"More Jobs" and the Post-Peak-Oil World

The following article first appeared on Culture Change.
What was required for the growing economy that was supposed to uplift all of modern humanity is at root a false notion for the manipulated public: the overwhelming majority must work for others to enrich the few so that all of society benefits through unlimited expansion. This problematic profit scheme is failing to hold up, what with general economic uncertainty on the rise (apart from "Hope") and the advanced depletion of easily extracted, cheap oil.
To put even greater pressure on our bankrupt (in so many ways) system, the ecological crisis is knocking at the door ever more threateningly, demanding not mere policy adjustments but a radically different approach to treating the Earth and all its people and species.
The system for unrestrained greed would have long ago been abolished as unnecessary and unfair but for the population-management advantage of divide-and-conquer competition. One can seek refuge in, "I'm not greedy, I just want a middle class life and I work hard for it." This dream is less and less tenable for the majority. One may as well espouse peace while unquestioningly buying increasingly subsidized gasoline, as profitable wars recur or rage on -- even though the oil will be running out.
Employment has pay-offs but they are unreliable and uneven, depending how easily satisfied a regimented individual or family chooses to be. Ultimately we have seen that society's approval of greed is shown by the legal funneling of unrestricted wealth to the influential top. However, we refuse to stop feeding the process when we retain our highest faith in more laws, elections and "Hope." Demanding more jobs as a solution to our problems is unimaginative and only exacerbates a fatally flawed system. Look around, is it getting better? Have brakes been applied to truly gross profit-taking and the corruption that goes with it? Hardly.
The emperor has no clothes -- nor adequate oil to keep the mass materialist illusion going. Calling for more employment is a beggar's cry when the stores of food are low and the promise of prosperity is empty.
Even if the current dismal state of affairs and blind clinging to the status quo were somehow acceptable, a return to growth to create improved lives for everyone willing to work (or able to find it) is no longer feasible.
With the departure of cheap, abundant energy upon the peaking of oil extraction -- the engine of the economy's expansion -- work as we know it is going by the wayside. This will bring about liberation for a high proportion of the population, if not everyone, and more importantly see our natural environment become our partner rather than our exploited victim. For this to take place while we still have a chance to salvage what we need for a livable planet, collapse of the corporate economy -- the global-warming machine -- must be embraced and accelerated. There is a better way to live, starting with survival.
The not-so-illustrious history of work
The dominance of work, like so many aspects of Western Civilization and its economy, is seldom discussed openly beyond disorganized griping. For we are asked as good citizens to not question the idea of work. Indeed, we are required not to question it. Jobs are sacrosanct. However, that belief may be part of the old paradigm that is being ushered out as the pace of change keeps up.
Hard work has been relatively recently been enshrined as a natural obligation, while it conveniently maintains the state and its ruling elite. For the vast majority of people, work invariably confers no equity stake in the enterprise or product. Whether it's called civic participation or a right, or whether it is as Nazi Germany depended on it (Arbeit), work as we know it is an acquired trait and a recent phenomenon in human experience -- that is, when it is a form of evolved slavery for the masses of people. Perhaps 99% of our time on Earth has been as hunter-gatherers, habitually spending on average much less time on what could be called work, compared to members of agricultural and industrial societies.
By recognizing work as forced, and not particularly kind for the body, spirit, or the Earth, we can regard work as linked to overcrowding -- or overpopulation. A large, hard-working population produces surpluses, fueling more population, especially with technology to help. We are now overdosed on technology applied regardless of consequences. Doing more work isn't going to help if it's to cater to endless growth or to further technology for its own sake. It's like digging a hole deeper for no good purpose. To differentiate between such work and purposeful, voluntary activity that benefits the whole community, we can create a designation that means the work is vital and widely appreciated: "Chosen Work." Chork, anyone?
