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Posted in Environment, Peak Oil by nickblack on November 23, 2009

I’m not suggesting for a moment that it will be Mass Migration by itself that initiates the move to military governments in the West. It was Lester Brown’s recent article in Scientific American, in which he put forward his idea that failing states may be what causes civilization’s collapse, that made me realize that as the failure rate continues to accelerate the pressure of mass migration may be the earliest catalyst for the end of democracy in the West. As he points out, the pressures of desertification, water shortages, collapsing fisheries, famine, civil war and overpopulation etc., are already impacting states in the developing world to a far greater extent than the West. Some military planners in the US are coming to the conclusion that these pressures will pose a greater threat than terrorism and drugs. So assume that the stream of the dispossessed continues, climate continues toward chaos, population continues to explode, and the technological basis for a military state already exists in the US and Europe. Then how robust are our vaunted democracies?

We in the West have assumed for a long time that democratic government is our inalienable right, fought for over centuries by heroes of liberty. We also assume, somewhat more questionably, that it is by definition the ne plus ultra of political evolution and therefore the ultimate aspiration of people the world over. There are a number of problems with these ideas; mostly that they aren’t true. Democracy is notoriously fragile and there is nothing inalienable about it. Its progression in Europe, beginning (more or less) in 6th century BC Athens, has been sporadic. Athenian democracy fell to Alexander’s monarchy, the Roman republic to Octavian, the first Emperor in 31 BC. It wasn’t until the 18th century that anything we understand as a democracy re-emerged. Since 1960 the great majority of nation states self identify as democracies. This is a little like asking people if they are honest. The majority of the world’s population lives under regimes that are corrupt, incompetent or worse. For example Zimbabwe, Colombia, and Turkmenistan consider themselves to be democracies. Francis Fukuyama famously announced in “The End of History”, that liberal democracy had won the day as the peak of socio-political evolution. It is possible he may have been over optimistic.

In his new book, “From Democrats to Kings: The Brutal Dawn of a New World from the Downfall of Athens to the Rise of Alexander the Great”, Michael Scott makes some chilling comparisons between the current situation and those that caused the collapse of Greek democracy: crippling economic downturn, uncontrolled immigration and unpopular wars. In other words, emergencies that overwhelmed the ability of democracy to adapt fast enough. Sooner of later a powerful elite takes control. Much the same story could be told of the rise of fascism in 20th century states. When democratic governments fail authoritarian/military governments tend to be the default. It’s hard to see what makes the present crisis different, except the scale of the problem is global rather than local. Given the fact that western governments have thus far failed completely to make any effective changes regarding either climate or resource depletion it’s reasonable to imagine that if there is, as Kunstler calls it, a long emergency, then Democracy will fail and be replaced by more authoritarian regimes.

The Pentagon, NATO, and the military establishment in Europe are well aware of the challenges and there is now a significant defence literature dealing with Peak Oil, Climate and Migration. Some of the scenarios being investigated by military planners are bolder than others, and include the prospect of taking control of more than just the states they are charged with defending. In his award winning paper entitled “Imperialism 21: Hedging and Abandoning History”, Lieutenant Commander Joey Dodgen wrote:

“As far-fetched as it sounds, the advantages captured through colonial or imperial ventures would be numerous, including, but certainly not limited to, resource control and forward military basing…Economic imperialism is crucial to securing resources, maintaining favourable trade, and calming America’s business market amidst the daily turmoil of global terrorism. Economic imperialism is of no less importance to the United States than military imperialism.”

The attitude is understandable, even if on the basis of our performance in Iraq and Afghanistan, unlikely to be crowned with success. The Pentagon is tasked with defending the “American Way of Life” or at least the integrity of the developed countries, and it will do so to the best of its ability. The same stance is true of European military and intelligence. They are clearly expecting to deal with an increasingly chaotic environment and are examining ways to succeed. So the stage is set; the technological triumvirate is in place and there is no reason to expect that as the 21st century progresses the West will not become increasingly militarized.

