Author Topic: The Coming Removal of the Mandate of Heaven, Part 1: Food  (Read 1298 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Ptarmigan

  • Bunny Slayer
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 24088
  • Reputation: +1010/-226
  • God Hates Bunnies
The Coming Removal of the Mandate of Heaven, Part 1: Food
« on: April 23, 2022, 03:11:53 PM »
The Coming Removal of the Mandate of Heaven, Part 1: Food
https://crisiswatch.substack.com/p/the-coming-removal-of-the-mandate?s=r

Quote
Update: I’m editing this to go into better detail on what’s going on - including issues I didn’t discuss initially - and to clarify some of the ambiguity. I’m also removing the political infighting aspect as that will be the subject of the third post, which will be posted on Saturday.

Agriculture
If you have been following the news in the agricultural world, you’re likely aware of the shortages of fertilizer and seed which is effecting farmers across the world. In China’s Jilin, Heilongjiang, and Liaoning provinces, officials have reported one in three farmers lack sufficient seed and fertilizer supplies to begin planting for the optimum spring window. Missing that window will drive down the eventual yield, resulting in food shortfalls - assuming the fields in question can even be planted in time to produce a crop. According to sources within these areas, they are stuck waiting on seed and fertilizer which have been imported to China from overseas - and which are stuck in the cargo ships sitting off the coast of Shanghai.

China’s official state-run newspaper, The Global Times, has rather angrily denied these reports - along with all other reports of food insecurity due to food production shortfalls.

Meanwhile, in a repeat of Mao’s command to engage in backyard production of steel, CCP officials throughout China have begun transforming basketball courts and roads into cropland.

China has a food shortage problem. They have been fishing around the world and over fishing.

Quote
Fishing
The situation at sea isn’t much better. Oceanographic research of the fisheries within China’s Exclusive Economic Zone - the 200 nmi (370 km/230 mi) zone extending from the coast as outlined in the Second UN Convention on the Law of the Sea - showed that as of the 1990’s, the biomass in China’s fisheries in the South China Sea had been reduced by 90%. Similar issues have been found with North Korea, where Chinese fishing fleets have so thoroughly overfished North Korean waters as to force Korean fishermen to sail to their deaths looking for food. Even with the draconian enforcement of fishing regulations, there are legitimate concerns the fisheries in these regions may ever be able to fully recover without a complete ban on fishing within Chinese water.

Chinese fishing companies have reacted to this by heavily funding large fishing fleets which range as far as West Africa in search of fish to feed the growing demand for seafood in the Chinese diet. Though officially capped at 3,000 vessels by Chinese law, estimates indicate that as many as 17,000 of these vessels are operating across the oceans of the world. This includes US territorial waters such as Guam, American Samoa, and Hawaii.
Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.
-Napoleon Bonaparte

Allow enemies their space to hate; they will destroy themselves in the process.
-Lisa Du

Offline Ptarmigan

  • Bunny Slayer
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 24088
  • Reputation: +1010/-226
  • God Hates Bunnies
Re: The Coming Removal of the Mandate of Heaven, Part 1: Food
« Reply #1 on: April 23, 2022, 03:15:38 PM »
The Coming Removal of the Mandate of Heaven, Part 2: Water
https://crisiswatch.substack.com/p/the-coming-removal-of-the-mandate-04a?s=r

Quote
Water Thresholds
In order to understand the grave danger China is facing, we need to understand water usage and thresholds below which the population begins to face some level of danger. For that, we’re going to turn to Reuters for an overview.

At a minimum, a civilization requires 1,700 cubic meters of water per person per year to be considered water secure. This amounts to 373,947 gallons of water per person, with a minimum of 4,156 gallons of water per year to ensure good health.

Freshwater is used for everything from industry to agriculture to power generation, and our infrastructure is rated for a minimum level of water moving through the pipes. If that water falls below that level, pressure drops and the water can become unsafe.

This starts to become a problem at 1,000 cubic meters per person per year, and reaches a threat level at 500 cubic meters per person per year.

Beijing is currently sitting at 100 cubic meters of fresh water per person per year. Barely seven times the necessary minimum for a person to remain healthy, with the rest stretched thin and endlessly recycled as it eventually becomes useless for any purpose which brings it into contact with humans in any way.

