Welcome to brumm.com: the Blue Phase
www.brumm.com Links


All off-site links will open in a new window.
Cell phone compatibility of off-site links cannot be guaranteed.


I define the word predicament, as it applies to the world situation of today, as a dilemma without a solution or answer. The Predicament (capitalized) is a systemic mega-issue facing the human species and the planet, with symptoms that include planetary resource depletion, climate change, and massive species extinction. It is a result of and exacerbated by the overpopulation of our species. The Predicament is both ecological and physical in nature. Although it could be mitigated to lessen its inevitable impacts, because of political, social, and cultural hubris and denial, I don't feel it will be done so in a manner that would be in the best interests of the future (and often even of the present). I also don't feel that everyone individually needs to give up denial and dwell on The Predicament, as it seems to create a sense of panic in many individuals (denial evolved as a survival mechanism). Though it is depressing to many, it doesn't have that effect (or panic) on me personally. If you feel you are someone who can handle a lot of bad news and still function, and want to seek out the truth and understand why things really don't seem to be going so well systemically worldwide, continue on:

The Oil Drum

The Oil Drum: discussions about energy and our future

I don't frequent The Oil Drum much anymore, but I think it is especially good for people who first learn about The Predicament and care to find out more about the peak oil aspect of it. It requires a lot of time to keep up, and, if you expect to gain a lot of new insight after awhile, you'll likely be disappointed, as once one gets the scope of the situation in mind, you have it. I am mostly interested in finding mitigation strategies, not solutions, but this may not be true for all people. The basic scenario doesn't change, and I find at the Oil Drum neither do the tone, style, nor topics of discussion (except for special circumstances which suddenly may afflict the world, etc.). It does provide an example of what is known as an online community. You get to know people's personalities well after awhile. I'm sure many professional contacts have been made there; it is a resource for that if you happen to be in a related industry.

Peak Moment

Peak Moment Television Conversations

Peak Moment, "Locally reliant living for trying times," is a series of conversations (video) hosted by Janaia Donaldson and Robyn Mallgren. These two women travel the scope of the U.S. and Canada, interviewing people who are involved in the ongoing study of The Predicament.

Manufactured Landscapes

Zeitgeist films: synopsis of Manufactured Landscapes

Although the review at the web site of Zeitgeist film's "Manufactured Landscapes" makes the movie sound amazingly benign, I had quite a different reaction: it was damning evidence of the horror that an overpopulated species of waste producers with big brains and opposable thumbs can create.

A Matter of Scale

An Online Book - A Matter of Scale

This is a free book on the internet that I downloaded a long time ago and unfortunately never got around to read. I am still offering a link to it because friends I respect told me of its value. Scale is something we often just don't comprehend well as a species; but it affects us in innumerable ways..

Evolutionary Theory, Paleoanthropology, Adaptationism

Cogweb: Evolutionary Psychology

This page was last revised in 2006. It is a list of articles which are quite useful in understanding what it is we humans are. I believe a few links on the page may not work, but a cursory checking of them found most of them still active.

Energy Skeptic

Peak Energy & Resources, Climate Change, and the Preservation of Knowledge

I am friends with Alice Friedemann, whom I know from meeting her during the earlier days of our peak oil groups here in the San Francisco Bay Area. She is a great thinker and scholar, and her articles and presentations are always informative, well-researched, and interestingly written.

Albert Bartlett

Arithmetic, Population, and Energy

This video of a lecture given by Albert Bartlett of the University of Colorado at Boulder is an 8 segment video (linked together at Youtube). It is posted there as "The most important video you'll ever see." That is less hyperbole than it would seem, in my opinion.

The Real Scoop on Biofuels

The Real Scoop on Biofuels: Running on Hype by Brian Tokar

This article was published at Counterpunch.org in 2006, before the economy hit the maladies of 2008. I bookmarked it at the time, but think it still useful. Note: though I believe growing food for fuel to be delusional in the long term (and even in the short term in ways), growing monocrops at all, as agriculture has evolved to do is problematic and not kind to our ecosystems.

Evolutionary Psychology

Evolutionary Psychology: An open-access, peer-reviewed journal

The Journal of Evolutionary Psychology has quite a mission statement: "Evolutionary Psychology is an open-access peer-reviewed journal that aims to foster communication between experimental and theoretical work on the one hand and historical, conceptual and interdisciplinary writings across the whole range of the biological and human sciences on the other." My journey into The Predicament led me to an interesting in evolutionary psychology, though I still need to do a lot more study of it.

Female monogamy is fiction, not fact, Hrdy says by Ken Gewertz

"Female monogamy is fiction, not fact, Hrdy says," published at The Harvard University Gazette

I guess most of us suspected this!

Resource Insights

Independent Comment by Kurt Cobb on Environmental and Natural Resource News

Kurt is a friend in Michigan I know through the topic of peak oil. His blog is regularly featured at The Energy Bulletin, and his work is highly very thought of. Kurt is also a very nice person; after my surgery in 2008, he happened to be in the Bay Area and spent an undue amount of his vacation helping me get around when I was mostly still incapacitated. Kurt published a book in 2010, a peak oil novel, Prelude.

