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Bored of Peak Oil

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

Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby ivuernis » Tue 03 Jan 2006, 17:51:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Doly', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ivuernis', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Colorado-Valley', 'I') don't even bother to try to inform people about peak oil anymore. If they're interested, they will already know.


Ditto. Ignorance is bliss for a lot of people and I’m tired of getting the brush off from people who say it’ll all be okay ‘cos we’ll do/find X, Y or Z without any facts or informed knowledge to back their arguments.


That's an easy excuse. The truth is, if you tell people you've planted an idea in their mind. If you don't tell them at all, they won't have the faintest idea of what could be going on.


I disagree. Most people have a fair idea that there is a problem (even if in their minds it is might be a temporary one). They can see the price of petrol at the pump, home heating oil, etc. That should be enough for most reasonably educated people to look a bit deeper but they don't. I'll gladly converse with anyone who wants to talk about PO but people also have a responsibility to educate themselves to some degree.

There's plenty of news coverage about oil, climate change, etc. Most people choose to ignore it or at least to not think about it from my experience.
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby RacerJace » Tue 03 Jan 2006, 18:10:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bobcousins', '
')
I think that illustrates how Doomers don't even understand Economics 101.... blah blah discredit to the doomers blah blah

.


Bobcousins I'm getting pretty sick of your constant beat up of doomers and labelling them as naive about an unlikely sudden economic crash. Quite frankly I think you are the one being naive with your narrow minded 'economic theory in practice' type views.

Even most credible economists know that complex systems undergo a phase shift when one or more of the fundamental variables are inextricably changed. Depending on how large and complex the system is with buffers and counter effects included, the likely outcome is that it will stretch for sometime and then have a catastrophic failure when the foundations of the system become too unstable.

In the context of peak oil I believe we are currently in the stretch stage where buffers and counter effects are causing economic turbulence. This is consistent with the plateau of of oil supply and demand. As the price of oil continues to go up it will cause weaker businesses and individuals overextended in debt to default. The big economies around the globe will stall at some point most probably catalysed by some macro economic impact (desperate political actions, war, over compensation against inflation, terrorist attacks or severe weather. etc). It will then begin to crumble and go through a phase shift. I don't know when or how long this will take but my gut feel is that it will begin to phase shift soon (like in the next 12 to 18 months) as the US economy starts to go into a tailspin.

I consider myself somewhat of a doomer and I don't expect a crash to happen overnight, nor do I believe it will take decades or centuries. It will in most probability happen within years. The real doomer part is that there will be suffering starting with the poor and unprivileged (happening now) and then move right up to the modestly wealthy.

.
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby holmes » Tue 03 Jan 2006, 18:20:39

I took neoclassical/keynesian economics 101 in 1993. Has it changed? If not I understand enough to understand its Nothing more than:
Summer breeze makes you feel alright
Neon lights shining brightly make your brain ignite
See the girls with the dresses so tight
Give you love if the price is right
Black or white
In the streets there's no wrong and no right
so forget all that you see
It's not reality
It's just a fantasy
Can't you see
What this crazy life is doing to me
Life is just a fantasy
Can you live this fantasy life
Outasite
Buy your kicks from the man in the white
Feels alright
Powder pleasure in your nose tonight
See the men paint their faces and cry
Like some girl it makes you wonder why
City life sure is cool
But It cuts like a knife
It's your life

Aldo Nova Rocks!
and who can forget..

See the curtains hanging in the window
In the evening on a Friday night
A little light shining through the window
Lets me know that everything's alright


Summer breeze, makes me feel fine
Blowing through my mind
Summer breeze, makes me feel fine
Blowing through my, makin me feel all-right
Making me feel, making me feel fine
Makes me feel right
Blowing through the jasmine in my mind


see the paper layin on the sidewalk
a little music from the house next door
who lives next door?
so i walk on up to the doorstep
threw the screen and then i cross the floor


summer breeze makes me feel fine
blowing through my mind love
summer breeze makes me fine
blowing yeah your makin me all right
makin me feel making me feel fine
make me feel right
blowin through the jasmine in my mind...in my mind


sweet days of summer, the jasmine's in bloom
July is dressed up and playing her tune
when I come home, from a hard day's work
And you're waiting waitin waitin waitin there, yes you're waiting there
Without a care in the world


I see the smile awaiting in the kitchen
Food a-cooking and a place there for two
you, i feel the arms that reach out to hold me
In the evening when the day is through


