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Barring a cataclysmic event, societal collapse isn’t sudden. It happens over generations if not hundreds of years. Joseph Tainter has an interesting hypothesis re the root cause of societal collapse. It feels relevant to our time. That stated, there are counterarguments that what might feel like collapse – of democratic institutions, of post-WWII America – is just people adapting to the world changing around them as they always have. To wit, “The end of the world as we know it isn’t the end of the world full stop.” Ehrenreich presents Tainter’s ideas and some counterarguments:
Only complexity, [Joseph] Tainter argues, provides an explanation that applies in every instance of [societal] collapse. We go about our lives, addressing problems as they arise. Complexity builds and builds, usually incrementally, without anyone noticing how brittle it has all become. Then some little push arrives, and the society begins to fracture. The result is a “rapid, significant loss of an established level of sociopolitical complexity.” In human terms, that means central governments disintegrating and empires fracturing into “small, petty states,” often in conflict with one another. Trade routes seize up, and cities are abandoned. Literacy falls off, technological knowledge is lost and populations decline sharply. “The world,” Tainter writes, “perceptibly shrinks, and over the horizon lies the unknown.”
I’m a UU and a Jesuit sympathizer. Dionne captures what draws me to both. The values he speaks to are indeed radical, moderate and necessary:
Those inspired by Catholic thinking have always been alive to the importance of balance—between personal responsibility and a concern for community, between individual rights and the common good. This sense of equilibrium could be an antidote to much that is wrong in our public life….
The Church’s teachings about politics represent a radical brand of moderation that is missing in our discourse—radical, because they offer a sharp critique of the status quo and its assumptions; moderate, because they understand the imperative of weighing competing goods and seeing human beings as fallen but also capable of transcendence and redemption.
The Baker administration continues to passive-aggressively inhibit and undermine progress on environmental issues in MA:
Severe cuts to environmental agency budgets and staff reductions are preventing Massachusetts from living up to its potential. Currently, only 0.6% of the state operating budget supports environmental agencies. In our annual Green Budget report we set forth funding recommendations that put us on the right track toward achieving the Governor’s commitment of 1% for the environment. The last time Massachusetts allocated 1% of its budget to environmental programs was in the early 2000’s.
Examples of Need and Impact [for FY2021]
- More than 100 MassDEP employees took advantage of the Early Retirement Incentive Program in 2015 but the agency faces additional responsibilities to comply with Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court decisions (like the 2018 decision to uphold the state’s ability to cut emissions from power plants,) and to implement new laws and regulations.
- $1.1M of H2’s $1.5M increase is already specified for PFAS efforts
- Deep budget cuts have jeopardized the ability of MassDEP to do its work. The agency is extremely limited in its ability to issue permits in a timely fashion, provide technical assistance, and enforce state law.
- An addition of $1 million for the MassDEP Administration line-item would enable the agency to hire back approximately 10-12 staff.
- With an additional $2.17 million in funding, MassDEP could hire back more than 10 enforcement and compliance officers, five permit officers, and five monitoring and assessment staff.
- DEP will be expanding the waste ban program, yet 40% of loads at the current waste levels contain banned materials.
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