this post was submitted on 15 Feb 2024
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Anything goes, give me your wackiest predictions and theories

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[–] [email protected] 54 points 6 months ago (3 children)

It is in many places, just not everywhere. Appalachia, Puerto Rico, lots of small towns, lots of urban neighborhoods. There was some guy saying, he say his country collapse, and it didn't happen all at once. i think something about, one day there'd be a bombing, and the next day you'd go to the disco, and it just happened a little at a time so there was no big dramatic moment.

[–] [email protected] 47 points 6 months ago (4 children)

that sounds like it was from this:

I Lived Through Collapse. America Is Already There
Living in Sri Lanka during the end of the civil war, I saw how life goes on, surrounded by death
https://gen.medium.com/i-lived-through-collapse-america-is-already-there-ba1e4b54c5fc

[–] [email protected] 51 points 6 months ago

The numbing litany of bad news. The ever rising outrages. People suffering, dying, and protesting all around you, while you think about dinner.

It's only in hindsight that I realize just how well Children Of Men nailed this.

[–] [email protected] 25 points 6 months ago

Yeah, that's definitely it.

[–] [email protected] 21 points 6 months ago
[–] [email protected] 10 points 6 months ago

That was a pretty good read

[–] [email protected] 31 points 6 months ago

As the saying goes: collapse isn't an event, it's a process.

[–] [email protected] 17 points 6 months ago (1 children)

the future is already here, it's just not evenly distributed

[–] [email protected] 10 points 6 months ago

One of the truest things said in recent history.

[–] [email protected] 39 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (1 children)

I think the US is already in decline, but I'm seriously concerned about the depression wave taking over our schools. I expect shit to pop off around 2030 when most of the COVID school kids graduate. We're going to see a lot more people who do not value their own lives acting out. I don't expect any overthrow of the American government, but I expect there to be a lot of civilian skirmishes.

[–] [email protected] 31 points 6 months ago

mass ptsd + hopelessness + guns - theory = real bad time, and not in a cool revolutionary way

[–] [email protected] 37 points 6 months ago (1 children)

you will be posting from a crater that used to be Chicago during the 18th Great Lakes Clique--Missouri Government War and some asshole on hexbear is going to be moaning about 'why hasn't the US collapsed yet'

[–] [email protected] 18 points 6 months ago

In twenty years when my crew and I are wandering around in a liberated Abrams tank preparing for the great offensive against the Iron Fortress of the Dakota Wastes, I'll still be on Hexbear laughing at owl memes rat-salute

[–] [email protected] 33 points 6 months ago (2 children)

As others have pointed out here, collapse is a process, not an event. But that being said, I think that if Trump gets reelected (which is almost inevitable at this point) his aggressive deportation plan might very well be a huge catalyst for inter-state conflict within USA:

Stephen Miller, Trump’s top immigration adviser, has publicly declared that they would pursue such an enormous effort partly by creating a private red-state army under the president’s command. Miller says a reelected Trump intends to requisition National Guard troops from sympathetic Republican-controlled states and then deploy them into Democratic-run states whose governors refuse to cooperate with their deportation drive.

Not to mention deporting as many people as he plans to would take a wrecking ball to the American economy.

[–] [email protected] 33 points 6 months ago (1 children)

creating a private red-state army

what-the-hell

Christofascist paramilitaries that forcibly deport, kill or otherwise incacerate people of a certain group? I bet the libs will just put up their hands and go "if we oppose them we're just as bad as them"

[–] [email protected] 20 points 6 months ago (4 children)

They're straight up planning to make concentration camps for immigrants. I mean, those basically exist already at ICE detention facilities, but this would be a huge expansion of that.

Dominionist paramilitaries immediately remind of the (harrowing) It Could Happen Here podcast.