The use of machines and the production and consumption of mined and refined, toxic materials can be summed up as an unnatural and oppressive punishment: carried out for the generation of others' vast profit. The Industrial Age saw a hard fight for basic human rights to be recognized, thanks largely to the union movement. But these gains were not completely fulfilled, and work was still barely questioned. Technology was supposed to save time and deliver us from drudgery, but it turned out to cost jobs and take up more of our time at the expense of human interaction and communion with nature. When a labor movement only takes the brutal edge off overwork, there are still a lot of struggling workers or former workers with basic needs unmet. Unfortunately, the U.S., among other places, does not utilize resources such as tax funds in such a way for most people to enjoy decent social services. Rebudgeting the funded priorities would take care of almost all our problems, if this could really be attempted, except for the fact that the generating of surpluses engenders wealth, greed and ecological destruction.
Living first, working second
Work as a vestige of slavery does not mean any enterprise or business must automatically involve exploitation and pollution. Between friends and neighbors -- in a close community -- there can be more material reward for the ring leader who may have conceived of the enterprise and who put in the most work. This would be Voluntary Work or Chosen Work for all concerned, as opposed to Desperate Work.
Despite industrial society's imperative to work our lives away, the involuntary-unemployed level is at a near historic high. There has indeed been hardship caused by the "Great Recession." But we must question solutions that offer only more of the same, even if the "solutions" are from critics of the White House and Wall Street. Aside from the impossibility of constant economic expansion and full employment in an overpopulated, energy-constrained world, how we live our lives deserves to be re-evaluated: as if freedom and more efficient, sensible and ecological ways of living are up and running right now.
Workers are really trying to obtain the necessities of life and to enjoy a bit of leisure. They aren't truly in need of devoting the best part of their lives at machines or in cubicles or behind the fast-food counters. Instead they want and need to secure their food, shelter, clothing and heat for survival and a decent life. As parents they almost all would like to be the ones to raise their children rather than see it done by institutions or day care mills (which are costly). Many workers would like not to have to put in time at a job in order to pay for a car habit mainly for getting to work. A labor union, even a scrappy and gutsy one, isn't likely to buck the model of isolating family members or take a stand against car culture -- let alone question employment in favor of a local-economy, mutual-aid barter society, a.k.a. the gifting economy.
The dollars for one's basic "living cost" aren't themselves the point of today's work, but rather they are to obtain what the dollars buy. Traditional societies obtained the essentials from nature and from communal cooperation. Considering climate destabilization and the potential for greater global devastation from war, the society we need must center on the community's providing essentials from the local ecosystem. For that to work, egalitarian social structures are necessary. They involve a different kind of work -- shall we say, living -- that is, tribal or ecovillage living, trade via sailboats, and all manner of collective organizing
Trying to achieve freedom from the employment-syndrome and the capitalists' grip is not a pipe dream. For if enough people do not buy corporate items, and money is kept in the local economy, this can demolish the corporatocracy and put infamous greed into the ashcan of history. Localism also creates community relationships to co-produce and trade for the food, shelter, clothing and heat that people need. If this strategy is called unrealistic, because people will "always" buy distantly made corporate products or accept any job-job, that doesn't wash -- for petrocollapse will soon take down consumerism and the high-entropy employers as well as bring about bioregional, community-oriented economics.
Image by twicepix, courtesy of Creative Commons license.
- 3-24-10
- Jan Lundberg's blog
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Work
"Employment has pay-offs but
"Employment has pay-offs but they are unreliable and uneven, depending how easily satisfied a regimented individual or family chooses to be."
Seriously?
The pay-offs of employment are pretty substantial for most people, in that employment allows one to pay for one's food, shelter, clothing and basic necessities, as well as to have some nicer stuff and contribute to the well-being of one's friends, family and community.
They've been predicting the imminent collapse of the oil economy for 20 years now, and we still keep finding new supplies or coming up with better methods of extraction. Even if the peak oil theorists' predictions regarding petroleum came true, we still have centuries of natural gas available, and companies are currently working on a gasoline substitute made from algae.
Yes, you should try to conserve and recycle and be respectful of the environment, but it is possible to do so without needless fearmongering. If you wish to live without the 9-5, it's entirely possible to do so. Either start your own business providing a good or service that people are willing to pay for, or join an "intentional community' that allows you to experience an "alternative local economy" for real. There are plenty of them out there, just see http://www.ic.org/
If you don't like "car culture" then rent an apartment near your job, or bike to work and towel off and change in the bathrooom. You've got options. But don't try to force this lifestyle on everyone. Currency is a much more convenient form of stored value than the barter system, and some work is inherently worth more than others, due to the level of skill and experience involved.
