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THE Peak Oil is a Hoax Thread (merged)

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THE Peak Oil is a Hoax Thread (merged)

Postby killJOY » Thu 14 Apr 2005, 05:44:27

EXPERT: absolutely no oil supply crisis Take that, PO conspiracy buffs. :lol:

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Peak oil = comet Kohoutek.
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Postby Raxozanne » Thu 14 Apr 2005, 06:16:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')o prevent the world's stagnation, requirements include a combination of fossil fuels, new technologies to make alternative energy sources more economically viable, and some attention to energy conservation using existing and new technologies, he said


This sounds a bit funny to me, if there is so much oil out there then why is he mentioning energy conservation?

This reminds me of the time I went into my local fish and chip shop. I had been reading in the news about how fish stocks in the North Sea are at crisis levels and while I was waiting in the queue I saw a leaflets entitled 'The truth about fish stocks' so I picked one up and started to read. Basically the leaflet said there was no need to worry as fish stocks were fine but then at the end it had a section entitled 'how to conserve fish stocks'.

Obviously mentioning that 'fish stocks are fine' and having a section entitled 'fish conservation' in the same leaflet is (excuse the pun) fishy. Also media reports were backing up the fact that fish stocks were in crisis.
Mentioning energy conservation in a report centered around the vast amount of fossil fuels left is also fishy.

Also I would just like to add that I don't trust Australians anymore (even tho I am one) as Australia is one of the biggist CO2 polluters of all time and won't change their ways even tho their climate is heating up.
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Postby americandream » Thu 14 Apr 2005, 07:01:17

Hey..if Peter reckons we're OK, who are we to argue.....
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Postby Cynus » Thu 14 Apr 2005, 09:11:40

I also like how he knows there are 649 billion bbl of UNDISCOVERED conventional oil outside the US. It's undiscovered, but does he know it's there.
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What do you guys think of this debunking article?

Postby Coolman » Wed 11 Jan 2006, 19:54:49

I am sure its been posted before, but lets talk about it because it shoots down Peak Oil and basically says consuming a lot stuff is good for some reason.

http://www.prisonplanet.com/archives/peak_oil/index.htm

"Rolling Stone magazine even carried an article in its April issue heavily biased towards making people believe the peak oil lie." Oh yes because James Howard Kunstler is a shadow government figure. lol RIGGGGGGHHHHHTTT.

Now I believe in the shadow government, but this idea that oil is everywere and we can consume for 100 more years or what not just seems like a fairy tale
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Re: What do you guys think of this artical

Postby Coolman » Wed 11 Jan 2006, 20:16:49

Another thing is if this is some giant shadow government scam, then why does the govenment tell us to consume everday. If they wanted to premote Peak Oil I would think they would talk about it every single day. Because they talk about consuming everyday and how great it is to own a SUV.
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Re: What do you guys think of this artical

Postby seldom_seen » Wed 11 Jan 2006, 20:30:29

I think everything is part of some shadow govt. NWO conspiracy according to that prisonplanet dood.

In fact how do we know he is not part of the shadow govt. NWO conspiracy?

somone should start a site to expose him!
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Re: What do you guys think of this artical

Postby Coolman » Wed 11 Jan 2006, 20:37:49

Its true the government likes money and supporting big business. But I don't buy that nature is somehow going to allow humans to destroy it for another 100 years.
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Re: What do you guys think of this artical

Postby Ludi » Wed 11 Jan 2006, 21:20:49

Of course consuming stuff is "good!" Keeps that ol' economy rolling along...
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Re: What do you guys think of this artical

Postby RonMN » Wed 11 Jan 2006, 22:07:31

Think about it..."keep consuming for 100 years".

That mindset is what lead us to the problem...the 100 years are up :(

Everybody likes to think "not in our lifetime"...when in-fact THAT is what we leave to our children.

Now...we ARE the children the mess is left to.
Quis custodiet ipsos custodes.
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Re: What do you guys think of this artical

Postby AmericanEmpire » Thu 12 Jan 2006, 03:37:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')verybody likes to think "not in our lifetime"...


