6 Must Watch Movies On The Global Crisis

If you haven’t been in a coma the last couple of years, then you might have noticed that the economy is crashing, food and gas prices are on the rise, and if people weren’t protesting in your city square, then they were protesting in one close by. However, as shown by the following 6 films, these instances and many others are tightly interconnected, and there are people looking into what’s causing them, where they’re leading humanity, and what can be done about them.

Collapse

The present & future forecast of the world’s problems, & how they’re forcing humanity into a new era, through the lens of Michael C. Ruppert

Collapse [Film]

Meltdown: The Secret History Of The Global Financial Collapse

The 2008 financial crash and the events that followed revealed humanity’s tight global interconnectedness & interdependence

Meltdown: The Secret History Of The Global Financial Collapse [Movie]

Blind Spot

Peak oil’s complex multi-crisis & its challenge upon a society rooted in generations of self-interest values

Blind Spot [Film]

Inside Job

How the commonly held value of “maximize your profit” led to the 2008 financial crisis

Inside Job [Film]

Earth 2100

Crises unfold integrally, not individually, exceeding national & disciplinary borders, & forcing humanity to adopt a global approach to solving them

Earth 2100 [Film]

Zeitgeist: Moving Forward

The realization of the negative influence of a society that prominently values individual self-interest upon human development & the need to build a new kind of social influence that promotes people’s well-being

Zeitgeist: Moving Forward [Film]

Earth 2100 [Film]

Earth 2100 [Film]

Based on current scientific research and expert views about the accumulating crises humanity is expected to face over the coming centuryEarth 2100 is a predictive portrayal of the century through the life of Lucy, a fictional woman born in the U.S. in 2008.

No Crisis Exists On Its Own

Earth 2100 paints a picture of the global crisis’ tight interconnectedness, how no one crisis exists on its own and cannot be dealt with in a pin-point manner. What the film shows is that:

  • an oil crisis becomes a food crisis,
  • they both connect to increase climate change and global warming,
  • which increases drought and affects a water crisis,
  • bringing about famine and thus, mass immigration of people seeking food and water,
  • as well as deforestation and mass animal and plant extinction,
  • rising sea levels and thus, floods,
  • which then bring about outbreaks of infectious diseases,
  • and this all becomes intensified by rapidly increasing human population, increasing worldwide consumption demand and natural disasters.

The Need To See Things At A Global Level

In presenting this complicated global crisis tangle humanity is expected to face, i.e. many individual crises as one global, integral crisis, Earth 2100 fundamentally proposes the need for a change in people’s approach to the world, from approaching problems locally and nationally to approaching them globally. As mentioned toward the film’s close:

[By 2100] we’re going to have joint management of water resources, of energy resources, of disaster management. We’re going to be living on a planet where we don’t see things at a national level, but we see things at a global level.”

–Peter Gleick, Ph.D., world renowned water scientist, President and co-founder of the Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment, and Security

By the time we get to 2100, the challenge of building a global, green economy where we’re sharing technologies and where we’re not fighting wars over water and oil… That’s going to bring out the best in the human family.”

–Van Jones, senior fellow at the Center For American Progress and a senior policy advisor at Green For All

That’s if we move in a positive direction. However, Earth 2100 also points out a major threat if the change toward a global, integral approach to the world is not met in time. This would result in much suffering, verging on the brink of civilizational collapse.

If we continue on the business as usual trajectory, there will be a tipping point that we cannot avert. We will indeed drive the car over the cliff.”

–John Holdren, advisor to President Barack Obama for Science and Technology, Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy

Watch Earth 2100 (in 9 parts)

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Go to the Earth 2100 official web page at ABC News »