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PeakOil is You

The Waiting is the Hardest Part

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

Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby rogerhb » Thu 29 Sep 2005, 22:25:31

Absolutely. The ASPO crowd, Simmons, even Gordon Brown want OPEC transparency.

But will they? Is it in their interests?

The Hirsch report says we need 20 years to prepare, so even if the date was 2025, we still have to start now.

If you want to change the future, what better day to start than today?
"Complex problems have simple, easy to understand, wrong answers." - Henry Louis Mencken
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby FireJack » Thu 29 Sep 2005, 23:39:03

I should mention that even if we somehow did overcome the effects of peak oil without any major effects there is the bigger problem of resourse depletion. I wonder that even if I live through the worst of what peak oil throws at me what could I do if no natural resourses are left.

I think $64 oil is a pretty good indication that peak oil is here. Plus matt simmons did mention that people from the oil industry are saying saudi arabia has already peaked. Im not holding my breath either way.
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby rogerhb » Thu 29 Sep 2005, 23:41:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('FireJack', 'I') should mention that even if we somehow did overcome the effects of peak oil without any major effects there is the bigger problem of resourse depletion. I wonder that even if I live through the worst of what peak oil throws at me what could I do if no natural resourses are left.

I think $64 oil is a pretty good indication that peak oil is here. Plus matt simmons did mention that people from the oil industry are saying saudi arabia has already peaked. Im not holding my breath either way.


I'm not proposing trying to overcome the effects, I want all to recognize the problem and downsize with grace.
"Complex problems have simple, easy to understand, wrong answers." - Henry Louis Mencken
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby medicvet » Fri 30 Sep 2005, 03:38:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')ur country is a blinding paradox of the rich and the poor, the powerful and the cogs that must keep showing up for work everyday so filet mignon can be served in the most exclusive restaurants. Tom Delay can bulley senators on the floor by yanking on their ties and threating to choke them, but if a poor black man in New Orleans loots a bottle of water during a national disaster he is liable to get shot.


And yet things are going to get worse. What will it take before people wake up and realize what is going on, if even something like Katrina doesn't make people realize that they cannot count on the govt. to be there for them?
Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe.-H.G. Wells

The only basis for a nation’s prosperity is a religious regard for the rights of others. - ISOCRATES
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby elroy » Fri 30 Sep 2005, 03:54:46

What I'm wondering is, when peak oil hits, will the average person recognize that the main cause for the depletion of our resources has been mass consumerism, or will they blame it on the oil companies ?
If the latter, then things aren't really getting any better. Then wood will be the next resource. Peak Wood in 2080 ? Terrible thing to think of.
Last edited by elroy on Sat 01 Oct 2005, 09:02:09, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby SHiFTY » Fri 30 Sep 2005, 05:17:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')eingberg said that ASPO had pushed their peak oil date back to 2007. The earliest date now set forth is still Thanksgiving 2005. If we took the mean of the significant predictions we are probably looking at 2012-2015.


And many people are going to think you are crying wolf if it doesn't occur for 10 years. Already people slag off ASPO for changing their dates around.

Remember, before the peak, you are pumping more oil than ever before. I can't see any effort being made when you are pumping more oil than ever before; can you?

Lets just hope the market prices oil appropriately, and there is some good leadership in the west which looks past the next election cycle.
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby Doly » Fri 30 Sep 2005, 06:37:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ElijahJones', '
')But I want to sound a note of caution. If Peak Oil is now 2005 or even 2007 we cannot avoid the worst consequences, if it is in 2012 we can mitigate it only by serious efforts. But what we lose if we get fanatical without more evidence is credibility.


Credibility is a slippery issue. A lot of Americans believe Bush is right to attack Iraq when the evidence is non-existent. Fanaticism can increase the credibility of an issue for a lot of people.