William R. Catton Jr.

Biography at Wikipedia
Ecological Enlightenment (1 of 5)
Stealing from the Future (2 of 5)
Ecological Enlightenment (3 of 5)
Bane of Advertising (4 of 5)
Re-Localization (5 of 5)
Interview Footage from the film "What a Way to Go: Life at the End of Empire"
Gas Shortages Explained
Book review of Overshoot: The Ecological Basis of Revolutionary Change
Book review of Bottleneck: Humanity's Impending Impasse

In my opinion, William Catton's book, Overshoot, published in 1980, was a visionary warning with great insight for its time, in which he laid out scenarios the planet could expect to face due to humans living in unsustainable numbers — numbers in which the exploitation of resources, some renewable and many not, would not be able to continue indefinitely. He published a second book, Bottleneck, a couple of years ago. The link to the Wikipedia article will give readers more complete information. As there are several fine videos online of interviews with Mr. Catton, I recommend checking these out as well.

What A Way to Go: Life at the End of Empire

What A Way to Go

"What a Way to Go, Life at the End of Empire," was a film that excited me tremendously when it was released because it tackled The Predicament on a systemic level. Rather than being just a movie on peak oil, on climate change, etc., it delved into resource depletion, climate, species' mass extinction, and overpopulation. No other movie that I am aware of has tried to bring these related issues together into one movie, but it is imperative to grasp them all if one is to understand the complete issue of Collapse. For me the ending dragged on too long, and it had spiritual (not religious) overtones that don't ring my bells, but I still highly recommend the film for anyone who wishes to acquaint themselves better with some of why "the world is acting the way it is" today.

Beyond Hope by Derrick Jensen

Article at Orion Magazine online

I refer frequently to this 2006 article written by Derrick Jensen. In it he explains clearly how and why hope keeps has kept environmentalists into a repeated destiny of failure. The false belief that a rigid system just might change and be more accommodating to the natural world is really not going to happen. The evidence should seem quite clear by now that it won't. I would add that most people define having a lack of such hope as being in a state of "hopelessness,", but this is NOT the same thing. Please read Derrick's article with an open mind and think about it!


  • Information on these links
  • Help
    Info & help for www.brumm.com
    The Help Icon

    Help



    Please report any problems you might encounter to me using this email link, or the link on the email icon at the bottom of any page's (lower) navigation bar.

    The organization of the links pages is, I feel, fairly straightforward. The main navigation index appears on the main links page, as well as the other links' subcategories' pages. (It does not appear on the Item Index page). Links to the subcategories' pages are available on the upper right navigational toolbar:

    The Links submenu

    The "item index" would be useful if you were searching for a specific link by person or category.


     
  • brumm.com Site Information
    More General Information about www.brumm.com
    The Info Icon

    The History of www.brumm.com



    The latest incarnation/redesign of the www.brumm.com web site was begun in September 2010.

    It was a surprise to me that I even have attempted this. After some rather dire health concerns and major surgery in 2008, I haven't felt like attempting anything particularly time consuming and difficult, certainly not as stressful as web page design tends to become.

    As the last couple of years have progressed, I do feel better, and there are so many things that are relatively new and fun to attempt with web pages. So I again got the idea to attempt this insanity. Many of these new things do things I would have liked to have done years ago, but the constraints and reality of the internet were much harsher then.

    www.brumm.com was begun in 1996, and first hosted on a server in Fremont, California, at zoom.com. Later I transferred the domain to he.net (short for Hurricane Electric). Still later it was on a late friend's server space that she and her husband leased at he.net. When they decided to dump that expense, I tried a cheap and dubious hosting service for a few months. It proved to be a big mistake! My pages got hacked, and they wanted more to fix the "damage" so I could get back up and running than they were going to charge me for rental over 3 years. I moved again in 2008 to sonic.net, in Santa Rosa, California. It may cost a bit more, but it is not a fly-by-night operation like so many cheap web hosting services really are.

    I am very much "pleased as punch" with sonic.net. They are one of the rare companies that have managed to stay around (at least) since the mid 1990s, remaining un-swallowed-up by the rush of big corporations into the internet fray. Sonic.net gets high customer satisfaction ratings. Indeed, I've only needed to call them once, and the tech support I got then was also excellent. This sounds like a commercial, but it isn't meant to be. So much of what passes for corporate culture these days is such a disaster, it's just a pleasant surprise to find oneself happy about any of them.

    In The Blue Phase version of my web site, certainly as "useful" as they all have been, I hope to include a few things I put away in the back closet in the more recent versions. I want to dust some of them off, update, and re-upload. Probably that will happen over the course of time. I am also including, of course, a few things I have regularly kept going, and new versions of things as well. I hope you enjoy it. As I tend to have a fairly unique perspective on things at times, perhaps it will inspire people to consider some alternatives they never thought of before.

