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The Bulletin: November 19-25, 2025

The Bulletin: November 19-25, 2025

This past week’s articles of interest…

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If you’re new to my writing, check out this overview.


Living well within limits – by Catherine Knight

How to Reverse the Massive Worldwide Loss of Soil Moisture, and Why …

What Is a City? Archaeological and Historical Perspectives

As Energy Costs Remain High, Utility Debt Builds For Millions Ahead Of Winter | ZeroHedge

You have 100 ‘energy slaves’ – by Andrew Dessler

Thomas Cole’s Warning to the American People – by Fox Green

Everyday microplastics could be fueling heart disease | ScienceDaily

Sustainability is Dead – by Matt Orsagh

Beaver-engineered habitats are outperforming ours

Trump’s Nuclear Revolution: The Policy That Could Redefine U.S. Power

Nobody’s Coming To Humanity’s Rescue; We’ve Got To Save Ourselves

The Long Twilight of Growth | Art Berman

Directional Advice for the (More Than) Human Predicament

Ecosystem Collapse and Extreme Weather Events — in That Order

Civilization Collapse: A Seneca Cliff Ahead? – by Ugo Bardi

The scientist who predicted ice-sheet collapse — 50 years ago

COP30: The Latest Failure

US Issues NOTAM Flight Alert Of “Heightened Military Activity” Over Venezuela | ZeroHedge

UK Government “Resist” Program Monitors Citizens’ Online Posts

Meet Pr Dieter Helm | Damn the Matrix

Living beyond limits

James Hansen is trying to get a message across

French General: We Must Be Ready To ‘Lose Our Children’ in War with Russia | The Libertarian Institute

Toxic sludge threatens at least 7 states — and the ‘risk is already locked in’ – Alternet.org

THE TRUTH ABOUT COLLAPSE ACCEPTANCE – by Adrian Lambert

You Don’t Hate The Mass Media Enough – by Caitlin Johnstone

The Zero State And What Comes After

Groundwater and Climate Crisis Solutions

Geoengineering Is No Longer Just A Theory | ZeroHedge

Global Rush for Copper Hits the Amazon – Inside Climate News

Climate Change, Models, and the Politics of Uncertainty

If they can’t beat it, they will co-opt it

Homo sapiens: inherently unsustainable – by William E Rees

James Hansen: Candid Truth About Global Warming

Two Investing Titans Issue The Same Warning | ZeroHedge

Modular Reactor Tide Rising: Nano Nuclear To Study Siting Multiple MMRs To Generate 1GW Energy In Texas | ZeroHedge

US Export-Import Bank To Spend $100 Billion To Secure Critical Minerals, Nuclear & LNG Supply Chains | ZeroHedge

A looming ‘insect apocalypse’ could endanger global food supplies. Can we stop it before it’s too late? | Live Science

Is a Major “Risk Off” Event About to Hit?

This Is Your Brain on Plastic, a Literature Review

Beware Fatal Blind Spots In the Climate Movement

Narratives Are the Tools By Which We Misunderstand The World

Africa’s Silent Recolonisation: Debt, Deindustrialisation, and the Net Zero Agenda


PLEASE NOTE: This list is just ‘of interest’. It does not mean I personally endorse or agree with the content of a listed article; in fact, some I certainly do not agree with. But these are all part and parcel of stories told by our species about our world. Some are published by the authors for ‘educational’ and/or ‘informational’ purposes, some are for far more nefarious ‘narrative management’ ones–you, the reader, can decide which is which. Keep in mind a relevant passage from a Bill Rees paper: “We begin with a reminder that humans are storytellers by nature. We socially construct complex sets of facts, beliefs, and values that guide how we operate in the world. Indeed, humans act out of their socially constructed narratives as if they were real. All political ideologies, religious doctrines, economic paradigms, cultural narratives—even scientific theories—are socially constructed “stories” that may or may not accurately reflect any aspect of reality they purport to represent. Once a particular construct has taken hold, its adherents are likely to treat it more seriously than opposing evidence from an alternate conceptual framework.”


If you have arrived here and get something out of my writing, please consider ordering the trilogy of my ‘fictional’ novel series, Olduvai (PDF files; only $9.99 Canadian), via my website or the link below — the ‘profits’ of which help me to keep my internet presence alive and first book available in print (and is available via various online retailers).

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You can also find a variety of resources, particularly my summary notes for a handful of texts, especially William Catton’s Overshoot and Joseph Tainter’s Collapse of Complex Societies: see here.