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THE S*** Hits the Fan (TSHTF) Thread (merged)

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

Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby MattSavinar » Sun 06 May 2007, 12:46:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pretorian', 'B')efore anything happens in USA/EU, you will see tshtf on many overpopulated independent islands who cant feed themselves & live off tourism/IMF. Just look closely at Fiji, Mauritius, Jamaica, Barbados and such. they will be first in the row. So chill out.

I totally agree. I say everybody chill out till the housing bubble pops.
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby Ibon » Sun 06 May 2007, 13:15:49

The interdependency amongst the elite, among corporations and governmets to keep the plates spinning for as long as possible is well understood and they will find increasingly desperate ways to prevent chaos and scenarios that lead us toward collapse. I think the area to focus on is what are the tipping points that will cause countries to abandon cooperation and go for unilateral survival.

Certainly the US invasion of Iraq will be viewed in hindsight as the opening act. What will follow?

My crystal ball is clouded at the moment. For example, would rationing of fuel allow the elite to keep afloat corporate globalization and keep the elite in power. THis idea which politically today seems unpalatable may end up being the only option available for the elite to prevent all out economic melt down.

So I see cooperation being imposed by geology also becoming a force once the alternative of increasing unilateral policies will be far more threatening to the elites in power. A Clinton type Democrat elected in the US will work toward this end. I don't even know if that's necessarily a good thing!

Maintaining control and power will trump all existing idealogies. Never underestimate the concessions the elite and corporations will be prepared to make to not lose their hegemony.

This game could go on for a long time yet. I don't see anything major threatening this on the short term horizon. You may still have your 5 or 10 years. I would even wager on that being the case
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby Sheb » Sun 06 May 2007, 13:54:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('KingM', 'W')asn't 2007 the year of the crash according to the biggest doomers on the site? Actually, wasn't it 2006, and before that, 2005?

You tell us, was it? I hate to say it, but the crash could have started already. Unless you define global peak oil crisis by when it hits the US.
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby Twilight » Sun 06 May 2007, 14:04:39

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sheb', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('KingM', 'W')asn't 2007 the year of the crash according to the biggest doomers on the site? Actually, wasn't it 2006, and before that, 2005?
You tell us, was it? I hate to say it, but the crash could have started already. Unless you define global peak oil crisis by when it hits the US.

I agree, and I was going to say... Why should the effects strike every country in the world simultaneously? The shit has been hitting the fan all decade. It hit the fan in the UK in 2000, you could say that was the first bowel movement. I doubt Nigerians are still debating the date of the energy crisis. When does it hit the US? Is that date more significant than when it hits India or China? It will be your turn eventually, don't worry.
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby mel1962 » Sun 06 May 2007, 15:13:35

I believe we are seeing the beginning of the production plateau if you look at the monthly EIA data for world oil production it is flat lined! :shock: The current gas crisis is caused in part by the peaking of sweet crude and the inability of our refineries to run on the sour. Not only prices are going up, but supplies are very low for the upcoming driving season.

I expect higher prices, gas lines and shortages within weeks! :o I hope that I am wrong, but I believe we have entered a new era that won't be recognized by the mainstream media for awhile! :roll: Keep your power dry, your gas tank full and hope for the best but prepare for the worst! [smilie=eusa_pray.gif]
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby PraiseDoom » Sun 06 May 2007, 16:52:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('KingM', 'W')asn't 2007 the year of the crash according to the biggest doomers on the site? Actually, wasn't it 2006, and before that, 2005?

An interesting fact check of any group on as free form and self reinforcing organization such as an internet bulletin board is to scroll back into the archives and see what has changed in the "group think" since the beginning. The archives around here go back perhaps 3 years, and even within such a limited timeframe the consistency with which the can continues to get kicked down the road is nothing short of amazing.

