by Pops » Mon 29 Oct 2007, 15:01:14
It is surprising how fast time goes by and how fast things seem to change. And even more surprising to me is how a person such as myself can become as involved in one fashion or another to folks they will never meet.
Four years ago I was quite the doomer and I posted to several now defunct PO related websites in addition to this one in an effort to jump start conversation. Now oil is almost $100bbl, food is fuel, hybrids are the rage, Green is coming back into fashion and I have heard the term Peak Oil in MSM as well as in advertising - however circumspectly.
The best change in the site has been the creation of specific forums. The ability to view the areas you are interested in without the distraction of stuff you care little about has been a boon. Even when there were only a dozen regular posters, each had a specific interest, whether forecasts, news, industry trends, survivalism or whatever.
There really has been little change in member’s attitudes in my mind aside from a somewhat less courteous attitude overall but I guess that is to be expected. Right from the beginning there were Mad Max’ers, Rambos, Cassandras, Chick-Littles, Pollyannas and left-over Hippies; now there are simply more people with a wider spectrum of stridency.
The one regret I do have is that many folks who have contributed meaningful expertise in a variety of subjects helpful to others looking for those resources feel the site is too slanted towards TEOTW instead of Changing The World and have stopped posting.
Having said that, I do want to thank Dan for his open-mindedness to let this site grow into the open forum it has become even though I know he had misgivings about letting nut-job, run-for-the-hills, Changing The World types like me in the conversation with the more academic analysts. The result of course is a board with a more diverse collection of experts, resources and opinions relating to peak energy (and lots of other things) than any other.
Thanks Dan.
And thanks as well to Aaron, overweight and hairy though he is, for riding herd on a bunch of dedicated and well meaning but opinionated and sometimes unruly volunteers and of course for keeping the bytes flowing.
Or is it bits?
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)