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PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Landers, Moderates & Doomers

General discussions of the systemic, societal and civilisational effects of depletion.

I am a...

Lander
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Moderate
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Doomer
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Total votes : 186

Unread postby Wildwell » Tue 09 Aug 2005, 23:40:27

The predictions of impending doom are silly. A lot really depends on people's attitudes; if people are prepared to be flexible then I'm a lander. If they are not then I'm moderate. There’s no sign that the planet is running out of energy, we can harness more as required and ration problem areas. The 2, 3 car households and cheap frequent flyers are a problem, but this can be controlled through rationing until things get sorted out.
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Unread postby Ghog » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 00:19:25

Moderate

Even though we aren't really doing anything to prepare on a massive scale, I like to believe that there is some hope. More and more media outlets are discussing PO. Major oil companies are suggesting there will be energy 'issues'. Also we have books and internet sites gaining popularity as more become aware and take that first step in learning about PO. Does awareness lead to us solving all of our issues? Probably not, but at least it is somewhere to start. We still may not have enough time, hence why I am in the view of 'there will be problems'.
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Unread postby Ibon » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 01:55:53

Moderate. It will hurt first but we will make a transition when our backs are to the wall and we have no choice.
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Unread postby Ibon » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 02:04:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kochevnik', '
')That question is :

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Are YOU going to make it ?


And my (very optimistic) answer is : Hell Yes ! :)

I have a great deal of faith and belief in myself and I have a great deal of faith and belief that many others here (mostly Doomers BTW) who have 'seen the light' will make it as well.

I just don't think the rest of humanity is going to be so lucky.



I personally couldn't disagree more with this post. This issue goes so way beyond me, the individual, or even my children. It is the almost pathological faith in the individual that has brought the west, particularly Americans, to this consumerism paradigm we exist in.

For surviving peak oil I would put my bets with cultures with a much stronger sense of community cooperation and consensus.
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Unread postby turmoil » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 02:06:59

...and organic farms.
"If you are a real seeker after truth, it's necessary that at least once in your life you doubt all things as far as possible"-Rene Descartes

"When you have excluded the impossible, whatever remains however improbable must be the truth"-Sherlock Holmes
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Unread postby RockHind » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 02:18:24

Dogs and cats living together; mutant biker zombies; Reapers coming down the coast from Texas; nuclear war; Walmarts closing; shortages on ice cold cola, the panacea of the common man.

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Unread postby BastardSquad » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 02:38:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kochevnik', ':')!:

Doomer (of course).

Make up a list of 10 things that would ensure a successful transition ... things like, oh, I don't know ... getting rid of the personal automobile ... limiting the number of births, every person in the USA growing a garden, tear down every shopping mall, things like that. Now go on any other non-PO website, explain the PO reasons behind the recent fuel price rises and ask anyone, anyone at all, if they, personally, would be willing to commit to even ONE of the things on your list. If you find even one person who says "Yes, I'll do it for the good of humanity and the future !" before you get flamed to death, I'll eat my shorts.

If our problem was simply technical, if all it took was the mindful application of the technology now at our fingertips, used in a logical, efficient and sane manner, I would be the most optimistic of optimists ... I would make JD look like Darth Vader in comparison. But our problem isn't technology, or even oil depletion ... our problem is people ... more specifically, their very primate emotions ... greed, selfishness, narcissisim and (unjustified) pride.


It's an incurable, terminal disease. People don't understand, and they don't CARE that they don't understand. That's precisely why we are screwed.


And before I leave, let me tell you a little secret .... Doomer's are not REALLY Doomers ... we just never get asked the RIGHT question ... the question that everyone thinks about EVERY SINGLE DAY, but in spite of all the thousands of topics and tens of thousands of individual posts, I have NEVER seen anyone ask ....

That question is :

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Are YOU going to make it ?


And my (very optimistic) answer is : Hell Yes ! :)

If I believed otherwise, if ANYONE here believed otherwise, then I seriously doubt they would waste their precious time here. I spend my time here to get answers to questions I didn't think to ask, and ideas to things I hadn't considered to be problems. I have a great deal of faith and belief in myself and I have a great deal of faith and belief that many others here (mostly Doomers BTW) who have 'seen the light' will make it as well.

I just don't think the rest of humanity is going to be so lucky.


First let me say-----Yeah,What He Said!!!

Aside from that,we have 6 billion people on the planet right now and the numbers just keep going up at a mindbogling rate.In order to live a sustainable existence on this planet we have to get that figure down to around 2 billion in a very short amount of time.I can't for the life of me see how we can make that transition in a nice,rosey way, full of flowers and rainbows and unicorns and a brotherhood of man singing round the campfire and all that kinda crap!!!

It may start slow,but sooner or lator it's gonna get real ugly.

Yup,I'm a doomer :)
"Switzerland is small and neutral.We need to be more like Germany,ambitious and misunderstood!" Futurama


"As for the dieoff of 5E+09 people - not a problem, so long as I'm not one of them." Jack
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Unread postby trespam » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 03:41:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Aaron', 'I')t's funny to me, in a deadly serious kinda way, how optimistic people are.