It'll be in my lifetime. But I don't plan on sticking around to deal with it.

I'll continue to live my quality life as long as I can though.
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Re: What do you guys think of this artical

Postby sameu » Thu 12 Jan 2006, 07:16:26

regarding the article:

They suggest the oil companies are artificially driving the price up
but I wonder, if this is truly what's happening, why didn't they do this much earlier? If it's so easy to boost their profits, why are they doing this now, and why not a decade ago?
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Re: What do you guys think of this artical

Postby julianj » Thu 12 Jan 2006, 07:44:28

The article is so idiotic I recommend that you don't waste your time with it, unless of course you want a laugh.
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Re: What do you guys think of this artical

Postby dub_scratch » Thu 12 Jan 2006, 11:30:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('sameu', 'r')egarding the article:

They suggest the oil companies are artificially driving the price up
but I wonder, if this is truly what's happening, why didn't they do this much earlier? If it's so easy to boost their profits, why are they doing this now, and why not a decade ago?


We could ask the question why they did not squeeze the nuts of of consumers two decades ago. Instead they saw the price of oil crash where it was low through the late 80s & 90s. This unexpected bear market surprised the industry-- especially rig builders-- and almost destroyed it. A lot of O&G companies and investors lost their shirts. And the good ol' USA went on a SUV buying and sprawl building binge....Where was the NWO conspiracy then? Oh I bet that was part of the plan too..
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Re: What do you guys think of this artical

Postby Free » Thu 12 Jan 2006, 16:17:20

I think prisonplanet is part of the shadow government, and Alex Jones is a shape-shifting Reptile.
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Re: What do you guys think of this artical

Postby aahala » Thu 12 Jan 2006, 16:54:02

I skimmed thru the linked article, and I don't think there's much to
say about it. I happened to look at some of the other topics on the
site and it seems to be pretty much your run-of-mill wing nut site.
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Re: What do you guys think of this artical

Postby The_Toecutter » Fri 13 Jan 2006, 01:13:35

What's really happening is the oil companies are stalling alternatives so as to keep the production plateau extended out as long as possible(with ups and downs), and to keep the crash as hard as possible. This will in-turn maximize their profits by allowing price increases during the plateau while keeping production maximized, while the hard crash will cause the amount of profits per barrel to rise even more than they would otherwise due to supply and demand used as an excuse, and damned be the consequences to the whole of society. But the cornucopians refuse to acknowledge peak oil's existence when it is a very real problem, staring them in the face, while the doomers are correct in its possible effects and time scale. There is of course some intermittant price gouging(ie. Katrina), in which demand is used as an excuse to jack up prices even when the cost to make and refine each barrel doesn't increase, something most doomers ignore, yet cornucopians insist is true. A good portion of that money is really lining the pockets of a certain few oil men, and they damned well intend to keep that money flowing, and even increase it. No matter the consequences.

The real truth isn't really between the two theories, but more likely of a combination of them, contradictory it may seem.

The above article is quite bunk. Peak oil is *not* a scam, it is real, and may be occuring now, if it hasn't already occured. However, one cannot ignore the profits seen during Rita and Katrina, two spikes on the graph, nor is it prudent for one to ignore just how manufactured of a crisis peak oil may be due to the alternatives available that are denied to prospective consumers(by the various entrenched industries and federal governments benefitting from tax revenue) so as to maximize economic growth. Would the oil consumption amounts of today be addressed and subsequently reduced, and our reliance upon oil greatly eliminated, an oil shortage wouldn't be anywhere near the problem it is today, if even a problem at all. But to address this consumption and reduce it would mean to power down, to shrink the economy. The corporations do not like this, especially the oil industry. Politics, and also the oil industry, play a large role in just what alternatives are available to us today and what individuals have to do in order to have access to these alternatives. Often, building their own and putting forth a high amount of money up front to save in the long term, due to less resource/labor-intensive means often being cheaper per unit output, from that alternative. Cheaper per unit output, in both resources and thus money placed forward, results in less money to the economy for the same living standard. Less money into the economy, regardless of living standard, is the basis of a powerdown. We can either powerdown in an organized fashion that would result in decentralization and keep much of our living standards while consuming less(the wealthy elite would be the ones to lose due to decreased percentage of the world's available wealth flowing to them), or nature can do it for us and bring us to worse than 3rd world living standards(while the wealthy elite would gain due to increased percentage of the world's available wealth flowing to them).