So the answer to the last question of the Rare Events post, “At what point are people scared enough of the influx to want what is essentially a military government?” is that they won’t be asked. Our responses to the Drug War and Terrorism have already laid the groundwork for such a transition. All that would be required is the continuation of the current crisis until a permanent state of emergency can be declared. We will likely adopt a far harsher view of mass migration as conditions in Sub-Saharan Africa, South America and Mexico, India, and a host of lesser failing states continue to deteriorate.

Of more immediate concern is the effect of mass migration on those states nearby failing states – contagion. It is happening all across Africa as one state fails and as populations become displaced they are naturally moving into neighbouring states, themselves already fragile. Recent analyst meetings and war games in the US have concluded that the next 20 years of climate and ecological degradation will produce catastrophic events, including storms, migrations, droughts and pandemics, which will require US military intervention.

I believe that the economic collapse of the West will make such expensive interventions impossible in the future and that the developing world is close to a tipping point, after which recursive feedback effects will overwhelm the developed world’s ability to place failing states on life support – they’ll be on life support themselves. Which leads me to think that we will be taking more of a defensive position as our politicians give up on the idea of bombing the world into democracy and focus on maintaining order at home. Which brings me to my next topic: Fractal Collapse.

Triumvirate

Posted in Environment, Peak Oil by nickblack on November 20, 2009

In thinking about the possible military response to the increasing mass migrations from failing states it’s not necessary to invoke science fiction scenarios. It’s closer than you think. The infrastructure for military government is already well established in most of the West. Well before rafts of Somalis were drifting across the Mediterranean annoying sunbathers and the Italian Coastguard, police tactics and surveillance were becoming ever more military. There is more surveillance in Britain on a daily basis than the Stasi or KGB dreamed of in their wildest flights of authoritarian fancy. Estimates run at over 4 million cameras. There are 32 within sight of George Orwell’s flat in Canonbury Square. As Open Europe’s recent paper “How Brussels is watching you – the rise of Europe’s surveillance state” makes plain, Europe is in the process of following Britain’s lead, and no democratically elected body has the right to veto it.

Another aspect of this militarization is the rise of SWAT, that is to say Special Weapons and Tactics, policing. SWAT began in Delano, California as a response to protests by Cesar Chavez’s United Farm Workers Union. It’s interesting that this was a response to what was essentially a migration issue: the treatment of Mexican farm workers. SWAT teams are now taken for granted all across America and, although the acronym SWAT isn’t used, increasingly the same squads are in place in Europe. It is now routine for members of these police teams to be trained by and with members of special forces, including Delta Force and SEALS. Of course it is a natural career choice for those leaving those same parts of the armed services. Never mind for the moment the rise of private ‘executive security’ – I don’t mean the fat guy in uniform standing at the door of the supermarket. I mean Blackwater (now Xe, LLC), ESTS, etc. These are the same guys. There is a vast informal network of former special forces personnel employed in all these organizations. You think they didn’t keep each other’s email and phone numbers when they left the service? The lines that have traditionally separated soldiering and policing have now all but disappeared.

The third arm of this militarization is a function of computing. Before the advent of the network and the titanic server farms that store petabytes of data it was simply impossible to collect and analyse data on the scale necessary to implement a database state. Yes, it’s true the Stasi was credited with having nearly 100 miles of files, but it was a scrapbook compared to what Google can do, never mind the NSA. For example, there seems to be little information published on the byte size of the UK DNA database, NDNAD, but it is said to hold the records of 5 million people, or 7% of the population. Perhaps most impressive is the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute’s World Trace Archive database of all the DNA sequences published by the science community. In January 2006 it hit a billion records, was 22 terabytes and doubling every 10 months, so I assume it’s getting pretty big by now. You get the idea.

