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PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

The Future Is Now

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General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby mmasters » Mon 06 Aug 2007, 14:45:29

Controlling resources along with the media brainwashing machine is hard to beat. My vote goes for high tech feudalism.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby Alcassin » Mon 06 Aug 2007, 14:51:01

If change wouldn't be possible any revolution couldn't succeed. I remeber one thing from history - when depression hits hard people are far more radical, and nobody can predict what will happen next.

In recent history - Cochabamba or Zapatistas are just quite good examples. During Great Depression in '30 there was a clash of ideologies around Europe. It depends how the powers will try to deal with declining economy.

Seriously, I'm not so sure what will happen next - there are many factors still to be put in equasion - like how big is depletion rate, what will survive after recession etc.

I've got some scenarios, and slavery is not excluded.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby Heineken » Mon 06 Aug 2007, 17:25:03

One thing I'd bet most of us would agree on: Things will move from bad to worse. Probably much worse.

The only question is the exact shape "worse" will take.

It's very depressing.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby NotMyBlood » Mon 06 Aug 2007, 17:43:39

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'O')ne thing I'd bet most of us would agree on: Things will move from bad to worse. Probably much worse.

The only question is the exact shape "worse" will take.

It's very depressing.


Things will have to change. In my eyes, I see it as a good thing. And if we could ever "change" on a macro level and realize that it is for the better then the"change" doesnt necesarrily(sp?) have to be "bad". I also think that is just wishfull thinking. To many "winners" in this society. To many cars, roads, cities already built. There is no way we are changing. Not without a fight........

-I would love to be able to get rid of my car. Think of the money you would save.

-I would like to live in a small community and know people by name and face. Slow everything down.
-Live in a world that doesnt place so much value material objects.
-Live in a world that doesnt judge a man by how much money he makes.
-Etc etc etc.....

But it aint happening, not in our lifetimes....
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby Tinman » Mon 06 Aug 2007, 17:45:57

The rich will run hide and hire mercenaries such as blackwater to protect their ASSets.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby Jack » Mon 06 Aug 2007, 19:00:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('skeptik', ''')Intelligent socialised psychopath' would be a better description, or one of the 'Snakes in Suits' as the acknowledged world expert on the subject, Dr. Robert Hare calls them. 'Sociopath' doesn't quite fit.


Hmm. Interesting point. I like it! 8)

I agree with Tinman - the rich will hire mercs, and lots of them.

Right now, there are lots of opportunities for mercs in Iraq - what happens when the military withdraws? Fewer employment opportunities, right?

Now - you have someone making $7500 per month. The party is over, and they're working as a security guard at the shopping mall for a buck over minimum wage. Paris Hilton offers them $2000 per month to protect her. Some will say no...some will say yes.

Now it's true, as gg3 points out, that "wealth" may be defined downward. I'm not at all sure a post-peak world can sustain fab lines for microchips, even at the behest of the wealthiest. But given a choice between a full belly and endless hunger pangs, most would prefer full - and if that's all that being rich means, it will still be worthy of aspiration.

There is, I think, a desire (belief?) that Peak Oil will instantiate some sort of "new deal" for the masses. I think not. I think it will grind them into the dirt. And when they rebel, as they will from time to time, various paramilitary groups, hired by the wealthy, will battle them. Merely a cost of doing business, not unlike a security system.

Would I, under such a scenario, pull the trigger to take out some traitorous rebel as I wrapped myself in a flag? Of course I would. And so would you, dear reader, so would you.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby Tinman » Mon 06 Aug 2007, 20:47:55

there are many examples in history of those in positions of powere and wealth hiring thugs to put down strikes (pinkerton guards for exemple)And protect proporty in times of disater and unrest. Blackwater protecting certain N.O. neighborhoods after Katerina while state and federal law inforcement disarmed American citizens of there firearms.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby Tinman » Mon 06 Aug 2007, 20:54:19

long strory short the game is fixed so the rich and powerful stay at the top of the great human pecking order and that not to many get a chance to join their club figuativly and literally.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby Heineken » Mon 06 Aug 2007, 22:38:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jack', 'I') agree with Tinman - the rich will hire mercs, and lots of them.


And, in your vision, you'll be one of those doing the hiring, right Jack?

So you end up with a society of warlords and their hired thugs. The warlords will do endless battle with one another. Also, they will frequently be offed by their hired thugs. It will tend to be a short life, and a fearful one.

