Don't you hate it when a shadow comes into another nice day?
All my weather worries are far away. The East Coast is grumbling under more snow. The deep South may be freezing the Canadian "Snow Birds." There is another crazy cyclone over Darwin Australia, dumping over a foot of rain in 24 hours.
But hey! The sun shines where I am. Then I see the sign by the produce stand. It says:
"
Due to extreme cold in California, Arizona, Texas, and Mexico produce prices will go up. Farmers lost nearly 80% of their crops. Expect higher prices, shortages, and lower quality."
I head over to the bread isle, and get more sticker shock. My favorite Flax Bread is now 5 bucks a loaf. Pretty soon I'll need to dip into those big pails of hard red wheat I put away for hard times, to make my own. That investment went up 25% in value, in just two years.
Gas here is $1.25 a litre - more or less five bucks a gallon, and climbing. So far there is plenty of it, but speculators are going wild, as Libya shuts down production. Are the Saudi's next, the headlines ask?
How will we know when the crisis has come?
I'm Alex Smith, and I can't avoid this simple fact: we are all connected now.
This week on Radio Ecoshock, we'll talk energy news, with an eye-out for the early stages of oil depletion, while solar just gets cheaper.
Dr. Jeremy Leggett, geologist, oil expert, climate campaigner, and British solar entrepreneur joins us for a no-holds-barred talk of the world.
Later, we'll get back to solutions from the Transition Movement. But this time our guest
Carolyn Baker suggests we need to look deep inside. Are you really ready for the wild changes coming up in the next few years? Carolyn gives us tips from her new book "Navigating The Coming Chaos: A Handbook for Inner Transition."
All the music you'll hear comes from the
new Radiohead album "The King of Limbs."
READ MORE (with tons of links)
2 comments:
Jeremy Legget is always good value and was spot on with his reading of the situation. He's naturally an optimist so it was good to feel for once that we perhaps do stand a chance of dealing with the issues. Won't be pleasant, but there could be a way through.
I'm sorry, is it just me, but Carolyn Baker talks gobbledegook. I just didn't know what she was on about. No thanks.
I see value in Carolyn Baker's concern for people's internal well-being. I've tried talking to my family and friends about what we're facing, and they get a look of sheer terror in their eyes before poo-pooing what I'm saying (while imagining the apocalyptic vision of the doomers, no doubt). We've all faced that, I'm sure. To have a resource to direct them to that will help them deal with those feelings of terror preventing them from facing reality will prove to be invaluable. I'm happy she's offering this.
Agreed re: J. Legget