by spudbuddy » Sun 31 Jul 2005, 13:36:52
"1. The majority of people are not willing or able to understand the concepts or ramifications of Peak Oil. "
I disagree entirely with this statement. This is to make the the assumption that the "dumbing down" of America has been successful.
The total percentage of Americans earning college degrees is constantly climbing.
Which means a greater percentage of the population is capable of reading at an adequate level to research this topic. Which is what many will do while they engage in discussion, before they engage in same, and certainly after.
The media would have us believe that the average IQ out there is pretty low.
By comparison, the average level of awareness of political, social and economic realities in the 21st century, compared to even pre-boomer days, is astonishing.
We are more prepared for this, as a society, than we have ever been.
If one looks at what is happening on a grassroots level (and this is where the groundwork is being laid) one can never assume that we're a nation of ostriches hiding our heads in the sand.
On the surface, everything looks pretty much the same...business as usual. Just beneath that surface is another story, entirely.
A friend of mine pointed out to me just last night...this medium is perhaps crucial to the issue, because it is the only public media not directly controlled by big business and government.
Here is where we do exercise our right to free speech, in a public manner.
It is important to understand the process:
When one sets about gathering information, and begins to see a bigger picture, they must test their understanding of what it is they think they're learning.
We do that in the real world, in real time, in the same old social ways and while conducting the same old habits we have always employed.
(around the water cooler at work, at a backyard barbeque, at the lunch counter, with coffee at the kitchen table, etc.)
But not only this...
We have this grand old tradition of putting things in print. Which is what we do here.
It is a free press, after all.
People are talking. There is an ever-growing chorus, a rising tide of thunderous sound, a huge swell of babbling yak. America talks. Not only with and among themselves, but with the rest of the world.
A wonderful thing.
And with an ear to the ground, when one discovers that the topical nature of discussion is slowly turning away from what doesn't matter (juicy gossip, reality tv, pop sensibility, the mundane, arcane, shallow, artificial and otherwise cheap and inconsequential nattering) well, here you have it.
I'm sure apocalyptic visions abound out there. They always have.
Silence is deadly. Silence gives consent.
When millions of people make up their minds they damned well do not want to give consent to the way we've been waltzing down the garden path, then things begin to change.
Things begin to change because people start to notice one another, and recognize the actualization of a public will.
The public will is the force that effects that change.
The public will is a force that is gathered, harvested, reaped, focused, channeled into the process that does the work for the good of us all.
Perhaps it starts with a question: "How many other people feel the way I do? Am I all alone here? Am I on track? Or am I way out in left field?"
Perhaps I need to test this by bouncing it off others."
I have read marvellous moments of levity in here...."when I first accepted peak oil....ha!...sounds like a born again testimony".....etc.
Social discourse is the lubricant that helps set the squeeky wheels in motion. Lord knows
, they're going to have to do a lot of turning in the next few decades. There is a lot of work to do.
We will never do that work in silence. We're not built that way.
Neither do we have to tip-toe around like scared mice, hoping that higher powers aren't going to notice, or that we don't step on toes, or upset anyone.
Of course higher powers are going to notice! (read: big busines, big government). Of course we're going to step on toes! That's part of the process of consensus. And I'm sure we'll upset a lot of people. Democratic principles call for it, demand it, even.
Myself...I don't particularly see only apocalyptic visions (as disturbing as they are) but instead, an amazing opportunity for this society, and indeed the entire planet...to make changes intrinsic to our survival.
Peak oil will force the issue, no doubt.
Change is always a constant. The world has changed considerably since the end of WW2. Change is necessary now. It's up to us to effect those changes. We are still very much in a formative stage. We need dialogue. Lots of it.
And here's where it starts. Bubbling up from the heartland, and every corner of the nation, every corner of the planet, in fact.
We are not powerless. We are not lemmings. We are not entirely free...but I suggest we are free enough to move a mountain, one pebble at a time. When enough of us pitch in, well...(hand me a shovel, someone.)