When I started the blog Chickens of Mass Destruction,
 the title was mostly whimsical, a play, in case you haven't figured it 
out, on the phrase "weapons of mass destruction." (That phrase itself 
turned out to be the biggest WMD, leading as it did to a great deal of 
destruction over the last 8 years.)
My whimsical twist 
on the phrase encompassed the interests I wanted to write about: food 
and agriculture, ecology, and politics. There was contained therein the 
idea that a simple thing like backyard chickens, and the local food 
movement in general, could also constitute a threat, albeit a gentle and
 ethical one, to the industrial capitalist system.
With this post I inaugurate a spin-off blog, Graceful Decline.
 Here I hope to explore the broader political, social, and ecological 
questions around the decline and fall of the American empire. I'll 
reserve CMD for food and agriculture issues. Of course these things are 
all related, so there may be some more cross-posting between the two.
At least some of the time, I will be using John Michael Greer's excellent blog, the Archdruid Report,
 as a launching point. For the last 6 years he has been laying out a 
feast for the cerebral cortex, making a strong case that peak oil will 
spell the end of our civilization, and presenting a sober projection of 
life after cheap energy.
For Greer it is neither zombie
 apocalypse nor utopian deliverance, but a middle road of hard choices, 
hard work, and muddling through as the gargantuan system of complexity 
we all depend on crumbles. His ideas are steeped in the physical 
sciences, particularly the limits imposed by ecology and the laws of 
thermodynamics. He also has a large following of commentators, with 
interesting insights of their own. Anyone who wants to understand what I
 am attempting to do here should definitely read the ADR archives, or 
pick up one of Greer's books. Those that deal with peak oil-related issues are like a distillation of his blog.
In
 looking at the nature of the empire that the US has built I am also 
informed by the thinking of Howard Zinn, especially his alternative 
history classic A People's History of the United States. It has 
its limitations to be sure, but for understanding the dynamics of power 
in a capitalist democracy it is compelling and useful. Demagogy, 
distraction, and divide-and-conquer were favorite tools of the founders,
 and they are still the mainstays of American politics on all fronts.
I
 look around and see a system that is committed to growth on a planet of
 limited capacity. It's like watching a runaway locomotive headed for a 
sheer drop, and all I can offer is my tiny voice. Please join the 
discussion, link, share. Add to my voice or try to neutralize it as you
 see fit...
 
 
 
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