by Tami » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 21:42:10
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lore', '
')Peak Oil is like a slow poison, it doesn't have to do anything right away in order to eventually end your way of life. As Kunstler calls it, it's The Long Emergency.
Catchy title. But the guy writes fiction.
Some are not as mellow on peak oil consequences as you appear to be. Lets quote a peak oil specialist, a man of extraordinary expertise, vast experience and learning on the topic.
http://www.lifeaftertheoilcrash.net/"To illustrate: in a July 2006 special report published by the Chicago Tribune, Pullitzer Prize winning journalist Paul Salopek described the consequences of Peak Oil as follows:
. . . the consequences would be unimaginable. Permanent fuel shortages would tip the world into a generations-long economic depression. Millions would lose their jobs as industry implodes. Farm tractors would be idled for lack of fuel, triggering massive famines. Energy wars would flare. And carless suburbanites would trudge to their nearest big box stores, not to buy Chinese made clothing transported cheaply across the globe, but to scavenge glass and copper wire from abandoned buildings."
Seen any suburbanites trudging anywhere lately? Or are they still driving their SUVs? Until someone cuts their unemployment benefits, the unemployed ones aren't even trying to find work which fits their new position in society.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lore', '
')It should be apparent to most everyone by now that markets are short sighted and somewhat inept at gauging serious flaws in the core economic fabric.
The market can't disguise the millions of barrels per day of crude production which we are supposed to have disappeared by now, no matter how inept they are.
Note "permanent fuel shortages" listed above.