Hey everyone,
Its time to talk.. Ive been saying this for 20 years, but now, its really time!
Let me paint you the full picture of where we are right now:
The Cost of Living Crisis Has Gone Beyond Critical
The middle class is being systematically priced out of basic survival. A household earning $50,000 today may find it nearly impossible to pay for housing, healthcare and education at current inflation rates. In California, you need to earn $237,000 annually to qualify for a mortgage on a median-priced home - over twice the median household income.
We have teachers working multiple jobs as DoorDash drivers just to feed their families. Police officers earning $120,000 who can't afford to buy homes. 70-year-old widows forced back into the workforce because they "cannot afford to retire."
This isn't just economic hardship - this is systematic extraction designed to keep us dependent, desperate, and divided. Living expenses for a typical family of four could rise 25-30% in the next few years, while home values and rents may increase over 50% as healthcare costs outpace wage growth.
The Power Grid Is Literally Falling Apart
Here's what they're not telling you about our electrical infrastructure: 46% of distribution infrastructure and 31% of transmission lines are "beyond their useful life." Bank of America warns that "Grid reliability is worse today than in the early 2000s."
The Department of Energy has warned that blackouts could increase by 100 times in 2030 if the U.S. continues to shutter reliable power sources and fails to add additional firm capacity. Think about that for a moment - 100 times more blackouts than we have now.
And it's not just theory. On April 28, 2025, Spain's entire electrical grid collapsed in 5 seconds due to a cascading failure. Within 30 seconds, successive waves of generation loss occurred, and the entire Iberian Peninsula went dark. This wasn't some developing country - this was modern Europe, with all their renewable energy infrastructure and interconnected grids.
An EMP attack or major grid collapse would also collapse the water infrastructure - the delivery and purification of water and the removal and treatment of wastewater and sewage. Outbreaks of cholera would follow. Lack of water will cause death in 3 to 4 days.
When the grid goes down - not if, but when - what happens to your refrigeration? Your heating and cooling? Your ability to pump gas, withdraw money, or communicate? Everything stops.
Water Scarcity Is Accelerating Rapidly
Half of the world's population could be living in areas facing water scarcity by as early as 2025. In Texas alone, officials fear the state could run out of water by 2030, with municipal supply unable to meet demand during a severe drought.
By 2025, 1.8 billion people are likely to face "absolute water scarcity," meaning they will have to live with less than 500 cubic meters of water per person per year. And this isn't just about developing countries - the water crisis in Flint, Michigan showed how quickly municipal water supplies can become contaminated and unusable, leaving 81,000 people without safe drinking water for years.
Texas water systems lose at least 572,000 acre-feet per year from leaking and deteriorating pipes - about 51 gallons of water per home or business connection every day. This is enough water to meet the total annual municipal needs of Austin, El Paso, Fort Worth, and Laredo combined.
The Food System Is On the Verge of Collapse
According to noted Canadian energy researcher Vaclav Smil, two-fifths of humanity—more than three billion people—are alive today because of nitrogen fertilizer. The chemical fertilizer trifecta that tripled global grain production is now in critical short supply.
Russia and Belarus, major fertilizer producers, have weaponized food supplies. If fertilizer remains in short supply or prices stay unaffordable, farmers may be unable to keep their soil fertile enough for crops. Brazil imports about 85 percent of its fertilizer, a quarter of it typically from Russia. If farmers there cut back on fertilizers and yields fall, it could have a significant impact on global food supplies since Brazil is among the world's top three exporters of soybeans, corn, sugar, beef, chicken, and pork.
Mass deportations would make an already bad farm labor crisis even worse, leading to higher food prices, especially for meat, dairy and produce. Proposed tariffs would increase the cost of nearly everything we buy through higher prices on inputs and ingredients at every step of the supply chain.
Civil Unrest Is Accelerating Globally
There have been over 800 significant anti-government protests since 2017 in more than 150 countries, with more than 160 events in 2024 alone. Political violence ranks as the biggest concern for more than 50% of companies globally.
