Dan Carlin: Are We Too Weak to Survive the Next Collapse?
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About this listen
Are we actually less capable of handling collapse than past generations—or are we just adapted for a different kind of world?
In this conversation, Dan Carlin (Hardcore History / The End Is Always Near) breaks down why modern society may be more fragile than we think: not only because of disease, war, or shortages—but because fear and system dependence can stop essential services fast. We talk about the Spanish Flu (1918–1920), “toughness” as a moving target, and how complexity creates new failure points.
In this episode:
• Why fear can break society before disease does
• Spanish Flu as a warning for modern cities
• What “toughness” actually means (and why it’s hard to define)
• Redundancy vs complexity: why modern systems fail differently
• Collapse scenarios we can’t predict—until they arrive
Question for you: If something major hit tomorrow, what breaks first—social trust, supply chains, policing, or healthcare?
Subscribe for more investigations into the hidden forces behind history—same playbook, different century.