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"Iceburg right ahead!!" the turning of the mainstr

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

"Iceburg right ahead!!" the turning of the mainstr

Unread postby ShawnAvery » Sat 21 May 2005, 19:24:55

I am a person who doesn't ordinarily watch TV or get any information from mainstream sources, with hardly any meat between the endless advertising and the subtle brainwashing and dumbing down that occurs. But, I visited my parents last weekend.. and of course, they had the TV on. The climate between now and maybe a year ago (when I last seriously watched TV) is very different.

Advertising for vehicles now use the MPG the car gets as a selling point. They didn't a year ago. They actually made FUN of George W. Bush on the mainstream Phoenix news station comparing him to Emperor Palpatine in the new Star Wars film. They used to lick his arsehole and refer to him nobly as a 'wartime' president.

I think we all are smart to realize that the market won't save us from the many converging crises we see in front of us, but I think we have underestimated the power of the mainstream media to significantly alter the perceptions and opinions of the average person who gets home from work and turns on the TV. I actually sat down with my mother and was able to have coherent conversation while watching The End of Suburbia, with her now agreeing with me all about peak oil.. when 2 years ago she wouldn't even let me bring up the topic. I think the change has had a lot to do with how mainstream media now frames conservation and resource depletion, and the fact that gasoline is no longer and will never be so cheap and plentiful here in America.

It doesn't take a genius to make a transition to less energy intensive lifestyles, but naturally people take a very long time before they can change their mind about something very important and adapt to new relevant information while still being able to save face.

When people see prices go up considerably they will not have anywhere to turn to figure out how to survive again, and I think the characteristic American denial will go up in smoke very quickly. That is where our responsibilities lie. The full transition will occur when the lifestyle possible by believing in oil turns out to be near to the quality of lifestyle by believing oil is in full depletion and that we should make the transition. They don't like the idea of riding their bicycles to work, but the idea will seem that much better when because of shortages they would have to sit in the oven-car for a couple hours to get a tank of gasoline.

I think that now is the time that we put our minds together and conceive a list of solutions for the problem of oil depletion for every demographic, for every level of organization and establishment. Not solutions that will enable us to continue on living the way we do, that is by no means possible.. but solutions that will enable us to continue living at all. Contrary to popular belief, the overshoot in the United States isn't so bad. The majority of the problem here is the design of our infrastructure, and the unwillingness of people to change... if the United States were to fix these 2 problems I think the die off here will not be half as bad as in more densely populated areas of the world.

We've seen the iceburg ahead for quite some time now and finally the ship is starting to turn. We're the heaviest economy on the planet, so it is going to take a lot of work.

We need to know the costs and benefits of major infrastructural overhaul and compare these to the costs and benefits of major military action. I am of the opinion that it is obvious which of these are cheaper and more workable. We need to address lists of public policy change in regards to our energy future, so that when the ship starts to turn a bit more we can have all of our ideas ready for immediate implementation.

We need to have a doable and comprehensive list of ways for the average person to become more self sufficient. We need to start developing a list of places that will most likely be uninhabitable so that people with a rational mindset will stop developing there, and move the development to a climate that has a future.

I think we are being overly naive if we try to implement non-scalable solutions to our oil depletion problem. Organization is not out enemy in dealing with life post peak, it is our friend. Distribution of energy and food resources in the future will have to be by some means fair or else the country will immediately dissolve into civil war, and the United States will no longer be united. Solutions will have to be implemented across the board, relocations from unsustainable areas will eventually have to happen, and our sources of energy will have to switch over from fossil fuels to human labor and renewable sources.

Yes, I believe that when things get bad enough, people will actually want to do physical work to better their lifestyles. The end of the age of oil does not mean the end of economy. It means the end of the cheap economy. It means the end of the easy economy.

Within the next couple of years, the elephant in the room's shit is really going to start to stink. It's becoming too big of a problem to hide anymore. How long will it be before Mr. Bartlett is addressing the nation on primetime television on a major news network? How long will it be before the bidding wars begin in earnest, and hoarding starts?

We have the means using the internet to communicate instantly with anyone else all over the world. There are televisions everywhere. Once the full extent of the problem is known worldwide there will have to be a global consensus and compromise in dealing with it, and anyone whos hoarding will have to share.

The alternative is nothing less than nuclear war. We all know that. You can't just let a country with nuclear weapons starve. They would lash out first. The United States CANNOT just collapse when there are nukes scattered about the country in underground ICBM's.