As my countrymen are dying right this moment, to obtain a dominant military footprint in the oil rich Middle East, I wonder how any of you can imagine that as oil becomes more scarce, we will avoid fighting over it.

It's what we do...


I think the poll is almost meaningless without a time frame, in particular years after peak. Five years after peak? Twenty years? What?

I suppose this is like one of those meaningless internet polls that Fox and CNBC and everyone else seems to be doing these days. Makes people feel like they are doing something.

As far as fighting for oil, people have been fighting and struggling for lots of things, as pointed out ("what we do").

In five years, the US will likely have passed through a very serious recession. Who knows, we may join with Europe and China to place troops into Saudia Arabia after a serious coup attempt. We may have bombed the hell out of several Iranian cities. I'm hoping none of this occurs. But the doomers really get boring unless they define their time frame. I've read Overshoot. I'm very concerned that humans might have overshot.

But again, what are we talking about? Ten years? People will still be dithering on this board at that time. Ten years older. And will have wasted good solid time to do something else--e.g. there is a real world out there. Twenty years--probably the same.

There will be problems. I guess that makes me one who fills the middle category--painful demand destruction over the next twenty years, a few wars, etc. Europeans were stuffing jews into ovens 65 years ago or so. The world was at war. That was pretty doomish. Is that the type of doom we're talking about?

Anyway, I'll stick to the economics discussions on occasion. At least something useful is accomplished there.
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Unread postby Dukat_Reloaded » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 04:38:16

I believe the world will be stuffed, but not totally doomed forever such as all life dying on earth. I do mean there is a ton of doom & gloom directly in front of us, but because that is in the future the majority can not see it yet. To those who think we are going to have a soft landing, I believe you are letting your material wealth and family influence your thinking. I would say most landers have a wife/husband and family with children. In these cases these people will be optimistic because they can't bare the thought of what will happen to their loved ones and will be impossible for them to look after their wife & children when doom & gloom come. Also alot of families are built on the presupposition that times will allways be good, they want to watch their children grow up and add extra extentions onto their house, and when peakoil comes, their dreams will be shattered so they are not really saying that they are a lander, but rather praying profusely and saying that they are landers in an attempt to convince other people to become landers as if in an attempt they can convince other people that may make the situation better. There is no way there will be a soft landing.
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Unread postby Permanently_Baffled » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 05:13:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Aaron', 'I')t's funny to me, in a deadly serious kinda way, how optimistic people are.

As my countrymen are dying right this moment, to obtain a dominant military footprint in the oil rich Middle East, I wonder how any of you can imagine that as oil becomes more scarce, we will avoid fighting over it.
It's what we do...


Aaron is right , there is a precedent in history for humans kicking the hell out of each other for resources. 8O

But surely the situation now is slightly different.

Nuclear weapons completely change the rules, and you could argue that this makes all the historical precendents irrelevant.

True we are in Iraq, but this was done with little risk of upsetting(to the point of declaring war) the other military/nuclear powers.

The US will not directly take on China, because it will destroy the US anyway. Not just from nuclear bombs, but also through destroyed oil fields and facilities.

This is the biggest threat, but not a foregone conclusion IMO. :-D

PB
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Unread postby Aaron » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 08:53:52

Well done folks...

Reasoned responses.

Me like...

Time frame is a valid argument, and this poll does not specify time line.

Fair enough.

And yes, I'm "handling" you... :razz:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'J')oshua: A strange game. The only winning move is not to play. How about a nice game of chess?
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.

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Unread postby Macsporan » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 09:16:18

I believe its going to be an awful mess, like the Depression only worse.

There will be great suffering and turmoil. I may be killed. Democracy may be suspended or abolished...sorry, that's already happened.

But with the avoidance of serious fighting it should be possible to re-engineer society to a lower level of renewable energy patterns and a transport system based on electric rail and horseback.

We will be stuck in 1850 forever which may not sound like much fun, but its a whole lot better than being stuck in 750 forever.

On the positive side there will be a lot more fresh air and sunshine, community and family life, a slower pace and plenty of time to write smug little treatises on the need for a planned political economy.

I guess that makes me a moderate.
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Unread postby CarlinsDarlin » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 09:44:58

It depends on what day of the week you ask me. Like Pops, I am trying to prepare for a doomer scenario (minus the MBZ), but I am hopeful that after a period of incredibly rough transition, we'll come out better in the end. Does that make me a moderate? Probably... but...

The doomer in me shows up everytime I think of the problems besides peak oil that we have to deal with - problems that will make the already strained situation worse. Like population, global warming, nuclear war....
I don't have much hope at all when I focus on these things.

And kochevnik has hit the nail on the head. Looking at the big picture, I'm pretty much a doomer - but for my own personal situation, I'm shooting for moderate :). We're going to do our best to make it.

So, I guess that makes me a doomer trying to be moderate?