[–] [email protected] 23 points 6 months ago

Fed ass collapse porn podcast

but harrowing is a good word

[–] [email protected] 16 points 6 months ago (1 children)

What's awful is they'll do it unapposed, the libs will refuse to do anything sadness

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[–] [email protected] 31 points 6 months ago (1 children)

It is an interesting question, at what point will the sporadic pointless violence and the constant desperation violence and the disease and the breakdown of public schools and loss of already minimal and difficult-to-access social services and the mass incarceration and disintegrating healthcare system where you stay in tbe ER for multiple days to go into debt and the high prices and the shit working conditions and the unlivable rent and the direct biological abuses of the powerless and the loss of any semblance of a social situation people know how to cope with while reassuring themselves they still have their Individuality™️ or a chance at a life instead of only surviving passes the point of no return into what you'd call collapse conditions. This already feels like the collapse. This is WWIII. That's why I feel alright. I've felt like this since I was 12 years old. I don't even care about what happens here and I don't feel guilty about it anymore, so ultimately I am one with the cool cyberpunk future and this is rad as hell actually

[–] [email protected] 22 points 6 months ago (1 children)
[–] [email protected] 16 points 6 months ago (1 children)
[–] [email protected] 13 points 6 months ago (2 children)

already reposted on all my other social media 💀

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[–] [email protected] 26 points 6 months ago (1 children)

2038-06-08 09:15:55 Eastern

[–] [email protected] 30 points 6 months ago (2 children)

Time travellers have ruined the internet

[–] [email protected] 23 points 6 months ago

Sorry about that i had to prevent the year 2038 problem

[–] [email protected] 17 points 6 months ago

Come with me if you want to live.

[–] [email protected] 24 points 6 months ago

As far as causes, I don’t think the current Team Red/Team Blue partisan bickering will have anything to do with the collapse. That bickering is just theater to keep the vote narrative going. It inspires the occasional random actor to go adventurism mode but nothing organized on the level to get real collapse/balkanization.

I firmly believe it’s going to be the supply chain of treats getting compromised that will trigger the collapse. It’s the only collective national glue, and the combination of climate change reducing productivity in the equatorial third world, the shortage of oil resources with no real transition plan to renewables, international shipping capacity insecurity due to prices, resources, piracy, other countries like China positioning to adapt to that new normal more smoothly, there ain’t gonna be enough treats to go around. That’s going to mean some states/regions attempting to hoard, ports will become points of resource distribution contention, whomever loses out on the federal fight will have motivation to split/rebel/attack opposing states, and we’ve got collapse/balkanization on our hands.

Timewise, thinking somewhere in the 2040-2050 range. There’s enough buffer right now but that’s the range where a lot of the “shit hits the fan” climate points hit and that’s when the equatorial supply chain will be crippled.

[–] [email protected] 23 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (2 children)

Well, if we're going by the timeline of my satirical short story I wrote a few years back, I think I'd landed on the late 2020s. So, around the same time as the beginning of the Second Russian Civil War, the establishment of the Transgender Republic of Hibaristan, Chinese reunification, the establishment of the Ryukyu People's Republic, the reunification of Korea, and I think Greenland also declared independence around that time.

Edit: oh and also Palestinian and Irish reunification, but I neglected to mention those.

[–] [email protected] 18 points 6 months ago (1 children)

I didn't know Palestine and Ireland were united for a first time but I look forward to the second

[–] [email protected] 13 points 6 months ago

Don't be smart with me, I can barely string together a coherent sentence

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[–] [email protected] 21 points 6 months ago (5 children)

My prediction is the mid 2040s, because in terms of historical narrative it's pleasingly symmetrical

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[–] [email protected] 18 points 6 months ago

pretty soon, the Bell riots are this year

[–] [email protected] 18 points 6 months ago

Lenin:

“There are decades where nothing happens; and there are weeks where decades happen.”

Marx:

“Mankind thus inevitably sets itself only such tasks as it is able to solve, since closer examination will always show that the problem itself arises only when the material conditions for its solution are already present or at least in the course of formation.”

Evolution of society happens like evolution of species. Nothing happens for a long time, until suddenly something does happen. Only one thing is certain, that change doesn’t happen until and unless the conditions are ripe for change. But the conditions do not in themselves precipitate change, they are only a precondition.

The difficult thing is that one can argue the conditions for a total collapse in the US are already here, and that all is needed is the spark. But it could also be that we are missing some essential condition, like maybe the US Dollar has to be dismantled from international trade, or the US has to lose its access to nukes. We can’t know, we can only interpret events in hindsight, even with our dialectics and our science.