Summer breeze, makes me feel fine
Blowing through my mind
Summer breeze, makes me feel fine
Blowing through my, making me feel allright
Making me feel, making me feel fine
Makes me feel right

Blowing through the jasmine in my, blowing blowing(x4)
Blowing through the jasmine in my, blowing

(skat)

Blowing through the jasmine in my mind
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby holmes » Tue 03 Jan 2006, 18:24:46

That melodie of summer breeze is just mezmorizing.. ahhh being atyke in the 70's listenign to the radio at the job sites(carpentry) with the uncle and dad. Maybe PMS knows that. Did seals and croft create the summer breeze tune?
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby seldom_seen » Tue 03 Jan 2006, 18:41:17

I think Aldo Nova has a little more than just jasmine blowing through his mind. I think he's been using his paper not for writing songs, but for rolling doobies!
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby GoIllini » Tue 03 Jan 2006, 19:26:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('RacerJace', 'M')y approach has been to weave the point of peak oil into the discussion as seamlessly as possible and just state a few basic facts like the population overshoot and the market indicators like gold and other comodities rocketing up. Sometimes I go too far describing some of the doomer scenarios and cause the discussion to stall as everyone considers the horriffic outcomes. But generally I pick my respondant and offer the level of doomerosity infomation based on what I believe the individual can and will likely accept.

In most cases if I find someone curious enough about it I recommend Life After The Oil Crash or to just google 'peak oil'. I have then followed up with people and have found that most have a general understanding but no where near the comprehension or acceptance of its consequences. Most have even dissmissed it and considered going out with a bang (in most cases I'm not sure if this means go nuts with over indulgence and then commit suicide, but I'm assumiming it is).

In the context of the post subject... I've become somewhat board with peak oil. I've been aware of it since July 2005 and I've been obsessively watching this forum since about September 2005. In that time I've read almost every concievable point of view and prediction. On the whole it has been a major part of crystalising what I now believe. However I am starting to get tired of the same ol same ol posts about predictions of the economy and the human condition. What I find inspiring are the posts about how to prepare.. See the Planning For The Future threads.


I think it does a real disservice to Peak Oil that we have a doomer website at the top of Google's search results. People are willing to accept the possibility that oil might hit $150/barrel and gas might cost $5/gallon. They aren't willing to accept the possibility that the world needs to change its worldview on energy.

Take a look at the Energy Technology thread right now. We're pretty convinced that nuclear can be a solution to peak oil. We have enough fuel recoverable at a net positive EROI- just from the ocean- to power the world for 5,000 years without reprocessing. (With reprocessing, it's enough for 250,000). Combine that with improving battery technology and PHEVs, and we might have a solution that avoids the doomer scenario. We can take a few steps to address exponential energy growth as we transition to nuclear, and hope that more is done in the next hundred years or so. I don't think we need a complete and utter paradigm shift in three or four years, and I don't think we need to be quite so shocking as to talk about stuff that will scare off folks within the first two standard deviations.

Here's how I sometimes frame it:
"A lot of smart oil geologists think we'll never see $35/barrel oil again. They claim that we've gotten most of the easy-to-find oil, and only the hard to get oil's left. Do you think it's time for us to start worrying about how dependent we are on oil?"
OR
"Why do you think oil prices are so high?"
(You'd be suprised. Most of my friends blame it on various groups a lot less than you'd expect. Then again, I'd like to think that most of my friends are pretty smart.)
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby MonteQuest » Tue 03 Jan 2006, 21:12:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bobcousins', 'O')ne of the extremely naive assumptions made by doomers is that within weeks or months of "Peak" everything will collapse.


No one I know makes such an assumption. Reaching the peak will only be seen in hindsight. What I, and many others, consider very likely is that the markets will push the price off oil off the charts once they have a firm grasp of what peak oil entails.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') guess that Doomers will not accept that we are already at peak, because that denies their super-spike theory.


The superspike comes when the future's market bids it up. You don't believe this will happen?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nyone thinking PO will cause collapse over a few years will be sorely disappointed. The collapse will take decades, if not centuries. Unless your attention span is long, you will get bored of PO long before it has played out.


