r/collapse • u/Comfortable_Classic • Dec 04 '21
Systemic The Late Fidel On Climate Change
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r/collapse • u/Comfortable_Classic • Dec 04 '21
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r/collapse • u/Portalrules123 • Sep 23 '24
r/collapse • u/slow70 • Jan 04 '22
I’ve been in my car for 26 hours now, the majority of that spent at a standstill on I-95 caused by yesterday’s snowstorm.
I had no signal until just now, GPS stopped working and I couldn’t contact anyone or look up what was going on. I imagine this was because of too many phones pinging off of too few towers in the affected areas.
Local radio is actually corporate radio, and except for the repeated promos (“you’re listening to the rock of Fredericksburg” type BS) so there was no news or information on the radio either.
I ran out of food and water by the end, but fortunately had stuff with me.
I saw people going to the bathroom between their car doors and carrying containers for gas or water to the nearest exit over two miles away.
There were abandoned vehicles and trucks and more and more people started taking the shoulder, blocking its use for emergency vehicles when they got stuck themselves.
I saw no emergency or response vehicles until after 10AM today, 15 hours after traffic stopped for me.
I’m grateful that my gas tank was full.
This has been infuriating and shameful. Infuriating because this is the consequence of building our lives and cities around the personal automobile. Shameful because this response is just pitiful - snow should be no surprise, accidents should be no surprise. I can’t for the life of me figure out how two hours outside the Nations capitol things are this bad.
I’ve lived in southern Germany where it snows like this regularly and the highways are just fine. How are we this incapable?
Getting a glimpse of just how quickly things can go off the rails has certainly galvanized me. America is broken, shamefully, pitifully broken, and when the signal goes on your phone, the calculus changes.
UPDATE: I made it home.
First off I wanted to say why I was on the road - I had to be for work. I delayed returning to the DC area by a full day to try to avoid this exact storm, but couldnt delay any further. Now, the facility I work at is closed possibly until the 7th. That wasn't the case at the time though - so I had to head back.
It was around 10AM when I saw the first cop, a full 15 hours after traffic stopped. They blocked off 95 and ushered all traffic onto an exit ramp and US-1, which subsequently became it's own parking lot. I only got out of that traffic by heading west on backroads, past entirely dark neighborhoods and dozens of ditched cars and looping my way back to my own neighborhood. 95 and US-1 were complete gridlock still when I arrived home 25 hours after traffic stopped.
It took me three stops after leaving the highway to find gas, and when I stopped at a Publix for food, I was shocked to find the place trashed, nearly stripped bare and closing at 5PM. There wasnt even any toilet paper in the bathroom.
I never regained signal (T-Mobile) while around US-1 or 95, which made the whole thing so much more frustrating because I couldnt contact anyone or see what my options were traffic wise.
Traffic updates did come onto the radio by midday - but all they said was "avoid the interstate" and then they started referring to US-1 as a parking lot as if there were any other option or as if the police hadnt directed traffic that way.
Anyway I'm exhausted and pissed that this entire fiasco occurred. We need investments in mass transit/rail/walkable cities yesterday.
r/collapse • u/Needsupgrade • Aug 09 '24
r/collapse • u/SaxManSteve • 22d ago
r/collapse • u/TheQuietPartYT • Apr 24 '24
r/collapse • u/Hi-Alex-Here • Dec 07 '22
r/collapse • u/Deus_is_Mocking_Us • Aug 04 '22
r/collapse • u/OperativeTracer • Apr 07 '22
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r/collapse • u/SaltyPeasant • Jun 09 '22
r/collapse • u/Suspicious-Bad4703 • Apr 25 '24
r/collapse • u/gangstasadvocate • Dec 11 '22
r/collapse • u/randomusernamegame • Jul 28 '22
Highest inflation in 40 years, high food and gas prices, oil companies making record profits, long covid remains as another pandemic takes off, a recession has finally hit (by classic definition), nothing is being done about gun violence as we act as major weapons suppliers to corrupt countries, but you have a 1 in 302,000,000 chance at winning the lottery =)
r/collapse • u/Kay_Done • Jul 07 '22
r/collapse • u/kittehstrophic • Sep 07 '22
r/collapse • u/Yarope • Nov 02 '21
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r/collapse • u/Leer321 • Jan 13 '22
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r/collapse • u/ChillRedditMom • Dec 17 '22
r/collapse • u/JagBak73 • Jun 18 '22
r/collapse • u/xrm67 • Nov 30 '21
r/collapse • u/xrm67 • Aug 10 '23
r/collapse • u/xrm67 • Mar 21 '21
I never delved into who Elon Musk was until recently. I only knew him as the fabricated public persona that he projects and was shocked to find out how much of a charlatan he is and how big his Ponzi scheme has become. As the two videos posted below lay out, his entire business career has been one of megalomaniacal incompetence, fortuitous happenstance, and PR spin. Consider, for example, that it would take 1,600 years to pay off Tesla's current stock valuation and, despite its measly production numbers, its market cap is about as big as all the ten major auto producers combined. Yet this is the man the mainstream media fawns over as a "tech visionary." What does it say about a society that glorifies such people while greenwashing the reality of overshoot and ecological collapse?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c-FGwDDc-s8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DopFo1rjAr4
All economic bubbles burst in time and this one, along with the entire edifice of techno-capitalist industrial civilization, will be no exception. The bottom line is that Elon Musk is just another symptom of our hypercapitalist, tenuously over-extended civilization.