[–] [email protected] 18 points 6 months ago (2 children)

Looking at how other empires have "collapsed" without being invaded or the military dividing up and declaring fiefdoms, it's been a slow decay of less and less effective centralisation (while still having de jure centralisation) as powerful people and organisations in regions increasingly view other regions as separate.

I think the US military is too organisationally coherent for an Alexander the Great kind of situation. While people do get attached to their commanding officers, it's not nearly as close to the heroic classical period, and you get used to new commanding officers pretty quickly assuming they're not complete assholes. We do make jokes about how wonky/privately captured US Military procurement and logistics can be, but this hasn't translated into factionalism per se, just bloat. I am also willing to be proven wrong on this, especially if the funding dries up or the US Military suffers some major losses. I feel like things like Iraq and Afghanistan, the losses there were lower than the defending population and the type of warfare allows the command structure an easy "out" for its self-confidence.

I also don't think the US will get territorially invaded. Naval landings suck at the best of times, and it's surrounded by allies, bases, and intelligence assets. No sane military is going to make that jump. Inasmuch as we valorise guerillas here, they're only good at defence where there is support amongst the local population. Again, open to see this changing, but I don't see it for the foreseeable future.

I also don't see the US Military (as in... The DoD, pentagon, Army, Navy, etc) being divided up territorially. For instance, a portion of the army becomes "The Texas Border Defence Army". There are a lot of political motivations to keep this the case.

Things like the national guard, police, and other "military"-like forces I definitely do see becoming more separated. Not necessarily with the "border crisis", but you can see the outline of it with the Texas National Guard. If cops get brought in from out of state as well, which states do this and which don't will also define these blocks. We're also partly seeing the outline with abortion laws. Whether or not these issues become "states rights" things, or if new issues are brought in (e.g. banning trans affirming care across all states instead) are all issues that you'll see further diversification but also weakening of federalism. If, say, a future Republican fed tries to ban trans affirming care and Washington State decides not to follow through, what happens? If DC stops funding to Washington State (I should have chosen different examples), the idea of federalism is weakened. If the law just isn't followed and local state government doesn't comply with the FBI, what happens? Do doctors in Seattle stop being able to practice elsewhere in the US? Does DC send in the troops to reign in the Washington state?

The world will look very different with Texadollars and Californibucks, I think that's a long way down the road. But separated economies and laws which both still sort of use the US dollar (e.g. Seattle would import a lot of USD through corporations, say) is part of the beginning.

Remember that with the Roman Empire, the Catholic Church and Feudal lords carried on many of the legal structures even after the Roman Empire stopped being able to be said to be a single entity. Systems of debt peonage carried over, the division between "arable land owning military citizen" and "slave/debt peon/non-citizen" carried over to "lord" and "peasant". The Catholic Church maintained Imperial divinity even though it was now a pope instead of an Emperor. Not with the exact same things, but that's what I imagine US Empire will look like in a few hundred years.

This, of course, is alongside the tightening of Capitalist contradictions. Rich get richer even as profits get squeezed (until mono-oligopolies spread around the world), poor get poorer and more numerous and desperate. But the legal and nationalist concept of "The United States of America" I think will look like the above. Also, the US Military and intelligence apparatuses will continue to defend Capital since that's why they exist.

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[–] [email protected] 17 points 6 months ago

Another vote for "things will just get shittier over time", not total collapse at any point, except for one possible scenario (I will describe below). If we use the Roman Empire as template, they never really "collapsed" all at once. Britain experienced "collapse" when the legions left in the 4th century, but the Roman area around Constantinople did "collapse" until over 1,000 years later. It's common among Roman historians to not even talk about "collapse" much per se, and focus more on evolution and change. Heck, some parts of the empire actually saw conditions improve after Roman control ended (in North Africa, they could stop sending all their grain to Rome every year, for example).

Now, there is one scenario I could see that could cause a total rapid collapse: if the US could no longer extract value (i.e. exploit) from the global south. I'm on a Capital vol. 2 and MMT kick right now. Basically, the key insight IMO from the first 17 chapters is that it's only in the sphere of production that value is created. It can be the production of goods or services, but that is the only place where value is created (well, Marx gives some very narrow examples of value being created in transportation of good and sometimes in storage, but those are extensions of production, really). This is where the fact that Americans don't make anything really comes back to bite them in the ass. Obviously we don't make things here but what most people don't realize is even American companies like Apple and Nike don't actually "create" value. The subcontractors they use in place like China and Bangladesh is where the value is created. It's just that Apple and Nike appropriate the value from those places and distribute it here among their marketers, lawyers, etc. The entire non-financial sector of the US economy resembles a merchant capitalist (where no value is created, it's just taken out of productive capital which is all overseas) economy than anything else.

