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PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

THE Slavery Thread (merged)

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby MrBill » Fri 12 May 2006, 02:33:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Chaparral', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mattduke', 'T')his is a disturbing thread. How long until the grasshoppers who haven't accumulated any property will attack the ants who have been living under their means, diligently saving, and carefully investing for years?


Yes, grasshoppers that have been breeding like crazy, sitting in their rent-controlled apartments and watching TV and doing a small business trading cash for food stamps at a steep discount from the local winos.

I'll take capitalism or a system of free enterprise over a fully collectivist system any day, any time.

That being said (or was it ranted) I can't help but think some collectivist ethic and enterprise may do some good in the areas of energy and transportation at least....and who knows, birth control as well ??


Well, it is hard for anyone to prosper while those who having nothing have nothing to lose. But those who know how to work hard usually come out ahead in the end. If you have ever been in a natural emergency or at an accident site, people are usually willing to take orders from the first person who sounds like they know what they are talking about. Take charge and start barking out orders and most will fall into line because they sure as hell do not know how to lead.

As soon as you accumulate any asset, whether it is a good business model or a group of profitable customers, someone is always willing to come along and try to weasel in on a free ride or even better take control of your asset away from you. It sucks, but if you know what you're doing, you can find another business or another group of customers and start again, they cannot because they only know how to expropriate wealth, not create it.

So if you're talking about a Mad Max scenario here with mob rule then I guess there is no reason to plan for the future. But if you're talking about a slow decline drawn out over decades then I would still prepare for it by surrounding yourself with people you can rely on. Forget the grasshoppers. Find yourself a good ant colony and make yourself useful in it. It may not help in the end, but when the ants go, the grasshoppers go too.
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Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby some_math_guy » Fri 12 May 2006, 13:56:37

I think the idea that the original poster was getting at is

'Is upward mobility possible without economic growth?'

or 'Can a middle class exist without permanent economic growth?'

Consider how our economy works : it continually grows by converting more and more 'stuff' (capital) out there in the world into commodities that are either consumed or hoarded by people...trees, minerals, oil, etc. Money is just used to represent this 'stuff' - it's a convenient way to trade commodities.

Peak oil theory posits that in a future where there is less and less energy available to extract 'stuff' (capital) from the environment with each passing year, there will be less available capital and a generally less favorable economic/business environment. Banks will be more cautious with lending money because the stuff is represents will clearly be more limited in availability and take more energy to 'make'. All of the growth strategies used in the current economic system of investment/risk/diversification basically tell you not to put 'all of your eggs in one basket' - that way if you have a few 'bad eggs', the rest will probably grow enough to protect your investment. In the future however, virtually *all* investments will do poorly because growth will be curtailed in virtually all sectors. What we will see is a massive contraction in the amount of valuable 'things' out there, and when valuable things are in short supply, you generally see polarizing social systems emerging where this limited wealth gets concentrated in the hands of the few people who know how to 'work' the system properly, leaving the rest poor.

In the future, with a permanent shortage of capital, there will be a huge chasm between rich and poor. 'Upward mobility' is based on the idea that you can start off poor (maybe a starving student from a poor family, but bright with promise), then to lower-middle class (maybe you graduate and get a good job, start paying off your student loans, start to furnish your apartment with some consumer goods) then to middle class (get a raise, save some money, buy a house, a car, some better consumer goods) and on to upper middle class (get a management position, buy several properties, several cars, a boat, vacations every year, investments).

In a system with no middle class, the chasm is far too wide to jump from 'poor' to 'rich', and there are few mechanisms available to cross the chasm. 'Upward mobility' I think is a relatively new concept because in centuries past, economic output was basically limited to manpower and animal power...economic output grew only marginally each year with the increase in population, but the increasing population required more goods, so essentially we have a steady-state system. With cheap energy, we've gotten a temporary infusion of what amounts to basically limitless (albeit temporary) economic growth, flooding the world with an abundance of stuff that otherwise would not be available (several times increase in food out put, wood and building materials available cheaply from faraway lands, minerals easily extracted from deep in the earth, etc). Remember that 1 barrel of oil contains the energy equivalent of 25,000 hours of human labour. At 5$/hr minimum wage, a barrel should be worth about 125,000$, but today is only valued at 1/2000th of this. This equation alone should make people understand how fundamental energy is to the economy and how it props up all of the social systems that have arisen in the petroleum age.

I think that the link between 'capitalism' and 'slavery' is somewhat inexact, but what you have to remember is almost all capital goods available today (buildings, cars, airplanes, bridges, food, plastics, computers)are only made possible with virtually free energy. In a future with less net energy available there we be less 'stuff' available, and produced on a scale probably orders of magnitude less than today, at the height of the 'free energy' oil bonanza. Wealth will tend to polarize after peak and social systems somewhat similar to 'slavery' (maybe feudalism?) will probably come back.
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Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby MaxDWolf » Fri 12 May 2006, 14:37:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', '
')Greed is part of freedom and it is a good part, because it drives one to take care of himself, creates the accumulation of wealth that can be invested in productive assets, and makes one then able to also be charitable. The idea that greed is bad is just a ploy used by politicians to make you give up your hard earned wealth to them since your are evil to keep the fruits of your own labor yourself.


My one disagreement with you is just one regarding choice of wording. Self-interest, putting oneself first, is good. I would differentiate between this and greed. Greed is (by definition) inordinate desire and/or acquisitiveness. To want to enjoy the fruits of your labors and even fair conquests is reasonable self interest. To refuse to acknowledge any right of society to ask you to contribute to the common good is greedy.
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Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby MrBill » Fri 12 May 2006, 15:23:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('some_math_guy', 'I') think the idea that the original poster was getting at is

'Is upward mobility possible without economic growth?'

or 'Can a middle class exist without permanent economic growth?'

Consider how our economy works : it continually grows by converting more and more 'stuff' (capital) out there in the world into commodities that are either consumed or hoarded by people...trees, minerals, oil, etc. Money is just used to represent this 'stuff' - it's a convenient way to trade commodities.

Peak oil theory posits that in a future where there is less and less energy available to extract 'stuff' (capital) from the environment with each passing year, there will be less available capital and a generally less favorable economic/business environment. Banks will be more cautious with lending money because the stuff is represents will clearly be more limited in availability and take more energy to 'make'. All of the growth strategies used in the current economic system of investment/risk/diversification basically tell you not to put 'all of your eggs in one basket' - that way if you have a few 'bad eggs', the rest will probably grow enough to protect your investment. In the future however, virtually *all* investments will do poorly because growth will be curtailed in virtually all sectors. What we will see is a massive contraction in the amount of valuable 'things' out there, and when valuable things are in short supply, you generally see polarizing social systems emerging where this limited wealth gets concentrated in the hands of the few people who know how to 'work' the system properly, leaving the rest poor.