State-based armed conflict is ranked as the #1 global risk for 2025, jumping from #8 last year. Nearly one-quarter of experts expect a material global crisis this year.
Contributing factors such as high inflation, wealth inequality, food and fuel prices, climate anxieties and concerns about civil liberties or perceived assaults on democracy have not eased. All kinds of civil unrest and protest activity remain a problem.
When society breaks down - and the indicators are screaming that it's happening - what happens to supply chains? To law enforcement? To the social contract that keeps civilization functioning?
The Middle Class Can No Longer Survive Without Exploitation
Here's the brutal truth: even middle-class families are being forced into situations where they have to compete destructively just to survive. When housing costs consume 50-70% of income, when basic necessities are becoming luxuries, when stable employment no longer guarantees security - people become desperate.
And desperate people do desperate things. The social fabric is tearing, and relying on others for your basic needs is becoming not just expensive, but dangerous.
There Is Another Way: Earthships and Complete Self-Sufficiency
For over 50 years, architect Michael Reynolds has been perfecting a technology that makes complete self-sufficiency possible. Earthships are homes that provide six essential human needs: comfortable shelter, electricity, water, waste management, sewage treatment, and food production - all without relying on external grids or systems.
These aren't just experimental structures - there are over 3,000 Earthships built around the world. During the 2020 pandemic, while people were lining up for food and losing power, Earthship residents were "walking down their hallways barefoot, picking bananas and spinach and kale and tomatoes" from their own indoor food systems.
The Complete Earthship Solution:
Energy Independence: Earthships generate their own electricity through solar panels and wind systems. They heat and cool themselves using thermal mass and solar gain, maintaining comfortable temperatures without fossil fuels. Residents typically save $500+ per month on utilities compared to conventional homes.
Water Security: Earthships harvest and purify their own water from rain, storing it in internal cisterns. They treat their own sewage naturally through constructed wetlands and biological systems, creating a closed-loop water cycle that functions independently of municipal systems.
Food Production: Integrated greenhouse systems allow year-round food production, providing fresh vegetables, fruits, and herbs regardless of external climate conditions. These botanical cells are designed to thrive in the thermal mass environment of the Earthship.
Construction from Waste: Built from recycled materials including earth-packed tires, aluminum cans, and glass bottles that would otherwise be waste. Each Earthship uses about 800 to 900 automobile tires, filled with 300 to 400 pounds of dirt each, creating incredibly dense and insulating walls.
Resilience Against Everything: As Reynolds says: "In an Earthship, the only vulnerability you have is if they drop an atomic bomb on top of you." These structures are designed to be autonomous vessels that can take care of people regardless of what happens to external systems.
The Deeper Philosophy: Breaking Free from the Matrix of Dependency
Reynolds calls his work "biotecture" - building with biological principles rather than conventional architecture. He's been a critic of the profession of architecture for its adherence to conventional theory and practice that creates dependency rather than autonomy.
This isn't just about building different houses. This is about fundamentally changing our relationship with the systems that control us. As Reynolds puts it: "I don't give a damn if it's architecture or not. Typical architects are making flamboyant pieces of beautiful sculpture that cost 40,000 dollars a month to operate in utilities, which certainly isn't sustainable or autonomous. I want a structure and a vessel that will take care of people and the planet."
Why This Matters More Than Ever Right Now
Every crisis we're facing - the economic collapse, infrastructure failure, water scarcity, food insecurity, social unrest - they're all symptoms of the same disease: complete dependency on systems designed to extract wealth and control behavior.
We're living in an era where "the pandemic was proof that the concept he pioneered had come of age. There were people—even wealthy people—waiting in line for food. Homes became unlivable because the grid failed."
The old world of dependency is actively hostile to human flourishing. The systems are rigged, the infrastructure is failing, and the social contract is breaking down. You can either continue participating in a game designed for your failure, or you can opt out entirely.
