The Last Man on Earth
An achieved goal of capitalist industrial civilization was
the systematic reduction of nature to a simple component of the economy.
Landscapes of rivers, lakes, forests, and meadows were replaced by the
concrete, steel, and asphalt of cityscapes. The build-up of toxic wastes and
byproducts of industrial civilization were seen merely as external problems to
be solved via engineering and technology. In the grand narrative of material
progress, industrial man put himself at the center of the universe, the lead
actor and hero who would always survive and triumph. He saw no problem with the
complete subjugation of the wilderness, taking more from the land than was
given back, and reducing biodiversity to a shell of its former self in the name
of economic growth. The dominant mindset was summed up thusly…
“…nature is a malignant force with useful aspects that must
be harnessed, and useless, harmful ones that must be shorn of their power. They
spend their energy adapting nature to their purposes, instead of themselves to
her demands. They destroy pests of crops and men, they build dykes and great
dams to avert floods, and they level hills in one spot and pile them up in
another. Their premise is that nature will destroy them unless they prevent
it…” ~ Clyde Kluckhohn
In the collective consciousness of industrial civilization,
man was exempt from falling victim to the 6th mass extinction. The future
narrative of people in the modern age never included:
…that they
would be among the last humans to walk the Earth.
…that their
children would not live long enough to grow old.
…that all
cultural, artistic, and scientific achievements of the human species would soon
be forgotten in time, no longer practiced and appreciated.
Cocooned away from the elements as they were, few city
dwellers noticed the creeping deterioration of the planet’s biosphere. Their
artificial world, filled with the digital screens of computers, televisions,
electronic billboards, and sundry other micro-computer devices, kept the public
preoccupied with a constant
stream of infotainment, celebrity gossip, sports,
and political spectacles. The popular line of thought was that the natural
world was too resilient to collapse from man’s activities; periodic efforts of
environmental remediation would be all that was needed to keep
business-as-usual afloat. Generational amnesia cast a false sense of security
over the unwashed masses. Rivers and streams, once teeming with fish and
aquatic life, were now laden with toxins, heavy metals, and plastics. Moose and
bison no longer roamed the fragmented wilderness; the remaining few were set
aside for bioengineering experiments in a last-ditch effort to save them. The
whole web of life with all its keystone species from microbes and insects to
large terrestrial and aquatic mammals was unravelling. Pests, viruses, and
pathogens ran rampant in the new disorder of the planet. Scientists talked of
tipping points, but no one really knew when such red lines in biospheric stability
would be crossed or if they had already been breached. Like a runaway freight
train, industrial civilization had indeed passed many tipping points long ago.
Few thought there would be such an abrupt downward spiral, seemingly without
warning. The first law of thermodynamics was being realized on a system-wide
scale.
Modern man was thought to have been infinitely adaptive and
clever, but the linear-thinking that dominated the culture was riddled with too
many blind-spots to prevent its inevitable downfall. As long as the same
economic system and mode of living persisted, no amount of new technology would
solve the root problems. Since the mid 1970′s, the industrialized world had
been living beyond the total carrying capacity of the Earth for decades and even
created a day to recognize the transgression which would arrive a few days
earlier each year. Various reports of imminent catastrophe were published, but
to no avail. Everyone had their mental crutch to fool themselves into believing
that the day of reckoning would never come. Some, like the fanatical zealots of
religion, rejoiced that the end was upon us while others were paralyzed with
fear and despair. The all-pervasive mainstream cult of money worship,
consumption, and economic growth gave rise to other doomsday cults who heralded
the end of time.
Mother nature took no prisoners; there was no escaping her
ironclad laws. Mass starvation, war, and pestilence rapidly whittled the human
population down to small pockets of survivors, but then even those few
post-apocalyptic tribes soon declined and disappeared until the day arrived
that only one human walked the Earth. One lone human survivor out of the
billions that once were.
He survived the pandemic that wiped out roughly
three-quarters of the global population. He survived the nuclear meltdown and
craziness of the food wars and nuclear terrorism. And thus far he survived
climate chaos by constantly moving. MRE’s ( ready to eat meals ) were
mass-produced for the general public and stored in most cities when the
agricultural system started to show signs of imminent collapse. Even after all
these years, the last human still found these warehouses of preserved food to
be an invaluable source of sustenance, supplementing his diet with the
occasional cockroach, rat, or wild pig.
How did the last man on Earth spend his time when not
scavenging for food, water, and other essentials? He was on a search to find
other humans of course. How could he have known that he was the sole survivor?
Without electricity, there no longer existed any sort of global communication
system. The one solar-powered/hand crank shortwave radio he had in his backpack
had yet to pick up any
signals, but he would religiously take it out every
night to scan the frequencies for an hour or two. To break the deathly silence
of the world, he would occasionally play the assorted music files that were on
his wind-up mp3 player. He especially loved their sound inside the expansive
corridors of old libraries he visited during his trek across the continent.
With his life always in jeopardy, he found that a good book was the best form
of escapism; compromising his health and safety with mind/mood-altering drugs
was not an option in a world devoid of hospitals and medicine. And sex? Well,
you’ll have to use your imagination for that. He certainly did. Such solitude,
a prison cell of solitary confinement spanning the entire planet, would have
driven most to madness and suicide, but he handled the loneliness day by day
and with stoicism.
In his early years, he experienced a taste of working at a
9-5 job, driving a car and flying on jumbo jets, but he didn’t miss any of it
really. He had been one of those who had read extensively about the
unsustainability of the global economy and about the nature of ecological
overshoot and collapse, and he had prepared for it. He held no illusions of a
new civilization being reborn out of the ashes of capitalist industrial
civilization. Capitalism, he knew, held too tight of a grip on modern man, and
the psychological barriers of the masses prevented them from seeing the end of
everything concerning the human experience …forever. As the weeks, months, and
years passed by and he grew older, he began to reconcile with the idea that he
was very likely the last person left alive. No need to leave any more messages
on roof tops, in vacant parking lots, or over the empty airwaves. No one was
listening. No one was coming. There really was no prospect of growing old
gracefully in this new reality. He had yet to find some small pocket of
unpolluted land that did not register on his Geiger counter. So he made a pact
with himself and the pistol he carried that when his health and strength no
longer allowed him to eke out an existence, he would not be alive when the wild
dogs came for him.
Civilizations die from
suicide, not by murder.”
~ Arnold J.
Toynbee



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