Live the life you want, and let others do the same. If you set a good example, and you truly have a sustainable system, others will follow your path. If you've deluded yourself, and your path is not sustainable, then there's no point in dragging others down with you.
It is important not to let your life focus around money, but it is equally important not to let your dislike of economic factors blind you to the basic realities of everyday existence.
"the basic realities of
"the basic realities of everyday existence"
Eat, drink, breath, sleep, deficate, die.
What part of this is complicated?
Basic reality has very little to do with what we concern ourselves with everyday. Ethically, there's no excuse for the attrocities humans perpetuate. We can't claim we are anything more than a sore thumb throbing obnoxiously and at best distracting the organism we were part of from flourishing.
Complicated reality has everything to do with what we concern ourselves with everyday. It's also clear that during this humiliating experience we have yet to be humbled enough to even begin to organize our resources to first protect ourselves from likely disasters and second to get the heck off this volitile spaceship we're cruising through the galaxy aboard.
The question is, do we enjoy being on the cusp of the unknown? Is that why we havent acted to protect ourselves from climate crises and meteors? Is it the fear that drives us to act irrationally?
What if we did tire of being affraid of what could be? Build a metal/plastic spaceship(we pretty much already are)? Would we be content breathing stale recycled oxygen on 'S.S. Earth II'? Complete with 'McDonalds' in the cafe? A Starbucks even? (agai, pretty much already have that)
Perhaps we could 'seed' another planet. Put Starbucks and chicken shacks on that piece of space debris. But we already have that here. And to tell you the truth... We couldn't even get people to utilize satelite television... Never mind truly leaving this planet. Not without some immediate and unimmaginable catastrophe.
But, if the case is we would never exodus from our mother ship willingly than we might have to be forced to. Perhaps if it was necessary we could enlist some corporate bigwigs to help us find the leverage necessary to move humanity in that direction. They're super experienced when it comes to conquering and occupying.
Don't forget this is not basic stuff we're doing. This is highly advanced. And sorry to say, it's also highly foolish. We have zero regard for what we are doing. Consciousness and all that.
"They've been predicting the
"They've been predicting the imminent collapse of the oil economy for 20 years now, and we still keep finding new supplies or coming up with better methods of extraction. Even if the peak oil theorists' predictions regarding petroleum came true, we still have centuries of natural gas available, and companies are currently working on a gasoline substitute made from algae."
They say that life is 10% what happens to you and 90% how you respond to what happens to you. The response to peak oil seems to a include high instance of denial as seen in the comment to which I'm responding. If poo-pooing the gravity of the situation is realistic, why would our president, who ran on a platform of "no drilling", now be chanting "drill, baby, drill!" in chorus with Caribou Barbie? Peak oil isn't just that we've used half of what is available, it's that we've used the highest quality and easiest to extract half. Combine that with the demands that the industrialization of China (a serious subsidizer of the use of petroleum) and India will place on what remains, making such proclamations amounts to turning a blind eye. For me, when I hear such arguments, my mind returns the reality of the promise of oil shale. A chunk of oil shale the size of a potato has the same amount of energy stored in it as a potato. Think about that.
hopeful
Karma ... "out of Eden" toil
After biting the forbidden fruit ... Adam and Eve were left with nothing but their own self-perpetuating karma ... forever lost to the eternal Dharma.
The term "karma" literally only means "work" ... in other words work is self created karma for those desiring beyond shared necessity ... the leaving of Eden.
This so-called modern story of today is 'but another chapter in the age old story of mankind in relation to itself.
All of our desires, even those in the name of family and friends, forever but "cost" some other aspect of "creation" ...
It is only when we lose sight of this in the name of any desire that we willingly "leave the garden" {Eden} and gradually experience demise.
All societies rise and fall ... always, always, always based on the same basic few tenants ... yet here we go perpetuating the same drama ... with a new modern twist.
Throughout all of time there have been those cautioning about "desire at the expense of necessity" ... yet how many "innocent" children can walk past the candy display .. yet in the name of family, community, nation, or even humanity we will readily protect, increase, and even flaunt at any/every expense.