It's naive to think that technology can just regress and that we can achieve sustainability on a local level and everything just be nice and peachy. We've reached a point along technological development in where we CAN'T go back.

There are many on this board who make some kind of correlation between increased complexity and resource depletion.

Complexity is not the problem, a return to simple living will not fix the problem of fossil fuel depletion, and technology (at least in the united states) is here to stay.

The problem lies in misunderstanding of technology and misapplication of science in agriculture, industry, and planning.

Our thought should not be in how to convince people of our predicament, our thought should not be in predicting the many signs of depletion and the glaring errors that we have made in the past regarding distrubution of fossil fuel supply, and most certainly our time should NOT be spent criticizing the powers that be for simply not knowing any better, or worse yet, knowing better yet not changing things.

Our thought should lie in contingency planning and cultural shift, so that when people can no longer deny what is going on around us that we can actually help out and provide a real alternative and jumping off point for any future that we may have left. The damage is done.

I think it's time we start working on solutions.
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Re: "Iceburg right ahead!!" the turning of the mai

Unread postby Tapas » Sat 21 May 2005, 20:23:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ShawnAvery', 'I') think it's time we start working on solutions.


Excellent post Shawn!

We have over 2000 members on this forum with intelligent minds and constructive thoughts. We should be the ambassadors to our own communities, spread the awareness and get the media and the city and local councils motivated to bring a change in policy.

I hope to read more of your posts. You are on the right track. Your writings are a breath of fresh air.
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Unread postby Carlhole » Sat 21 May 2005, 20:44:47

"Brevity is the soul of wit." ~Shakespeare
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Unread postby Daculling » Sat 21 May 2005, 21:10:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Carlhole', '"')Brevity is the soul of wit." ~Shakespeare


I disagree, very inspiring and I agree. We all need to further the waking of the sheeple. They are the resourse we deeply need to make a transition, though I still believe it will be violent and ugly.
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Unread postby TrueKaiser » Sat 21 May 2005, 23:06:24

*jaw drops before seting fireworks off*
*insert '%deity'* someone that actualy gets it!
Religion is excellent stuff for keeping the common people quiet.
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Re: "Iceburg right ahead!!" the turning of the mai

Unread postby some_guy282 » Sun 22 May 2005, 00:59:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ShawnAvery', '
')
When people see prices go up considerably they will not have anywhere to turn to figure out how to survive again, and I think the characteristic American denial will go up in smoke very quickly. That is where our responsibilities lie. The full transition will occur when the lifestyle possible by believing in oil turns out to be near to the quality of lifestyle by believing oil is in full depletion and that we should make the transition. They don't like the idea of riding their bicycles to work, but the idea will seem that much better when because of shortages they would have to sit in the oven-car for a couple hours to get a tank of gasoline.



Agreed. Sooner or later the denial will go up in smoke. But what will replace it? You seem to believe people will react rationally and orderly when the crisis occurs. I think that if people acted rationally and orderly, we wouldn't be in this mess to begin with. I've got my money on anger replacing denial when the time comes.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ShawnAvery', '
') I think that now is the time that we put our minds together and conceive a list of solutions for the problem of oil depletion for every demographic, for every level of organization and establishment. Not solutions that will enable us to continue on living the way we do, that is by no means possible.. but solutions that will enable us to continue living at all.


Agreed. But is the average American psychologically prepared to hear this? I don't think so. If they were, our leaders would be informing them of the problem. Instead, they continue to say (and will for god knows how long), "Don't worry, be happy." Any leader who gets on TV and tells us the truth is commiting political suicide. You mentioned Bartlett giving presentations later in your post. I agree that may happen someday, but I can easily see some leader coming out and saying, "Yes we have a serious problem. But just elect me and I'll fix everything. It'll go back to the way things used to be.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ShawnAvery', '
')
Contrary to popular belief, the overshoot in the United States isn't so bad. The majority of the problem here is the design of our infrastructure, and the unwillingness of people to change... if the United States were to fix these 2 problems I think the die off here will not be half as bad as in more densely populated areas of the world.