    Report any errors or difficulties to me at brumm@brumm.com. Use that link or else the email icon on the (bottom) navigation bar on any page.


     
  • brumm.com Site Information
    Page Information for the Various Links Pages at www.brumm.com
    The Info Icon

    About these Pages

    http://www.brumm.com/links/index.html
    http://www.brumm.com/links/friends-links.html
    http://www.brumm.com/links/genealogy-links.html
    http://www.brumm.com/links/html-links.html
    http://www.brumm.com/links/index-links.html
    http://www.brumm.com/links/like-links.html
    http://www.brumm.com/links/music-links.html
    http://www.brumm.com/links/predicament-links.html
    (The various pages that lead to off-site links)



    Many standard links to sites that everybody knows about will not be found on this list. If you haven't discovered Youtube yet, you must be an awfully new Internet user. My own surfing habits don't frequently involve returning to a lot of sites once I have seen them. I don't regularly read any blogs, but do hit upon some fairly more often than most I guess that indicates a trend....

    If any of the links on this page do not work, I would be happy for you to report them to me at the email link on the bottom navigational tool bar.


     
  • My Short Biography
    A Short Autobiographical Sketch
    The Biography Icon

    Dennis W. Brumm



    Height: I once was 6' 4½", but in the past years I've shrunk about an inch. When I was very young and silly, I wanted to be over 7 feet tall.

    Shoe size: 13, though, since the Chinese have begun to make all our shoes, it seems to have increased to 14, at least sometimes. Some maternal cousins have upwards of 15 and 16.

    Weight: Recently shrinking. If I write a rant on the American diet (and its sub-cults) sometime, I will explain what I've been up to.

    Colors: Blue eyes, but sometimes bloodshot while designing web pages. Hair, grayer than ever, originally blondish, then brownish.

    Family: My parents are both dead (my mother since 1967, my father in 1986). No siblings, so I'm an "orphan" these last 25 years.

    Friends: I have many, and many good ones.

    First memory: Apparently before age one. My mother had a bout will Bell's palsy shortly after I was born, and I remember seeing her face a bit "contorted." When I mentioned this once to my father, he informed me I couldn't possibly remember that, as I was too young. But, despite his naysaying attitude, I do. I remember bits and pieces of a 3rd birthday party, when my Uncle Paul brought me a used toy tractor to ride (like a tricycle) on the sidewalk. He'd taken off the rust and painted it, and fixed it up nicely. Many other very youthful memories.

    Last memory: Typing the word "memories" in the above paragraph.

    Where I've lived: New London, Iowa, until age 18, then Ames, Iowa, until age 25. and finally San Francisco, California, since then (1978). I've lived in the same apartment in San Francisco since 1980.

    Travel: I had a touch of the travel bug when I was in my 20s. I went to Europe twice. I haven't been on an airplane since 1990, so I guess the bug was exterminated. Nowadays I am not the biggest fan of the airline industry. Global warming and all...

    Health: I was a sick kid, getting a lot of colds, ear infections, as well as the usual childhood diseases. I missed a lot of school some years. By the time I was a teenager, this improved greatly, and I rarely get sick now. However, as I have survived 2 aortic dissections (see the "Bad News" Section), and since I have a titanium aortic valve and some plastic arteries, I wouldn't say I'm the healthiest human on the planet.

    Hobbies: I spend a lot of time on my computer. It shows. I began an interest in genealogy in about 2000. It meshed nicely with the computer interest. I studied piano as a kid and some in college and have a great interest in music. Composed some for awhile, and was obsessed with making video once upon a time. I have one cat left (there were three just a few years ago); he is not a hobby but my good friend.

    Other interests: I have an interest in where culture is going, and why. Additionally I have dabbled lately in evolutionary psychology, but I am not "adept" in knowledge of it.

    Education: New London (Iowa) High School, graduated in 1970. Attended Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa. No degree, all sorts of things happened during that period (see the gay liberation section of "Schools.")

    Work: I have been on disability since May 1998 from the aforementioned aortic condition. Not working has kept me alive. I previously held a number of interesting jobs, ranging from janitor to chemical technician to the middle manager boss of ten folks in the accounting department of a produce company. I didn't expect or really want an early retirement, but thus crumbled the cookie. We can't always get or have what we want, even if your spiritual advisor tries to convince you otherwise.

    Irritations: These change periodically. Presently they are cell phones in public (disruption of the commons), cell phones regardless of location (to some extent all digital addictive media, though I am an addict as well). I get pretty angry sometimes at the entitlement felt/exhibited by those who push baby carriages on local sidewalks and stores (baby carriages are the SUVs of the sidewalk). Often I get irritated by those who accept unfounded myth in the face of all evidence, and the rationalizations they make in the supposed reasoning of their beliefs. However, I have come to believe this latter trait is probably a natural human phenomena, evolved as such, and try to just let my irritation go about it whenever possible. I can still feel some astonishment without the irritation and get along better with the world.


     
  • Email
  • Information on these links
Go to the top of the page