There is also water shortage. The ground water is polluted.

Quote
Water Shortages in the North
South North Water Transfer Project

Now, if you’ve seen those videos of the roaring floods which race down the Yangtze and wipe away villages every spring, the idea that China may have a water shortage may seem incredible. The problem is these floods are highly centralized in the south and are a result of China’s rainy season - which only lasts for a few months in spring and autumn. Even during the relatively dry periods, however, 80% of the water in China is located in the Yangtze basin.

This is great news for the people in the Yangtze, who don’t generally need to worry about quantity - even if they have to worry about quality - but it leaves the much more heavily populated north with only 20% of the water to provide for close to 70% of the population.
Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.
-Napoleon Bonaparte

Allow enemies their space to hate; they will destroy themselves in the process.
-Lisa Du

Offline Mr Mannn

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 14885
  • Reputation: +2648/-276
Re: The Coming Removal of the Mandate of Heaven, Part 1: Food
« Reply #2 on: April 23, 2022, 04:49:07 PM »
If you are not a prepper, BUY now while you still can.
You don't need enough to survive an apocalypse, just a few weeks to a month when supplies can be brought in.
start with BASICS. white rice and beans. as long as they are dry and cool, they will last longer than you will.
Cans of food will last for 14 years. Hormel Chili can last indefinitely.

in hurricane/earthquake country, officials advise two weeks of stored food. You can do that.

Or do you trust the Biden admin to feed you?

Offline FlaGator

  • Another Pilgrim
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 5409
  • Reputation: +1029/-31
  • Democracy can survive anything except Democrats
Re: The Coming Removal of the Mandate of Heaven, Part 1: Food
« Reply #3 on: April 23, 2022, 06:09:52 PM »
I keep many cans of spam, a lot of rice, quite a bit of canned soup and canned ravioli, and  10 or 12 jugs of water for no other reason than it seems like an intelligent thing to do if you live in Florida.
"My enemy's enemy is the enemy I kill last."
Klingon Proverb.

Offline SVPete

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 29249
  • Reputation: +3208/-248
Re: The Coming Removal of the Mandate of Heaven, Part 1: Food
« Reply #4 on: April 23, 2022, 09:20:11 PM »
Ptarmy's posts refer to the situation in China, and the "Mandate of Heaven" has 2 or 3 millennia-long roots in Chinese culture. Dynasties literally rose, claiming their successes were proof of a mandate from heaven, and subsequently fell over catastrophes, which were regarded by the people as signs of a loss of that mandate.

China, for millennia has had intertwined problems:

* Much of its land is not arable, so that producing enough food for its population has often been difficult;

* Unlike in the Sierras and Rockies, much of China's precipitation is in the form of rain. The snows in the Sierras and Rockies function as storage, so that there is less flooding in the winter, and water is released into river systems more gradually. When most of an area's precipitation is rain, floods result, such as last year's flooding on the Yangtze River that threatened the Three Gorges Dam. In centuries past, flooding has changed river courses, killed huge numbers of people, and brought down a dynasty or three.

Several years ago it was expressed to me this way: because China has no tradition or cultural experience with a true representative republic and civil freedoms, Chinese people put up with a lot that we would consider oppressive; they will continue to do so so long as the government keeps them relatively safe. Covid and the failure of Xi's No Covid policy, and this apparently coming famine will strain that bargain severely.
If The Vaccine is deadly as anti-Covid-vaxxers claim, millions now living would have died.

Offline Ptarmigan

  • Bunny Slayer
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 24088
  • Reputation: +1010/-226
  • God Hates Bunnies
Re: The Coming Removal of the Mandate of Heaven, Part 1: Food
« Reply #5 on: May 11, 2022, 06:47:24 PM »
The Coming Removal of the Mandate of Heaven, Part 3: Political Infighting
https://crisiswatch.substack.com/p/the-coming-removal-of-the-mandate-7c2?s=r

Quote
I want to preface this article by stating everything I say here could be wrong.

Modern Chinese politics is a hall of mirrors, and the true allegiance of every player in the game is known only to themselves. As such, we on the outside are left with no choice but to try and interpret what we see and understand it using logic and critical thinking - and all the while knowing it’s entirely plausible our own biases are warping what we’re seeing.