The point here is not that databases are by definition part of some global conspiracy, but that they allow previously unimagined levels of personal data to be held by governments and corporations, neither of which have a particularly great record in this regard. In the UK, this week’s news is that millions of phone contract records were stolen and sold to rival mobile phone companies, by employees of T-Mobile. The list of incompetent or dishonest data security breaches is legendary. But it is now past the point of recall. Privacy is history and it would be idiotic to assume that should a more military government come to power under the pressures of resource shortages, depression and climate chaos, it would not seek to use databases for its own purposes.

So the answer to two of the questions posed in my last post seem to be straightforward. What kind of government does that call for? Probably more military than we imagine right now. What does it look like and how would it happen? It looks remarkably similar to life now, and all it takes is some ‘emergency’ – whether it is from terrorism or economics or climate is irrelevant. The infrastructure is there: the combination of surveillance, combat policing and the database state form the critical technological triumvirate for an emerging military response to ecologically driven mass migration.

The third question, ‘at what point are people scared enough of the influx to want what is essentially a military government?’ is not quite so easy.

Migration

Posted in Collapse, Environment, Peak Oil, Technology by nickblack on November 17, 2009

For the last couple of years, while I’ve been spending time on the ocean whenever possible, there’s really been little to say. Much as expected the financial system has imploded and now the people of Europe and the US (at least) are essentially bankrupt, while a number of bankers are incredibly rich. Despite various politicians and banking professionals on both sides of the Atlantic professing astonishment at how such a thing could happen, it was in fact predictable. Soros, Taleb, and a host of others warned for years that the system was a keg of dynamite. It is very difficult to see a way for the economies of the west to recover on a comfortable timeframe. Unfortunately this comes at a time when what we needed in the world was a financial system that would allow us to make the best possible investments in climate remediation efforts and energy infrastructure alternatives to oil and gas. That money has now evaporated or has been spent on private luxury.
On the ecology/climate front I have seen nothing to make me change my initial assessment that we are now past the point of being able to control the speed of ecological collapse in various critical environments and stop the global temperature increasing beyond anything our species has experienced. On the contrary, the acceleration of CO2 concentration in the atmosphere continues unabated despite the endless round of meetings and treaties. The reason is not hard to see: for politicians it is simply impossible to make the kinds of commitments necessary and stay in office. We are now at 385ppm, and increasing by about 2 ppm per year. So it is inevitable that we will pass 400ppm, at which point our climate will begin to resemble the Miocene, the last time levels were this high. Temperatures were 3∞ to 6∞ C higher and sea level was 24-40m higher.
Worse, it appears from some recent articles that fewer, rather than more, people in the US and Europe believe in anthropogenic climate change. Which means that even if there are some measures we can take it will be very hard to get anything through democratic governments. We are left with trying to come to terms with how to manage in an increasingly chaotic environment with things as they stand. While we haven’t much experience dealing with this level of disruption, there are examples of cultures and societies in the past confronting ecological, financial and population challenges. We don’t have a great record. From the collapse of the Akkadian Empire in 2200 BC, civilization has been repeatedly overwhelmed by natural disasters, overpopulation and financial ruin – rare high impact events to which complex societies are unable to adapt. Despite our technological prowess we are in no better position to deal with such events than Sargon’s subjects. They had, however, a minimal advantage: there was somewhere else to go. We have a global civilization and there’s nowhere else to go.
The traditional response to collapse has been migration on a mass scale by the survivors. There’s nothing in the current circumstances to suggest that the same thing is not happening now. Even the IPCC, which is generally on the conservative side of things, never mind the Pentagon, sees the burgeoning levels of migration from what we used to laughingly call the ‘developing world’ as a major security issue and those nations at the receiving end will increasingly respond militarily. I’m wondering what kind of government changes that requires. Clearly the current liberal governments of the West don’t seem to be advocating such measures, but I’m beginning to wonder how far down the road (think Cormac McCarthy) we go before increasingly frightened populations demand military response. What kind of government does that call for? At what point are people scared enough of the influx to want what is essentially a military government? What does that look like and how would it happen?