In the future, with a permanent shortage of capital, there will be a huge chasm between rich and poor. 'Upward mobility' is based on the idea that you can start off poor (maybe a starving student from a poor family, but bright with promise), then to lower-middle class (maybe you graduate and get a good job, start paying off your student loans, start to furnish your apartment with some consumer goods) then to middle class (get a raise, save some money, buy a house, a car, some better consumer goods) and on to upper middle class (get a management position, buy several properties, several cars, a boat, vacations every year, investments).

In a system with no middle class, the chasm is far too wide to jump from 'poor' to 'rich', and there are few mechanisms available to cross the chasm. 'Upward mobility' I think is a relatively new concept because in centuries past, economic output was basically limited to manpower and animal power...economic output grew only marginally each year with the increase in population, but the increasing population required more goods, so essentially we have a steady-state system. With cheap energy, we've gotten a temporary infusion of what amounts to basically limitless (albeit temporary) economic growth, flooding the world with an abundance of stuff that otherwise would not be available (several times increase in food out put, wood and building materials available cheaply from faraway lands, minerals easily extracted from deep in the earth, etc). Remember that 1 barrel of oil contains the energy equivalent of 25,000 hours of human labour. At 5$/hr minimum wage, a barrel should be worth about 125,000$, but today is only valued at 1/2000th of this. This equation alone should make people understand how fundamental energy is to the economy and how it props up all of the social systems that have arisen in the petroleum age.

I think that the link between 'capitalism' and 'slavery' is somewhat inexact, but what you have to remember is almost all capital goods available today (buildings, cars, airplanes, bridges, food, plastics, computers)are only made possible with virtually free energy. In a future with less net energy available there we be less 'stuff' available, and produced on a scale probably orders of magnitude less than today, at the height of the 'free energy' oil bonanza. Wealth will tend to polarize after peak and social systems somewhat similar to 'slavery' (maybe feudalism?) will probably come back.


Ah, thank you! A lucid post about the common problems we face. Okay, not the first decent thread I have read, but at least someone who understands subtleties. Thank you. Less energy does not equal slavery or vice versa. It equals less wealth generated by an equal amount of energy input. I think it was POP or PUP55 who said they first realised how much energy a gallon of gasoline had when they used a chainsaw for the first time? Amen!
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Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby Falconoffury » Fri 12 May 2006, 22:29:01

A lot of people think that capitalism is a system where everyone is free to produce goods of value, and everyone is free to choose to buy them. That is correct, and I'm not arguing against that idea. Just don't forget the resources that go into goods and services that people value. What happens to the system of money and freedom to produce and purchase when the resources to produce goods and services is slowly reducing? We have the freedom to choose any job that we can, but just what jobs will be available in a world with reducing goods and resources? Won't we have to compete with an ever growing population for jobs in an ever shrinking resource base?

My argument is that a percentage of those currently rich will figure out how to hold onto their wealth during this time of reducing resources, and have a huge pool of poverty ridden, desperate people to work for the rich to allow the rich to keep their wealth while the poor are getting just enough resources to survive. Thusly, we end up with a two class system. We have those who are able to hold their wealth and convince the poor to work towards their well-being, and we have the poor who simply have nothing and just need a way to survive. We won't have a middle class because we end up with those who can hoard the resources and those who work so that the rich and continue to hoard the resources.

Now, I hope this wasn't a waste of a post as I expect some good arguments for or against it!
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Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby MrBill » Sat 13 May 2006, 03:09:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Falconoffury', 'A') lot of people think that capitalism is a system where everyone is free to produce goods of value, and everyone is free to choose to buy them. That is correct, and I'm not arguing against that idea. Just don't forget the resources that go into goods and services that people value. What happens to the system of money and freedom to produce and purchase when the resources to produce goods and services is slowly reducing? We have the freedom to choose any job that we can, but just what jobs will be available in a world with reducing goods and resources? Won't we have to compete with an ever growing population for jobs in an ever shrinking resource base?

My argument is that a percentage of those currently rich will figure out how to hold onto their wealth during this time of reducing resources, and have a huge pool of poverty ridden, desperate people to work for the rich to allow the rich to keep their wealth while the poor are getting just enough resources to survive. Thusly, we end up with a two class system. We have those who are able to hold their wealth and convince the poor to work towards their well-being, and we have the poor who simply have nothing and just need a way to survive. We won't have a middle class because we end up with those who can hoard the resources and those who work so that the rich and continue to hoard the resources.

Now, I hope this wasn't a waste of a post as I expect some good arguments for or against it!


I think your points are fair enough. Less resources will most likely result in less wealth being generated, but perhaps more value added with the resources we do have or perhaps with renewable resources, as we are forced to do more with less. The needs of the burgeoning population will dictate having to produce more with less and we will curse our prolifigy in the future. Like the furniture maker who wonders how our forefathers could have burned down forests full of hardwoods or used solid oak as a building material. We will rue or lack of foresight. Certainly we will waste less.

But as this weekend's tragic events in Nigeria demonstrate the issue of haves and have nots is always complex. 200 poor people burned to death as they stole gasoline from a punctured pipeline. Who is to blame? The thieves? They are poor and have few alternatives, but is that an excuse? The developed world who rely on exports from Nigeria for their easy motoring? The oil company who is doing what oil companies are supposed to do, find and extract oil so it can be turned into wealth? Or the Nigerian government, which is one of the most corrupt in the world? And who refuse to share Nigeria's resources equitibly with the Nigerian people? I do not know about you, but I believe the Nigerian government is to blame, but obviously the issue effects the poor, the motorists, the oil companies that operate in those environments and everyone. But the issue itself is both simple and complex at the sametime.
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Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby CrudeAwakening » Sun 14 May 2006, 03:44:08

I tend to see society stratifying as well. Those that have lived the consumer dream and ended up indebted up to their eyeballs will suffer the most, along with those who experience prolonged unemployment as a result of the economic recession I perceive to be ahead.

I think the ultimate outcome depends on how significant the social dislocation is, and to what extent the upper classes can maintain some kind of hegemony over the disenfranchised lower classes. If the middle class does largely disappear, this will remove its role as a social buffer between upper and lower classes, and would not bode well for continued social harmony (such as we have, anyway).

