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10/20/2013

Dmitry Orlov's

THE FIVE STAGES OF COLLAPSE:

Survivors' Toolkit

(New Society Publishers, May 2013, 281 pages, $19.95)

Reviewed by Frank Kaminski

At some point, those of us who accept the inevitability of a complete societal collapse, driven by resource depletion and rapid climate change, have to wonder what more can be gained by our continued attempts to persuade the masses. Granted, our efforts do succeed in enlisting a steady trickle of new recruits into the ranks of the "walking worried"–to quote a term used by collapsitarian Julian Darley–but the public at large still dismisses our appeals as lunatic ravings. What reason is there to believe that further efforts at spreading the truth will bring different results? More and more, it's starting to seem like the sensible approach is to get out of the awareness-raising business entirely and focus our energies instead on providing practical guidance to those who are willing to use it.

This is certainly the view of collapse thinker and writer Dmitry Orlov, whose latest book, The Five Stages of Collapse: Survivors' Toolkit, was released by New Society Publishers in May. As indicated by its subtitle, this much-anticipated offering from one of the best authors on the subject seeks not to convince readers that a collapse is imminent, but rather to suggest approaches and strategies for managing it when it comes. "[T]his is not a 'We must...' book or an 'Unless we...' book, or even a 'We should...' book," writes Orlov. "There is no agenda here–just the assumption that collapse will happen, the conjecture that it can be analyzed as unfolding in five distinct phases and, based on quite a bit of research, the conclusion that each phase will require a different set of adaptations from those who wish to survive it."

Marching Gas Pumps

The idea of a five-stage taxonomy of collapse first suggested itself to Orlov in early 2008. It came to him as he noticed that a number of commentators were aptly using Elisabeth Kübler-Ross' five stages of grief to describe the process of coming to terms with humanity's ecological predicament. In February of that year, he posted a piece on his blog titled "The Five Stages of Collapse," which became the germ for the book. In it, he proposed that societies that have been pushed beyond the point of sustainability tend to move through a set sequence of collapse stages. He identified these as financial, commercial, political, social and cultural collapse. And he argued that the United States, with its grave crises related to energy, runaway military spending, foreign debt and a worsening foreign trade deficit, seems poised to bring about its own hasty descent through the five stages.

An émigré from Russia, Orlov had already seen one collapse firsthand. He witnessed the Soviet Union's fall during the early-to-mid 1990s, and in the process accumulated a vast store of wisdom on collapses in general and how best to proceed when caught in one. It didn't take him long after that to see that America was headed for a similar, if not more severe, crash of its own. However, he kept his observations to himself for years, sensing that there wasn't yet an audience for his message. While he bided his time, he settled with his wife in Boston, where he earned a living as an engineer, made his way around by bicycle and, in his spare time, pursued a love of sailing that was more than mere pastime. (Indeed, he would go on to explore the potential of the sail as a mode of transporting food and other cargo in a fossil fuel-depleted future.)

Financial collapse, writes Orlov in Five Stages, is invariably the first and most sudden to occur, because finance represents a mere concept rather than tangible wealth. It can be kept up for only as long as growth and the expectation of future growth are maintained, and when these falter, it fails catastrophically. Right now we're seeing an end to the growth of just about every essential industrial input that has fueled our civilization, oil being chief among them. The widespread realization that growth is over spells death for global finance, meaning that the nations of the developed world are poised on the brink of financial collapse. (Orlov points out that one country, Greece, is already well past the brink and is mired in financial, commercial and political collapse all at once.) The author sees industrial nations headed for a deflationary spiral followed by "a quick but painful bout of hyperinflation thrown in at the very end."

The next phase, commercial collapse, occurs when a country's physical flows of consumer products and services become disrupted. The mass bank failures brought about by financial collapse cause international trade to stop, which in turn halts global supply chains. Citizens find themselves facing shortages of basic goods, while manufacturers run short on materials needed for their production processes. It doesn't take long for the global economy to pass "a point of no return," in Orlov's words, beyond which recovery is impossible because all the requisite supply networks and trading relationships have been lost. In short, people cease believing in the notion that "the market shall provide."