So what does this mean? If Americans aren't creating value within the country, and it's just that value is taken from other parts of the world and distributed here... if you cut that off then all of the sudden the US is a country that isn't creating much value and isn't even capable of that outside of a Stalin-esque centrally planned industrialization program. The US depends on circulating capital taken from the global south domestically, not producing it domestically. So if that's not circulating, and Americans have no real capacity to create value domestically... then material conditions probably degrade on a scale that's hard to even wrap your head around. THAT would be a hard and fast collapse.

Admittedly, the catalyst for that (the rest of the world preventing the US from exploiting production in the rest of the world) is pretty far-fetched, so at this point it's just academic and why I saw that I really only see a slow motion degradation happening.

[–] [email protected] 17 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

Late 2030's- mid 2040's depending on how things pan out over the rest of the decade. There is no avoiding it, but if the neo-libs remain in power they may delay the collapse slightly. Climate change will be the predominant factor in the collapse. A one-two punch of a collapse of insurance and housing markets due to the increase in extreme weather events, and the rise In sea levels tanking coastal economies. Add in food insecurity for some additional civil unrest. Starvation, disease, and violence will be the leading causes of a death-toll that will rise to at least several dozen million in a short period.

The federal government may remain nominally in power in parts of the former United States, but will be a toothless puppet of the corporations that weather the collapse (even more-so then it is now). Rural areas that lack any sort of resources that corps desire will become lawless violent wastelands, the only order coming from petty warlords, mostly the remnants of far right militias or criminal organizations that fled the inhospitable global south. Many communities will be migratory as extreme weather makes it difficult to put down roots. Famine will be rampant and cannibalism will become common.

Survivalist and Preppers across the nation will rejoice thinking their day has come, only to find that their choice of location for their compound/bunker was extremely poor. Floods will wash many of them away, and many more will be scorched to the ground by uncontrolled massive wildfires. The rest will be juicy targets for more organized gangs of looters. Many will think themselves smart by heading into the wilderness to survive off the land, only to find several million others had the same idea. They mostly end up shooting each other, and wild game is over-hunted to extinction within 2 years.

Cities across the US may weather the collapse to varying degrees. It mostly depends on their current wealth and location. Those that persist will transition into semi-autonomous neo-feudal corporate police states. The majority of these will be based around the Great Lakes and in the Rocky Mountains. Denver and Salt Lake City will likely survive, with the Mormons turning post-collapse Utah into their theocratic wet dream. Chicago will be the center of a loose alliance of corpo city states around the Great Lakes, and rust belt cities like Detroit, Cleveland, and Buffalo will finally have their comeback! The southwest will be completely uninhabitable due to drought and extreme heat. The west coast and southeast are too prone to extreme weather for population centers to survive. There will be a great migration as hundreds of millions become climate refugees. The scarcity of food will make it so the inhabitable parts of the former US will likely only take in refugees with connections or useful skills. Many will be enslaved. Others will be turned away to starve or die violently in the wasteland.

Technology levels will decline as the global supply chains that make modern tech possible collapse. Quality of life as a whole will decline greatly for all even the elites. The elites with more foresight will prepare and relocate, becoming the new feudal lords. Those who do not will find themselves meeting the same fates as the lower classes, their former wealth worthless and lacking the skills to survive. The middle class will be finally obliterated completely, and chattel slavery will make its big comeback! The plus side is there may be some isolated and heavily armed rural communities where life is alright, but none of this will last as the climate collapse continues to worsen triggering feedback loops that will raise global temperatures more then 6 degrees. Too hot for any currently evolved complex life to inhabit the earths service. Humans are extinct by the turn of the next century. GG everybody!

*Edited this to clarify some language and add new ideas.