Also agree to a point. One thing the US has going for it is its ability to feed its population. Even with peak oil we will likely be able to take care of our own food wise, even if the food is very expensive. As far as the infrastructure goes, that gets tricky. Of course it's easy to say things would be better if we changed our living arrangements by limiting the suburbs and inceasing mass transit, but doing it is another matter entirely. I'm not optimistic we'll have the resources to build massive rail transport systems even if we had the will.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ShawnAvery', '
')
We need to know the costs and benefits of major infrastructural overhaul and compare these to the costs and benefits of major military action. I am of the opinion that it is obvious which of these are cheaper and more workable. We need to address lists of public policy change in regards to our energy future, so that when the ship starts to turn a bit more we can have all of our ideas ready for immediate implementation.



Unfortunately our leaders have already made this cost/benefit analysis, and we weren't allowed in on the meeting. I dont' think anyone on this board would support resource wars in favor of spending that same money on things like alternative energy and rail systems here at home. But you know what? We don't make policy. And the people who do make policy don't care what we think. They've made their choice, and they chose resource wars.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ShawnAvery', '
')


The alternative is nothing less than nuclear war. We all know that. You can't just let a country with nuclear weapons starve. They would lash out first. The United States CANNOT just collapse when there are nukes scattered about the country in underground ICBM's.



Your logic here is identical to that of many Peak Oil deniers - "It's too terrible to happen, so it wont." I don't want to see it happen either, but don't think it can't just because the thought of it is too terrible to bear.


You seem to be fairly optimistic about what will happen. I think the scenario you envision is possible, but far from likely. When we hit Peak Oil, the economy can no longer grow. If the economy doesn't grow at 2% per year, we can't finance our debt. That's bad enough if we are on a slow and gradual decline. What happens if Ghawar dies and we see a rapid decline?
In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations, and epochs it is the rule. – Nietzsche

Time makes more converts than reason. – Thomas Paine

History is a set of lies agreed upon. – Napoleon Bonaparte
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Re: "Iceburg right ahead!!" the turning of the mai

Unread postby MicroHydro » Sun 22 May 2005, 02:13:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ShawnAvery', 'T')hey actually made FUN of George W. Bush on the mainstream Phoenix news station comparing him to Emperor Palpatine in the new Star Wars film.


8O Are the sheeple getting a clue? :-D

The most important thing about Emperor Palpatine was that he used a covert operative (Count Dooku aka Lord Tyrannis) to fake an external terrorist threat in order to suspend democracy and become a dictator. Osama Bin Laden, (whose family is partnered with the Bush family) definitely worked for the US in the 1980s. Many believe that he still works for the Bush family, both on 9/11 and when he released a tape a few days before the 2004 election.

Are people FINALLY getting it in Arizona?
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Unread postby RonMN » Sun 22 May 2005, 08:34:11

While people may be just starting to "get it"...they are not turning it into action or even ideas of changing their ways.

One thing that seems overly simple is "grow your food close to home"...i now have 17 tomato plants planted in my back yard (among various other things) and as long as people think i like gardening...everything is cool. If they knew this was a serious preparation...they would mock me.

They can seem to understand PO as long as it doesn't interfere with their daily life styles :(

This is why i believe we'll see the true uglieness (and violence) come out when it comes to "crunch time".
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Unread postby PeakOiler » Sun 22 May 2005, 09:48:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('RonMN', 'W')hile people may be just starting to "get it"...they are not turning it into action or even ideas of changing their ways.

One thing that seems overly simple is "grow your food close to home"...i now have 17 tomato plants planted in my back yard (among various other things) and as long as people think i like gardening...everything is cool. If they knew this was a serious preparation...they would mock me.

They can seem to understand PO as long as it doesn't interfere with their daily life styles :(

This is why i believe we'll see the true uglieness (and violence) come out when it comes to "crunch time".


So true I'm afraid.

My garden isn't as large as it needs to be either. My 13 young peach trees are only going to produce about 140 peaches this year. Weather was a factor this year in the yield. Last year one tree produced over 200 peaches. In five years or less, the yield should be up to about 1000 or more.
At 30 calories per 2" peach, 1000 peaches comes to about 30,000 calories, and with a 3000 calorie per day diet, those peaches would last me 10 days.
And I'll be sick and tired of peaches.

The pecan, apple, lemon, lime, and pear trees will help too. When I get up to about 100 trees in my orchard from the present 20, I still don't think I could meet my caloric intake.

I hope this example will help some people realize what it might take to meet the challenges ahead.
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Unread postby TheTurtle » Sun 22 May 2005, 10:01:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ShawnAvery', 'T')he United States CANNOT just collapse when there are nukes scattered about the country in underground ICBM's.

