Created: Mar 09, 2009
Updated: Jul 31, 2009
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Chris Martenson Crash Course

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Type: Video
 
Website: http://www.chrismartenson.com/
 
Date published: Sun, Mar 08, 2009
 
Country: United States
 

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Chris Martenson's Crash Course is essential viewing to understand the interrelationships between Energy, Economy and the Environment. It makes the connection between the three as well as presenting a full understanding of money, debt and the holy grail of growth. It will make the current turmoil of the financial markets more accessible.

If you want to understand how the world works (or doesn't), how it got that way, and how you can make your own individual plan for Transition, this is a great place to start. This is also essential viewing to help you understand our unique place in the history of human civilization and our responsibility to do something about it. Wake up and become part of the solution.

Here's the first two chapters of this 3.5 hours crash course.

Click here to view the rest of the course videos (for free on Youtube). And check out http://www.chrismartenson.com/ to view the extensive resources there. 


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blindspotter 4 months ago
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This is an important resource, soundly researched and presented. Please just take care with the implication that individuals can protect themselves or address the problems at source by individual transitions. Some of the shocks that Chris rightly predicts can be minimised by local preparedness but others cannot and the only really effective response is collective and global. Chris may wish in future to point out the distinctions between how things are being done (the crash pathway) and how things could be done differently (the revival pathway). Otherwise the necessary changes will be obscured. For example the repeated statement that the global economy must grow in resource turnover and money supply applies only in the current crash pathway and not with other pathways, as shown in my research for NATO Seven Policy Switches for Global Security
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Narda, have you heard of the Global Oneness Project?

They produce some very inspiring videos around 'oneness' within and without.

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Exactly! What is interesting for me, Bowo, is to see and bring out the correlations between the two mirror images - the interior and the exterior. What is nagging at me, perhaps, is my own need to find a simple way to describe it...

If there is someone or some resources which show these correlations I'd love to read/see it - but more than just data... this can be obtained easily anywhere...

So far, to me, The 11th Hour proves to be - in this respect - by far the best, most comprehensive resource I have come across. It is so, in my mind, because it does make this correlation time and again... some of the statements by some of the scientists at the beginning and at the end are 'shockingly' very spiritual observations, very unexpected - thank God!
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Thanks for reviving the idea Deborah. Honestly, that group has been put on hold and we haven't really done much there. Perhaps we can experiment by designing an online version of Transition (self-) Training? There seems to be plenty of Transition-related materials learn-able online.
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boatsie 4 months ago
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just posted this to Wiser University group.... want to discuss idea of 'hosting' some courses there until we actually begin designing a course..... Do we have an AofF editor for that group yet?
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What I find interesting is that, it seems, the convergence is not only without, but also within. Some are more aware of it sooner... while some... later.
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You know, Bowo, it's been nagging at me ever since I've watched it. Particularly the way he puts it: "Masive change is upon us"...

 

 

...and he explains and shows graphs of what he describes as an unprecedented convergence of exponential growth/decline... and I keep on thinking about the positive mirror image of it... such as the unprecedented global convergence of exponential growth in human response - as one example we came to know about thanks to Paul Hawken's question 'I wonder how many people/groups/organizations there are out there?'... I must write something about it...

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bowo 4 months ago
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This looks like a good course! Googled and found that it's on YouTube already. Posting the first video above with link to the rest.

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The Spiritual Soul of Finance

I am delighted to find Chris Martenson's brilliant Crash Course on WiserEarth and I recomend it as an Eco-literacy must. We have been watching and discussing the first 10 chapters earlier this year at the Beshara School, during the ongoing course - Towards a Unified Vision. Many of us were quite shocked! Not only disillusioned by the global myth of financial reliability as he unfolds it through a thorough historical analisis of the US economy, but with Martenson's prediction of a radical change happening in the very near future. Somehow, you do believe him. For me, the fact that the seeming purely spiritual self-inquiry - which was hitherto the norm at the Beshara School - extended to include 'worldly affairs' such as Martenson's course, was no less remarkable. Clearly, to me, one of today's greatest and most urgent spiritual challenges is a global reconsideration and a discussion of the definition of self.

Here's Martenson's introduction from his site

About Chris Martenson

Executive summary: Father of three young children; author; obsessive financial observer; trained as a scientist; experienced in business; has made profound changes in his lifestyle because of what he sees coming.

I think it’s important that you understand who I am, how I have arrived at my conclusions and opinions, and why I’ve dedicated my life to communicating them to you.

First of all, I am not an economist. I am trained as a scientist, having completed both a PhD and a post-doctoral program at Duke University, where I specialized in neurotoxicology. I tell you this because my extensive training as a scientist informs and guides how I think. I gather data, I develop hypotheses, and I continually seek to accept or reject my hypotheses based on the evidence at hand. I let the data tell me the story.

It is also important for you to know that I entered the profession of science with the intention of teaching at the college level. I love teaching, and I especially enjoy the challenge of explaining difficult or complicated subjects to people with limited or no background in those subjects. Over the years I’ve gotten pretty good at it.

Once I figured out that most of the (so-called) better colleges place "effective teacher" pretty much near the bottom of their list of characteristics that factor into tenure review, I switched gears, obtained an MBA from Cornell (in Finance), and spent the next ten years working my way through positions in both corporate finance and strategic consulting. From these experiences I gather my comfort with numbers and finance.

So much for the credentials.

The most important thing for you to know is the impact that the information that I’ve now placed on this site had on me. Let’s do this as a Before and After.

Before: I am a 40-year-old professional who has worked his way up to Vice President of a large, international Fortune 300 company and is living in a waterfront, 5 bathroom house in Mystic, CT, which is mostly paid off. My three young children are either in or about to enter public school, and my portfolio of investments is being managed by a broker at a large institution. I do not really know any of my neighbors, and many of my local connections are superficial at best.

After: I am a 45-year-old who has willingly terminated his former high-paying, high-status position because it seemed like an unnecessary diversion from the real tasks at hand. My children are now homeschooled, and the big house in Mystic was sold in July of 2003 in preference for a 1.5 bathroom rental in rural western Massachusetts. In 2002, I discovered that my broker was unable to navigate a bear market, and I’ve been managing our investments ever since. Since that time, my portfolio has gained 166%, which works out to a compounded yearly gain of 27.8% for five years running (whereas my broker, by keeping me in the usual assortment of stocks, would have scored me a 38% return, or 8.39%/yr). I grow a garden every year; preserve food, know how to brew beer & wine, and raise chickens. I’ve carefully examined each support system (food, energy, security, etc), and for each of them I've figured out either a means of being more self-sufficient or a way to do without. But, most importantly, I now know that the most important descriptor of wealth is not my dollar holdings, but the depth and richness of my community.

I hope you find what I have to offer here useful.

All the best,

Chris Martenson

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