James Howard Kunstler

Too Much Magic

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The author of The Long Emergency explains why technology can’t solve all our problems, and how excessive optimism can endanger our future.
The Long Emergency quickly became a grassroots hit, offering a shocking vision of our post-oil future and capturing the attention of environmentalists and business leaders alike. As discussion about our dependence on fossil fuels and our dysfunctional financial and government institutions continues, the author returns with Too Much Magic—evaluating what has changed and what has not, and what direction we need to take in this post-financial-crisis world.
“Too much magic” is what James Howard Kunstler sees in the bright utopian visions of the future dreamed up by optimistic souls who believe technology will solve all our problems. Their visions remind him of the flying cars and robot maids that were the dominant images of the future in the 1950s. Kunstler’s image of the future is much more sober. With vision, clarity of thought, and a pragmatic worldview, Kunstler argues that the time for magical thinking and hoping for miracles is over—and the time to begin preparing for the long emergency has begun.
“A sharp critic of energy-sucking, big-box landscapes.” —Winnipeg Free Press
This book is currently unavailable
324 printed pages
Original publication
2012
Publication year
2012
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Quotes

  • b6582899550has quoted3 years ago
    Americans incessantly motor from home to work to mall to soccer field to burger barn in lives devoid of repose and tranquillity, the necessary conditions for reflection. A few wary citizens may sense that something feels increasingly wrong with the picture, but they’re apt to draw the wrong conclusions, for instance, that a conspiracy exists involving some fantasized elite scheming to deprive middle-class Americans of their natural entitlements to a life of comfort and convenience
  • b6582899550has quoted3 years ago
    Now suburbia’s time is over. We’re done building any more of it. The stuff that already exists will increasingly lose value and usefulness. Most Americans don’t know this yet.
  • b6582899550has quoted3 years ago
    Pouring the vast accumulated capital treasure of the United States into building an infrastructure for daily life with no future is self-evidently a tragic misallocation of resources.
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