It's naive to think that technology can just regress and that we can achieve sustainability on a local level and everything just be nice and peachy. We've reached a point along technological development in where we CAN'T go back.


It seems even more naive to think that the US can't collapse just because we don't want it to. The history of civilization seems to indicate otherwise.

To name just a few precedents:
Sumeria, Egypt, Hittites, Akkadia,Minoa, Babylonia, Mycenea, Persia, Alexander the Great, Carthage, Roman Empire, Mayan, Aztec, Incan, Qin Dyasnasty, Mongolian Empire, kingdoms throughout the Indus and Southeast Asia, Spanish Empire, British Empire, Ottoman Empire ...

None had nukes, of course, but they were, for the most part, each and everyone of them the pinnacle of civilization in their time and they have all gone by the wayside, with most of their technology disappearing with them.

Now let's add the USSR as a more recent example of a nation with nukes being allowed to collapse and I think it becomes clear that the US can easily cease to be.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('RonMN', 'W')hile people may be just starting to "get it"...they are not turning it into action or even ideas of changing their ways.

One thing that seems overly simple is "grow your food close to home"...i now have 17 tomato plants planted in my back yard (among various other things) and as long as people think i like gardening...everything is cool. If they knew this was a serious preparation...they would mock me.

They can seem to understand PO as long as it doesn't interfere with their daily life styles :(

This is why i believe we'll see the true uglieness (and violence) come out when it comes to "crunch time".


My experience is similar to that of RonMN. When I try to share my concerns with my peers (who are all educated professionals) they mock me. Their derision is a thin veneer barely hiding a complete willingness to violently protect their Way of Life. Indeed, when "crunch time" gets here, it will get very ugly.
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Re: "Iceburg right ahead!!" the turning of the mai

Unread postby clv101 » Sun 22 May 2005, 10:44:37

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ShawnAvery', 'I')t's naive to think that technology can just regress and that we can achieve sustainability on a local level and everything just be nice and peachy. We've reached a point along technological development in where we CAN'T go back.

Advancing technology leads to demonising returns... the more complex something is the more work goes into it and the more fragile it is. It takes so much energy just to maintain the status quo less and less energy is available for advancement and expansion. There will come a point of maximum complexity.
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Unread postby RonMN » Sun 22 May 2005, 10:49:03

I believe that perhaps it is time to STOP sharring your concerns :cry: The last thing any of us needs is a hoard of raving neighbors/coworkers at our front door when TSHTF thinking that you can somehow wave a magic wand & give them back thier life styles.

I've heard many people say "If that happens i'm just going to show up at your house"...i've started telling them "go ahead...i wont be there"!
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Unread postby shortonoil » Sun 22 May 2005, 11:00:00

Concerning nukes: nuclear weapons, unlike chemical weapons, require extensive maintenance to remain operational. The constant decay activity of the radioactive elements used in their construction pit the surfaces of the fissionable material of the weapon until the weapon will not go off. This requires only 1 to 2 years for most weapons. We can hope that when the collapse comes that no will get around to using these weapons until they have become non-operational. Maybe we will get lucky and the damn things will just rot in their silos. Maybe!
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Re: "Iceburg right ahead!!" the turning of the mai

Unread postby aldente » Sun 22 May 2005, 11:25:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('some_guy282', ' ')But just elect me and I'll fix everything. It'll go back to the way things used to be.


Sounds like what happend in Germany in the 30's. That country has been kept on a short leash after WW1 and the icing on the cake was the Great Depression in 1929.
Once the first lines at gas stations appear in the US of A the rest is just a matter of time. I've heard somewhere that the military budget of the USA is nearly as large as that of the rest of all nations combined. I also read somewhere that from a historic point of view war is the common state of mankind and the periods of peace inbetween are the exceptions.
At some point it is not that a populus decides if it should go to war or not, instead it is being decided for them. And, hey, a whole third of the american army is already based on the arabian peninsula, which actually proves the point.
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Re: "Iceburg right ahead!!" the turning of the mai

Unread postby aldente » Sun 22 May 2005, 12:02:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('albente', ' ')And, hey, a whole third of the american army is already based on the arabian peninsula, which actually proves the point.


