The New Thermal Divide - Part 3: Global Collapse: How Heat Scrambles Ecosystems and Food Supplies

The New Thermal Divide 1 The New Thermal Divide - Part 1: Anatomy of an Invisible Killer 2 The New Thermal Divide - Part 2: From Savanna to City-Humanity's Failed Adaptation 3 The New Thermal Divide - Part 3: Global Collapse: How Heat Scrambles Ecosystems and Food Supplies 4 The New Thermal Divide - Part 4: Accountability and the Future of a Superheated Planet ← Series Home The New Thermal Divide - Part 3: Global Collapse: How Heat Scrambles Ecosystems and Food Supplies Extreme heat is the prime mover of the climate crisis. It functions as the engine of planetary chaos, amplifying secondary effects like drought, wildfires, and sea-level rise. Heat is a destructive, invisible force that drives entropy and disorder across all natural systems. For all living things, temperatures rising above their specific Goldilocks Zone lead inevitably to death. Humanity is witnessing its technologically advanced world unraveling as heat pushes global food supplies, marine ecosystems, and human health systems toward collapse. ...

Political dimensions of famine

When Disaster Strikes - Part 5: Famine and Political Power

When Disaster Strikes 1 Part 1: Disasters Don't Create Inequality-They Reveal It 2 Part 2: Why Some Cities Burn (And Others Don't) 3 Part 3: The Sacrifice Calculus 4 Part 4: Elite Disaster Strategies 5 Part 5: Famine and Political Power 6 Part 6: Earthquakes and Governance 7 Part 7: Pandemic Politics 8 Part 8: Why We Forget ← Series Home Key Takeaways Famines rarely result from absolute food shortage: Most famines occur with adequate food supply somewhere in the system—the problem is distribution, access, and entitlement. Political systems shape famine vulnerability: Democracies with free press rarely experience famines; authoritarian systems suffer them repeatedly. Famine can be a tool of governance: Rulers have deliberately created or prolonged famines to achieve political goals. Food distribution reflects power relations: Who eats and who starves reveals society's real priorities, stripped of rhetoric. A Question of Entitlement In 1943, as World War II raged, Bengal experienced a famine that killed an estimated 2-3 million people. Rice was being exported from India to feed Allied troops. Winston Churchill dismissed appeals for relief, asking why, if conditions were so dire, Gandhi hadn’t died yet. ...

Hunger is Man-Made - Part 1: How Inequality Fabricates Scarcity

Hunger is Man-Made: The Political Economy of Food Scarcity 1 Hunger is Man-Made - Part 1: How Inequality Fabricates Scarcity 2 Hunger is Man-Made - Part 2: Engineered Vulnerability: When Famine Becomes an Act of History 3 Hunger is Man-Made - Part 3: The Green Trap: How Modernization Concentrated Land and Poverty 4 Hunger is Man-Made - Part 4: The Global Supermarket: Corporate Control, Debt, and the Toxic Gift of Aid ← Series Home Key Takeaways 500+ million people face hunger despite global abundance: This crisis unfolds not from food scarcity, but from concentrated control over production resources. Scarcity is an illusion created by inequality: Sharp disparities in controlling food resources obstruct development and distort utilization. Whoever controls bread controls the mind: Control of essential resources determines who eats and who starves, enabling the exploitation of populations. Hunger stems from human systems, not nature: Malthus was wrong—the problem is dependency and underdevelopment, not limits to growth. Demystifying hunger is the first step to change: Understanding the structures that manufacture scarcity is essential for implementing genuine solutions. Post 1: Hunger is Man-Made - Part 1: How Inequality Fabricates Scarcity The book, The Hunger Industry, challenges readers to rethink deeply held assumptions about food and subsistence. Readers will confront ideas previously accepted as settled facts. This work compels mental alertness, anxiety, and a departure from intellectual routine. It deals with the most crucial human issue: securing daily bread. The authors emphasize that “without bread, man does not live” and whoever controls the bread controls the mind. ...