The Unexpected and Uneasy Comfort of r/Collapse
Four Horsemen of Apocalypse, by Viktor Vasnetsov. Painted in 1887. Courtesy Wikipedia Commons
I’m a Doomer, and r/Collapse is my support group and survival guide for the climate crisis
In 2021, a majority of young people aged 16–25 defined themselves as “Doomers.” Doomer is one of those internet labels that originally meant to mock young people who believe humanity is fucked, and nothing can be done.
Frankly, I don’t think being a “Doomer” means you have to live in a frozen state of depressed inaction.
I guess you could say I’ve been a Doomer most of my adult life. When I was a student at the University of Virginia, I liked to pluck random books out of the library and read them for fun. One day, I picked out a book called “The Doomsday Book,” by Gordon Rattray Taylor and published in 1970. The book covers a broader range of catastrophic scenarios and existential threats to humanity at the time (and many have since accelerated).
Taylor discusses global threats like overpopulation, resource depletion, pollution, climate change, and the misuse of technology. He explores how these factors could contribute to a global crisis or even the extinction of the human species.