When, oh when do we ever really learn the cost of forsaking "eternality" {dharma} ... for "temporality" {karma} ...
Only when appetite becomes satisfied with necessity ... all across the board.
The cultures that seem to last the longest seem to be the ones where the deepest satisfaction with a little food, clothing and shelter survives the cultivation of things beyond. {indigenous sensibility}
but where shall we live?
Living Here and Now
Indigenous life is never "forced" upon us. It is that life which is inherent within each of us ... in direct, present-time relationship with our immediate organic-to-cosmic environment ... basically "life before the fig leaf"
In other words we only struggle to the degree we desire beyond our basic necessities in the name of all fantasy and fiction.
So the question "where will we live" is only a question to the degree each of us is not directly involved in our basic food,clothing, and shelter.
Just like the "overpopulation myth" article on Evolver last week, This Planet, as far gone as it is, is not as bad as the extreme versions one hears.
Lets not talk ourselves into a panic, as their is enough "fear spin" out there already"
If here in the USA, massive bamboo and hemp planting,{both grow fast} which is cheap and sustainable, and grows all throughout southern USA, was implemented in a National disaster, we have emergency shelter and cloth in no time.
Instead of FEMA camps ... survival camps
it would be so easy to supply "our needs if other avenues collapsed, Clothing and Shelter at the drop of a hat .. just scaled way down from our urban and suburban culture.
Most of our so called suffering only really comes from our lifestyle attachments. For many of us a simpler global village is easily within grasp if it is kept simple and pure.
The only problem is motivation. I think a main problem with people living very simply and purely, is that they think such an "indigenous" life, forgoing all the lackluster sophistry of modern social intrigue will bore them and stunt their growth.
We have become so identified with centuries of deterministic and mechanistic thinking that we think there is "no greater way" ... yet many of us feel that the more we simplify the basic survival stuff, the deeper into the Universal truth we will be able to fathom.
As it is quite obvious that the exact opposite is whats causing the possibility of our own despise.
So the majority of the collapse is in our heads. There is no one expert that really knows where we could all be in the decades/centuries to come if we get our act together.
So it is never a question of how and where we will live, as much as "who" we will be and "why" we will live.
As it is now a "why not" culture ... "why shouldn't I " ... why wouldn't I
We often talk here of the intrinsic value of Entheogens as the very sacrament that will offer the enlivenment and enhancement so that we would find the deeper organic-to-cosmic "entrained sensibility" in relation to our inner and outer environments so that we would not have the emptiness gaps that today are filled with entertainment /infotainment.
We are burning out all of our resources in the name of fantasy and fiction. Find deeper meaning ... and the world changes
Science is so far gone in exercising the empirical muscle ... at the very expense of our organic intuition ... it is said that due to excessive domestic breeding, many breeds of dog could never survive in a natural environment.
In a similar vein, many of us, to different degrees, are overly modernized to where it would be painstaking to approach a "dirt under nail" life ... what to speak of one that was intriguing and full of meaning.
People love concerts and happenings because it awakens the very sense of unity that our over individualized life deters us from.
Which would be permanently restored if we were "forced" to work side by side again.
At what point does sharing basic food clothing and shelter, become "not enough" ... the happiest, funnest stuff
... lying beneath the Sun, the Stars ... not the greatest experience
... the Cosmos as it is known through intuition .. the "Spirit" beyond the cosmos
... none of this has ever come or will ever come from fantasy, fiction, or science ... always and only from within.
Soon, many teenagers in
Golf courses: Work on the maintenance and groundskeeping crews, or work in the retail shop or clubhouse environment. Check out this map of metro Atlanta golf courses.
Restaurants, especially fast food: Fast food restaurant jobs are quite popular summer jobs for 15 year olds with teens, as they usually don’t require previous work experience for entry-level positions, and there are plenty of part-time schedules available. Starting in food service in high school could help prepare you for a server or kitchen position in a more upscale establishment, which is a way many college students help pay their tuition.
Economics
Imminent collapse or not...
Miami Car Dealer = Enlightenment?
south.motors- you just totally like, blew my mind!
"for petrocollapse will soon
http://www.bioregionalanimism.com/
palo alto Jobs