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[-] FourteenEyes@hexbear.net 59 points 1 year ago

Collapse takes decades. It's happening now and has been since 9/11.

[-] Cummunism@hexbear.net 32 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

if not since 9/11 then since Reagan, which shows how long it has taken.

[-] FourteenEyes@hexbear.net 27 points 1 year ago

Reagan did shit that was easily reversible but never got reversed

W committed us to multiple wars costing trillions of dollars and making us even more enemies than we already had

[-] Cummunism@hexbear.net 19 points 1 year ago

they both wrecked the economy and country in their own special way.

[-] SankaranSpy@hexbear.net 16 points 1 year ago
[-] FourteenEyes@hexbear.net 42 points 1 year ago

Clearly defined shift in foreign policy that also began hollowing out our economy in earnest, very easy to point to as a tipping point

[-] cryptymythy@hexbear.net 21 points 1 year ago

but those $600 in bush bucks was nice, just had to let them loot everything else

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[-] ZapataCadabra@hexbear.net 53 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I'm not a doomer but the US it outlasting us. The Russian empire had almost a century of peasant rebellions before the USSR. China had longer. We're not even close.

[-] CyborgMarx@hexbear.net 23 points 1 year ago

To be fair technology (particularly communications technology) is far more advanced and people are way more urbanized

[-] ZapataCadabra@hexbear.net 38 points 1 year ago

Yup, those are factors that make it harder. A society that is not used to rebellion isn't going to do a big one like that. Not without smaller ones preceding it, normalizing it. I don't know how we get there. Maybe summer of 2020 was a step to it. Maybe Rodney King was an earlier step.

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[-] Vampire@hexbear.net 51 points 1 year ago

This is leftist cope pretty much.

Some people say China will collapse imminently.

USA is strong in many ways.

[-] ClimateChangeAnxiety@hexbear.net 54 points 1 year ago

Idk a lot of it is living here and looking around going “This can’t possibly continue like this indefinitely, right?”

[-] AssaultRifle15@hexbear.net 52 points 1 year ago

Don't worry, things can and will get much, much, much worse. Most Americans have a roof over their heads, plenty of corn syrup to fill their bellies and enough treats to keep themselves occupied. The US is definitely declining, but an outright collapse is still very far away.

[-] RNAi@hexbear.net 19 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Mate, look at countries with way worse conditions than the US, like Haiti, yet shit has been continuing indefinitely

[-] ZapataCadabra@hexbear.net 16 points 1 year ago

I do keep thinking about cost of living, there has to be some pressure release right? Some relief?

[-] SoyViking@hexbear.net 21 points 1 year ago

They're going to keep using culture war bullshit as the president release for as long as possible. People who angry about trans athletes or critical race theory or judeo-bolchevism are not going too inconvenience their rulers.

[-] SankaranSpy@hexbear.net 22 points 1 year ago

USA is in hyper late stage capitalism. It is anything, but strong

[-] Vampire@hexbear.net 31 points 1 year ago

Is your movement recruiting and training over 60,000 fighting men per year? https://recruiting.army.mil/pao/facts_figures/

Does your movement control the international monetary system?

Does your movement tap the internet backbone?

[-] Dirt_Owl@hexbear.net 31 points 1 year ago

I mean, a strong army is one thing, but they keep losing wars for one. Also like... you gotta feed that army.

[-] jack@hexbear.net 25 points 1 year ago

The US produces gargantuan amounts of food. It's a massive net exporter. The idea that it would be unable to feed its army is ridiculous. It's the most agriculturally productive state in human history.

[-] Dirt_Owl@hexbear.net 22 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

We are going through an environmental collapse. Food is not going to be easy very soon

[-] jack@hexbear.net 21 points 1 year ago

The US can grow water intensive crops in the middle of the driest and hottest desert on earth. It has access to incredible amounts of fresh water, far more land than its population needs to be supported, and the most advanced agricultural technology.

Just saying "environmental collapse" doesn't predict anything about the US's ability to grow food and what you're suggesting would need to be like a 50-75% drop in production. A mistake being made by some people in this thread is the idea that everything in the US is broken. But the US can economically dominant the world for a reason: it is a gargantuan economic and industrial powerhouse with a huge variety and quantity of natural resources and a massive population. None of that is going away. Hegemony will fade because it's a political disaster and China has all those same advantages with far better management, but the US isn't going to disappear any time soon.