The key point, in my opinion, is authority. People believe things when they are said by somebody they see as having authority. The majority of people here are techies, and we believe that what scientists say has a lot of authority. But a lot of people would trust a scientist only as far as they can throw him. They don't understand scientific arguments and they don't believe in them. They will believe it, though, if their president says it, or if their religious leader says it, or if their favorite celebrity says it. Depends on what they see as an authority figure.

We must convince people with authority in different walks of life. That is the only way to convince the average Joe.
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby Ludi » Fri 30 Sep 2005, 08:34:00

Elijah, I don't understand your position. It seems to me very much like the position of some people who say we need more studies of global warming before we take steps to mitigate the damage we're doing to the global life systems. We know Peak Oil will occur. Why wait around for more information before taking steps to mitigate it? Especially since meaningful mitigation will take decades to implement. This makes no sense to me whatsoever.
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby Ibon » Fri 30 Sep 2005, 12:36:38

Peak oil consequences reach to the core of our cultural values and the battle to restructure our culture toward sustainability will be fought on the spiritual, moral and ethical level as hard science and statistics will continue to demonstrate unequivocably that we are running out of time.

What is missing is the authority as Doly pointed out. But you can sense that this has the potential to become a huge mass movement, in fact you can almost feel the momentum speeding up during the past months. I don't think the waiting will be long, in fact I don't think this is comparable to the 60's which was ideologically driven and parked firmly in the left. Peak oil acts as a common denominator and reaches across the whole political spectrum. Even if oil pices fall back due partially to the refinery bottle neck we wont be able to return to a complacent consumerism. The cat is out of the bag.

Katrina is only the beginning of what will be a series of events, some political, some economic, some natural events, that will increasingly reveal the vulnerability of our current human value system that has led us to the brink of collapse. Collectively we know this, even though for many it still lies below the conscious level in a denial. Denial works when the insfrastructure that holds the consensus reality is solid. When it starts to break down it threatens the core of our belief system.

We will start to see in our political leaders, celebritries, and spritual leaders this authority emerge as the collective consensus reality surfaces to the truth of our unsustainable dehumnanizing cultural value system. The elite will no longer be able to hold the masses in check. It will be a revolution.
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby Ludi » Fri 30 Sep 2005, 13:45:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ElijahJones', '
')I am pretty certain Ludi that if you obey like good little surf and reduce your energy consumption voluntarily someone of the people ho frequents the various elite gatherings of the earth will make money off of your goodwill..[/i]


I am anything but a serf, and I have very little goodwill. I'm not interested in conservation for it's own sake, but for the sake of my own bank account.
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby mgibbons19 » Fri 30 Sep 2005, 14:09:37

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ElijahJones', '.')... But I want to sound a note of caution. If Peak Oil is now 2005 or even 2007 we cannot avoid the worst consequences, if it is in 2012 we can mitigate it only by serious efforts. But what we lose if we get fanatical without more evidence is credibility.

....


Well put.
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby SinisterBlueCat » Fri 30 Sep 2005, 14:11:33

Ibon, what an awesome post. I do not know about anyone else, but I find the prospect of a coming revolution terribly exciting. My father-in-law, an 86 year old 82nd airborne paratrooper who landed at Normandy said just yesterday that there are three types of people...

those who have lead great, exciting lives filled with experience and adventure.

those who have lived for the most part completely crappy lives filled with pain, suffering and loss.

and those who have lived in mediocrity, nothing great, but not really bad either.

Death and change are not a fearful things to the first two types of people. Only for the last.

I am tired of the wasteful, brain dead, plastic wrapped, suburbanite, endless motoring society we live in and I am ready for change. And to me, the situation will be win-win. If I live though it, wow. If I die, I am dead.

As for the rich being safe and somehow protected through such a revolution, I say bah. Some yes, but many, many more no. Revolutions are just that, a time of great change and reversal of fortune. Many rich in this country never earned a dime of what they have, and they are only able to keep it because they know how to play by the rules of this society. But if this changes in a big way, and the old rules are thrown out and new rules put into play, they are screwed.

