[FRIAM] Cautionary Tales: CliFi

Steve Smith sasmyth at swcp.com
Thu Jan 27 19:05:26 EST 2022


I read quite a bit of existential-threat/remediation non-fiction as 
well, and sometimes it is hard to tell the difference because while the 
non-fiction (technical) is generally accurate to the details, it is 
always describing "a spherical cow", thus the "plausable on the surface" 
answers.   I worked a few years on a critical infrastructure protection 
modeling project (more from a resiliency to terrorism than to climate 
and other change, but focused on cascading failures). I also worked  
among hurricane/disaster response teams as well.  It gave me a 
disturbing view of just how *systemically* vulnerable we all are.


Of course, the wealthy (really, currently middle-class and above) are 
fairly insulated from the (current) effects, but the threshold of who is 
affected and how deeply seems to be rising.  I think it is part of the 
reason that many of the well-off tend toward policies like building 
border walls and voter suppression... they see the stresses on the 
infrastructure putting their (our) privileged position at higher and 
higher risk as the overheated, hungry, etc. masses start to roil more 
(domestic and from the global south).   This is easier to think about 
than actually addressing/mitigating the deeper causes... and the results 
tend to be quicker, more obvious and therefore more satisfying in the 
moment.


Overshoot in several dimensions is already underway and the inertial 
properties are easy to underestimate.


I feel like THIS forum has become more open/supportive of discussing 
these topics than even 2-3 years ago... probably too small, too little 
and too late, but better than nothing.



> Steve,
>
> In the Bay Area, and in other places there is a trend toward 
> electrification.  It sounds plausible on the surface, but to go all 
> the way means solar for water and for electricity.  Most houses within 
> financial reach for most people don't have the square footage to 
> support all that.   Consider that a smaller electric on-demand hot 
> water heater could draw 75 amps flat out.   There's no reasonable way 
> to get lithium batteries that can absorb that kind of load.   That 
> would be $50k just to even start on the batteries never mind the 
> panels.   If not that, then one must give up (often limited) lot space 
> for the tube style solar, which really isn't all that efficient.
> The "freedom from the utility" is just not going to happen except in 
> the posh South San Francisco type areas.   Meanwhile the utilities 
> want to penalize individual solar producers because they stress the grid.
>
> Meanwhile, if the price of gasoline goes north of $5 / gallon, people 
> are screaming bloody murder.   Why isn't it $20?   No, these folks 
> (which is mostly everyone it seems) aren't going to be joining the 
> 2000-watt society.   And then there's the Manchin types holding out to 
> keep *coal*​ afloat?   Don't we just deserve to suffer at this point?  
> At least we could try but fail to develop and deploy replacements.  
>  That non-fiction would be interesting reading.
>
> Marcus
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> *From:* Friam <friam-bounces at redfish.com> on behalf of Steve Smith 
> <sasmyth at swcp.com>
> *Sent:* Thursday, January 27, 2022 12:15 PM
> *To:* friam at redfish.com <friam at redfish.com>
> *Subject:* Re: [FRIAM] Cautionary Tales: CliFi
>
> Marcus -
>
> Thanks for your feedback on KSR's writing style... it really sobered 
> me to realize how much of an obsessionist I am on this topic and what 
> I will ignore to feed that obsession.
>
> I tripped over (thank you Google News Feed) an interesting article in 
> Grist:
>
>     https://grist.org/climate/with-the-world-on-fire-climate-fiction-no-longer-looks-like-fantasy/
>     <https://grist.org/climate/with-the-world-on-fire-climate-fiction-no-longer-looks-like-fantasy/>
>
> that resonated with my reflections.   While I do feel a little 
> obsessive on the topic (not just climate but all the convergent 
> "endogenous existential threats" coming at us),  I feel somewhat 
> balanced about it, especially as I graze on the buffets that books 
> like MotF and Stephenson's Termination Shock and Amithav Ghosh's 
> "Great Derangement" offer.   I also found William Gibson's Jackpot Series:
>
>     https://www.wired.co.uk/article/william-gibson-agency
>     <https://www.wired.co.uk/article/william-gibson-agency>
>
> refreshing (for a dystopia) with our myriad existential threats 
> (climate, species, pollution, finance, civil unrest, fascism, etc.) 
> converging on a bit of a (nasty) wet-fizzle of an apocalypse he 
> sardonically dubs "The Jackpot".
>
> The Grist article describes (somewhat) the value of keeping one's eye 
> on the dystopian/apocalyptic future threatened by our short-sighted 
> habits and (overly optimistic?) conceptions of the future generated by 
> our materialistic pop-culture.
>
> Someone here (Marcus, Glen, EricS ?) mentioned Musk and the idea that 
> he might be pursuing the canonical "Good Old Fashioned Future" coined 
> in the Golden Age and refashioned in the Modern Era of Science 
> Fiction.    We boomers (and Xers?) who went into Sci/Tech likely read 
> at least a lot of Marvel/DC comics (if not the Science Fiction without 
> pictures) of our era and I claim it heavily shaped our image of what 
> was possible/desireable.    I don't think it is serving us (Gaia of 
> whom we are her most precocious children?)
>
> - Steve
>
>> On 1/25/22 5:58 PM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
>>>
>>> < It might not surprise anyone here that I have become a CliFi 
>>> obsessionist with Kim Stanly Robinson's stuff well represented 
>>> ("Ministry for the Future" standing out well above the others).  His 
>>> Red/Green/Blue Mars series is a good complement with the 
>>> social/technological/spiritual implications of Terraforming there. >
>>>
>>> Huh.  I found MftF drawn-out and boring with distracting little 
>>> nonsense chapters interleaved.   I don’t see why it is popular.   A 
>>> few good ideas here and there but couldn’t care less about the 
>>> characters.  It could be massively compressed.
>>>
>> That would be *all* of KSR's novels I'm afraid...  my obsession with 
>> the ideas (unanticipated problems as well as unanticipated responses) 
>> trumps any need I have for being entertained by the characters or 
>> even plot.
>>
>> It really read to me (as you point out) as a series of loosely 
>> connected vignettes of specific interest.   To the extent that *some* 
>> of the MoTF characters did get under my skin, it was as an irritant 
>> as much as anything.   I probably read Red Mars when it was new as my 
>> introduction to KSR and did not go back to his writing until as 
>> little as 5 years ago when I found his topics more relevant than I 
>> had acknowledged before...  He seemed to me to be a lot preachy and I 
>> guess now I'm enough of the choir to be able to hum along with his 
>> sermons now.
>>
>> Stephenson also gets very tedious for me, but I find his depth of 
>> research and quirkiness of characters and technical surprises worthy 
>> of my attention through his gruelingly long and seemingly careening 
>> storylines and characters.
>>
>>
>
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