Added to this are the problems of an aging population, and of course global conflict over resources. I worry about the hundreds of millions of people who believe it is their birthright to consume at current levels, when it becomes clear that this is no longer an option. Who will they blame? I suspect they will see the people who ride out the wave most successfully as being responsible for their predicament.
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Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby americandream » Sun 14 May 2006, 07:35:54

Take a look around you the next time you exhort the wonders of the free market.....the infrastructure you function within is 70% common funded (roads, hospitals, bridges, parks, libraries, city halls, armies, police, revenue service etc...with a 30% grafted on predatory organism solely dedicated to the use of further other common resources for the generation of private capital accumulation...one wonders what advances we might have made had the best of our brains not been dedicated to the development of PS2 and X Box.

Incidentally....I'm extremely well of financially....I know a rotten system when I smell one..but that does not necessarily mean that I'm not going to participate in it out of some mental deficiency....lol.....you people are so simple in here...you so quickly jump to conclusions...has it never occirred to you that someone you may well term upper middle class...using your infernal tendency to label may well be a marxist....for reasons other than limited intellect.
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Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby gigacannon » Sun 14 May 2006, 13:07:15

Capitalism is a means of representing useful work in the form of numbers which may or may not be printed on hard currency.
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Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby abelardlindsay » Sun 14 May 2006, 15:17:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Kaare_Mai', 'I')t is funny to see how americans who never set a foot outside their country can dismiss other types of systems...

I live in Denmark, and as most of europe, Denmark is a socialistic country.

We have no poor people. - Not a single person in Denmark has to live on the street.

Not a single person has to pay a dime to go to the doctor or hospital.

We have very little crime and 99% of the population has never seen a gun with their own eyes.

Denmark is the home for several danish companies that are known world wide.

We pay 6.2$ / gallon at the pump and 40% income tax, and not a single soul are complaining. Why? Because we're wealthy. We have nice houses, plasma TV's, cars, internet, 7 weeks of vacation without the special holidays and weekends calculated in.

So don't come here and tell me that socialism doesnt work... Im glad not to live in the arogant, self centered, gun-loving america where their own people are forced to suffer when a storm hits their shores...


http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/fac ... os/da.html
Denmark:
Population:
5,450,661
Oil - exports
332,100 bbl/day (2001)

Wow so at current prices that's about $1500 a year in per person oil revenues. Well that and a 40% tax rate and no oil imports makes 7 week vacations pretty easy. Ever notice that all the socialist miracle countries like Canada, Norway, Denmark, have huge domestic energy reserves? America was pretty damned nice to live in during the 50s and 60s too...

I think the best you can get with social democracy without oil is Japan.
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Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby Concerned » Wed 17 May 2006, 08:36:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('abelardlindsay', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Kaare_Mai', 'I')t is funny to see how americans who never set a foot outside their country can dismiss other types of systems...

I live in Denmark, and as most of europe, Denmark is a socialistic country.

We have no poor people. - Not a single person in Denmark has to live on the street.

Not a single person has to pay a dime to go to the doctor or hospital.

We have very little crime and 99% of the population has never seen a gun with their own eyes.

Denmark is the home for several danish companies that are known world wide.

We pay 6.2$ / gallon at the pump and 40% income tax, and not a single soul are complaining. Why? Because we're wealthy. We have nice houses, plasma TV's, cars, internet, 7 weeks of vacation without the special holidays and weekends calculated in.

So don't come here and tell me that socialism doesnt work... Im glad not to live in the arogant, self centered, gun-loving america where their own people are forced to suffer when a storm hits their shores...


http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/fac ... os/da.html
Denmark:
Population:
5,450,661
Oil - exports
332,100 bbl/day (2001)

Wow so at current prices that's about $1500 a year in per person oil revenues. Well that and a 40% tax rate and no oil imports makes 7 week vacations pretty easy. Ever notice that all the socialist miracle countries like Canada, Norway, Denmark, have huge domestic energy reserves? America was pretty damned nice to live in during the 50s and 60s too...

I think the best you can get with social democracy without oil is Japan.


Yes and under capatilism you would have a handful of wealthy owners that take all the wealth while the people remain impoverished.

I'd rather have a mixed economy where there is an incentive to produce and some of the profits go back to the people.

FWIW the USA is a socalist country, taxes are socalist/communist (redistribution of wealth outside the market economy).

Capatilism will fail (as it has in the past) by not re-distributing wealth and benefits of productivity growth to the greater majority.

Both free market libertarians and communist idealogues are working from a theroetical perspective that as far as Im concerned does not pan out in the real world.
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Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby gego » Mon 22 May 2006, 01:27:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MaxDWolf', '
')My one disagreement with you is just one regarding choice of wording. Self-interest, putting oneself first, is good. I would differentiate between this and greed. Greed is (by definition) inordinate desire and/or acquisitiveness. To want to enjoy the fruits of your labors and even fair conquests is reasonable self interest. To refuse to acknowledge any right of society to ask you to contribute to the common good is greedy.


Society is an abstraction. It does not have rights. Only individuals have rights and these rights themselves are abstractions.

If one person existed on the earth, then rights would be irrevelant, for he would do as he pleases without regard to anyone else as they would not exits. When two people exist, then it becomes a problem as to conflicts over behavior and danger to oneanother. The idea of rights can come into existence as a system to prevent agression against one another. The idea of right to life and property rights are sensible means to make life functional and safe, but only if everyone agrees that the most functional system is a system of rights rather than a system of kill and be killed by the most powerful. Rights come out of enlightened minds; power struggle comes out of brutish minds.

Rights were invented in the minds of man to protect men, not society.

Your concept that society has rights and people have obligations to contribute to socitey is absurd, and has no basis in logic. If one decides to give up some of his property rights and contribute to others it is only an outgrowth of his good will, and not his obligation. To say that one has an obligation to socitey is to advocate slavery, and ownership of an individual by socitey.
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Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby gego » Mon 22 May 2006, 01:40:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')
Oh, I think many are saying that capitalism and the market economy are to blame for all our problems like peak oil? Nevermind that it is a geological fact. But there you go.

Well, I think Cuba is an example of a fabulously well-run country with a socialist government and centrally planned economy, so long as a Russia, or China or Venezuela is always at hand to pay the bills and provide cheap energy imports.

Speaking on Venezuela. Another great example of an economy running on all cylinders and creating wealth.

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




CARACAS, Venezuela (Reuters) - Taxi driver Jaime Tinoco works the streets of Caracas in a 1976 Chevy Nova that guzzles 19 gallons (72 liters) of gas a day. But he doesn't worry about fuel efficiency -- filling his tank costs just

$2.30.

