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How did this all happen anyway??

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How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby she » Sat 24 May 2008, 19:01:41

Hello,

I am new here--great site.

Can someone tell me when the USA became so dependent on foreign oil? Was it around the same time that exploration here was stopped?? Was it in the 90's ?????

Who was the pres. then??
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby Bas » Sat 24 May 2008, 19:06:45

Carter took the problem of depleting oil reserves seriously, but all good intentions were quickly forgotten under Reagan, especially when the price of oil started dropping again in the mid 80's
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby Pops » Sat 24 May 2008, 20:04:39

I'm not sure who to respond to:

Ibon [ 180 Posts ] Search
sicophiliac [ 38 Posts ] Search
erl [ 4 Posts ] Search
she [ 1 Post ]

Can you help me figure out to whom I should address my reply?
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)
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby BigTex » Sat 24 May 2008, 20:15:03

Pretty slick Pops.

[smilie=cachas.gif]
:)
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby HEADER_RACK » Sat 24 May 2008, 20:18:29

Kinda blows that "I'm new here" right out the water
Nothing is more dangerous than a man with nothing left to lose but has everything left to gain.
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby kokoda » Sat 24 May 2008, 21:32:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Bas', 'C')arter took the problem of depleting oil reserves seriously, but all good intentions were quickly forgotten under Reagan, especially when the price of oil started dropping again in the mid 80's
Carter was the first president to realise the problems of growing energy demand and was taking steps to fix the problem.

I wonder what sort of America would have existed today had he got a second term of office.
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby The_Toecutter » Sat 24 May 2008, 21:35:50

How did we get here?

First, keep the following in mind:
-Our economy relies upon more growth and spending to prosper and has been such for the last 100 years.
-Any solutions to our problems that involve reducing spending by consumers or reducing tax burdens are frowned upon by business and government who are eagre to maximize revenues towards them.
-Our legislation has ben manipulated to accomodate the above two phenomena in our society.
-Most of this growth has not benefited the average person, but instead the super rich. Since the 1970s, productivity per capita in the U.S. has doubled, but real wages adjusted for inflation have decreased. It now takes families with two parents working to have the same living standard as a family in the 1960s with a single parent working. Worldwide, the top 1% richest now own 40% of the world's wealth and account for over 30% of the world's resource consumption. The bottom 90% accounts for less than 30% of the world's resource consumption and still includes half the world's middle class and many Americans.

-Know the following facts:
-Automobiles account for over 40% of US oil consumption just for their fuel. Their manufacture is considerably less, and roads about 1% of US oil consumption. It takes about 12 barrels of oil to make a car.
-Air travel in jumbo jets accounts for about 12% of U.S. oil consumption.
-The U.S. military alone consumes more oil than does the entire nation of Greece.

Now understand the following pieces of history in the U.S.:
-Car ownership in the U.S. had plateaued at about 1 car for every 3 persons of driving age in the 1920s because most people didn't need cars. The U.S. had the greatest mass transit system in the world; you could hop on a trolley in the suburbs and go anywhere within your metropolitan area cheaply and conveniently without the costly burdenb of car ownership. Then the depression came, and the oil and auto industry wanted to make money and the U.S. government was wanting Americans to spend more to help re-grow the economy. Solution? The govenrment allowed big oil and big auto to buy up all the mass transit and tear it down to force Americans into auto reliance during the 1940s. This combined with penalizing city dwellers and subsidizing the suburbs post world war two and issuing a propaganda campaign to coerce Americans into buying the 'American Dream' encouraged mass sprawl. Now today, there is more than 1 car for each driving age person in the U.S. and transportation is difficult in most areas without a car and impossible in many areas without it.

