How to resist cultic thinking in the end times

by Richard Heinberg in Common Dreams……People who are aware of society’s blind spots are often attracted to would-be cult leaders, because the former need a new worldview to replace the flawed one they are reacting against, and the latter fill that need.

Trevor Hancock: A polycrisis is greater than the sum of its parts

by Trevor Hancock in the Times Colonist…The ­polycrisis, according to the UN and Cascade Institute, includes the climate crisis, war, extreme ­economic inequality, financial ­system instability, ideological extremism, ­pernicious social impacts of digitalization, cyber attacks, ­mounting social and political unrest, large-scale forced ­migrations and an escalating danger of nuclear war,

How to deal with a world of polycrisis?

How to deal with a world of polycrisis?

by Steffan Heuer in Think:Act Magazine….While the term is not new, polycrisis has taken on a new meaning and new urgency as governments, think tanks and ordinary citizens try to get their heads around how to best respond and prepare for it.

Are these the end times?

Are these the end times?

by Richard Heinberg in Resilience.org…Although we made great steps in understanding the structural factors driving “end times” in our societies, our theories, models, and data can be greatly improved. Such understanding, in my opinion, is key for developing effective reforms and policies that can take us on a better course out of this crisis. Beyond making science better we need a broad public discussion of its implications, and of what needs to be done. Ordinary citizens can help by educating themselves on these issues, by participating in the discussion of possible remedies, and ultimately by putting pressure on our ruling elites to act in ways that benefit the people broadly, rather than (as they’ve been acting over the past few decades) in their own narrow and shortsighted personal interest.

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