While U.S. consumers struggle with soaring energy prices, Venezuela's gas is now the world's cheapest at 12 cents a gallon and Washington's regional foe, President Hugo Chavez, vows to maintain subsidies that keep fuel dirt-cheap
.

"Those gringos have everything -- so why does their gas cost so much?" asked Tinoco between chuckles as he navigated a midday traffic jam. "Don't they have oil reserves?"

Chavez, a self-proclaimed socialist and critic of President Bush, has even begun subsidizing fuel for poor U.S. neighborhoods as U.S. consumers brace for average summer gas prices of $2.71 a gallon -- 34 cents higher than last summer.

In Venezuela, the world's No. 5 oil exporter, drivers fill their tanks for less than the price of a cheap breakfast, and love to point out that gasoline costs less than mineral water.

The nation's gasoline is now the world's cheapest, according to an International Monetary Fund report released in April that shows Venezuelan gas prices as about a third of those in oil-producing giant Saudi Arabia.

Shiny SUVs and rusty 1970s-era sedans share the streets of Venezuelan cities as drivers shrug off fuel costs.

Low-priced fuel is considered a birthright in Venezuela, which sells 1.2 million barrels per day of oil to the United States -- the world's biggest gas guzzler.

"Gasoline should stay cheap the way it is, that's why we have oil in Venezuela," said Maria Rosa Pinero, 55, a housewife, filling up a Volkswagen Gol at a gas station in eastern Caracas.

Chavez has extended Venezuela's fuel subsidy to poor Americans through a well-publicized jab at the U.S. government that offers 40 percent discounts on heating oil distributed by Venezuelan-owned refiner Citgo.

Flush with cash from high oil revenues, Chavez has also shored up regional alliances by providing low-priced fuel to Central American and Caribbean nations he says have been snubbed by the United States.

'HOOD ROBIN' SUBSIDY

Venezuela's gas subsidy is the subject of endless grumbling by economists who say it promotes consumer waste and costs the state billions of dollars in lost revenue.

Critics say the subsidy largely benefits middle and upper-class vehicle owners at the expense of government income that could be spent on the poor.


"They call it the 'Hood Robin' subsidy," said Jose Luis Cordeiro, a petroleum engineer who writes about energy issues. "Instead of stealing from the rich to give to the poor, it's the opposite."

He estimates Venezuela would have taken in at least an additional $8 billion last year -- almost 8 percent of the nation's GDP -- if Venezuelans had paid market rates for fuel.

The subsidy also encourages rampant fuel smuggling to neighboring Colombia and leads to huge lines of Brazilian drivers waiting to fill up along the southern border.


But past efforts to raise gas prices have not gone well. Authorities in 1989 raised fuel prices at the height of a recession, leading to three days of rioting during which at least 300 people were killed. Human rights groups say troops may have killed several thousand people.

The event marked a turning point in Venezuelan history, and served as inspiration for Chavez -- at the time a young army officer -- to lead a coup attempt three years later. The coup failed but helped propel Chavez into the presidency in 1998.

Chavez has maintained popularity by channeling oil revenues toward social programs for the poor, and has often criticized U.S. dependence on cheap gasoline. Washington says he is using his oil wealth to threaten regional democracy.

At Venezuelan gas stations, however, there are few complaints about low-cost fuel or fuel efficiency.

"People buy a car because it's comfortable or because it's big," said Isidro Rodriguez, 30, an accountant, as he filled up a new 4-wheel-drive Ford in southern Caracas. "It's not for the price of fuel, because that's never been a problem."


HOwever, let us not forget Bolivia. That up and coming regional powerhouse. Thanks for the help to develop our oil & gas, now get out. Hey, it worked for Venezuela and look how wealthy they are?

But just one question. When these superpowers have squandered their natural resources and are bankrupt again, should the World Bank and IMF lend to them again? How many strikes before they are out? Or like Argentina, do we just keep lending and crossing our fingers? Talk about socialism. That is a bottomless pit for international goodwill and lending.


I generally do not like Mr. Bill, because of his involvement and defense of the fiat money creating and ripoff system, but I will agree that his post here is eloquent and dead center.
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Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby gego » Mon 22 May 2006, 01:47:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Kaare_Mai', 'I')t is funny to see how americans who never set a foot outside their country can dismiss other types of systems...

I live in Denmark, and as most of europe, Denmark is a socialistic country.

We have no poor people. - Not a single person in Denmark has to live on the street.

Not a single person has to pay a dime to go to the doctor or hospital.

We have very little crime and 99% of the population has never seen a gun with their own eyes.

Denmark is the home for several danish companies that are known world wide.

We pay 6.2$ / gallon at the pump and 40% income tax, and not a single soul are complaining. Why? Because we're wealthy. We have nice houses, plasma TV's, cars, internet, 7 weeks of vacation without the special holidays and weekends calculated in.

So don't come here and tell me that socialism doesnt work... Im glad not to live in the arogant, self centered, gun-loving america where their own people are forced to suffer when a storm hits their shores...


Kid, you are still sucking on your mother's tit, only it is the now the tit of your rulers who are exploiting your fellow citizens as the source of milk. If your mind was not so screwed up by your government owned and operated indoctranation schools, you might be able to post some original thouht rather than parrot what has been implanted in your brain.

Were Denmark not peddling drugs and sex to repressed British tourist, you would be living the life of third world serfs.
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Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby MrBill » Mon 22 May 2006, 03:41:37

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') generally do not like Mr. Bill, because of his involvement and defense of the fiat money creating and ripoff system, but I will agree that his post here is eloquent and dead center.


This is not junior high school. I am not here to be liked. I am here to discuss ideas, some of which are not popular either. However, this debate about social systems is getting old. For your guide, the FIAT money system, as you describe it, also erodes the value of my savings. I am not happy about that either, but at least I understand a little how this system does and does not work, so I am ahead of 51% of PO posters on this subject! ; - )

As with regards to Denmark, I personally like the country, so I am not going to say anything bad about it. However, I have met more Danes living and working in the UK & Germany than Germans or English trying to live and work in Denmark? I guess Denmark, like most high tax, cradle to grave, social democracies places a lot of communal value on making sure no one falls through the cracks? Admirable, but if I compare Denmark to other Skandinavian countries, I would not say EVERYONE willingly pays up and is happy about it.

Many Nordic companies list their shares abroad to avoid punitively high taxes. Those taxes then do not go to support those cherished social programs as this article on IKEA makes clear. Yes, I know Sweden is not Denmark, but their social models are similar. Also, I know that the reception to foreigners looking for political assylum or economic migration is eroding popular support for these programs. Danes and others are saying enough is enough.