The Practical Path Forward
Immediate Actions: 1. Study Earthship Technology: Visit Earthship.com, read Reynolds' books, and understand the six principles of autonomous building: thermal/solar heating and cooling, solar and wind electricity, contained sewage treatment, building with natural and recycled materials, water harvesting, and food production.
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Attend an Academy: Over 200 students and interns come to Taos, New Mexico each year to learn hands-on Earthship building techniques. These academies teach the practical skills needed to build autonomous structures.
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Find Your Land: Start looking for property where you can build without restrictive codes. Reynolds has lost his architectural license and faced permit problems because conventional building codes aren't designed for autonomous structures.
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Build Your Skills: Learn basic construction, plumbing, electrical, and gardening skills. The beauty of Earthship design is that they are "intentionally uncomplicated and mainly single-story, so that people with little building knowledge can construct them."
The Community Approach: In the Greater World Earthship Community in Taos, they're building 130 homes on 320 acres, with the rest as common green space. The buildings are far apart to allow animals to continue roaming while providing a model for autonomous living.
This isn't about becoming a hermit. This is about building resilient communities of people who've decided to take responsibility for their own survival and create something better than the failing systems around us.
The Real Cost of Waiting
Let's be honest about what's coming: Food production would collapse without electricity. Crops and livestock require water delivered by electronically powered pumps. Tractors, harvesters, and other farm equipment run on petroleum products supplied by infrastructure that requires electricity. The plants that make fertilizer, insecticides, and feed also require electricity.
A catastrophic power outage could last days, weeks, months, or even years. Between 2014 and 2023, thousands of people died during self-defense situations as social order broke down during crisis periods.
Every day you wait is another day you remain vulnerable to systems that are actively failing. Every month you delay is another month you're dependent on infrastructure that's beyond its useful life.
This Isn't About Going Backwards - It's About Evolving Forward
Earthships aren't primitive shelters - they're highly evolved biotechnological systems that work with natural phenomena rather than against them. They represent "a different way of living that inspires all of us" and point toward a sustainable future where humans can thrive without destroying the planet.
We're not talking about giving up technology or comfort. We're talking about using technology intelligently to create genuine security rather than the illusion of security provided by failing systems.
When asked about scalability, Reynolds says: "We are following the path of the automobile. It's a horrible analogy, as the automobile has done damage to the Earth, but getting an Earthship home needs to be as easy as leasing a car."
The Choice is Yours, But Time is Running Out
You can continue depending on systems that are actively failing, watching your purchasing power erode while the social contract dissolves around you. You can keep paying for utilities that may not work, water that may not flow, and food that may not arrive.
Or you can take responsibility for your own survival and build something that actually works.
The window for easy transitions is closing. The evidence is overwhelming: the old systems are done. The question isn't whether they'll collapse - it's whether you'll be ready when they do.
Build your Earthship. Grow your food. Generate your power. Treat your water. Take care of your family.
As one researcher put it: "Think the global fertilizer shortage is someone else's problem? Take a look in the mirror. If you are reading this in North America, Europe, Latin America, or Asia, chances are that the bundle of amino acids staring back at you is alive today because of chemical fertilizers."
When those fertilizers become unavailable, when the grid fails, when the water stops flowing, when the trucks stop delivering food - what's your plan?
The Earth is offering us everything we need to survive and thrive. We just have to remember how to accept her gifts and stop depending on systems designed to extract and control.
The revolution isn't coming. It's here. And it looks like radical self-reliance built on technologies that work with natural systems rather than against them.
The train is leaving the station, and this time it's heading somewhere the old systems can't follow. All aboard the sovereignty express.
Much love and urgent action, @eco-alex 🚂
This isn't a drill. This isn't theory. This is your life, your family's survival, and your chance to build something that works while there's still time. The choice is yours, but the window is closing fast.