influential authors exploring the future of industrial society, writes the widely cited weekly blog the Archdruid Report and has published more than 30 books including The Long Descent, The Ecotechnic Future, The Wealth of Nature, and After Progress. He lives in Cumberland, Maryland, an old mill town in the Appalachians, with his wife Sara.
©2016 John Michael Greer (P)2017 Post Hypnotic Press Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















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Oh how I wish this genius was not right!
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Industrial civilizations reckless and myopic treatment of petrochemical energy and the consequences that will follow in the setting of the North American continent
Civilization dies in darkness
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John Micheal Greer's writing is, itself, very good; his use of language and familiar examples prepares the reader or listener as he approaches more complex ideas. Grim as the subject matter is, a genial tone still emerges encouraging others not to wallow in despair, but instead to get up and dust off, as the work won't do itself.
Loved it
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A must read
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Important
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Also contains one of the only level-headed discussions I've read about climate change. An incredibly refreshing difference from the disingenuous environmental propaganda that pervade both the Left and Right.
Well worth your money
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LESS starts here
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Clear-eyed realism backed by history
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Everyone would be better off for having read this.
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He dismisses invention as any solution and ignores that invention spurted us to the place we now find ourselves.
He perpetuates the technologies he claims are our doom (I unsustainably paid for this book, with a touch, from a server farm and wirelessly received it, listened to it, and rared it... actions in ignorance of the futility of my reliance on those givens, but not in ignorance of his perpetuation of the systems he decries).
I'm not saying he's wrong. How can I? He schedules the collapse ranging from the time you finish this sentence to 500 years from now. In fact, I think he's probably got that right, but I think he's describing his ideology more than the science he claims to be utilizing. Instead, he uses alchemy, I think, to turn gold into lead.
He doesn't see obstacles as challenges to be overcome, but as inevitabilities to succumb to or, optimistically, to endure.
We definitely are in a tight spot, and if nothing is done (he says by at least 1980), we will likely hang 10 down the perpetual wave of inevitability, but if we want any chance at all, do NOT vote him to be our coach.
Smug, Dire, Iconizing, interesting
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