by XOVERX » Wed 31 May 2006, 00:25:31
I'm the son of a hard-working small business entreprenuer. Dad passed away in 2000. I have 3 sisters, and my mother approaches her 80s. I have enough ex-wives to create a strong bridge team (my current wife being the best of all), and a couple of wonderful daughters, 15 and 10. My step-daughters are a load, however. Funny thing, genetics.
I bumped into Peak Oil sometime in March or April, 2006, just 'internetting.' Previously, I viewed Ray Kurzweil as sort of a personal 'guru,' and spent much time considering the cultural ramifications of computers gaining transparent consciousness.
PO has had a profound effect upon me. I am, at this time, very interested in learning and analyzing the nuances of the overall situation. PO has caused me to reevaluate all my ideas, my beliefs, and my core reasoning.
For example, I have always been a strong defender of corporate capitalism because I perceived that the selfishness of the wealthy gave the rest of us good roads, nice computers, plenty of food, and an unlimited future. Nanotechology held out the promise of universal wealth, and computers, the fountain of youth.
What I failed to factor in was . . . energy. Oil. Where is the energy going to come from to drive the wonders of nanotechnology? And that is the horror of Peak Oil.
If corporate capitalism fails in the face of depletion of fossil fuels, then what good was any of the industrial age, at least the way that we have lived that age? My developing thoughts over the past few weeks is that corporate capitalism cannot succeed without an endless supply of cheap oil because it is based, at its core, upon the selfishness of the wealthy elite in conjunction with the control of politics via media influence establishing the thoughts of "common man." And if "Disneyland" is a great place if cheap energy is unlimited, what use is it when the energy is gone?
The most disturbing aspect of PO, for me at least, is this: Without the ingrained philosophy of corporate capitalism controlling the minds of the vast majority of Americans, including mine, perhaps Americans, in conjunction with the world, could find a way through the eye of the PO energy needle. It is my great doubt that classic corporate capitalism, as it exists today, can react in sufficient time to avoid the precipice of cultural destruction that is not necessarily inevitable with the reality of PO, but which will happen if the selfish sit around counting their money, pooh-poohing mathematical facts of resource depletion. Has humanity outsmarted itself?
Furthermore, I hope that my current "doomerism" is simply one phase of one's incipient knowledge of PO, because that is precisely how I feel about the fix the world is in politically, culturally, and intellectually.
Obviously, my thinking is in the early stages. I cling to hope that there is going to be a way through the PO problem. But I must confess that I see no answer at the present time, what with America's current cultural paradigm.
Business as usual is fine. Except when business is not as usual.
God help us all.