Oh, and now you are a seer of the future decline rate? No one knows what it will be. Making predictions like this is crystal ball wishing.
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby zoidberg » Wed 04 Jan 2006, 01:23:36

After reading the replies I think I have an answer to my question:

No attempt should be made to convince anyone of anything. Insufficient data is available and the data that is available, is not entirely impartial. (oil reserves I'm thinking of). Plus as someone mentioned this winding down process may take a generation(or two) with declining production forcing the world into new equilibriums and consequently people just adapting to the changes. For example, lets say the US suffers some sort of massive inflation or a debt default. The world economy goes topsy turvy, recessions break out everywhere. Energy consumption plummets until supply far outstrips demand. A mini boom takes place, Peak Oil 2 hits, and lets say Japan and Russia team up to stop a Chinese oil grab in Siberia. War destroys a bunch of stuff, China is defeated and turns in on itself in a civil war. Demand again plummets, and once again Supply exceeds Demand. another mini boom takes place, until demand exceeds supply, something big happens and the equilibrium falls down to a new level. I think the time frame involved in that scenario is all people need. I think a child growing up in that type of atmosphere wont need much prodding to accept the virtue of conservative prudence. (Unlike us crazy, always grow, always milk kiddies)
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby Dukat_Reloaded » Wed 04 Jan 2006, 10:31:31

Give bobcousins a break, afew months ago I jumped off the wagon and believed everything would be alright, but I came back to my senses and now more pessimistic than what I was before. bobcousins will wakeup again soon.
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby AmericanEmpire » Wed 04 Jan 2006, 11:21:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')hat should be enough for most reasonably educated people to look a bit deeper but they don't. I'll gladly converse with anyone who wants to talk about PO but people also have a responsibility to educate themselves to some degree.


Yeah, last spring when oil prices went over $2.00 a gallon I went on the internet looking to see what was up and came across www.lifeaftertheoilcrash.net. The information is out there for people if they will just research to find out whats going on in the world.

Peak oil just makes so much since once you learn about it. The only reason I can see that people don't understand it is that its so damn depressing they don't want to understand it. People don't want to hear the everything is gonna go to shit and they are gonna be lucky to even be able to survive. Not when they have been used to living in the material comforts that we have.

In fact it seems riduculous to most people that we could go from what we have now to all starving in the streets because people have always had plenty there whole live. Unless they delve into the issue of energy resources and their depletion they just assume progress will continue forever. They've always had grocery stores and gas stations their whole lives afterall.
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby holmes » Wed 04 Jan 2006, 13:14:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seldom_seen', 'I') think Aldo Nova has a little more than just jasmine blowing through his mind. I think he's been using his paper not for writing songs, but for rolling doobies!


LOL! I got the wrong sumemr breeze lyrics too. LOL. I might start smoking once and awhile.
Hey seldom!
When the spring comes we dance!
My knee is healing nice and the terrain is waiting.
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby syrac818 » Wed 04 Jan 2006, 19:32:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('GoIllini', '
')
I think it does a real disservice to Peak Oil that we have a doomer website at the top of Google's search results. People are willing to accept the possibility that oil might hit $150/barrel and gas might cost $5/gallon. They aren't willing to accept the possibility that the world needs to change its worldview on energy.

Take a look at the Energy Technology thread right now. We're pretty convinced that nuclear can be a solution to peak oil. We have enough fuel recoverable at a net positive EROI- just from the ocean- to power the world for 5,000 years without reprocessing. (With reprocessing, it's enough for 250,000). Combine that with improving battery technology and PHEVs, and we might have a solution that avoids the doomer scenario. We can take a few steps to address exponential energy growth as we transition to nuclear, and hope that more is done in the next hundred years or so. I don't think we need a complete and utter paradigm shift in three or four years, and I don't think we need to be quite so shocking as to talk about stuff that will scare off folks within the first two standard deviations.

Here's how I sometimes frame it:
"A lot of smart oil geologists think we'll never see $35/barrel oil again. They claim that we've gotten most of the easy-to-find oil, and only the hard to get oil's left. Do you think it's time for us to start worrying about how dependent we are on oil?"
OR
"Why do you think oil prices are so high?"
(You'd be suprised. Most of my friends blame it on various groups a lot less than you'd expect. Then again, I'd like to think that most of my friends are pretty smart.)



I really enjoyed reading this post. I think it's important to focus on solutions as opposed to dwelling in the problem. We all know there's a serious problem, it' why we're here. The fact that the majority of the discussions on here are about "We are sooo screwed! Can you eat a cat?" is flat out bizarre to me. I honestly believe that this is one of the primary reasons why Peak Oil doesn't receive more attention. It is presented as an inevitable horrific awful event with absolutely no solution, and not surprisingly people don't respond to that. And if one is into that kind of discussion, there are plenty of forums for bird flu, global warming, nuclear holicaust, etc.

