@Kubli - thanks for posting that, and yes...I was here in the 2005-2008 timeframe...as the post you referenced pointed out, that absolutely shaded my thinking.
If it has genuinely changed, then kudos to all who have had a hand in making that happen! I'm not sure I understand how the "slow crash" paradigm differs from fast crash (except that obviously it happens in slow motion, by comparison), but if your endpoint is fundamentally the same (just taking longer to get there), I can't really say that's "better" just...different.
Still, more than willing to look and listen.
As I said before, I SHOULD BE a natural ally to the doom crowd. Conservation is hugely important to me, as are sustainable, resilient communities (local, sustainable power generation, locally sourced food and manufacturing, etc)....those are big things for me. And as I've said before...I'm on board with the idea that if you have a limited amount of a thing, and you use it (at any rate), the day's gonna come when the limited resource isn't there any more (I'm not really sure who would disagree with this, but maybe some fruitcake somewhere would...I don't pretend to know).
Where I seem to differ from the doomers (or peakers, or whatever they're calling themselves these days) is in what that MEANS in terms of life in the world.
Again, kudos to you guys for moving away from the zombie apocalypse...depending on what you're moving TOWARD, we might not be all that far apart.

re: ethanol...I basically agree. Not great policy, however...dormlin was trying to say that the reason for the record production this year was because we're "burning food."
Based on the difference between total production last year and this, and comparing that to the piddling total production of ethanol (*the food that is being burned), the math does not support the contention...of course, I expect he'll be along shortly to tell me I'm lying, but...there ya go.