What is they say, sit in one place long enough, and the entire world will pass you by? The possibility exists that the same concept will apply around here...10 years from now....which would put PO some 12 years in the past, the same people will be saying the same thing about the natural gas powered world which has sprung up around them in the interim. I'm still betting on the big DieOff happening like its supposed to, but the further we get from Peak, the crankier I get about how long its all taking.
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby Ibon » Sun 06 May 2007, 16:59:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PraiseDoom', 'A')n interesting fact check of any group on as free form and self reinforcing organization such as an internet bulletin board is to scroll back into the archives and see what has changed in the "group think" since the beginning. The archives around here go back perhaps 3 years, and even within such a limited timeframe the consistency with which the can continues to get kicked down the road is nothing short of amazing.
What is they say, sit in one place long enough, and the entire world will pass you by? The possibility exists that the same concept will apply around here 10 years from now which would put PO some 12 years in the past, the same people will be saying the same thing about the natural gas powered world which has sprung up around them in the interim. I'm still betting on the big DieOff happening like its supposed to, but the further we get from Peak, the crankier I get about how long its all taking.

Do you realize you are only the slightest shade of color different from a rapture believing fundamentalist christian, both weary of this degenerate world sharing in a belief that a mighty hand will come and sweep away the detritus in vindication of your beliefs. Whether from the hand of god or the force of geology and nature it is worth exploring from where this death wish comes, no?
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby NoLogos » Sun 06 May 2007, 17:25:43

Until you can define *exactly* what you mean my TSHTF, how will you know? I think we are all frogs in warming water, not really noticing the slow deterioration of our environment, the increasingly rapid change to fascism in our gov't, and our declining living standards. For me, peak oil has hit already. I hope my garden does well this year!
What else could you call it? The dollar has declined 40% in six years, forclosures are at a "historic high" (higher than during the Great Depression), and inflation is ramping up along with gas prices. TPTB are trying to keep everything from crashing, imho. A slow squeeze of the population is acceptable to them.
The era of cheap oil is over, and from now on oil will be cheap only to those rich enough to afford it.
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby MattSavinar » Sun 06 May 2007, 17:38:12

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('NoLogos', 'U')ntil you can define *exactly* what you mean my TSHTF, how will you know?

A major U.S. city under water and $500 billion spent on an oil war = TSHTF. I'm sure we have plenty of time before any thing like that happens though . . . .
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby roccman » Sun 06 May 2007, 19:21:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '"')Do you realize you are only the slightest shade of color different from a rapture believing fundamentalist christian, both weary of this degenerate world sharing in a belief that a mighty hand will come and sweep away the detritus in vindication of your beliefs. Whether from the hand of god or the force of geology and nature it is worth exploring from where this death wish comes, no?"

POST OF THE DECADE!!! EXCELLENT!!
In my mind - all the mad maxes (me being one) and all the little houses on the prarie want to see a reshuffling of the deck in hopes of a better hand. Oh we kick around living sustainably...community building ...cooperation ...yeah right.

The self proclaimed alpha males and alpha females want to be just that in the post PO world...kings and queens of thier own little gardens. But to have the prize - the deck must be reshuffled because the elites currently have the best seats. It cannot be any other way.
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby Tyler_JC » Sun 06 May 2007, 19:48:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MattSavinar', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('NoLogos', 'U')ntil you can define *exactly* what you mean my TSHTF, how will you know?
A major U.S. city under water and $500 billion spent on an oil war = TSHTF. I'm sure we have plenty of time before any thing like that happens though . . . .

In my humble opinion, you can't have TSHTF without awareness. link
Image
Image
I tend to use the above graphics to depict my predictions for the future. That website provides a fairly plausible scenario.
"www.peakoil.com is the Myspace of the Apocalypse."
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby gg3 » Sun 06 May 2007, 22:49:00

The TSHTF moment occurs for each person when they or someone in their close circle of friends and family find that they can't get one or more basic necessities. It could be foreclosures, it could be bare shelves in supermarkets, it could be the gas station runs out of fuel just before they get to the head of a block-long gas line, or it could be someone they know coming back from Iraq with a flag draped across their coffin.

As for the culture of apocalypse:
I was giving this some thought recently, about how all the irrationalists (people who value "the next world" more than "this world") seem to be in agreement that apocalypse is around the corner. For Messianic Jews it's the coming of the Messiah, for apocalyptic Christians it's the Second Coming, and for Muslims it's the Mahdi. Hinduism has the Kali Yuga (the Age of Kali, the god of destruction and creation) but so far that hasn't figured large in Western news. Buddhism doesn't seem to have its own equivalent, though perhaps some of its local sects do, and the same case applies to Wicca and various neopaganisms.