What can we do? What should we do? How far can conservation take us? Coal to Liquids is getting a lot of attention, can it be implemented to help offset oil decline? PHEVs? Solar?

That's how change is made. People identifying a problem and figuring out a better way to approach it.
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby FatherOfTwo » Thu 05 Jan 2006, 13:45:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('syrac818', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('GoIllini', '
')
I think it does a real disservice to Peak Oil that we have a doomer website at the top of Google's search results. People are willing to accept the possibility that oil might hit $150/barrel and gas might cost $5/gallon. They aren't willing to accept the possibility that the world needs to change its worldview on energy.

Take a look at the Energy Technology thread right now. We're pretty convinced that nuclear can be a solution to peak oil. We have enough fuel recoverable at a net positive EROI- just from the ocean- to power the world for 5,000 years without reprocessing. (With reprocessing, it's enough for 250,000). Combine that with improving battery technology and PHEVs, and we might have a solution that avoids the doomer scenario. We can take a few steps to address exponential energy growth as we transition to nuclear, and hope that more is done in the next hundred years or so. I don't think we need a complete and utter paradigm shift in three or four years, and I don't think we need to be quite so shocking as to talk about stuff that will scare off folks within the first two standard deviations.

Here's how I sometimes frame it:
"A lot of smart oil geologists think we'll never see $35/barrel oil again. They claim that we've gotten most of the easy-to-find oil, and only the hard to get oil's left. Do you think it's time for us to start worrying about how dependent we are on oil?"
OR
"Why do you think oil prices are so high?"
(You'd be suprised. Most of my friends blame it on various groups a lot less than you'd expect. Then again, I'd like to think that most of my friends are pretty smart.)



I really enjoyed reading this post. I think it's important to focus on solutions as opposed to dwelling in the problem. We all know there's a serious problem, it' why we're here. The fact that the majority of the discussions on here are about "We are sooo screwed! Can you eat a cat?" is flat out bizarre to me. I honestly believe that this is one of the primary reasons why Peak Oil doesn't receive more attention. It is presented as an inevitable horrific awful event with absolutely no solution, and not surprisingly people don't respond to that. And if one is into that kind of discussion, there are plenty of forums for bird flu, global warming, nuclear holicaust, etc.

What can we do? What should we do? How far can conservation take us? Coal to Liquids is getting a lot of attention, can it be implemented to help offset oil decline? PHEVs? Solar?

That's how change is made. People identifying a problem and figuring out a better way to approach it.


In typical FatherOfTwo style I both agree and disagree with the above. :)

On the one hand I think sites such as peakoil.com, Matt’s site&book, Kunstler etc. are overly doomeristic by assuming everything that could go wrong will, and that we’ll enter a never ending spiral into the abyss. For instance, they ignore or don’t do honest research into other technologies such as nuclear energy. Their bias’ are often unwavering, and to me at least, glaringly obvious. It’s unfortunate because they either oversimplify the issues (and responses) to peak oil or they only see the world through one tint of glass - typically a heavy grey/black tint! By doing this they damage their own reputations/viewpoints but worse end up drawing to them those who are hopelessly pessimistic or unhappy with their lives. It’s kind of like the ying to a fanatical healing preacher’s yang.

On the other hand, and probably more importantly, the awareness is so low that in some ways it is really good to present people with a big stinking pile of shit as their morning coffee – they need something rude to wake them up. Fortunately this site has enough off a counterbalance, and good arguments back and forth amongst intelligent people, that anyone with half a brain can see that even if the doomers aren’t totally right, we’re in for some nasty times and major changes. The simple fact is that many of the doomer arguments must be paid attention to.

I just hope the site remains somewhat balanced because it’s serving an important function.
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby Chaparral » Fri 06 Jan 2006, 01:07:28

Peak Oil will never get boring. Even when all the scenarios have been hashed out on this and other forums, there is still money to be made (or lost) trading the commodities during the slide/recovery/apocalypse/whatever. That alone will get me my adrenaline fix. It's alot safer than shark-diving and racing too.
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby Cobra_Strike » Fri 06 Jan 2006, 15:47:15

Hi, I am new here (been lurking a bit before joining) and I thought this thread would be a good place to start.

"We may not have a sound understanting of Economics, but we do understand that when you combine 25 parts of society that are failing miserably with no solution in site, that the conclusion is "Doom". I am not a Doomer because of Peak Oil alone, and I doubt any of the other Doomers are either."

