by malcomatic_51 » Tue 26 Dec 2006, 08:56:27
I work in an energy company, but hardly anyone else has heard of PO - not even amongst the design engineers. There is one other engineer who is well aware of it, but he's generally into anything anti-American and conspiracy theory, so he's coming at it from that side. Even he still drives around in an SUV.
There are people who know about it and it shocks them enough to realise they are looking out into an ephemeral standard of living every morning. These people are very rare, because those who can think for themselves always are.
There are those who know about PO, but it does not worry them very much because it is not a sanctioned belief. There must be a term in the psychology of crowds for a state in which people are perfectly aware of a threat but it has not emotionally connected to their survival instincts, because the "Chief" has not yet made a gesture that they should be afraid. Several of my family are like this. Interestingly, my uncle is a (retired) distinguished oil geologist in Western Canada, and I now recall that for many years he has reminded us that all we enjoy is based on cheap oil. He never broached the topic of a peak. When I last spoke to him in the Spring I raised it with him, and it was pretty clear he's "one of us", a peak pessimist, but I could not engage him in any conversation on the topic. I think he is operating what George Orwell called "Crimestop", that is, the instinctive ability to prevent oneself from thoughts that are a threat to the status quo, or would lead to disturbing introspections.
My department manager at work also knows about PO, but again, it has not sunk in.
This second group of people are much commoner than the first, but still rare. I doubt they would amount to 0.1% of the population.
As for the remainder, they are the mindless herd who are flung about in the storms of life as they haven't the insight to step around trouble. Many of them are perfectly intelligent people and ought to be able to work it out for themselves. But their minds are engaged in figuring a loan for the next Merc/Porsche/Range Rover, wangling a promotion at work and getting a place in the country. That is probably the real problem, our society is so self-absorbing and captivating to those who choose to compete in it that the natural world around our human play-pen just does not register.
Until that natural world intrudes in a major way into the play-pen.