But of course us rationalists (people who value "this world" equally or moreso than the "next world") don't indulge in that sort of thing. Except for PO and global warming. The difference being that we have testable hypotheses and empirical facts to back us up: things that can be measured concretely rather than taken on faith alone.

So at this point we have a very substantial plurality of the human race looking forward to various versions of a global reboot & reformat. There is a subtle difference between believing that a crisis is looming but can be overcome, and believing that a crisis is looming but cannot be overcome.

In WW2, the peoples of the UK, the US, and the USSR, apparently were quite convinced that they would eventually prevail against the Axis. On the other hand, Poland was hit more or less by surprise, Holland was occupied with little chance to fight, and France was somewhere between Poland/Holland and UK/US/USSR.

The Allies fought like hell and eventually prevailed. In Poland and Holland (and presumably other occupied lands), subtle forms of resistance were the norm: personal survival largely by keeping oneself hidden, and cooperation by helping others for example Jews who otherwise would have been deported to the camps. France had the Resistance, which today would be called an organized insurgency.

It would have been obvious madness for a country such as Holland to consider engaging the Wehrmacht in a full-on military confrontation, because the power mismatch was so extreme. Better in that case to hunker down and get by until the storm had passed.

The obvious lesson here is, do what you can with what you have. And no matter what else, you still have free will. Today the consensus worst-case scenario is overshoot & collapse followed by dieoff, followed by rebuilding at an earlier level of technology and lower level of population. (Worse scenarios, such as a last-gasp spasm of full-scale nuclear war, are not consensus even among doomers.)

Generation X and younger will be around for the worst of the crash phase. Perhaps Generation Z will be alive when the rebuilding begins. I for one am not willing to accept the hypothesis that humans have devolved so far since WW2 that they have lost their free will and their will to build and to fight.

The key question should always be, What can each of us do with what we have?
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby Kristen » Sun 06 May 2007, 23:05:47

I still believe this will be a slower process. The standard of living has declined yes, bit our stoplights and street lamps are still humming alive. Imagine how much energy we could save if we shut off all them.

There's been a surge of advertisements about providing the energy we need by the national oil and gas industry. This I consider to be a warning because more and more people are beggining to sense that something isn't right. I see peak oil becoming more mainstream. People have stopped telling themselves gas prices are going to come down. I hope a total collapse is later than sooner.
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby TWilliam » Sun 06 May 2007, 23:43:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Fredrik', 'F')act8: Global food production may enter permanent decline because of GCC and impending shortages of fertilizers and pesticides, triggering a world-wide famine.

Fact 8b: $this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Unless someone or something stops it soon, the mysterious killer that is wiping out many of the nation's honeybees could have a devastating effect on America's dinner plate, perhaps even reducing us to a glorified bread-and-water diet.
Honeybees don't just make honey; they pollinate more than 90 of the tastiest flowering crops we have. Among them: apples, nuts, avocados, soybeans, asparagus, broccoli, celery, squash and cucumbers. And lots of the really sweet and tart stuff, too, including citrus fruit, peaches, kiwi, cherries, blueberries, cranberries, strawberries, cantaloupe and other melons. In fact, about one-third of the human diet comes from insect-pollinated plants, and the honeybee is responsible for 80 percent of that pollination, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby Ibon » Mon 07 May 2007, 00:44:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'E')xcept for PO and global warming. The difference being that we have testable hypotheses and empirical facts to back us up: things that can be measured concretely rather than taken on faith alone.

In spite of all these emperical facts at our disposal let's for a moment consider the variables:
1) Human behaviour,
2) Technology advances
3) Lack of accurate data on geology
4) Geopolitical uncertainty
5) Global economic system stability
6) Global warming
7) Disease uncertaintites

It seems that in looking in the crystal ball into the future all these facts seem to offer little of predictive value. I find something inherantly untestable about our current situation.
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby cube » Mon 07 May 2007, 04:56:50

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

Image

I tend to use the above graphics to depict my predictions for the future. That website provides a fairly plausible scenario.
Is that an undulating plateau I see there? :wink:
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby NoLogos » Mon 07 May 2007, 09:55:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MattSavinar', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('NoLogos', 'U')ntil you can define *exactly* what you mean my TSHTF, how will you know?

A major U.S. city under water and $500 billion spent on an oil war = TSHTF. I'm sure we have plenty of time before any thing like that happens though . . . .

