Hi there,
Here are a bunch of responses all rolled into one post:
Yes, resource depletion is absolutely a symptom.
It sounds like you've watched "What a Way to Go: Life at the End of Empire" or read Daniel Quinn's "Ishamel" triology.
The root problem is bigger, much bigger.
http://valuesystem.livejournal.com/29314.html
http://valuesystem.livejournal.com/27244.html
By the way, I am Aaron Wissner, "the person in the article".
I believe what you are referring to as "religion" is commonly known as a "paradigm shift", i.e., a new way of looking at the world brought about by the understanding of one previously unknown yet important bit of information.
That oil is a limited, finite, non-renewable resource is as much of a fact as that we breath air. It is fine to get all metaphysical and philosophical about it, but reality is here all the same.
On the purpose of the article, I think this rebadge from the WSJ sums it up best...
<b>Preparing for the Worst Oil Shock</b>
Troubled by the theory that the world's oil production is about to peak, thousands of people are spurning cars, buying local produce and working from their homes as they gird for the looming crunch.
<i>From the WSJ Online Home Page, Jan. 27, 2008</i>
I'm still working on that trust for Matt...
I wouldn't mind having a solar oven. Those can be used while camping as well, right?
Great "carotid artery" example: I'll try to remember that one.
On moving...
We looked at some land about 5-miles east of Lake Michigan, north of Muskegon. Good wind, good water, tolerable soil, not too far from a freeway, but not too close either, north of all the major population centers. We found one really nice wooded 40 acre spot, but it was way beyond our price range, and since we are both currently NOT willing to go back into debt, we're going to have to wait until our savings grows. With a lot of luck, the major badness won't happen for a couple years yet. A lot of luck.
Currently, I'm most interested in trying to convince my mom and dad to give us a fraction of their 80 acres, so we could build the zero-energy house, and be close to family, and so the baby could grow up knowing his grandparents. Again, good water (about 10 feet down in sand), 5 miles from the east shore of Lake Michigan, away from population centers... but the soil type is really poor; can't grow much other than apple trees, pear trees, and asparagus... For a couple of non-farmers, that is the probably the biggest drawback of this plan.
By the by, for more reflection on the article, I just updated:
http://valuesystem.livejournal.com/29855.html
Thanks again for the interesting discussion.
-- Aaron Wissner