In the book Gone with the Wind, Ashley called the Civil War the Gotterdammerung, the doom of the gods and what gods they were....until things changed.
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby Paul64 » Fri 30 Sep 2005, 14:30:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he people of America are completely unaware (for the most part) that their lives are being bought and sold.


Maybe true...or maybe people just suppress this knowledge for their own survival, and for the comfort of 'fitting in'. But my thinking is the people we like to blame, Bush and his cabal, corporate executives, etc. are simply the inevitable result of a system that over decades and centuries has grown and manifested itself in a way nobody ever could have predicted into what we have now. In a way you can't blame the elites for 'taking advantage' of the system, such as it is, since, until it collapses, all evidence suggests that the system cannot fundamentally be changed anyway. It's sort of the Richard Kiyosaki (the author of 'Rich Dad, Poor Dad' series) approach to life.

Heck I've done the same to a lesser scale, a little lower on the pyramid, taking advantage monetarily of my skills - a tech worker at a financial services company for 6 years with a good salary until I finally left in May (with some savings and retirement account intact). Our job was making money from money, or rather, "adding value" :wink:

But obviously I for now remain way higher up on the pyramid than the lowly Chinese factory worker who actually worked on the machine that made my new pair of fancy eyeglasses 8O

My own selfish plans then...as I wait, job-free...slowly deplete my current savings account :o ,avoid big corporate work, study open source software and languages (been basically a Micro$oft guy for 11 years since I started in IT; now getting up to speed on PHP and MySQL), and do odd computer jobs here and there.

I am also getting in physical shape, have joined local farm orgs here in Massachusetts and plan on doing volunteer work in my free time at a nearby organic farm next year (big deal for me...I've been a 'natural food' eater, mostly organic, raw foods, for many years and in a depression could never live on crackers and warm soup from the downtown gov't food queue. Currently I rent and have no place for a garden, so I need to know the people who grow the good food locally and help them out).
Refugee from cubicleville:
http://www.morethanabel.net
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby gnm » Fri 30 Sep 2005, 14:31:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ElijahJones', '
')I am pretty certain Ludi that if you obey like good little surf and reduce your energy consumption voluntarily someone of the people ho frequents the various elite gatherings of the earth will make money off of your goodwill..[/i]


I am anything but a serf, and I have very little goodwill. I'm not interested in conservation for it's own sake, but for the sake of my own bank account.


Anyone who pays property tax is a serf. a serf lives on the land and works it but must tithe to the true owner or have thier land taken away. Between property tax and emminent domain we live in serfdom.

-G :-x
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby Ludi » Fri 30 Sep 2005, 14:32:58

SinisterBlueCat, so why not join the revolution, then?
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby Ardalla » Fri 30 Sep 2005, 14:32:59

My compliments on a well written essay. The old me of 20 years ago would have agreed with you 100%.

I think we need to keep in mind that there are a large number of people in the US that are only 2 or 3 generations removed from their sharecropping ancestors. There has been a tremendous movement out of the lower/middle working class of the early part of the last century. These people are now living in $200,000 - $400,000 homes and driving SUVs.

PO scares the hell out of these people. They will not hear of it. They don't want to return to this idyllic life you speak of. They will fight it by denial and by violence if necessary. These people DON'T MIND that the rich are getting richer as long as they are getting their piece of the pie.

Just as an example, there is a guy I work with who is upset about high gas prices. He says we should demand that the Saudis lower the price of crude. If they don't co-operate, he says just take the oil. He supports Donald Trump for president. He is a factory worker in a union plant who one would expect to be Democratic. He is not atypical.

The US is in denial and the drama that is unfolding will be played out on that stage.
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Re: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Postby Ludi » Fri 30 Sep 2005, 14:34:24

Why the heck would anyone want to return to sharecropping?? 8O
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