:-D :-D :-D :-D Your sarcasm is excellent! New Orleans/Iraq.... lol!
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby SevenTen » Mon 07 May 2007, 10:44:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'E')xcept for PO and global warming. The difference being that we have testable hypotheses and empirical facts to back us up: things that can be measured concretely rather than taken on faith alone.

In spite of all these emperical facts at our disposal let's for a moment consider the variables:

Some of these variables can be defined in terms of other things, like:
1) Human behaviour - a function of stress levels, low stress means easily manageable, high stress means less manageable, extreme stress (as from sudden lack of food and/or water) means barely or unmanageable. Stress levels, in turn, are a function of the environment. Beneficial environment, low stress. Harsh environment, high stress. Suddenly empty belly, extreme stress.

How the environment affects us through stress depends on how well we can manipulate and shape our environment. We manipulate our environment by providing ourselves with enough to eat and drink, a place to sleep, clothes to wear, positive social interaction, and the technology and numerous tools humans need (computers, spades, violins, arrows, pencils, etc.).

If your family is hungry, you are under stress. If you have access to certain rocks, sticks, vegetation, tree sap, and some bird feathers, you can string a bow, fletch some arrows, and go hunting for dinner, low stress. If your family is hungry, and all you know how to do is nuke a frozen dinner, and all the electricity is out, high stress.

Right now, our ability to manipulate our environment is almost exhaustively and exclusively dependent on an increasing flow of cheap energy.

2) Technology advances - a function of the energy and resources available to the phases of research, design, testing, manufacturing, implementation, and distribution, which are resources not being used for agriculture, war, or maintaining a cultural way-of-life.

The less cheap energy used to feed people, the more people will have to work the fields, the less people available to do research. In addition, the overwhelming bulk of our technology, and all of its phases, is geared toward efficient use of fossil fuel energy (eg, cars) instead of efficient use of human energy (eg, bicycles).

3) Lack of accurate data on geology - Yes, this presents a timing problem, but most informed people on this board will agree that peak oil is somewhere between 2005 and 2011, which means TSHTF between 2008 and 2014. Even the far end of the spectrum is not a lot of time.

4) Geopolitical uncertainty - This is a tough one. We're talking about risk of war, risk of betrayal (as in a government reneges on a deal, and money changes hands, but oil and grain do not). But these risks have a lot to do with stress.

5) Global economic system stability - Yes, this also presents a timing problem. It affects, and is affected by, human behavior, technology, and geopolitics.

But at its core, what "the economy" means is the exchange of goods and services between people. Goods are made of or with fossil fuels, services are powered with fossil fuels, people are fed with fossil fuels. Depletion will mean economic contraction, contraction will greatly increase instability.

6) Global warming - This alone has the potential to entirely screw us as a species. But we won't know that until most likely a decade or two down the road. Which, by then, will be entirely too late to take global, concerted action.

7) Disease uncertainties - Disease is mankind's natural predator, and we fight disease with sanitation, cooking our food, waste disposal, and medical care. The success of all of these depends on fossil fuels to pump and heat water, make soap, heat the oven, flush away wastes, visit the doctor, and be prescribed petro-pharmaceuticals. A decline in fossil fuels will result in an increase in disease.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')t seems that in looking in the crystal ball into the future all these facts seem to offer little of predictive value.

Some things can still be seen through the fog. Perhaps your crystal ball needs polishing?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('NoLogos', 'U')ntil you can define *exactly* what you mean my TSHTF, how will you know?

I think, at the heart of it, "when does TSHTF?" has the same meaning to each of us individually.

"When do I and the people I care about/depend on start to really hurt?" Each person's situation is slightly different, each has different demands, different social entrapments/engagements, and each person's definition of "hurt" is also different. So the specific answer will be different for each person, but the general answer is,
"Sooner, rather than later. So prepare now."
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Re: We probably have less than 12-to-18 months before TSHTF

Postby DantesPeak » Mon 07 May 2007, 12:05:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tyler_JC', '.').. See graphic Tyler_JC's post I tend to use the above graphics to depict my predictions for the future. That website provides a fairly plausible scenario.
Is that an undulating plateau I see there? :wink:

Nice graph but the sun should be setting on the right side. :)
It's already over, now it's just a matter of adjusting.
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