-During the 1930s, industrial hemp became viable for replacing crude oil for many applications such as petrochemicals, medicines, textiles, and paper. Many industries lobbied to get the war on drugs started to preserve their interests, and since then you can be arrested for growing it in the U.S. It is one of the few biofuels that can be cultivated in the U.S. without destroying soil, with a positive EROEI, no fossil fuel inputs or pesticides needed, and can even be cultivated feral. Henry Foird even built a Model A sedan that was hemp and wheatstraw bodied, 1/3 the weight of steel, and 10 times as dent resistant. Biodiesel can be made from hemp for the equivalent of $0.60/gallon and today hemp can sustainably replace perhaps 10-20% of US oil consumption, which would be far more than any other biofuel.

-Wanting to grow the economy, the U.S. has perpetually been at was since WWII and has been pumping as much money into the military as possible. This consumes large amounts of oil, but helps grow the economy more. Defense industry lobbyists do not want this to end and have had far more say on this issue than the American people have ever had.

-When the 1970s fuel crisis came, the auto industry had demonstrated prototype cars that could achieve 60+ mpg with no compromises to the consumer and no or little cost penalty. They never built them and refused to build them(See Volvo LCP 2000, Renault EVE+, Peugeot VERA+, Renault VESTA II, ect.).

-Jimmy Carter wanted to do something about this(such as eliminating America's foreign oil dependence, ending the war on drugs, ect.), but during the 1980 elections, Reagan and his associates arranged a deal with the Iran terrorists to hold the hostages longer than they would have otherwise been held. This exacerbated the hostage crisis, but ensured a Reagan victory in 1980 once Americans associated the crisis with the Carter administration. He took Carter's solar panels off of the white house, got on good terms with middle east dictators, even helped finance oil industry campaigns to rob land from African villagers so oil could be drilled on it by Shell and Chevron, and the oil crisis of the 70s/early 80s ended and the U.S. came to import 65% of its oil today. This grew the economy a huge amount. The super rich got the majority of growth while living standards for the average person continued to deteriorate.

-In the late 1970s, small automakers were starting to become competitive because they were offering products consumers wanted. The big three were rapidly losing market share, and lobbied the government to enact all of the necessary regulations to make it impossible to compete. This and subsequent Reagan-era 'voluntary' import tariffs not only doubled the cost of cars in the US(foreign cars went way up in price and the US automakers then raised theirs), but created market barriers so huge that today over $400 million is needed to mass produce a car in the US; mass production is needed for cost to be competitive. This has since kept small businesses from selling affordable, no-compromise, super-efficient cars and electric cars.

-During the late 1980s, electric vehicles became viable for 100 miles range, 0-60 mph < 13 seconds, 80+ mph top speed, in volume same cost as gas cars, and could have achieved consumer acceptance in the U.S. in volume for a few hundred thousand cars per year. The auto industry refused to touch the technology, and even used hired muscle to intimidate people who were demonstrating prototypes. The U.S. government even confiscated a prototype called the EXAR-1 from one company just before it was to be shipped to China for replacation and production.

-Sugarcane ethanol from Brazil has been confirmed to work with an EROEI > 4 and capability to produce ethanol for under $2.00/gallon. While not without its drawbacks, it is relatively gentle on soil(compared to corn). Fearing competition, the corn industry and oil industry lobied the government to tariff foreign sugar products, and thus this product is not economically viable in the US because of this tariff. This could perhaps replace 1-2% of US oil consumption, small, but significant.

-During the mid 1990s, electric vehicles became viable for 150+ miles range, 0-60 mph < 9 seconds, 100+ mph top speed, if produced in volume lower cost than gas cars, sub 30 minute charge times with Aerovironment quick chargers, and could have achieved widespread consumer acceptance. The U.S. government, auto industry, and oil industry began to actively and vigilantly fight the adoption of this technology.

-During the 1990s, the U.S. government under Clinton gave the big 3 automakers hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars to develop prototypes of 80 mpg midsize cars with no compromises in performance or utility or cost to the consumer. The big 3 developed the prototypes, and never had to sell a single one(See GM Precept, Ford Prodigy, Dodge ESX cars). UC Davis and other universities were demonstrating 35+ mpg full size SUVs. The major auto makers refuse to produce a car like this when they are fully capable of doing so.