However, with a hard crash, another dynamic is introduced. If nature powers down for us, this will destabilize our civilization. The elites do not like this, but are eying an increase to their wealth. This is where totalitarianism comes in. To keep a revolt from happening occuring, the power elite resorts to ever increasing control over the individual person. A hard crash will necessitate rigourour control over our daily lives if civilization is to not collapse, and they would think nothing of eroding our freedoms to benefit themselves, even at the risk of the process being undermined and all of civilization collapsing anyway(which is inevitable with a continued crisis anyway, but the elites would rather leave that to their descendants).

Quite a conundrum we are in. We have the solutions to this problem of peak oil, even today, powerdown combined with alternative energy, but the power elite refuses to work on it, having mostly stripped the individual from their role as a descision maker and transferred their role into a consumer. By limiting the market to the choices the power elite approves of, the consumers power is limited and can only be reclaimed if they seek to rid themselves from the greater society as much as possible, to become self reliant. But with prices being inversely variant as production volume increases, and production volume of alternatives limited, the cost of being self sufficient becomes expensive up front, something most do not have the means to achieve(unless they take drastic reductions to living standards, the very unpleasant way to power down and become self sufficient. Many who are now homeless did it that way, some by their own choice, most not by choice).

With no one implementing alternatives on a massive scale, and with the decision makers in our political process(power elite) set against powering down voluntarily and decentralizing society, we will crash and burn unless we address this problem immediately. We may still have time, but with no one acting, each day that passes will make the powerdown we do see, one imposed by nature instead of our own will, that much WORSE.
The unnecessary felling of a tree, perhaps the old growth of centuries, seems to me a crime little short of murder. ~Thomas Jefferson
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Cody Willard on Peak Oil

Postby smallpoxgirl » Sun 18 May 2008, 17:48:03

Thought you guys would enjoy this one. And I always thought Fox was such a reliable news source. :roll:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he same cycle we’re playing out right now in 2008 is part of the exact same 150 year old cycle that has been playing out since people figured out that fossil oils give a great bang of energy in a relatively small package (gasoline vs cottonwood, for example…both burn very easily, but only one burns clean and hot enough to say, run a Cadillac). Peak oil? Yeah, I heard that same silly concept back in the last oil bubble that I lived through in Ruidoso, NM, a very-oil-dependent tourist economy near Texas. All those idiot Texans who spent like oil would stay at $35 a barrel and higher forever, ended up totally broke and ruined when oil, as it ALWAYS does, reversed its intermediate-term trend and headed back to $10. They were broke for a couple decades after that. And oil was still at $10 a barrel just ten short years ago. Yeah, 1998.
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Re: Cody Willard on Peak Oil

Postby NTBKtrader » Sun 18 May 2008, 19:08:17

he may be right but only because of a depression/drastic demand destruction, when investors figure out that the economy won't grow anymore it will be a race to the bottom...
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Re: Cody Willard on Peak Oil

Postby americandream » Sun 18 May 2008, 19:40:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('NTBKtrader', 'h')e may be right but only because of a depression/drastic demand destruction, when investors figure out that the economy won't grow anymore it will be a race to the bottom...


Do you mean the American economy or the global economy? Do you see the Chinese economy for example, being arrested in the speed of its growth to the degree that it's demand for global resources halts or better still, declines to that of the Maoist era? Likewise, India, the former Soviet and communist states, Brazil...I could go on.
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