Overview From the Publisher:
No home is complete without this essential resource. M.I.T. graduate Matthew Stein spent 15 years compiling the information for When Technology Fails. This easy-to-use manual is designed for self-reliant living in today's changing world.
As we begin the 21st Century, the rapidly expanding world population is quickly depleting the available natural resources and fossil fuel supply while increasing the demand for basic human needs-food, shelter, clothing and energy. This combined with the current worldwide infrastructure dependent on instant global communication and next-day distribution grids means that any disruption of the norm due to technology breakdowns, weather patterns, solar spots, techno-terrorism or natural upheavals can create massive disruptions to daily life.
When Technology Fails is the first book to offer basic instructions and recommended resources for the wide range of skills and technologies necessary for self-reliant living, achieving mastery of all kinds of emergency conditions, and treading lighter on Mother Earth. When Technology Fails is a user-friendly manual for the 2lst Century in the tradition of the Whole Earth Catalog.
We hope you enjoy reading this important book and can recommend it to your readers.
Review From Matt Savinar, proprietor of the website "Life After the Oil Crash:"
Like most of my readers, I spent the entirety of my "pre-Peak Oil" life as a fossil-fueled zombie, slavishly servicing the petro-techno, hyper-energetic collective narcosis commonly referred to as "the US economy."
Then I found out about Peak Oil and realized, "Holy Mother of God . . . if this shit's true, I'm like totally screwed. . . and worse yet, I don't even know the first thing to do to begin getting unscrewed."
Then I found Matthew Stein's book, When Technology Fails: A Manual for Self-Reliance and Planetary Survival. This book which covers pretty much everything you need to know to begin preparing for "life after the oil crash." It has so much valuable information, I am even considering stocking up copies for "investment" or future barter purposes as a book with this much valuable and life-saving information will certainly be more valuable than the US dollar post-peak.
Stein has organized the book into byte-size and manageable skills for you to master and things to acquire. The book is particularly useful to people, who like myself, have spent their entire life in what James Kunstler calls the "hallucinatory economy." We need very simple, clear directions as we begin down the road to reality and self-sufficiency.
For example, right now I'm on Stein's chapter on what you need to include in your "grab and go bag" aka "shit's hit the fan, time to run to the hills bag" aka "grab this bag and haul ass to somewhere remote if Bush lobs a nuke at Iran . . . "
Being a city-slicker by birth and an attorney by trade, I don't know the first thing about what you need to include in your survival pack. If left to my own instincts, I would probably include a three-piece suit, my rolodex and some retainer and fee agreement forms.
Obviously, I wouldn't survive long.
Luckily I have Stein's book (actually four copies - one in my book box, one in my grab-and-go bag, and an extra two just in case something happens to the first two.) So I open to his chapter on survival packs and am able to include the appropriate things. (While I've left out the three-piece suit, briefcase, and rolodex, I just can't give up the retainer and fee agreements. Hey, old habits die hard.)
Stein's book has much more than just information to help you survive short-term emergencies. For instance, he has a chapter on building yourself an small "ecoshelter." When I get to that chapter, I will read through it, do some google searches, purchase or acquire the necessary materials and do my best to construct one myself. Even though I won't be moving out of my apartment and into the shelter anytime soon, having the skill to build one will prove valuable, and possibly profitable, in a post-peak world.
Stein has a section on Peak Oil and is clearly quite well versed in the issues relating to it. There's even a graph from Dr. Campbell in the book!
To the men reading this: to be perfectly blunt, Stein's book may even help you get laid post-peak. Before you bust up laughing, hear me out. I recently finished reading Jared Diamond's book, Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed. He cites an example of one collapsing society (don't remember which one as the book is as big as a freaking encyclopedia) where he suspects the final demise of the society occurred when the women in the society realized the men didn't have the skills necessary to survive the new circumstances that had befallen the society.
What did the ladies do to ensure the continued existence of their genes? Simple, they abandoned the men and hooked up with the men in a neighboring society who had the necessary skills. Kind of harsh, but hey that's natural selection at work. Deal with her or she'll deal with the guy down the road.
Now who do you think will be best suited to ensuring the continued existence of their genes post-peak when the market has crashed, gas is $10/gallon, and electricity is extremely expensive at best and woefully intermittent or nonexistent at worse:
A) Alan, a Wall Street stock broker;
B) Bob, a fat-cat corporate attorney,
C) Carl, a Madison Avenue advertising executive;
D) Dave, a rap/hip-hop star;
E) Earl, a tanning-hut manager;
F) Fred, an SUV salesman;
G) Gary, a guy who can build a shelter out of scrap, hook it
up to small homemade solar-pv system, do a little energy-
acupressure healing, preserve meat and fish, and extract
water from air via a solar still?
You don't need to be cultural anthropologist to figure out which of these guys will be deemed the most "inclusively-fit" by the female population. If you want to be like Gary, you had better start learning now. Stein's book is as good a place to start as you're going to find.