[-] Dirt_Owl@hexbear.net 23 points 1 year ago

If it were just as simple as growing food in a desert it would be fine, but the circumstances that allow us to do that are fragile and will be impacted by a lot of shit failing, not just one or two things that can be fixed by technology. The US can grow things in the desert now because it has the rest of the country's fertile resources to do so. It doesn't matter what technology the US has. It isn't just a matter of replacing bees with drones or installing irrigation. The soil will be dead. The water will become anaerobic. The types of plants we can grow will dwindle, and resulting monoculture will cause even more problems. It will be insanely expensive to do. Keep in mind that this is a country that relies on capitalism to survive, the only reason it can keep going is because there are resources that are easy to exploit. What's going to happen to businesses that can't get their cheap corn syrup anymore? While this is going on people will be starving, and more pandemics will be occurring, meaning the workforce needed to power this huge endeavor will be strained to its breaking point.

I think that the climate crisis has been so diluted by the media that people don't realize just how bad an ecological collapse is. I haven't even listed all the details because there would be too much for me to go through and I suck and writing. Either way, look at the Permian great dying and ask yourself if we can survive that as a species, let alone a country.

The way the US handled COVID-19 should give you an idea of how unprepared they are.

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[-] Grimble@hexbear.net 17 points 1 year ago

"Your movement"

Link to burger army recruitment page

LOL fuck off spook

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[-] President_Obama@hexbear.net 16 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

hyper late stage capitalism so-true

It's actually in disco neofeudialism and will therefore last a few hundred years more before Brasil becomes a hegemonic power, read theory

[-] halcyondays@midwest.social 17 points 1 year ago

I would be absolutely shocked if there are scraps of semi modern civilization left at the end of this century due to the impending horrors of climate change. We’re well into the sixth mass extinction, a few hundred years left for anything we can currently recognize is overly optimistic.

[-] President_Obama@hexbear.net 20 points 1 year ago

There will be droughts some places and floodings some others. The imperial core will repel refugees from those places. There is no shared human destiny in some climate apocalypse

[-] halcyondays@midwest.social 15 points 1 year ago

I do agree that some form of eco-fascism as a xenophobic response to worsening quality of life is likely unavoidable.

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[-] Dirt_Owl@hexbear.net 47 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

3 - 10 years

I say this because climate change and the Holocene extinction are going to be a lot worse than people realize. There is going to be more disease, more fire. Capitalism's rabid growth and consumption has started hell on earth. That's not cope, I don't actually want it to happen that way because it's not just the US that will collapse, it's all of us, humans, animals, plants. That's my opinion as a training ecologist. It is so much worse than what they're telling you.

This isn't just about economics or war anymore. There are different forces at play than with other falling empires.

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[-] BynarsAreOk@hexbear.net 46 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Defining collapse, to me this means US balkanization.

IMO it will happen when the US gets a few large scale climate related disasters like the Texas snowstorm etc but over a dozen(more than 1 a month) going on continuously for about 3-5 years would be enough to destroy the country.

I believe it is a certainty because the US government is not capable of mobilizing resources to deal with these disasters, at the end of the day the capitalist class will not allow it. This already happens anyway, Puerto Rico got fucked and Trump withheld resources, nothing was done anyway. You'll be told to leave or flee or get fucked. Everyone will cheer when Florida goes underwater but will they deal with the consequences of mass migration etc? You can expect headlines like this in the future Trump complains to senators that Puerto Rico is getting too much hurricane relief funding If this isn't a sign of collapse than what is it? The "richest" nation in the world counting pennies for disaster relief while e.g giving unlimited no questions asked funding for the military.

Anyway as for the timeline, well climate change is showing signs of nothing except getting worse, nothing is being done and nothing will be done until it is too late, you can look into solar reflection is the goto example, I am all but convinced the US will do it unilaterally and fuck up everything because literaly better to gamble the fate of the world than to talk about changing capitalism, degrowth etc.

So if you want a date? It is hard to say, we are on the very pessimistic path, you can look at all the depressing headlines if you want confirmation, everything is always "faster than expected" or "scientists shocked" etc even accounting for the usual MSM sensationalism this message is even stronger among the academic circles, before 2050 is already quite likely, but almost certainly "collapse" will happen before 2080.

Climate change dictates this will happen and to argue against it like saying its "cope" and whatnot would be saying that a country going through multiple disasters and mass migrations has not collapsed yet because technically there are still 50 states and some geriatric dipshit 80 year in sitting on a table somewhere being called a "president".

[-] sicklemode@hexbear.net 43 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Long enough to outlast your youth and the best years of your life, if you still are in the prime of it.

