Byzantium was in decline for seven centuries until the Ottomans pulled the plug. Rome was in decline for several centuries prior to its sacking.

Climate change and the accompanying plagues, droughts, famines, and calamities that accompany it might accelerate and exacerbate the state's capacity and willingness to respond to these crises, but all it might mean is that this is a new normal added to the reproleterization of American life.

I don't really have a point but it is just a thought that I (perhaps others) are going to have to accept that future, and that is a kind of new world I am unsure as to how to adapt to.

  • PresterJohnBrown [any]
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    4 years ago

    We don’t live in a time in which a decline of a state can linger over 300 years.

    Definitely wouldn't say that, I think you're confusing correlation with causation. There's nothing about our time that precludes the possibility that a state that could last a thousand years (other than the whole global heat death thing).