-Every time a high speed electric rail proposal has been made, the airline industry has used their clout to prevent any such systems from ever being built in the U.S. We can't have consumers taking airplanes less and saving money now, can we? Meanwhile, the airline industry is now sucking taxpayer dollars to stay afloat.

-It is now the 2000s. We have the battery technology for EVs to exceed gasoline cars in every category imaginable except charge time and range, and even charging can be done in 10 minutes with fast chargers and ranges can exceed 300 miles per charge. The auto industry still refuses to build electric cars because they will save the consumer too much money, money which normally flows to the auto companies. We also have the technology for 80+ mpg midsize cars, 35+ mpg SUVs, 150+ mpg subcompacts, 90+ mpg sports cars without the consumer sacrificing a thing, but the auto industry still refuses(See Opel Eco speedster, Loremo AG, UC Davis Futuretruck, ect.).

-The auto industry has repeatedly requested government bailouts while it continues to produce guzzling vehicles that Americans don't want.

-Every time there has been even a minor oil crisis, instead of supporting alternatives to a meaningful degree, our government has consistently resorted to more war, as we have seen in both Gulf War I and II. War costs money and forces the American people to spend money through the tax system, while once alternatives are adopted in mass quantities, Americans will; save money.

When Americans complain, our government offers them solutions that don't work:
-Hydrogen fuel cells in mass production today would make a fuel cell car cost over $100,000. Well to wheels, H2 is about as efficient as gasoline, is currently derived mostly from crude oil, and even engineers from Toyota claim that in 20 years, it is optimistic that a fuel cell car could be mass produced for under $50,000. Fuel cell cars have traditionally been hard-pressed to achieve over 100 miles range(although can now do 250+ miles with 45 minute filling times to compress the H2), and their performance is very sluggish. Fuel cell membranes fail after 2,000 hours of their first operation. Meanwhile, electric vehicles have worked for decades, and in volume, would cost slightly less than gasoline cars. Hydrogen fueling infrastructure around the U.S. would exceed $1 trillion in cost and would keep Americans chained to the fuel pump. Auto lobbyists love this 'solution' because they can look like they are doing something without actually doing anything. The government loves this 'solution' because it is good PR and if it ever becomes viable 30 years from now they can keep extracting 'fuel taxes' from Americans.

-Corn ethanol has an EROEI < 1 according to a study by Gregory Pimentel of Cornell University, rapidly depletes soil, requires use of our food to manufacture, and costs more than gasoline to produce. But, ADM, Monsanto, and their ilk like this because it will allow massive adoption and subsidies of their products, payed for by Joe Taxpayer.

-Our government has in mind more war if the oil scarcity causes serious problems. More war will make more money, and if Americans are opposed, they have the PATRIOT Act, Homeland Security Department, and the like to round up dissenters if it comes to it; they'll make cheap labor. Meanwhile, our oil war in Iraq has failed because the Iraqis are very stubborn and willing to defend their country from an occupying force. The money wasted on this endeavour could have greatly helped America reduce its oil dependence, but was instead squandered lining the pockets of the defense industry. This resulted in more growth, going almost exclusively to the top 1% while today Americans are struggling.

How did this all happen? Follow the money. This was all preventable. Now we have a huge crisis on our hands, and there are a very few people who will make very large profits because of it, espedcially those within the oil industry. They do not want this to change.

We've been robbed of a future.
The unnecessary felling of a tree, perhaps the old growth of centuries, seems to me a crime little short of murder. ~Thomas Jefferson
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby BigTex » Sat 24 May 2008, 21:59:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Bas', 'C')arter took the problem of depleting oil reserves seriously, but all good intentions were quickly forgotten under Reagan, especially when the price of oil started dropping again in the mid 80's
The Reagan administration forced the price of oil down as a weapon against the Soviet Union, the second largest exporter of petroleum at the time. We made a deal with our own devils, the Saudi Arabian princes, to over-pump their giant fields and destroy the Soviet economy. We are now paying the price.
Carter put solar panels on the White House roof and Reagan took them down and told us to shop like there was no tomorrow. Well tomorrow has come and it is starting to look like hell. There are way too many newbies here today. It is strange and portends great pain soon. Something is happening out there. The herd is restless. They are looking around and seeing dark clouds on the horizon. They are ready to stampede. Got preps?
People, peakoil.com is not a sanctuary. It is your own worst nightmare. :twisted:

