I'm new to peak oil, and I've found the discussion threads I've read extremely interesting and informative.
One thing I've noticed in a few of the threads I've read is a lot of "us/them" language or thinking, and I thought I'd ask about it.
There seems to be a dichotomy constructed in many of the conversations I read on this website. To simplify (grossly, and please forgive my ignorance): On one side there seems to be the "peak oilers" -- people who have an excellent grasp of these very complex issues (A Quick Aside: What sort of socio-economic and educational background do you think is required to participate in these kinds of discussions? I wonder if some people are inadvertently excluded from participating in these discussions.) On the other "side", I get a picture of people who are "ignorant" "sellouts": those who have lots of credit card debt, big mortgages, drive SUVs, etc. The list can go on.
This us/them dichotomy seems to pervade a lot of the discourse surounding peak oil, and I find it very disturbing how it echos the neoliberal individualism of the very political, economic, and ideological systems I thougth we were here to critique!
I want to live a more sustainable lifestyle, but I don't want to morally regulate others, either.
I'm not advocating for more individualism (HELL no), and I'm not advocating for ignoring our neighbors and fellow citizens and the damaging lifestyles we in the industrialized world take for granted. I guess I just wanted to somehow ask how community, teaching, and social/environmental accountability can be introduced into our dialogues, as oppsed to, say, comparing my "good" choices to the "sellouts" next door.
It seems as though the us/them language has the potential to create a climate of distrust, superiorty, and incites us to patrol the borders between our own "goodness" and the moral "badness" of "others" (even, ironically, when we're speaking on the behalf of disadvantaged people). How do we shift the discussion to social, as opposed to individual, change, in terms of how we think about our neighbors, friends, strangers, etc.?
I would like to think about how I can make these peak oil issues speak to people in ways that will engage them, as opposed to alienate them. What does peak oil mean to the woman I sit beside on the bus everyday, who is a single mom with three kids and barely gets by working part time at McDonalds? For that matter, how can I be committed to a more sustainable lifestyle and live with the fact that I have a mortgage, student loan debts, and that I occasionally drive my car. I dont want my accountability to turn to judgement and then turn to paralyzing guilt and fear. It doesn't seem like the best way to form fruitful relaitonships.
What kind of system does us/them language allow for? What kind of values allow for and sustain this way of thinking? When I think of the black and white, us/them language, I think of George Bush "you're either with me or against me" finger-pointing mentality. And it disturbs me.
I'm sorry if this thread is completely irrelevant and/or ignorant. This website is a fantastic way to create some dialogue and political change. It felt like an important point to address.






