Well this thread certainly has blossomed.
I actually believe military action should be a tactic of last resort.
This is what I was trying to imply with this thread... is this a "last resort" issue?
The major oil producers are not withholding reserves data for some benevolent or moral purpose. They withhold this data for only one reason... profit.
So if we accept that hydrocarbon depletion may have very serious consequences for the entire world, including many broad regional conflicts, (war), that awful future is balanced against what?
Some countries profits in the oil commodities market?
It's my own abhorrence for war which drives this question for me. Sometimes it is necessary to cut off the finger, to save the hand. These are difficult choices to be sure, but in my mind it comes down to this simple idea; either we secure the information the world needs to understand our future, or we accelerate blindly through the darkness never knowing when it's too late... until it is too late.
Imagine you're on a bullet train going 200 MPH down the tracks. The conductor informs everyone, there is a possibility that somewhere along the track a bridge has collapsed, but too maintain his companies profits, they are unable to disclose this information. Company secret...
Is there really anyone who would say, "well ok... that's fine."?
Or would you gather as many passengers as you could, march up to the engine car, and get that information no matter what it took?
Are we really prepared to risk all the terrible consequences of post peak demand destruction, so that some billionaires portfolio goes up a quarter point?
On the point of it making any difference:
Perhaps it's true that knowing would do us no good at all. As pointed out in this thread, there are many factors involved, and knowing might be quite irrelevant.
I put forward that our collective ignorance has ZERO chance of making changes possible. So sure, it might make little difference if we knew... but it might also begin the process of facing our energy demons now, instead of foisting that problem on our children.
We do risk the good will of the world, (what's left of it anyway), by military intervention.
The real question is; What do we risk if we fail to act while it's still possible?
The problem is, of course, that not only is economics bankrupt, but it has always been nothing more than politics in disguise... economics is a form of brain damage.
Hazel Henderson