As a society passes through the final three phases in the cycle, people progressively lose faith in its remaining institutions. During political collapse, national governments become irrelevant as they prove incapable of providing for their citizens. Local forms of governance spontaneously spring up, often in partnership with organized crime, to fill the void. As for social and cultural collapse, Orlov writes that they're mostly preventable, and indeed that the Soviet Union managed to stop short of both of them. When they do occur, they're characterized by a loss of trust in one's community and in the goodness of humanity, respectively.

This book includes case studies to illustrate the different collapse stages, each one emphasizing a particular set of skills and attitudes most conducive to surviving them. Iceland following the financial crisis of 2008 is presented as an exemplar of successful financial crash mitigation. The main lesson to be learned from its experience, writes Orlov vehemently, is "Let The Banks Fail." As for weathering commercial collapse, Orlov points to the Russian mafia, which, despite its reputation for viciousness, actually observes a strict ethic of honest dealing and restraint in the use of violence. For his example of successful adaptation to political collapse, Orlov considers an even more uncomfortable case: the Pashtun people of Afghanistan and Pakistan, who accounted for most of the Taliban's membership. There's also a fascinating study of gypsies, and how they can thrive in times of social collapse because they've mastered the art of conning to the point of a high art.

By far the most disturbing portrait is that of an African tribe called the Ik. Orlov uses their experience to show how humans can endure even after they've been stripped of the very virtues that are assumed to be prerequisites for humanity, such as love and compassion. The Ik were driven off their native land in northeastern Uganda 55 years ago when it became a game reserve. The only land left to them was desolate mountainside that was difficult to farm, and the result was chronic famine. Survival didn't mean merely putting one's own needs above those of others, it meant making oneself a ruthless adversary of everyone else in sight. The Ik were shockingly cruel to one another, and no bonds–not even those between mother and child–were sacred. The anthropologist who first studied the Ik, Colin Turnbull, seemed traumatized by the experience. His book about it, The Mountain People, was deemed by one reviewer to be "a terrifying book, a quick but well-illuminated look under the sewercovers of the human psyche."*

Orlov views the story of the Ik as a cautionary tale, one that forces us to "confront the uncomfortable notion that survival at all costs may be a fate worse than death." Regarding the subjects of his other case studies, however, he offers in-depth discussions of how their approaches could be useful to people in today's doomed industrial societies. Above all, he emphasizes that adapting to the difficult future ahead will require rejecting everything we've been schooled and socialized to believe about the world and our place in it. It will also necessitate "learning to be poor," something that Orlov says takes a great deal of practice, since people who are suddenly thrust into destitution have neither the skills nor the psychological preparation for a life of subsistence and bartering.

One of the core assumptions that this book challenges is the belief that notional wealth, in the form of paper currency or numbers in a computer, makes one rich. Having witnessed the Soviet Union destroy its currency by hyperinflating away its debts, Orlov knows better. He realizes that real wealth exists within hard assets like the precious metals in jewelry or the lead ballast in a sailboat, which hold their value over time regardless of what happens in the specious realm of finance. Another theme repeatedly visited by Orlov is the importance of extended family. Orlov shows how the dereliction of family ties by people living in today's industrial nations is both unhealthy and at odds with the role that families have played throughout most of history. He believes that the societies in which family life has been neglected the most will fare the worst in times to come.

It was in December 2006 that Orlov began making a name for himself as a writer on collapse. His breakout article, "Closing the 'Collapse Gap': The USSR was better prepared for collapse than the US," ran on the energy news site Energy Bulletin (now Resilience) on December 4, and it rapidly became one of the site's all-time most popular posts. He adapted this essay into his first book, Reinventing Collapse, which New Society Publishers released the following May. Both the article and the book brimmed with intelligence, worldly experience and a droll, clever wit that has been Orlov's trademark ever since. Though he still has his day job as an engineer–now in the field of software engineering–Orlov continues to actively blog and speak on collapse. As he recounts in the new book, "[s]topping, beyond a certain point, would have disappointed far too many people." Well, I think I speak for all his fans when I express my wish that he not stop anytime soon.

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Notes:

* Mary Daniels, "The Ik; a study of The Loveless People," Chicago Tribune, Nov. 5, 1972: M3, http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/chicagotribune/doc/170334387.html (accessed Oct. 1, 2013).

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