In defense of capitalism I would like to point out that trademark protection, which socialist governments are not keen to defend, protect two of those international companies that Denmark is so proud of - Carlsberg and Lego. Carlsberg is brewed under license around the world, but without its protected trademark, anyone could make an inferior beer and label it Carlsberg eroding its reputation, or in fact just take the recipe and brew it without paying rent to Carlsberg.

Also, without trademark protection, China can produce all the Lego that the world will ever want or need undercutting Denmark on price through economies of scale, and therefore depriving those Danish workers of an income on which to pay those high taxes to protect their cozy social system.

Let's face it, without Greenland, and any oil & gas that might be in the Arctic, Denmark's biggest asset happens to be that it is close to Germany, Denmark's largest trading partner. Especially, this year, with all those football fans drinking Carlsberg beer during The World Cup! Maybe their families will visit Legoland in Germany while they are there? ; - )
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
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Re: Is capitalism nothing more than slavery with growth?

Postby deconstructionist » Mon 22 May 2006, 13:01:44

Capitalism as it is currently practiced in America is State-Capitalism and as such, is basically an elaborate system of social control. We are wage-slaves. We do not have a free market. Nor are we socialist. It is a state-socialist system, also known as state-capitalism. It is a doubly bastardized form of capitalism and socialism all mish-mashed into one. State-capitalism is capitalism without freedom, socialism without eqaulity, and can only grow into a totalitarian police-state, which is where we are headed.
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Wall Street Journal Promotes Slavery by Corporate Elite

Postby directinfo » Wed 28 Jun 2006, 05:08:01

The Wall Street Journal – All the disinfo that’s fit to print about Peak Oil.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')url=http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06165/698172-28.stm]Power shifts to countries with oil reserves[/url] Wednesday, June 14, 200 By Bhushan Bahree and Chip Cummins, The Wall Street Journal
There is more to today's oil crunch than temporary jolts to supply and demand. What is also roiling the energy world is an enduring shift in the balance of power between the fuel-guzzling West and oil-rich developing countries. Since World War II, the industrialized world has relied on stable and affordable supplies of crude to fuel economic growth. The U.S., Europe and Japan together needed more oil than they could produce. The developing world had plenty of oil, but little use for it and few alternative markets. So industrialized countries tapped the cheap resources of poor ones.

No mention here about how the Western countries kept resource-rich countries embroiled in civil wars, brutal dictatorships, etc... No, but fascinating when you look at the world at night you see all of the resource USING countries light up and they increasingly rely upon war in resource rich areas to keep what's left coming online cheap.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')ow this mutual dependency is unraveling and a new order is taking shape, turning the tables on America, its allies and other big energy consumers. Major exporting nations have concluded that they have more leverage than ever before over consuming countries.

Well, Russia says that sure. And now Iran and Venezuela are saying it. But I don't see Iraq yet having a voice on the issue.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')wo forces are behind this change. The accelerating industrialization of the billion-person economies of China and India means that global energy demand is likely to keep growing rapidly for years to come. And just as important, the world's top crude-producing countries are keeping a tighter grip on their spigots.

Well wait a minute here. You mean to tell me that runaway demand, on the one side is met with suppliers "keeping tighter grip on their spigots". Who is writing this? Is there no account for finite supply? "Tighter grip", ha. Well, no I won't be buying that yacht from Donald Trump next week, my wife is keeping a tighter grip on the finances these days. What a loony statement.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')audi Arabia and other oil-rich states have balked at making the large investments Western policy makers think are necessary to meet demand in coming decades, although they plan to expand production somewhat in the medium term. Moreover, these nations are using more of their oil at home to meet surging domestic demand, driven in part by new industries that were once the preserve of the developed world.

"Balked at making the large investments... necessary to meet demand" - another good one! Boy these authors, Bhushan and Chip, they must be part of a comedy routine! Good show Wall Street Journal. Nice way to lighten the mood near the Peak Oil collapse. I "Balked" at squeezing blood out of a turnip. I was unwilling to make the investments necessary to meet demand.

By the way, didn't Saudi Arabia already do their part by promising to lift output by 50% at the mere turning of a spigot? Why invest into squeezing blood from a turnip? Just say "I can squeeze blood from that turnip anytime I want". It is much easier to cut out the middle man and just make the claim. Same difference, eh?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '&')quot;The idea is to use (the) advantage of the availability of energy and build industries on that basis," said Saudi Arabian oil minister Ali Naimi in a recent interview in Riyadh, as the sound of jackhammers pounded through the windows of his office overlooking the booming city. "Any industry that requires intensive energy will be welcome in Saudi Arabia."
"availability of energy" Right... and then "build industries on that basis". Right again. And then what about the next statement? Shouldn't it go something like "... and then watch the whole thing collapse from my armed fortress, having consolidated power and implemented a police state."
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')n addition, petro-states from Iran to Ecuador are flexing their muscles, brandishing fossil-fuel supplies as a weapon in diplomatic disputes, or tearing up contracts with foreign companies.
Major importing nations are scrambling to adapt. Energy security has emerged as a central foreign-policy concern from Washington to Beijing. Last month, a U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee held hearings on how to cope with nations that use oil as a weapon. Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, secretary-general of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, said last month that the alliance would consider using force if energy-supply lines were threatened, a major broadening of the group's mandate. "As far as oil and gas is concerned, I think NATO could play a role to defend the sea lanes," he told European parliamentarians.
Nice analysis when it comes to demand-side. But their supply-side analysis is real comedy. Oh the mass media struggles to keep a straight face on the supply issue. Why is that? HMMmmm... it wouldn't play too well with the whole geopolitical paradigm of us being the good guys if we just look at energy supply very closely now would it?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')ajor Western oil companies are also struggling to adjust. Ninety percent of the world's untapped conventional oil reserves are in the hands of governments or state-owned oil companies, far more than was the case several decades ago. It doesn't appear that the planet is running out of crude, as proponents of the "peak oil" theory have argued. But some oil experts foresee the big Western oil companies running out of easy-to-tap oil, and most of them are already turning to harder-to-recover reserves.
I can see the Authors of this article talking to each other: Chip - Well, those "Peak Oil" guys are all wrong. We aren't even close to "running out" are we? Well, by golly, we at least got about half left. And that's a lot, ain't it Bhushan?
Bhushan - Yes, our kind and honorable corporations have been losing ground to nationalization of oil. The experts say we have harder-to-recover reserves. Chip, do you see a trend here? We have seen "easy-to-tap" become now "harder-to-recover"... maybe we will see "difficult-as-all-hell-to-pump" next?

