by Pops » Tue 29 Apr 2014, 08:15:12
My point here is simply that physical value is created by putting labor to raw material and that energy slaves have taken over the burden of that labor. The result is a majority of the human economy is now involved in the spending of value rather than it's creation.
This has always been the source of what makes me uneasy about Limits, peak oil, Olduvai Gorge or just first world society in general: we've actually come to believe that value just happens and that spending it is the key human endeavor. So when the time comes to transition away from cheap energy we'll be completely unprepared, having spent generations spending value not making value.
That is the preparation that's needed, not stocking up on ammo and pork n beans but preparing to transform the economy from spending fossil fueled surplus back to making value.
I worked in a print shop and did construction for a while as a kid but most of my life I've been in the airball end of business; store planning, marketing, graphic design. That's not self-recrimination, simply the recognition of my slot. It's been great fun to be alive at this time, I really like the creative part and the freedom I've had to work as much or as little as I wanted. But I've created nothing of actual value, merely participated in the act selling stuff to people who've likewise created nothing, etc, etc.
Narz wrote:
"Service jobs are the future. Stuff, stuff & more stuff is not sustainable."
The facts are exactly the opposite, which is my entire point: The unsustainable part is the cheap fossil energy that makes stuff of value, allowing us to do graphics and dance in the subway. The service economy that has grown in tandem with fossil fuels and population is an artifact of cheap fossil energy, not some great lasting invention of human ingenuity as economists (a "science" that's grown right along with FFs) would have us believe. How can that be more clear?
"is joy wealth?"
I hate to say it but: LOL
It's easy to be a hippy when you have a trust fund. It's easy to be a slacker when you'll not starve, it's easy to smell the roses when you're not pulling turnips, LOL. This is the perfect example of my point; that people actually believe we need a new metric for wealth because FFs have made tangibles like turnips a given.
The only problem is cheap energy isn't a given.
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)