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The world after covid

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What will be the post-covid world? Or, should I write, the covid-compatible world
 
What will be the post-covid world? Or, should I write, the covid-compatible world
 
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<span style = "position:relative; left:-5px">, </span>since we may have something like this to maintain this "new world" order (I put quotes not to confuse with one of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_World_Order unquoted versions], although they might be related): the covid itself, its second wave, a menace of covid22, or whatnot. A collapse of some sort is impending. It is long due given the very capitalistic nature of our society, with unsustainable exponential growth, always producing more, always consuming more, always more and more and more. The economy with its inflating tensions between the increasingly poors and the obscenely rich, has to collapse, or the resources copiously wasted, have to collapse (but this would come later). Unexpectedly to most, so it seems, another collapse may have got in the way before that. A sanitary collapse. Instead of everybody going to a standstill because banks have gone bankrupt, or because oil tanks have gone dry, we have instead a twelve-Monkeys scenario which brings us to something in essence equivalent: the collapse of society. Possibly in its wake, the collapse of civilization. To me there is no surprise that our way of life has changed so briskly in so little time. I've been expecting this since 2013 or so. But I was thinking this would come either from the banks, or from the streets. I toyed with the idea of a world-war, an international conflict, to change the rules. I regarded sci-fi scenarios like AI taking over as too far remote although they are catching up quickly. Indeed, I didn't think of a sanitary crisis. And here we are.
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<span style = "position:relative; left:-5px">, </span>since we may have something like this to maintain this "new world" order (I put quotes not to confuse with one of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_World_Order unquoted versions], although they might be related): the covid itself, its second wave, a menace of covid22, or whatnot. A collapse of some sort is impending. It is long due given the very capitalistic nature of our society, with unsustainable exponential growth, always producing more, always consuming more, always more and more and more. The economy with its inflating tensions between the increasingly poorer and the obscenely richer, has to collapse, or the resources copiously wasted, have to collapse (but this would come later). Unexpectedly to most, so it seems, another collapse may have got in the way before that. A sanitary collapse. Instead of everybody going to a standstill because banks have gone bankrupt, or because oil tanks have gone dry, we have instead a twelve-Monkeys scenario which brings us to something in essence equivalent: the collapse of society. Possibly in its wake, the collapse of civilization. To me there is no surprise that our way of life has changed so briskly in so little time. I've been expecting this since 2013 or so. But I was thinking this would come either from the bank, or from the streets. I toyed with the idea of a world-war, an international conflict, to change the rules. I regarded sci-fi scenarios like AI taking over as too far remote although they are catching up quickly. Indeed, I didn't think of a sanitary crisis. And here we are.
  
The sanitary crisis is .
 
  
In all cases,
 
  
Whatever happens, there'll always be the music.
 
 
Le beau est aussi essentil que l'utile, plus peut-être.
 
 
<center><wz tip="Words of wisdom from the Derbyshire police: ''Walking your dog in the peak district: not essential.'' The same unit would later chase a lorry driver who kissed a granny on the cheek for sexual assault.">[[File:Screenshot_14-07-2020_204142.jpg|400px]]</wz></center>
 
  
 
There are things that are striking. One is the perfect timing. The societal collapse, the civilisational mayhem that I'm awaiting like boiling milk on the fire, did, like boiling milk on the fire, happen all of a sudden.
 
There are things that are striking. One is the perfect timing. The societal collapse, the civilisational mayhem that I'm awaiting like boiling milk on the fire, did, like boiling milk on the fire, happen all of a sudden.
  
 
Everybody gets offended by everybody else. There is no
 
Everybody gets offended by everybody else. There is no
 
<center><wz tip="When cold logic overcomes human thinking.">[[File:Screenshot_14-05-2020_202038.jpg|450px]]</wz></center>
 
 
<center><wz tagtotip="tintincomplotiste">[[File:tintin-complotiste.jpg|600px]]</wz></center>
 
 
<center>
 
{| class="table"
 
| style="width:180px; vertical-align:top; padding:10px; text-align:left;" |
 
Blistering barnacles! The "Pachacamac" is running up the yellow flag and a yellow and blue pennant: infectious disease on board!
 
| style="width:180px; vertical-align:top; text-align:left; padding:10px;" |
 
-Goodness gracious! And we've got to go on board to search the ship.<br>
 
-It's out of the question till the port health authorities have cleared her...
 
| style="width:180px; text-align:left; vertical-align:top; padding:10px;" |
 
Captain, I'll bet anything you like that every man aboard the "Pachacamac" is as fit as you and me.
 
|}
 
</center>
 
 
<span id="tintincomplotiste">
 
{{fr}} Tintin complotiste, dans «Le Temple du Soleil», il comprend qu'une épidémie permet de mettre en quarantaine une population qui se retrouve hors de portée immédiate de la police, de la justice, de toute sorte d'inquisition, mais pas de la sagacité et du courage du héros isolé. <br>{{en}} Tintin the conspiracy theorist, in "Prisoners of the sun", understanding the quarantine is a trick to cut short all type of investigation. Translation below by Leslie Lonsdale-Cooper and Michael Turner.
 
</span>
 
 
[[Brassens]]' song [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ixCDkk1-U6c La Mauvaise Herbe]:
 
 
<poem>
 
:Je suis de la mauvaise herbe,
 
:Braves gens, braves gens,
 
:Je pousse en liberté
 
:Dans les jardins mal fréquentés!
 
:Et je me demande
 
:Pourquoi, Bon Dieu,
 
:Ça vous dérange
 
:Que je vive un peu...
 
</poem>
 
 
Hossenfelder on unvaccinated (German) people&nbsp;[https://twitter.com/skdh/status/1458801121632399366?s=20]: "{{onlinequote|the only silver line is that the stupid people are more likely to die}}":
 
 
<center><wz tip="For some people like Hossenfelder, it's a good thing that some people, like stupid ones, die from covid.">[[File:Screenshot_20211111_152504.jpg|400px]]</wz></center>
 
 
She means "silver lining", i.e., the good thing in an otherwise bad situation. From this happening by itself to the idea of boosting this only line of hope, there are a few steps only.
 

Latest revision as of 10:25, 27 November 2021

What will be the post-covid world? Or, should I write, the covid-compatible world , since we may have something like this to maintain this "new world" order (I put quotes not to confuse with one of the unquoted versions, although they might be related): the covid itself, its second wave, a menace of covid22, or whatnot. A collapse of some sort is impending. It is long due given the very capitalistic nature of our society, with unsustainable exponential growth, always producing more, always consuming more, always more and more and more. The economy with its inflating tensions between the increasingly poorer and the obscenely richer, has to collapse, or the resources copiously wasted, have to collapse (but this would come later). Unexpectedly to most, so it seems, another collapse may have got in the way before that. A sanitary collapse. Instead of everybody going to a standstill because banks have gone bankrupt, or because oil tanks have gone dry, we have instead a twelve-Monkeys scenario which brings us to something in essence equivalent: the collapse of society. Possibly in its wake, the collapse of civilization. To me there is no surprise that our way of life has changed so briskly in so little time. I've been expecting this since 2013 or so. But I was thinking this would come either from the bank, or from the streets. I toyed with the idea of a world-war, an international conflict, to change the rules. I regarded sci-fi scenarios like AI taking over as too far remote although they are catching up quickly. Indeed, I didn't think of a sanitary crisis. And here we are.



There are things that are striking. One is the perfect timing. The societal collapse, the civilisational mayhem that I'm awaiting like boiling milk on the fire, did, like boiling milk on the fire, happen all of a sudden.

Everybody gets offended by everybody else. There is no