Author archives
Dave Pollard - Born in 1951, lived in various parts of Canada, was married for 27 years to a woman he remains on good terms with, and has two wonderful step-children, four grandchildren and one great-grandchild he is immensely proud of.
Author since 2003 of a blog How to Save the World, described as a “chronicle of civilization’s collapse, creative works and essays on our culture; a trail of crumbs, runes and exclamations along the path in search of a better way to live and make a living, and a better understanding of human nature and how the world really works.” 7500 pages and counting, with a suggested reading list and ‘best articles’ list.
Wrote a book called Finding the Sweet Spot: A Natural Entrepreneur’s Guide to Responsible, Sustainable, Joyful Work in 2008, and co-authored Group Works: A Pattern Language for Bringing Life to Meetings and Other Gatherings in 2011.
Since resigning from 35 years’ paid work, mostly as an advisor to small enterprises, and moving to Bowen Island BC in 2010, he’s worked with the local Intentional Community and Transition movements, the local Arts Council, and various international networks of artists and students of culture dedicated to chronicling and preparing for industrial civilization’s collapse over the course of this century.
Currently living alone in the guise of a hedonistic, poly, vegan, unspiritual, insatiably curious and skeptical, deschooled, and comfortably retired person. Seemingly also slowly becoming, in spite of his ‘self’, a kinder, more loving, compassionate, playful, compersive, sympathetic, equanimous, hopelessly joyful, realistic pessimist.
Things apparently learned by and believed by the character Dave Pollard (though ‘he’ had no choice in the matter):
Pollard’s Law of Human Behaviour: Humans have apparently evolved to do what they must (the personal, unavoidable imperatives of the moment), then do what’s easy, and then do what’s fun. There is never time left for things that are seen as merely important. Social, political and economic change happens only when the old generation dies and a new generation with different entrained beliefs and imperatives fills the power vacuum. We have evolved to be a collaborative and caring species, and we are all doing our best — we cannot do otherwise.
Pollard’s Law of Complexity: Things are the way they are for a reason. To change something, it helps to know that reason. If that reason is complex (and it usually is), success at truly understanding and changing it is unlikely, and developing workarounds and adapting to it is probably a better strategy. Complex systems evolve to self-sustain and resist reform until they finally collapse. For that reason, the systems of global industrial civilization culture are now collapsing rapidly and inevitably, producing the sixth great extinction of life on Earth.
The World After Us: What will be left after collapse, besides a devastated and exhausted planet, will be a much smaller (and thereafter probably declining) human population, struggling to relearn how to live healthy, sustainable, resilient lives in local self-sufficient communities. The rest of life on Earth will recover and do just fine without us.
The Disease of Self-Consciousness: The socially reinforced illusion of the separate self, and all its trappings (belief in free will, choice, control, responsibility, agency, volition, the existence of subjects and objects in separate space and time) arose evolutionarily as an advanced survival instinct in intelligent (and possibly in domesticated) creatures, and identification with this illusion is the source of all suffering (though not all pain, anger, fear, shame, grief, sorrow, and anxiety). It is perhaps also the source of the incredible violence and destruction wreaked by ‘self-inflicted’ creatures. Beyond the self, all there is, is this, and it’s magical, unknowable, wondrous and astonishing, with no need for a spirit, a higher consciousness, or purpose or meaning. It just is… amazing.
The author, having no ‘self’-control, has no idea what the future holds for ‘him’, and will continue to do the only thing ‘he’ can do as each situation arises. Stay tuned.
Author and blogger Dave Pollard addresses the incendiary global war of lies vs. truth, reminiscent of the MAD Magazine cartoon Spy Vs. Spy for those who of us who can recall the scenarios they played which remain eerily prescient. Pollard posits the most effective way to win and retain political power is by seizing the hearts and minds of citizens through a mix of propaganda, mis- and disinformation, and censorship. He continues, this is especially true now, living with a ubiquitous and unceasing firehose of often-conflicting information, and exploitative for-profit “social” media controlled by a handful of dimwitted and unstable western oligarchs.
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Subjects: Communications, Competitive Intelligence, Ethics, Free Speech, Information Management, KM, News Resources, Social Media