Again, very different from today's experience of being rich.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby Jack » Mon 06 Aug 2007, 23:38:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', '
')And, in your vision, you'll be one of those doing the hiring, right Jack?


No, Heineken. No one with less than $100 million can really be regarded as rich anymore.

I will seek to be a hired thug. I'll enjoy my work. I won't last long - few will - but my passing will be quicker and easier than most. Perhaps, with luck, I'll win a place in Skadhi's dark and frozen halls.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby NotMyBlood » Tue 07 Aug 2007, 00:20:43

well, i wasnt thinking along those lines, although it makes perfect sense.

However, I was thinking of a return to strong Unions backed by the likes of characters like Jimmy Hoffa and Sid Hatfield. A return to collective bargaining, early 20th century style. :):):)
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby Pretorian » Tue 07 Aug 2007, 00:41:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jack', 'I') will seek to be a hired thug. I'll enjoy my work.


Why dont you become one right now Jack? the pay is better and risks are smaller.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby Jack » Tue 07 Aug 2007, 00:58:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pretorian', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jack', 'I') will seek to be a hired thug. I'll enjoy my work.


Why dont you become one right now Jack? the pay is better and risks are smaller.


I enjoy other career options now. And, though I am not rich, neither am I poor. Therefore, I see no reason to seek Skadhi's icy embrace so soon.

Post peak, we might see three classes of people - the wealthy, the serfs, and the thugs. Since I'm not wealthy, that leaves two choices.

How will you choose? The life of a serf is not an easy one - and may be no longer than that of a thug.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby mark » Tue 07 Aug 2007, 08:36:47

Too many here are equating money, having lots of money, as being rich. If I’ve got a billion dollars in the bank, t-bills, stock market, etc, does that make me rich? I don’t think so. Only if gold were the currency of record and one had lots of gold would I consider that person rich.

To be rich in today’s world means, to me, owning productive assets. In a world of uncertainty, where even the currency is uncertain, simply having money, even cash, is no guarantor of being rich.

It is even uncertain what a productive asset would be in a fiat money world when the life blood begins to vanish! That’s why those with assets have the advantage; they simply have more resources to acquire more assets, meaning there’re more likely to stumble on the right asset for changing times. .
Last edited by mark on Tue 07 Aug 2007, 12:08:26, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby Heineken » Tue 07 Aug 2007, 09:12:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jack', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pretorian', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jack', 'I') will seek to be a hired thug. I'll enjoy my work.


Why dont you become one right now Jack? the pay is better and risks are smaller.


I enjoy other career options now. And, though I am not rich, neither am I poor. Therefore, I see no reason to seek Skadhi's icy embrace so soon.

Post peak, we might see three classes of people - the wealthy, the serfs, and the thugs. Since I'm not wealthy, that leaves two choices.

How will you choose? The life of a serf is not an easy one - and may be no longer than that of a thug.


Friend Jack, what direct experience do you have that qualifies you to be a hired thug? Other than sociopathy, of course. :)

The reality of such a route could prove rather frightful. It's a radical departure from your current life of the gym and the croissant. People in such lines of work have a nasty habit of getting their arms and legs chainsawed off.

How would I choose? None of those options, if options they are. I'll choose to disappear, one way or another.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby Jack » Tue 07 Aug 2007, 09:22:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', '
')Friend Jack, what experience do you have that qualifies you to be a hired thug? Other than sociopathy, of course. :)


Oh, I've got a few little tricks up my sleeve that might be of value. But there isn't much point in going into the details, since it might increase the competition for the available slots. 8)
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby Madpaddy » Tue 07 Aug 2007, 10:05:10

There will always be rich people with us but not necessarily the people who are rich now.

A person can get rich today by hitting a small ball accurately with a stick and somehow, society thinks it worthy to reward that person with millions of dollars every year.

In the future, IMO, a person who can hit a human head accurately with a 7.62mm round from 1000+ yards every time will be far better rewarded.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby Madpaddy » Tue 07 Aug 2007, 10:10:33

Mark,

You make excellent points in your last post.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')oo be rich in today’s world means, to me, owning productive assets. In a world of uncertainty, where even the currency is uncertain, simply having money, even cash, is no guarantor of being rich.


I see ownership of land (preferably hundreds of feet above sea level) as being the best bet in the future. This however, will have to be allied to being in a position of political influence. Even the large landowner can just have their property confiscated for the "common good". Influence = Power = Wealth.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby gg3 » Tue 07 Aug 2007, 13:03:49

Re. "wealth."