So take all of this with a grain of salt and do your own research.

Until then, let’s break out the thumbtacks and string.

Chinese politics is smoke and mirrors. China is more Corporatist and Fascist.

Quote
Corporatism
The one core aspect of fascism you will find anywhere is the tendency to corporatism. As the FEE points out, this usually manifests in the existence of a single organization that represents all interests within a given constituency, which is very true of the Chinese economy and what passes for a civil society. These organizations have an appointed leader chosen by the Party, and they subordinate the interests of the group to that of the State and by extension the Party.

These groups maintain sufficient autonomy to pursue the directives handed down by the State in the most efficient manner they’re allowed so they can solve the issues the State tried - and failed - to solve under Mao. To that extent, 1,400 such organizations exist throughout China - with 19,600 provincial branches and 160,000 county-level branches for these organizations.

The Chinese Communist Party has cliques.

Quote
When Deng Xiaoping took power and announced he was going to share power to prevent the disaster which was the Mao era from reoccurring, two factions emerged - the Shanghai Clique and the Communist Youth League Clique. The Shanghai Clique had undisputed hegemony over the Party from 1989 and the ascension of Jiang Zemin until Hu Jintao was able to secure his first term as President in 2002.

Hu Jintao and his ally, Li Keqiang, struck a deal with Jiang Zemin wherein the two factions would share power and trade positions in turn. Certain positions within the cabinet of the executive branch would be set aside for each clique in the opposition’s government - each seat associated with the political base which the clique represented - to ensure both groups worked together and neither felt threatened.

Within this structure, the Communist Youth League Faction was a populist organization that represented the rural provinces and the internal illegal migrants who were flocking to the cities looking for work despite the fact they lacked the hùkǒu (household registration permit which allows an individual to live in a given location) or dān wèi (work unit which created a de facto caste system within the Chinese economy and controlled what job one was legally allowed to work and where). In contrast, the Shanghai Clique represented the coastal regions and the State-Owned Enterprises and large cartels on the coasts who were the primary source of hard currency by which China imported food and coal.

After Hu served his two terms, it was decided the CCP needed to prevent either clique from establishing full hegemony over the State or the Party, so the choice was made to place Xi Jinping as the next President of the People’s Republic of China.

This proved to be a mistake.

China is still mostly rural.

Quote
Poverty Alleviation
If you recall from the section on the Communist Youth League Clique, their rise to power was largely fueled by populist discontent over the imbalance in economic investment. While the coast is full of shining cities which glisten in the sun, the Chinese hinterlands are deeply impoverished. Peasant families rely on coal-fire stoves built into the base of their beds to stay warm, dilapidated houses are common, and poverty is widespread.

Recognizing the potential threat this poses to the Tsinghua Clique’s hold on power, Xi decided to steal Hu Jintao’s playbook and ran with it. In 2012 alone, Xi ensured the rural hinterlands received twice the amount of money that these regions received in all of Hu Jintao’s second five-year term. Combined with attacks on the Communist Youth League Clique in media as elitists who’re only using the rural communities for power, and cut financial support for the organization which gave the Clique its name by half.
« Last Edit: May 11, 2022, 06:52:44 PM by Ptarmigan »
Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.
-Napoleon Bonaparte

Allow enemies their space to hate; they will destroy themselves in the process.
-Lisa Du

Offline Eupher

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 24894
  • Reputation: +2835/-1828
  • U.S. Army, Retired
Re: The Coming Removal of the Mandate of Heaven, Part 1: Food
« Reply #6 on: May 11, 2022, 07:48:58 PM »
Any organization has "cliques." It's the nature of the beast.

Especially Washington, D.C.

We call it "The Swamp" now. Full of lobbyists, career politicians, bureaucrats, hangers-on, and all manner of people looking to cash in on money and power, this is what we have in our nation's capitol.

Sigh.

We're truly ****ed.
Adams E2 Euphonium, built in 2017
Boosey & Co. Imperial Euphonium, built in 1941
Edwards B454 bass trombone, built 2012
Bach Stradivarius 42OG tenor trombone, built 1992
Kanstul 33-T BBb tuba, built 2011
Fender Precision Bass Guitar, built ?
Mouthpiece data provided on request.