2026年4月2日 星期四

The Sky is Falling: When the Gods Sent the Bill

 

The Sky is Falling: When the Gods Sent the Bill

There is a comforting delusion that history is made by "Great Men" making "Great Decisions." In reality, history is often made by a volcano in Indonesia that nobody has heard of, or a sudden drop in solar radiation that turns a fertile valley into a frozen graveyard. Between the 13th and 17th centuries, the Little Ice Age (LIA) proved that the most powerful empire on Earth is actually the weather.

Consider the timing: just as the Mongols were consolidating the Yuan dynasty and the Ming were building their "Eternal" monuments, the planet decided to pull the plug on the heating. We see the Norse in Greenland starving in silence, and the Ottomans facing rebellions because their subjects were tired of eating dust. It’s a cynical reminder of human nature: we are remarkably civilized until the grain runs out. When the Samalas eruption shook the earth in 1257, it didn't just eject ash; it ejected the stability of every regime on the map. By the time the Black Death hitched a ride on grain ships fleeing famine, the world wasn't just sick; it was structurally broken. We like to think we control our destiny, but the LIA suggests we are just microbes living on a very temperamental rock.