Two points here.
Ibon is not nearly as brazen as Montequest was. While I kind of take issue with him coining a term "kudzu ape" I have no doubt that Ibon is a human being and has feelings (like when he posted a personal photo of himself recently next to his pickup truck).
Montequest, on the other hand, was kind of emotionally repressed. He found it almost impossible to express himself in the first person. He hid behind boilerplate quotes from Catton and Bartlett. So he just seemed more like a bot than a real person. He would reveal what he did for a living or some of his pet projects like making raised beds, but he NEVER admitted to any emotional anguish over doom. Only when he was boxed into a corner and had to cop to some situation with his ailing mom, and then he disappeared for like a year because it got too personal.
I don't necessarily expect this site to be a support network, and at times it actually has served the opposite purpose, brushing up with people who were keyed into doom but seemingly wired the totally opposite way that I am, but I just want to know they're human.
So I know Ibon is human even though sometimes his writing style does get a little biblical and 3rd person.
Second thing is about timeline...
I believe in a decade-long playout because of the limits-to-growth population and death-rate charts. These show the death-rate bottoming out and then sweeping upward within decades. The cause of that death-rate should be what's most important. Death rates don't just skyrocket like that and the population doesn't curve down into a negative if people are still rutting like rabbits unless something really 4-horseman is going on.
So that's where I parted company with his whole end-of-rome slow-crash hypothesis. The LTG chart may not look at first glance like a massive malthusian die-off, but for anyone who lives through it, that's what it's going to feel like is going on.
I've been accused by pstarr as being a technophile. Well, that means I also buy into the LTG algorithm, which over the course of 40 years has proven to be accurate. I have not actually deconstructed the algorithm, but it's a pretty awesome feat, let me tell you. It's true that Hubbert had a curve too, so it's always possible at some point something unpredictable will cause things to chart differently, but for now I think odds are good that we'll keep following the LTG chart.

You can see here that we're entering into a roughly 20 year period where population growth crests and then begins to fall. Within only 5 years the death rate will reverse itself. Instead of going down, it will go up. Why? Who knows. Could it be peak oil all by itself? Sure. Massive crop-failures? I don't know. Probably some combination of factors. I won't even say for certainty that the chart will keep tracking this way, but I'm expecting it to. And it's close enough now that we'll be able to validate the chart pretty well.
So we're talking about going from, I dunno, 8 billion down to the population at 1980 of 4.4 billion. That's almost a 50% die-off in less than a century. That's no Long Descent (TM).
You'll also see the birth rate start going up again even as the die off is accelerating. This is counter-intuitive. It's like our response to dying off is to just breed even MORE and thus cause more apocalyptic vying for resources. We'll just throw fuel to the fire.
"If the oil price crosses above the Etp maximum oil price curve within the next month, I will leave the forum." --SumYunGai (9/21/2016)