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Central Louisiana State Hospital

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  PINEVILLE — It's been 115 years since the first steps were taken to create the Hospital for the Insane of Louisiana in Rapides Parish. The facility was established to serve mentally ill patients from 42 parishes in its early days and cared for more than 3,000 patients daily at its peak. It eventually became known as Central Louisiana State Hospital, which grew enough to operate independently with its patients helping to produce their own food, sew their own clothes and care for the property. The quieted grounds in the heart of Pineville retain their sense of seclusion to this day, but are a stark contrast from the activity Central State's thousands of residents and employees contributed to years ago. Much like the once-operational and commanding Dairy Barn , which enjoys notoriety as result of being visible from the highway, dozens of uninhabited buildings show their age up close. Industrial looking and brick structures alike, now missing window ...

Reinventing Collapse (2008)

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  Reinventing Collapse (2008) Orlov’s book Reinventing Collapse: The Soviet Example and American Prospects, published in 2008, further details his views. [9] Discussing the book in 2009, in a piece in The New Yorker , Ben McGrath wrote that Orlov describes "superpower collapse soup" common to both the U.S. and the Soviet Union: “a severe shortfall in the production of crude oil, a worsening foreign-trade deficit, an oversized military budget, and crippling foreign debt.” Orlov told interviewer McGrath that in recent months financial professionals had begun to make up more of his audience, joining "back-to-the-land types," "peak oilers," and those sometimes derisively called “doomers”. [7] In his review of the book, commentator Thom Hartmann writes that Orlov holds that the Soviet Union hit a “soft crash” because of centralized planning in: housing, agriculture, and transportation left an infrastructure private citizens could co-opt so that...
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PINEVILLE — It's been 115 years since the first steps were taken to create the Hospital for the Insane of Louisiana in Rapides Parish. The facility was established to serve mentally ill patients from 42 parishes in its early days and cared for more than 3,000 patients daily at its peak. It eventually became known as Central Louisiana State Hospital, which grew enough to operate independently with its patients helping to produce their own food, sew their own clothes and care for the property. The quieted grounds in the heart of Pineville retain their sense of seclusion to this day, but are a stark contrast from the activity Central State's thousands of residents and employees contributed to years ago. Much like the once-operational and commanding Dairy Barn , which enjoys notoriety as result of being visible from the highway, dozens of uninhabited buildings show their age up close. Industrial looking and brick structures alike, now missing window panes a...