[–] [email protected] 16 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (1 children)

I'm in the "it wont be a sudden collapse, things will just keep getting shittier until we wake up one day and realize that most of the states are basically 'developing countries'" camp. A sudden collapse would require something like a war going badly and the US getting invaded - and I just don't see that happening. The US will lose its ability to project force around the globe, but will remain a strong player in the Atlantic and the hegemon of the Americas. I think there will be a new paradigm of foreign relations where we basically lean on Europe and our presence there becomes a lot less gregarious. As control of Africa slips from our fingers the Middle East and especially Saudi Arabia will re-balance their own foreign policy commitments and that will be when you see the true last gasp of American Empire as we try to prevent the cheap oil tap from being turned down - if we;re successful the Empire will last fifty more years, if we fail then the Empire is de facto dead.

Poor regions in America will deteriorate even more rapidly than they already are, wealthy regions will experience something like the stagflation of the 70s and working people will get squeezed even more, mass shootings will become more common, the suicide rate will rise precipitously, fascists will seize power in many governments only to realize that the copper wiring has long been stripped out by corporations, somewhere socdems will take power and try to reverse course only to be sanctioned by the corporations (everyone will point to the capital flight and say that that's why communism doesn't work), and so on.

This will continue until a Putin-like figure emerges who can exercise some sort of control over the bourgeoisie and remake the government, or a Bolshevik-like organization does and ignites a class war. But the conditions of shock therapy or post-WW1 can't be replicated, so there's no telling how long the ship will take to sink and it might not be in our lifetimes.

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[–] [email protected] 16 points 6 months ago (2 children)

This might be too outlandish, but Texas will start enforcing its own borders with Mexico while the federal government just looks on and cedes control to the state authorities.

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[–] [email protected] 16 points 6 months ago

Collapse is already happening for way too many, it will accelerate when no one on either coast can get property insurance due to rising sea levels, when the inland aquifers are finally sucked dry and agricultural irrigation ends, and when no more able-bodied children are available as cannon fodder for the empire. Probably the last straw will be when the never-ended civil war goes hot once again. We just need to hope they don't use nukes on each other this time.

[–] [email protected] 15 points 6 months ago

Budget McKinsey, maybe in AI-fueled app form, coaches small business tyrants to do ghoul shit like up-or-out policies. Small towns empty out because how can you buy a house when odds are against you keeping a job for 5 years? Landowners form even more of a cartel and refusal to build anything but luxury housing becomes one of those subjects that the duopoly agrees on and is never mentioned again. As such, almost everyone moves a rung down on the housing ladder.

Wanted to move somewhere nice? You're going to come home to your starter house every day after work for the rest of your life.

Looking for a starter house? Fuck you, keep renting.

Want a nice apartment? Fuck you, roaches and roommates.

Shitty apartment? Fuck you, live in your car.

Live in your car? Fuck you, sleep on the streets.

Sleep on the streets? Our views on assisted suicide have evolved.

And just because you've moved down a rung doesn't mean we won't repeat the whole shuffle again.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 6 months ago

Tomorrow. Xi is gonna declare communism early and all US production in China will shut down.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 6 months ago (1 children)

It's already here. There are tons of cities like Camden, New Jersey throughout the US. There are literal tent cities of homeless people throughout California.

Most Americans are not class conscious or courageous even to organize a bourgeois coup, they'll just endure the decline and clash with the police until they are presented with a social vision that can provide the bread and circuses and cash flow to afford it.

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[–] [email protected] 11 points 6 months ago

I think in the coming years, China will pull more and more of the third world countries under its domain. Specifically, I think that China will kick off something like the H1-B program in the US because of its aging population. They're going to draw in more and more scientists and researchers from those third-world countries and their tech sector is going to really challenge America's, which will be one of its last great bastions of wealth. And if China ever gets the upper hand there, then the US will start to decline. I don't think it'll ever really lose - the population is too educated and the lands are too rich - but I think a reversal of China and the US' statuses is entirely possible in the next 30-40 years.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 6 months ago

Within 5 years. Congress won't be able to agree on raising the debt ceiling, do one of those government shutdowns again, but this time they never restart it. The shutdown status of limited federal agencies working and non-essential employees furloughed becomes the new normal. The roles the federal government filled gradually become taken over either by state governments or corporations.

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