Dmitry Orlov's Blog
December 12, 2009
Around this time of year, some brave souls venture to put their reputations at risk by attempting to predict what the next year will bring. Some do so with uncanny accuracy, others — not so much. Being a serious author who hardly ever makes jokes, I generally sit out this annual bout of frivolity, but, noting that a new decade is about to burst upon us, I thought it reasonably safe to paint a picture of how I see the next decade. (In the unlikely case that my predictions turn out to be...
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Published on December 12, 2009 18:58
December 6, 2009
</a>As we approach the end of a year, and the end of a decade, it is a good time to draw some conclusions and think about the future... of the blog you are currently reading. I started it a few years ago, as part of an effort to promote a book I was writing. That went quite well, and in the process I built a small but enthusiastic audience of people who clamored for more.
They tended to be forward-looking, independent-thinking types who couldn't help but see that an American collapse was coming an...
They tended to be forward-looking, independent-thinking types who couldn't help but see that an American collapse was coming an...
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Published on December 06, 2009 07:05
December 5, 2009
[Late yesterday I killed this post, along with the previous one, because comment moderation got to be too much of a chore. The fellow depicted here has a lot of cousins, and they all have internet access. Then quite a few people wrote to me to ask me to bring it back. As a compromise, I am bringing back just this post.:]As some of you might have guessed by now, the topic of climate change is very important to me. I believe that all sorts of people should be made aware of climate change in...
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Published on December 05, 2009 12:29
December 4, 2009
I pruned back the last couple of posts, which had to do with so-called "Climategate," and which turned out to be unfair to my readers, who got lost among the flood of comments from human spambots. I got tired of looking at the nonsense that kept pouring in. It was my mistake to broach the subject in the first place, and I would like to apologize to my readers if this wasted any of their time.
The vast majority of the human spambots was quite easily identifiable as American based on their diale...
The vast majority of the human spambots was quite easily identifiable as American based on their diale...
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Published on December 04, 2009 20:46
As some of you might have guessed by now, the topic of climate change is very important to me. I believe that all sorts of people should be made aware of climate change in ways that will make it very important to them as well. By "all sorts" I mean not just the intelligent, educated people with an ability to understand what a "climate model" is, but the sort of people you can see exhibited here.I spent a year working in advertising, and have gained some understanding of what sort of ammunitio...
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Published on December 04, 2009 12:12
December 2, 2009

I have been trying not to write this blog post, but in the end I couldn't resist. I know full well that I should just ignore this Climategate nonsense, but since what I have to say is quite short, I'll just go ahead and say it.
1. The UEA emails were stolen. Data theft is a criminal activity. Use of stolen data is a criminal activity as well. People who get paid for publishing articles that are based on stolen data are dealing in stolen goods. This is no different from selling a house that you...
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Published on December 02, 2009 14:52
November 22, 2009
A few years ago I bought a sailboat from a fellow who I am sure wishes to remain unnamed, but who at the time made much of his boat restoration skills. He had made a number of alterations to the boat, some ambitious, some less so, while I was, at the time, quite inexperienced. In spite of my relative inexperience, I was already able to discern certain imperfections in the results of the seller's efforts. But I was very impressed with the boat itself (and the boat did turn out to be quite exce...
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Published on November 22, 2009 22:26
November 14, 2009
Sunday Morning with Chris LaidlawRussian-born and now resident in the US, Dmitry Orlov has a theory that the United States is heading for collapse just as the Soviet Union did — and for the same reasons: a severe and chronic shortfall in the production of crude oil, a severe and worsening foreign trade deficit, a runaway military budget, and ballooning foreign debt. He talks to Chris Laidlaw about what he calls 'The Superpower Collapse Soup'.
At the end of the interview, I misspoke when Chris ...
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Published on November 14, 2009 18:31
November 13, 2009
Are you still talking about Cyclone Nargis? Have you ever heard of Cyclone Nargis? Here's a reminder: on 1 May 2008 a weakening low-pressure system suddenly picked up energy as it approached Burma from the Bay of Bengal. By the second day of this rapid strengthening, Cyclone Nargis was blowing in excess of 135MPH and made landfall on the low-lying southern coast of Burma armed with vast reserves of cyclonic energy, a storm surge beneath, and constant heavy rain from above. The Irrawaddy Delta...
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Published on November 13, 2009 19:09
November 5, 2009
Today the Wall Street Journal ran an interview with Mike Ruppert (who got me started by publishing my first article on his site, From The Wilderness). It is a sympathetic article, in which the subject of the imminent, inevitable collapse of industrial civilization is afforded a calm and thoughtful treatment.Feed that to your donkey!
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Published on November 05, 2009 18:04
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