Chip - Aw Bhushan, that isn't proper analysis. We're writn' for the Wall Street Journal here. What we need to do is focus on how to get money through the corporations and into the stock market. Get it? WALL STREET Journal Bhushan... Jeez!
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')oyal Dutch Shell PLC and Exxon Mobil Corp. are making gargantuan bets on liquid fuels derived from natural gas. Shell and Total SA of France are extracting fuel from the gooey tar sands of Canada. ENI SpA, the Italian oil major, this month paid $900 million for the right to explore for oil off the shores of Angola. The search for new reserves has become "a nightmare," says Paolo Scaroni, ENI's chief executive officer.
What's that? Chip and Bhushan knock the Peak Oil movement in a way that makes no sense and then they quote a guy who gives solid evidence of the whole Peak Oil position: "The search for new reserves has become 'a nightmare'". Indeed. That is kinda what happens when we get to peak production. Not that we "run out". but getting new reserves online is a "nightmare". Ha ha... but Chip and Bhushan will keep pretending that supply is no problem I suppose. let's see..
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')il accounts for 98 percent of the fuel used by the world's cars, trucks and planes. With new crude supplies lagging behind demand growth, a new energy economy is emerging in which a mosaic of other fuels will supplement crude, some energy experts contend. "Bio-diesel," a specially processed vegetable oil that is often mixed with petroleum, and clean-burning liquids squeezed from natural gas are among the resources that will become essential for keeping the world humming, they argue.
A ha... so we are to believe that Oil today accounts for 98 percent of the fuel used in transport, but we can somehow put something other than oil into the transport industry? Like what? Mac Donald's vegetable waste and natural gas liquids? Where does one start ripping into these clowns? "... essential for keeping the world humming". Who could say such a thing? Are we in the twilight zone now? Does bio-diesel come from industrial farming or no? Does industrial farming have a prayer with bio-diesel? Are we going to mine, fabricate, assemble, transport and service all of that capital equipment on the power of squeezed soybeans? And then still have enough left over to plant, spray, irrigate, harvest, store, process, transport, cook and eat? Ha ha ha... Chip and Bhushan aren't only clowns, they are magicians too! Soybeans for "keeping the world humming". I like that.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '&')quot;The transition away from oil may take 20 or 30 years, but it has to start now," says Joseph Stanislaw, an energy adviser at Deloitte & Touche USA LLP.
Brilliant! Now that we are at Peak Production, it takes an energy adviser at Deloitte & Touche to tell us that we gotta "start now" in our transition away from oil. Great! How much did he get paid to figure that one out?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')rude has tripled in price since 2002 due to swelling demand, supply outages and slow growth in output. Oil hit a record of $75.17 a barrel in April, and Tuesday settled at $68.56, down $1.80. Wealthy industrial nations have weathered oil crises before. A wave of shocks in the 1970s and 1980s, including oil-field nationalizations and the 1973 Arab oil embargo, sent prices soaring and tilted power toward exporting nations. But rich Western nations stayed in the driver's seat because they were the main consumers of exports. And the U.S. and Europe had vast and proven oil reserves in Alaska and the North Sea, which they exploited when developing-world suppliers refused to cooperate.

Three decades later, the Western world no longer has such leverage. Crude-oil production by nations who aren't members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries is widely expected to peak around 2010. Outside of Russia and the Middle East, the biggest opportunities today are in deep waters off politically volatile Africa and in the Caspian Sea, not in the West.

The International Energy Agency, the industrialized world's energy-market watchdog, has forecast that world oil demand will rise 37 percent by 2030, to 115 million barrels a day from about 85 million today. But the oil-producing nations with the greatest pumping potential either will not or cannot tap their resources sufficiently to meet those projections.

Ah, interesting question - "...will not or cannot tap their resources sufficiently to meet [demand."] So which is it, "will not" or "cannot"? Hmmm? Any guesses out there in Wall Street?
Hint #1 - Oil is finite or infinite?
Hint #2 - Earth is a closed system or open?
Hint #3 - Oh nevermind. Just keep writing for your corporate overlords and enjoy your meaningless lives. Idiots, all of them! Is there a grownup in the house please? We on earth need a grownup over here. Please send one quickly, thank you.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he Paris-based IEA has long expected the Saudis, who now supply about nine million barrels a day, to contribute 18 million to 20 million barrels a day toward that figure. In an interview, however, Mr. Naimi suggested that the Saudis are unlikely to go much beyond 15 million barrels due to concerns about depleting reserves too fast and damaging fields by pumping too quickly. Other suppliers, including Mexico and Kuwait, also appear unwilling or unable to meet the expectations of Western planners.
But, but... I don't understand. Mr. Naimi sir, I was grew up being fed by the forever growth idea that we will just let the market handle stuff like this. Isn't that your understanding out there at the good 'ol IEA? I mean, surely with oil jumping beyond 70 to 100 dollars a barrel at the supply-demand gap, there will be plenty of innovations out there in the marketplace right? Can't we just let the market deliver us alternatives and let this whole Peak Oil misunderstanding take care of itself?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')PEC members have expressed concern that demand projections such as the IEA's may be overstated. The IEA has concluded that because OPEC does not appear to be investing as much in production as expected, global oil supplies probably won't reach the agency's 115-million-barrel target for 2030. "We are likely to see higher prices for years to come," says Fatih Birol, the IEA's chief economist.
Ha, so the poor guys are OPEC led by Saudi Arabia are out there with spigots full blast, but that's not enough. They also have to be made stooges in front of the western cameras to help "calm the markets" with absurdities. Then, when that's all done, the IEA starts asking them to meet their promised quota by, now get this, investing money. Yeah, into western raider corporations. Go get em IEA! Loot, pillage, burn. Send out the Viking IEA warships to pick up some more energy slaves. We are thirsty out here.

Oh no. I just had a thought. Again, I am reminded that this ain't gonna end good. All the focus is on human conflict issues, a total denial of supply issues. Wall Street Journal, I think you are winning prizes in Hell right now. All the news that's fit to print for the devil's best endgame. The real "ragheads" are the publishers of the Wall Street Journal, because it is a rag of a paper.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'D')emand patterns have also changed markedly. During the 1970s oil crisis, oil consumption was still concentrated in the industrialized West and in the Soviet Union, which produced more than enough for itself and its satellites. Today, the Saudis and their OPEC allies have many more big, attractive markets, starting with India and China.
Well, demand growth is a good thing. That's one way to look at it. I might also say: Demand patterns have changed with the lack of rain in the ancient tropical zone where the Gobi Desert now exists. There are many attractive markets for water in the desert as humans and hoofed animals hover on the edge of existence.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'P')roducing nations also face booming demand at home. Gasoline use in Iran, where the capital city is clogged with cars, is rising by 10 percent a year. Oil demand in the Middle East has risen by 13 percent since 2003, a growth rate nearly as high as China's. The Middle East was consuming 6.1 million barrels a day at the end of 2005, compared with 6.6 million barrels for China. This soaring demand equaled about one-third of the increase in global crude supplies, including from OPEC.