Revision: Irak is not on the arabian peninsula. But then again, this statement could become accurate if the Saud dynasty should be overthrown let's say.
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Unread postby NEOPO » Sun 22 May 2005, 16:08:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('RonMN', 'I') believe that perhaps it is time to STOP sharring your concerns :cry: The last thing any of us needs is a hoard of raving neighbors/coworkers at our front door when TSHTF thinking that you can somehow wave a magic wand & give them back thier life styles.

I've heard many people say "If that happens i'm just going to show up at your house"...i've started telling them "go ahead...i wont be there"!


:lol: too funny !!!

Can I use that line in my "peak oil" act?

"go ahead... I wont be there"! hahahah
Please forgive me - I dont laugh much anymore :x
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Re: "Iceburg right ahead!!" the turning of the mai

Unread postby MicroHydro » Sun 22 May 2005, 18:14:52

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('albente', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('some_guy282', ' ')But just elect me and I'll fix everything. It'll go back to the way things used to be.


Sounds like what happend in Germany in the 30's.


No. That was what happened in the United States in 1980.

Before that we had three conservation/alternative energy/energy independence presidents in a row: Nixon/Ford/Carter, all talking peak oil.

Ever since then the US has been ruled by a unified corporate/national security apparatus in favor of basing the US economy on imported oil and military force. Yes, Clinton was part of it too. Clinton bombed Kosovo with shells made from radioactive nuclear waste to secure the route for the trans-Balkan Black Sea to Adriatic pipeline for the oil companies (and incidentally to enable drug smuggling into Europe, the basis for much of the CIA wealth). Clinton also signed the bill to repeal the national speed limit and encourage increased oil consumption.

What we have in the US is a one party corporate state with a secular wing and a theocratic wing. Right now the theocrats are ascendant and triumphant. But, that could change as long as the powers that be are allowed continued profits.
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Unread postby TrueKaiser » Sun 22 May 2005, 22:55:07

ShawnAvery
you seem to be a good level headed person who has though over this problem with more of a open mind then everyone here it seems like.

to someguy 282.
yes there will be problems. some people will react that way but they will be a small minority, mostly the people with the most to loose who have not prepared themselves like the other elites. the majority of people faced with either acting rationally and living or acting nuts and dieing their self survival instincts will push them to the former.

shawn from what he is writing, does not deny the fact that it will happen. he is mainly pointing out that mad is still in effect, forcing starvation on a people through action or inaction is not a smart thing. if it is by action then they will retaliate with their nukes. if it is by inaction then those nukes go unguarded and fall to the black market like what happened after the collapse of the ussr. no nation wants either of those to happen.

also to point out something. for a political candidate to come out with a problem is not political suicide. it is political gold, if you also in the same speech promote a solution. the trick is also how you break it to people, if you break it how many people here do (ex:nothing can save us *insert quasi science interpretations* ) then yes it's political suicide, but if you do it by telling them the truth that there are ways to ease what will be painful transition and not telling them it's Armageddon(which it isn't)
Religion is excellent stuff for keeping the common people quiet.
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Unread postby some_guy282 » Mon 23 May 2005, 00:54:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TrueKaiser', 'a')lso to point out something. for a political candidate to come out with a problem is not political suicide. it is political gold, if you also in the same speech promote a solution. the trick is also how you break it to people, if you break it how many people here do (ex:nothing can save us *insert quasi science interpretations* ) then yes it's political suicide, but if you do it by telling them the truth that there are ways to ease what will be painful transition and not telling them it's Armageddon(which it isn't)


This sounds a lot like what Jimmy Carter did, and look what happened to him. Back then armageddon was far from certain or even likely. All people had to do was make some sacrifices to ease a painful transition, just as you said. And that's just what Carter told people. But you know what? People don't even want to hear they have to sacrifice in the least bit! They want to be told the good times will go on forever. If a politician tells them there will be hard times ahead but sacrifice will ease a hard transition, and another politician says there wont need to be any transition - I can make things the way they used to be. Who do you think people will vote for?
In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations, and epochs it is the rule. – Nietzsche

Time makes more converts than reason. – Thomas Paine

History is a set of lies agreed upon. – Napoleon Bonaparte
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Unread postby OilsNotWell » Mon 23 May 2005, 02:34:26

In honor of this post's title, I give you:

Iceberg (wav)

Used for educational and discussion purposes only of course...

By the way, my dictionary says it's iceberg, not iceburg..which would be a city of ice methinks.... :wink:

and I give you a beautiful picture:

Image

PS. The photo is fake...is a composite creation by a professional photographer of 4 separate images...but it's nice nonetheless
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