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This New Year, let’s resolve to face the future with care, not fear

Summary: Sometime during the past few generations we lost our traditional confidence in ourselves. Fear replaced it. It makes us weak and easy to manipulate. Fortunately our fears are exaggerated, and our history gives us reason for confidence. Let’s shed our fears to make a great 2017!

 

Climate change, peak oil, 4GW, social decay, ecological collapse, economic collapse, pandemics of new and old diseases — the list rolls on. It’s the Crisis Crisis, with the doomsters dominating our news. Every day they make readers ask “How can civilization survive until next week?” But for thousands of generations humanity has confronted such serious problems as we climbed from scavengers to become the dominant species on this planet. It’s been a long climb.

Early Victorian London was one of the world’s greatest cities, one of the first modern cities. Its people lived closer to nature than those of today’s London. Their food was “organic”, since the agrichemicals industry — with its artificial preservatives, colorings, and other adulterants — had not been invented.

“The groaning tables on Victorian Christmas cards groaned beneath platters of food that would be condemned as unfit by modern health officials. …In 1842 a royal commission found that the average professional man lived thirty years; the average laborer, seventeen.”

— From William Manchester’s The Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill, Visions of Glory.

Fantastic progress in technology changed people’s lives to health, affluence, and security most of us in the West enjoy today. It has spread. In Ian Fleming’s 1955 novel Moonraker, MI6’s secret agent 0011 vanished into the “Dirty half-mile” of Singapore; today Singapore citizens consider US cities to be as crime-ridden holes compared to their well-run city-state.

Alone In Fear. By fre-lanz on DeviantArt.

So why so much fear about the future?

Refuting the many doomster nightmares is like plugging holes in a cracking dam. These stories multiply, driven by our fears about the future of our rapidly changing world. Our past successes provide Americans with little confidence about the future. What will happen during the next fifty years, by 2067? Here are my guesses.

  1. Peak oil will have come and gone. Today’s progress in building new energy sources will continue. By 2067 we have adapted to a post-oil world.
  2. The age wave will have past over us. The developed world will have seen the elderly become its largest age group –placing severe stress on their economies — then die. Some nations’ retirement systems will have gone bust paying for their pensions and medical care.
  3. The global long population crash will have begun as many nations have population declines (it has already hit Japan). Societies with fertility rates below replacement will face slow cultural extinction, unless they boost fertility or assimilate large numbers of immigrants. The economic effects of population decline are exaggerated.
  4. new industrial revolution has now begun. Late 21st century industry will rely on catalytic chemistry (as does our body), producing few pollutants. Advanced power systems will provide ample clean power. The children of 2067 will find the concept of pollution difficult to understand.
  5. The Left’s climate change fears will have proved exaggerated, as the shift away from coal, slow population growth, and continued technological progress put emissions on a slower track than the IPCC’s worst case scenario (RCP8.5).

Conclusions

We can only guess what the world of 2067 might look like. It might seem as strange to us as the world of 1950 would be to someone living in 1900.

We look back at the fears of the Victorian era with amusement. Would cities grow so large that horse manure renders them unlivable; the lights go out when the last whale is killed for its oil; the Earth be ravaged by giant war machines (such as airships and submarines)? I believe that in 2060 our descendants will similarly laugh at our nightmares, while they look to the future with fear about challenges we cannot imagine.

Humanity was born naked and ignorant on Africa’s Serengeti Plains, bereft of either armor or weapons. We have survived droughts and floods, an ice age and a supervolcano — slowly leaning and developing our powers. We have always walked into an unknown future, but our past should give us the confidence to do so with caution but not fear.

“I must not fear.
Fear is the mind-killer.
Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration.
I will face my fear.
I will permit it to pass over me and through me.
And when it has gone …. I will turn the inner eye to see its path.
Where the fear has gone there will be nothing.
Only I will remain.”

— The Litany against fear, used by the Bene Gesserit. From Frank Herbert’s Dune.

For More Information

Other ways to make 2017 count:  A New Year’s resolution for America.  Resolve to begin the reform of America in 2017!

If you liked this post, like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter. See all posts about the new industrial revolution, about shockwaves, about good news for America, and especially these…

  1. Is America’s decline inevitable? No.  — Why be an American if one has no faith in the American people?
  2. Rebuttals to the big list of reasons why America will fall.
  3. Good news about the 21st century, a counterbalance to the doomsters.
  4. Experts, with wrinkled brows, warn about the future — Experts often see the future with alarm, seeing the dangers but not benefits. That gets attention, from both the media and an increasingly fearful public.

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