Saudi Arabia, which sits on a quarter of the world's oil reserves, also intends to consume more crude at home. The world's largest oil exporter is building new industries that rely on petroleum in an effort to leverage its primary resource, much as China did when it harnessed its vast labor supply to become a global manufacturing power. Mr. Naimi says one of his biggest goals is to create export-oriented fertilizer and aluminum industries.

Good, Mr. Naimi. Good goal you have. More industrial consumers of oil right there in Saudi Arabia. And what better industrial demand than more fertilizer? That will keep the people numbers rising a bit longer. And then, as Chip and Bhushan have already indicated, we will live on soybean oil for replacement...

... hey wait a minute. Mr. Naimi, will soybean oil get sent to Saudi Arabian fertilizer production facilities when the oil is dry? Let's run this through some calculations Mr. Naimi. Your goal seems a bit Malthusian in the long term, wouldn't you say? Are you ready to explain to your great grandchildren just what your goals are today Mr. Naimi? Hmmmm?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')t Turaif Camp in the Arabian Peninsula's northern desert, state-owned metals giant Ma'aden has dug an open-pit test mine for phosphates, an ingredient in fertilizer. Piles of the white mineral glitter in the sun, sprinkled with tiny fossilized sea creatures. Nearby, workers are digging another mine to excavate bauxite, the raw material of aluminum. These mines are part of a $10 billion project that will include a new coastal city with aluminum and fertilizer factories -- all powered by Saudi's huge reservoirs of heavy crude.
Other oil exporters are using their oil resources in more belligerent ways. Last month, Ecuador expelled Occidental Petroleum Corp. over a contract dispute. Bolivia's president nationalized his country's gas fields, dispatching troops to 53 fields and ordering foreign firms to renegotiate contracts. In April, Venezuela seized fields from Total and ENI.
OK, now it is time to take the gloves off figuratively speaking. Chip and Bhushan should be investigated for criminal negligence and crimes against humanity.

How can they advocate using oil for the development t of new industrial demand at peak supply? OK, I understand that they write for the Wall Street Journal, and as intellectual prostitutes. that is the term used by Journalist insider John Swinton in New York in 1890 to describe people like Chip and Bhushan and we need to start holding these guys accountable.

All the more these guys need to be accountable when they start accusing oil exporters of being "belligerent" when they resist the corporate doomsday machine by nationalizing reserves, ripping up contracts and thumbing their noses at exploitation. In the end, doesn't slowing down the tappers give a marginal additional buffer to the eminent Peak Oil collapse? History will show soon, because we are at Peak production now. Several quotes in this disinformational piece already indicate that quite strongly.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he new supply-demand landscape has left the West increasingly vulnerable. The IEA estimates that the 26 industrial countries that are members of that organization will need to import 85 percent of their oil by 2030, compared to 63 percent today.
Well, are we to assume that the top 26 industrial countries automatically have a right to get that 85 percent? Chip and Bhushan, you are dangerously close to advocating a prison planet and global enslaving system. And if you do advocate that, do you think you will benefit from such a system? Will there be a bigger demand for disinfo journalist sycophants in that age? You are probably right if you think so. Good luck then in your bright future if that's the case.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')his is forcing a rethink of U.S. and European diplomatic and military strategy. For half a century, the energy-security formula had been simple: Protect the oil-supply lines from the Middle East, and the industrialized world would be safe. President Carter codified that thinking in the Carter Doctrine of 1980, which declared Persian Gulf oil a vital national interest and vowed to use military might to defend the region from attack.
When Arab members of OPEC embargoed oil exports in 1973, the West responded by squirreling away strategic stocks of oil for dire emergencies. The oil embargo ultimately fizzled, and the U.S. re-established close ties with Saudi Arabia. After Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, the Saudis swiftly increased production to make up for almost all the oil lost in Iraq and Kuwait. They did the same before and during the invasion of Iraq in 2003.

But the Middle East is no longer the shock absorber it once was. Last fall, when hurricanes devastated U.S. oil facilities in the Gulf of Mexico, the Saudis already were pumping about as much as they could. The U.S. and its allies orchestrated a release of strategic stockpiles to stave off shortages.
Regions outside the Persian Gulf now are capable of supplementing Western supplies. But that means the West must build alliances and deploy ships and troops to protect modest supply routes as far afield as the Caspian Sea, the Andean region of South America and West Africa. Now every oil field matters.
Good history telling and then we arrive at the phrase: "Now every oil field matters." Kinda like they say today in the once tropical zones where the now Gobi Desert resides: "Now every water well matters." If it isn't Peak Oil, then what is it?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he consequences were clear at a recent NATO conference on energy security in Prague. Addressing NATO officials and oil executives, U.S. Air Force Gen. Charles Wald, at the time the U.S. military's deputy commander for Europe and Africa, blasted the industry for what he saw as lax security around the world. He ticked off crucial pipelines and energy-transportation choke points in his theater. Such vulnerable points include the Oresund Strait between Sweden and Denmark and a pipeline running out of Chad, a small producer.
Go get 'em Her General Wald! You go and fix that Oresund Straight between Sweden and Denmark big fella. That's the way to secure our oil from those radical Swedes.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he energy-security model laid out by President Carter needs an update, said Gen. Wald, who has since stepped down from his post and is set to retire in July. "You just can't call 1-800-dial-the-military," he said. "The oil companies themselves have to start stepping up." During a break in the session, footage of burning oil facilities flashed across the conference hall's screen as the 1960s tune "Eve of Destruction" blared.
But General Wald, you CAN dial the military. That's just what we do, don't we?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')fficials in Iran and Venezuela have warned they could disrupt oil supplies if threatened by the U.S. In January, Russia briefly shut off natural-gas supplies to Ukraine, which many observers read as a political warning to independent-minded Kiev.
Those Bastards! How dare they turn off their spigots just because we threaten to kill their leaders and bomb their countries and forbid them from developing nuclear power and spread depleted uranium dust into their countries from our radioactive munitions. How dare they, slaves of the global elite, resist us! Don't they know who is boss? Go tell it like it is Chip and Bhushan! The natives are restless, eh? We need to exert a little "attitude adjustment" on those resistors.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '&')quot;The power of (energy) coercion is really equivalent to a military attack," says Richard Lugar, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The Indiana Republican says his stance on energy security hardened in August after a diplomatic mission to North Africa. He spent a night in Libya at Tripoli's gleaming Corinthia Bab Africa Hotel, where he saw Chinese, Indian and Western oil-company executives vying for business in the country oil fields, which had been closed to U.S. oil companies for two decades before the U.S. lifted economic sanctions in 2004.