OK, so let's start with the doctor who lives up in the hills. He owns a house with a half million in equity, has various accounts with another million or two in equity, lives within his means... let's say his net asset worth is about $2 million. He's a millionaire, which makes him conventionally wealthy.

Now the doctor has a gardener, who doesn't own a house but owns his truck and tools, and has some equity in his business, maybe in the range of about $20,000 altogether. He's a deca-thousandaire, if you will.

Now take a look in the stratosphere. A billionaire with let's say $2B in net asset worth.

Who has more in common with whom, we ask...?

Well, the doctor's assets are worth 100x as much as the gardener's. But the billionaire's assets are worth 1,000x as much as the doctor's.

When it comes to tax policies and suchlike, the doctor's interests and the gardener's are more alike than the doctor's and the billionaire's.

---

There's wealth and there's wealth.

Those parasites referred to a few pages back, who buy companies and vivisect them for a trifle, are scum and deserve to be fed to the proverbial fishies, after a trip through the wood chipper feet first. They are producing nothing, they are destroying productive enterprises and livelihoods, and in physics terms they are agents of entropy. Morally they are no better than robbers and looters.

On the other hand there's Bill Gates. Even despite whatever criticism might be raised about monopolistic business practices, the fact is that the guy got his the oldfashioned way, with brains and hard work and a little help from his friends and more brains and more hard work. And now he's giving a good chunk of it back by supporting public health research and applications worldwide, to the tune of billions per year. Gates is the opposite of the pond scum in the preceding paragraph, as is Steve Jobs, as is many a wealthy entrepreneur and competent business manager both large and small: these are people who have produced far more for the world than they have taken for themselves. In physics terms they are agents of syntropy. IMHO they're welcome to the rewards of their efforts.

Wealth, like anything else, is as it does.

Or as I'm fond of saying, money is a tool, it's worth what you build with it.

---

On the other hand, all the Bill Gates Billions in the world, by themselves aren't going to save our collective ass from the climatic alligators: for that it takes the actions of governments, making and enforcing laws, and engaging in international treaties. The treaties and the laws will shape the markets, and thus set the stage for conversion to climate-clean energy sources and powerdown.

Or they won't, at least not in time.

And we'll all die miserable deaths.

There's your more likely future. Cowering in caves near the tropically-warm north and south poles, consoled by the absence of hungry polar bears who perished previously, and starving slowly into stick-figures that would be too meagre to make a meal for a polar bear anyway. Oh happy happy joy joy... and pass the Prozac this way.

---

As for feudalism being more stable because it's been around longer: nope, I'll disagree with that one. Past success is no guarantee of future performance. Feudalism existed for a long period while world population was low and net knowledge was infinitesimal compared to the present.

Increasing knowledge is mutually reinforcing with representative democracy and free & fair markets. OTOH in America at present, 30% of the population believes humans had dinosaurs as pets or something similar. Hmm.

---

Re. the UK, poverty = not having a TV in every room. You know what's up with that one, don't you? The new TVs will contain little webcams. Everyone will have to have one in every room. Now you'll be photographed on average 300x a day whlist out and about, and another 300x a day whilst going about your business at home. Yes, and the working classes will want their proof-of-prosperity in every room too, all the better for their "betters" to head off any unrest at the pass.

Here's to HRH the Prince of Wales, may he accede to the throne before all has been lost to the prying eyes and flying spies. May he, and Al Gore as US President, jointly rescue the English-speaking world from the brink of climate catastrophe, and thereby give the rest of the world just a little more wiggle room to rescue itself before our collective goose is cooked like an egg frying on a southern summer sidewalk.
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Re: A MORE LIKELY FUTURE

Unread postby Heineken » Tue 07 Aug 2007, 13:45:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Madpaddy', 'I') see ownership of land (preferably hundreds of feet above sea level) as being the best bet in the future. This however, will have to be allied to being in a position of political influence. Even the large landowner can just have their property confiscated for the "common good". Influence = Power = Wealth.


Land is the only thing I've ever really been interested in owning, because I see it as one of the few things of truly enduring value.

People with giant houses on tiny lots---they have nothing but a troublesome toy.

Yes, anything can be taken away from you at any time. By illness, death, war, and Big Brother.

In the meantime, I stomp around on my private little country. Two of 'em, actually, 75 miles apart. Both above 500 feet in elevation, so safe from rising sea levels for a good while.
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