K
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Unread postby deconstructionist » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 09:54:11

i voted moderate. when i first heard about PO a few years ago (thanks, matt, for scaring the shit out of me) my doomerosity level was like 47,000,000. Since then, I've done a fair amount of research, come to grips with things a bit, gotten somewhat more of a hold on my financial situation, considered alternative viewpoints, and settled somewhere in the middle of the road. this will be WAY more than a blip on the road map of human history, but i don't think we're going to see 5,000,000,000 dieoff. Although the new energy bill passed by the US is pushing me more towards the doomer side than in previous weeks.
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Unread postby LadyRuby » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 10:35:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('deconstructionist', 'A')lthough the new energy bill passed by the US is pushing me more towards the doomer side than in previous weeks.

Yes, let's see if we can speed up the depletion of our limited resources!!
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Unread postby retiredguy » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 11:34:33

55 years of observing my fellow man and reading extensively has led me to the conclusion that PO plus other resource-depletion problems we are facing will spell catastrophe for mankind.

There is a very tiny chance that disaster could be averted, but steps probably won't be taken in time.

Contrary to what someone posted earlier, I'm not betting I will make it. My age at the time of the crisis will certainly be against me. You young folks are going to take a dim view of keeping us old folks alive when doing so will jeopardize your own survival.

I wish the landers were right. If the economy doesn't collapse I can look forward to many more years of retirement and financial comfort. But that is an illusion.

In the meantime, I'll continue to live a simple life and pursue the use of alternative energy sources just as I have done for the past 30 years.
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Unread postby retiredguy » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 12:09:16

I'd like to pose a question to the landers in particular, and the moderates in general: What are YOU doing to insure the soft-landing/transition? I don't mean what are you doing individually, because that won't amount to very much. Are you expecting "market forces" to sort things out? Or corporations to come to the conclusion that capitalism doesn't work in a finite world?

If you aren't actively trying to influence politicians to your way of thinking or trying to build an organization to champion your cause, then you are not doing anything more than the most pessimistic doomer.

I believe the resource wars have begun. Gulf War 1 was the opening salvo. Gulf War 2 is the second act. The third act is unfolding and it centers on Iran. The Irans are going to go nuclear and the reason is pretty damn obvious: to insure their own security. I'm no fan of the Iranian regime, but if I were in their shoes, I would follow the same path. Once nuclear, Iran can be assured that the US and "coalition of the willing" won't mount an invasion. Nuked oil fields don't produce much oil.
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Unread postby Permanently_Baffled » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 12:24:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')I'd like to pose a question to the landers in particular, and the moderates in general: What are YOU doing to insure the soft-landing/transition? I don't mean what are you doing individually, because that won't amount to very much. Are you expecting "market forces" to sort things out? Or corporations to come to the conclusion that capitalism doesn't work in a finite world?

If you aren't actively trying to influence politicians to your way of thinking or trying to build an organization to champion your cause, then you are not doing anything more than the most pessimistic doomer.


Hi retired guy. :)

I am a moderate, I see a prelonged economic recession then depression. After this , I think what happens depends on which country you reside.

Without going into too much detail, for the UK , I think we will see a cross between WWII rationing , nationalisation , and a semi "command"economy. Unfortunately I think certain freedoms could be suspended if security is threatned or there is too much rioting.

I think population reduction or die off will be in the shape of lack of available , affordable medical care , and lower life expectancy (from poorer diets etc) rather than by people coming round your house and killing you for the stale cheese sandwich you are saving for a treat LOL

As for doing about any of this, I feel quite powerless ... :(

PB
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Unread postby trespam » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 12:27:20

Retired guy: We really don't know how this is going to play out. Resource wars preceded the gulf wars. Flagging ships during the reagan era, the Carter doctrine, FDR buddying up with the Saudis--all are forms of recourse politics--with war as the ultimate form of politics.

Personally, I think humans are in overshoot. I can't prove it. Nobody can. And I understand that petri dishes of bacteria, when they overshoot, collapse pretty significantly. Animals do the same. But we don't know what the time frames are. Humans are not bacteria. The time frames are different.

My point? My gut tells me that the earth isn't going to be happy long term supporting 6 billion people. The earth probably isn't too keen on supporting half that number. But nobody, on this board, or elsewhere, knows the time frames over which this adjustment will occur. Collapse can happen over weeks (a horribly infectious disease or biological warfare) or over several hundred years.

I'm not a cornucopian. But the investment advice of doom and gloomers over the past fifty years sucks. And that, my friend, you can take to the bank.
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Unread postby nero » Wed 10 Aug 2005, 13:51:07

Hi Retired_Guy,

Peak Oil is happening on a very large scale and what I do in particular is not going to affect it. And what is more, I'm not too worried about having to "do" anything about it. Perhaps if we prepare well in advance we can avoid some disruptions, but in the grand scheme of thing I don't expect peak oil to create large disruptions, so why bother trying to mitigate them. I am much more worried about the environment in general. I do think that the degredation of the environment is the critical issue of our time and I get involved on those issues.
Biofuels: The "What else we got to burn?" answer to peak oil.
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