[-] Coolkidbozzy@hexbear.net 37 points 1 year ago
[-] GaveUp@hexbear.net 36 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

At least one more century just going off of historical examples, the most recent one being the British Empire/UK

[-] Llituro@hexbear.net 30 points 1 year ago

probably before i would be able to get money out of a retirement account

[-] BurgerPunk@hexbear.net 27 points 1 year ago

This reminds me of how there's multiple dates that historians place the end of the Roman Empire at and all say something slightly different. The date picked creates a certain interpretation for the end of the empire. For example, some often use the moving of the capital to Constantinople under Constantine (i think like 310-ish AD) as the end of the Empire in the sense of a cohesive entity centered in Rome as we think of it. The Western Empire still existed for 100+ years and the Eastern Empire for like a 1,000 years after that. I think that paints an interesting picture of what decline looks like on that scale.

Timeframes in the modern era are sped up for a lot of reasons (communications tech, and climate change mostly) but its really hard to put a timeline on something like decline and collapse, even in history, let alone when trying to predict future

In a lot of ways, i feel that what American Balkanization is going to look like has already occured to a significant degree. The Federal government took little real action or responsibility during COVID, and is choosing inaction as a minority party overturns abortion rights ceding more power to states. They're also inactive while wild slates of anti-trans laws get passed in the most reactionary states and their extreme abortion restrictions. The Federal government's policy is basically "your on your own ~~citizens~~ consumers." I think that process will continue, but i think it looks more like this than states breaking away and forming new countries. I think the federal government will continue to be a middle man for collecting and dispersing tax dollars and running the military to keep the war economies going and facilitate imperialism. When the US can no longer do the later inshallah-script we'll be deep in collapse. Hard to imagine when it will be, or what that will look like

Something i noticed in Texas thst i think highlights another aspect of this process. The US has a rural urban divide in political affiliation. In Texas the Republican stare government has been trying to extert more power over the major city governments that are run by democrats. They withheld Federal disaster relief money from Harris County (Houston) after Hurricane Harvey and recently took over Houston's school district. No federal intervention on these overstepping of powers.

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[-] Owl@hexbear.net 27 points 1 year ago

Gotta define collapse.

The domestic system of governance? Already collapsing.

The ability of the state to project military power? A decade or two for most of the world, an extra decade for South America.

A formal entity called the United States with structure derived from its constitution? Could be a thousand years.

[-] SoyViking@hexbear.net 16 points 1 year ago

A formal entity called the United States with structure derived from its constitution? Could be a thousand years.

My pet theory is that the US will eventually go the way of the HRE. Just like there was an emperor, there's going to be a president in Washington DC for centuries to come. He's going to be a very important person who'll have soldiers in fancy uniforms saluting him, but the centre of real political power will have moved somewhere else.

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[-] CyborgMarx@hexbear.net 26 points 1 year ago

If collapse is defined as swathes of the country either being abandoned or placed under indefinite martial law and if current trends in terms of housing, education, health, wages, pollution, infrastructure and climate change continue

Then around 20-25 years, 10-15 years if the worse case scenarios for climate change become reality

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[-] HexbearGPT@hexbear.net 26 points 1 year ago

However many days I have left to live +1 more day. Because that’s how much the universe hates me.

[-] AssortedBiscuits@hexbear.net 21 points 1 year ago

Going based on pure vibes and ass-pulling:

  • Irreversible decline: We are here.

  • "The sick man of [continent]": By 2050s.

  • Losing most imperial possessions: A few decades after "The sick man of [continent]"

  • Minor Balkinization (secessionist movements): ~2070s

  • Major Balkinization (rump state surrounded by successor republics): 2100-2110s

  • Formal end of these United States of America: The rump state could easily truck along for centuries, especially if one of the successor republics manages to conquer the rump state and retroactively claims itself as a continuation of the rump state.

My vibes-based analysis is unable to incorporate climate change into its analysis, but climate change will obviously speed up the timeline.

[-] StalinistApologist@hexbear.net 19 points 1 year ago

How long did it take the Roman empire to collapse? I think about this daily

[-] ZapataCadabra@hexbear.net 22 points 1 year ago

How often do men think about the Roman empire?

Men: Here's how the Spartacus rebellion could have succeeded...

[-] kristina@hexbear.net 17 points 1 year ago

us federal government says significant chances of societal collapse due to climate change in certain areas plus civil unrest by mid 2030-2040, so ill say if its going to happen any time soon, itd be then

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this post was submitted on 01 Oct 2023
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