Mr. Lugar is now pushing for a treaty with China and India that would spell out ways for the three nations -- all large consumers of oil -- to cooperate rather than compete in the event of a supply shock. In today's energy world, he said, natural resources "are strategic weapons."
That's right Herr Honorable Lugar! And if they attack us first, by not selling us all the oil we want, when we want, at the price we want, and how we want it with the big investments into our stock market and all that, well then we need to retaliate don't we? And what better way to retaliate than to get together all of the top users of energy and spray their whole country with depleted uranium? Dear Herr Lugar Honorable Sir, can I be your armchair General? I just love to exploit people in the name of honor and justice. And our constituency will believe us to be heroes won't they? Best of both world's isn't it? All the wealth and all the glory, none of the risk. The only problem is that damn conscience. However, I found this great new religion that is helping me a lot with my conscience. "Do as thou wilt" is the only one commandment of Satanism Herr Lugar. Won't you join me at the next sacrifice? I'm just sure that you will like it. You might make Dark Deacon Lordship in a year if you get the US to attack another innocent country.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')estern oil giants are racing to adjust. Ever since Edwin Drake started drilling for oil in Pennsylvania in 1859, launching the modern petroleum age, oilmen have dreamed up technologies to coax more crude from the ground. Goldman Sachs estimates the industry will spend $660 billion over the next six years on big projects. Just 13 percent of the oil expected from these efforts will come from "traditional" extraction, the firm said. The rest will involve more-complex technology or resources formerly deemed too costly to extract.
Again, the trends. Whereas everything used to be traditional extraction, now we have fallen to "just 13 percent". Anyone over there at the Wall Street Journal Forecasting desk see a trend? Hmmm? Bozos, all of them!
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')hell, for instance, is spending heavily on projects that have more in common with mining operations than with the exploration efforts of the previous century. It recently paid $400 million for rights to explore for oil buried deep in Alberta. Companies have rushed to the region to mine its oil sands, a tar-like muck that requires expensive excavation and processing. Shell says it doesn't yet have commercially proven technology to get at the sands, but considers it a risk worth taking.
"I don't know how long exploration will continue to be a major play" for big oil companies, "but 50 years from now it will be that much more difficult than it is today," says Malcolm Brinded, Shell's head of exploration. "You want to get in there now to get access to the best acreage and drill the best wells. You don't want to hang back in a situation like this."
Well there you go again, another insider spells it all out for us. "but 50 years from now it will be that much more difficult." Isn't that a kinda significant indicator of Peak Oil right there?

But no! Chip and Bhushan advocate the big corporate solution, which is to get into all of those helpless countries that have easy to access reserves and plunder them outright. What is good for Wall Street is good for Chip and Bhushan. Never mind the steeper cliff that would result if the big money gets their way. Chip and Bhushan don't pay any attention to those lowly concerns of smaller people. By the time we get to that point, human slavery will be phased in and Chip and Bhushan will be out there talking about how the stock market would be higher if only the little people would cooperate more and give more of their human energy to the big corporations. Isn't that about the size of it?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')il surpassed coal as the dominant source of energy early in the 20th century, and was essential to the development of aviation and motorized transport. The world now appears to be in the first stage of a bumpy transition to a system in which oil, while still the economy's most important fuel, will no longer so thoroughly dominate it.
Very artistically spoken. How about a little adjustment to the last sentence for the sake of clarity. "The world now appears to be in the first stage of a bumpy transition to a system in which oil will be replaced by human slavery to keep disinfo journalists employed."
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')enry Groppe, the 80-year-old founder of a Houston-based energy-consulting firm, has watched the industry morph for half a century. He divides oil history into three epochs. The first was a 100-year era of plenty and U.S. control that lasted until 1970, when prices averaged $13 a barrel in 2004 dollars. The second, an era of transition and rising OPEC influence, lasted until 2004 and saw prices average $36 a barrel over that period.

The current era -- just two years old by Mr. Groppe's reckoning -- looks to be a messy one, with more potential for supply shocks and clashing over resources. Prices are likely to stay volatile as consumers try to outbid each other for constrained and vulnerable flows of crude. Rising prices tend to act as a rationing device, knocking some consumers out of the market altogether. "We have entered the era of scarcity and price rationing," Mr. Groppe says.
Chip, Bhushan, Your article is a mess guys. I kindly draw your attention to your previous statement up top where you say "It doesn't appear that the planet is running out of crude, as proponents of the "peak oil" theory have argued. "

Then you go on to argue against national ownership of energy supplies, favoring Wall Street Corporation exploitation by any means, even going so far as to quote Herr Lugar's position of naked aggression against any country that doesn't relinquish natural resources on his terms.

So we arrive here at your conclusion where you quote a Mr. Groppe who basically contradicts what you said about the planet not running out of oil. All the disinfo that's fit to print, isn't that about the size of it guys? Finally, I would like to take you on a journey beyond the "current era" described by Mr. Groppe which envisions an "era of scarcity and price rationing". OK, so what is the next era then?

We will look out for your next excellent article Chip and Bhushan! The next era of human slavery. What will you call that one? Maybe "Power shifts to Countries with human reserves"? Ha ha ha... you sycophant losers!

Original article taken from here--->>>
Tate Ulsaker pretends to be an informed jester for peace and humanity.
Additional failures of Tate can be found in real time at his newsgroup here - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ArkBuilders_org/
Last edited by Ferretlover on Sat 21 Mar 2009, 19:15:06, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: Merged with THE Slavery Thread.
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Re: Wall Street Journal Promotes Slavery by Corporate Elite

Postby eXpat » Wed 28 Jun 2006, 05:35:28

Amen
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Re: Wall Street Journal Promotes Slavery by Corporate Elite

Postby Gridlock » Wed 28 Jun 2006, 05:46:12

Brilliant!
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Re: Wall Street Journal Promotes Slavery by Corporate Elite

Postby Doly » Wed 28 Jun 2006, 06:24:41

Somebody tell these guys that peak oil isn't running out of oil, it's running out of cheap oil. They already got that we're running out of cheap oil. All they need to learn now is the proper name for it.
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