I would have to agree with this sentiment. It is not the idea of peak oil that originally got me very interested in our economy. When I began to read about pension cuts I got worried about the future of our economy, reading about peak oil was sort of a nail in the coffin thing as far as I was concerned. A post peak world could keep the economy from doing anything other then slowly decline, and political situations would probably make any existing issues worse.

IMO any resource peak has very importent effects on growth, but emotion is what gets in the way of solving problems when they arise. Humans are a very emotional species.
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby NugBlazer » Sat 07 Jan 2006, 13:08:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bobcousins', 'A')nyone thinking PO will cause collapse over a few years will be sorely disappointed. The collapse will take decades, if not centuries. Unless your attention span is long, you will get bored of PO long before it has played out.


Well, that laughable statement has caused you to become the first person on this board that I've clicked the "ignore" button for. Congratulations! :)

/end sarcasm
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby Cobra_Strike » Sat 07 Jan 2006, 18:07:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('NugBlazer', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bobcousins', 'A')nyone thinking PO will cause collapse over a few years will be sorely disappointed. The collapse will take decades, if not centuries. Unless your attention span is long, you will get bored of PO long before it has played out.


Well, that laughable statement has caused you to become the first person on this board that I've clicked the "ignore" button for. Congratulations! :)

/end sarcasm

Ha Ha! Well, it takes all kinds of people to think out sinarios for the future I guess.
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby Gazzatrone » Tue 10 Jan 2006, 15:47:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '"')Battle_Scarred_Galactico"

Anyone thinking PO will cause collapse over a few years will be sorely disappointed.[b]


True.

However, anyone who wants wars, last ditch desperado tactics and military adventures will think all their Christmas' have come at once. .$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '<')/div>


Do you honestly think it will take 40 years a couple of generations for things to collapse?

Remember its not about when the oil runs out its when the oil becomes to costly. considering from now knowing we have 1000gb of known oil left and using it at a rate of 30gb per year with a global increase of around 1.6 - 1.9% (thankfully not the 3.5% as seen in 2004 then we'd really be screwed) that means within 10 years we will have approxiamately used up close to 400gb of the remaining oil. Thats half way to run out within 10 years. thats plenty few for me.

I remember a few years back the panic in the UK when truck drivers barracaded oil plants. You saw what happened with limited oil supply right there and then. And don't put faith in Humanity to be behaved and diligent with the oil, it will be first come first served, until all is used up,thats how Humanity behaves. We will inevitably revert to a way of life not seen since the mid 19thC. probably within 30 years definitely in my lifetime and I am 31 now, as the industrial infrastructure based solely on oil ceases to function.

We'll sit round coal fires telling the grandchildren of magical days when all the cars ran on oil and everyone had civil freedom to move about. And we communicated with items called mobile phones which no longer work as Man can't fly into space and repair the satelites anymore. And there were huge metal flying birds carrying people to far flung places on the other side of the world in a matter of hours. And when they ask why these things no longer exist we can proudly say its because Man is ultimately short sighted and based its whole social structure on economic growth supported by a finite resource
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby yoda » Tue 10 Jan 2006, 17:09:04

bobcousins and other optomists: I have been lurking here for quite some time, and have been listening to all of the arguments, just trying to learn as much as I can.

I fully believe that "doom" and sudden crash of "life as we know it " are relative, and will differ for each individual. For me, and my family it is already beginning.

I can no longer afford to heat my house. When we purchased the house, propane was around 1.00 a gallon. It is now 2.48 a gallon in my area. This means that we have to keep our thermostat at 50 during the day, and 45 at night, to afford the current rate. It was 15 degrees here yesterday. If prices go up much more, we will be draining the water lines to prevent freezing, and going even lower with the thermostat. Not sure how we will get water then. It will not take much more of an increase to make us just give up.

We can barely afford gas for the car. We make NO unnecessary trips, and will only drive to work and back. Even with this adjustment, we are struggling to provide food and necessities to our family.

I think we were middle class not that long ago. The rising cost of fuel is having an incredable impact on my life TODAY. I do not know how long we can survive if prices go up any more. You come tell my cold and hungry children that peak oil is not going to happen all at once. It sure happened all at once in my house, and all in the last year and a half.
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Re: Bored of Peak Oil

Unread postby Wildwell » Tue 10 Jan 2006, 18:49:54

Peak oil is like constipation. You wait unnecessarily for ages waiting for nature to take its course, not quite sure when it’s going to happen or what things are going to be like when they get to the other end! :P
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