pstarr, I wonder if there is any market for "de-motivational" speakers.
:)
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby eastbay » Sat 24 May 2008, 22:27:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'T')he Reagan administration forced the price of oil down as a weapon against the Soviet Union, the second largest exporter of petroleum at the time. We made a deal with our own devils, the Saudi Arabian princes, to over-pump their giant fields and destroy the Soviet economy. We are now paying the price.

Well, I'm not too sure about your conclusion pstarr. I believe Reagan will get credit for creating a situation whereby oil was consumed a bit quicker, that's all. Peak oil was charging at us full speed no matter what.

There's not very much earlier implementation of all the so-called 'alternatives' would have done other than to allow even more population gain and therefore even more pain as the peak was passed.
Just a thought. We would have 'paid the price' regardless.
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby BigTex » Sat 24 May 2008, 22:49:44

Toecutter, that was a great post. Thanks.

One line jumped out at me:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('The_Toecutter', 'H')enry Ford even built a Model A sedan that was hemp and wheatstraw bodied, 1/3 the weight of steel, and 10 times as dent resistant.


I think I saw that car.

Image
:)
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby Bas » Sat 24 May 2008, 23:06:49

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'T')he Reagan administration forced the price of oil down as a weapon against the Soviet Union, the second largest exporter of petroleum at the time. We made a deal with our own devils, the Saudi Arabian princes, to over-pump their giant fields and destroy the Soviet economy. We are now paying the price.

I disagree with that, the record oil prices in the seventies and early 80's made the market drill like crazy for the black gold in places like the north sea which made the prices go down with some years of delay. Of course the Saudis pumped more under American pressure which was important when the Iraq-Iran war had just broken out, but this was of minor importance, also in comparison to different OPEC nations pumping more than there quotas to take advantage of the high price and cash. I'd say it was much more market forces than wisdom from the Reagan administration.
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby Aaron » Sun 25 May 2008, 12:38:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', 'I')'m not sure who to respond to:
Ibon [ 180 Posts ] Search
sicophiliac [ 38 Posts ] Search
erl [ 4 Posts ] Search
she [ 1 Post ]
Can you help me figure out to whom I should address my reply?

How about TreebeardsUncle?

For Shame...

THIS IS NOT A NEW MEMBER, BUT AN OLD ONE MULTI-NAMING.
The problem is, of course, that not only is economics bankrupt, but it has always been nothing more than politics in disguise... economics is a form of brain damage.

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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby Blacksmith » Sun 25 May 2008, 18:13:57

I remember reading Hubbert's theory in the seventies and when the oil crisis of the early seventies hit people started to pay attention. Of coarse then the North Slope came on stream, prices fell and we all looked like fools.
The only difference now is, there is no fall back, no magic pill, and people are now paying attention to the fools, but its too late.
Then again I guess when you really think about it, it was already too late, when Drake was discovered.
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby eastbay » Sun 25 May 2008, 18:24:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Aaron', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', 'I')'m not sure who to respond to:
Ibon [ 180 Posts ] Search
sicophiliac [ 38 Posts ] Search
erl [ 4 Posts ] Search
she [ 1 Post ]
Can you help me figure out to whom I should address my reply?

How about TreebeardsUncle?
For Shame...
THIS IS NOT A NEW MEMBER, BUT AN OLD ONE MULTI-NAMING.

I don't understand how anyone would have the time to play games like that. Multi-names? I just don't get it. Why not just be who you are and go with that? I mean, there're only so many hours in a day for goodness sakes ....
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby mercurygirl » Wed 28 May 2008, 03:37:27

Well, I don't have time to keep track of every damn poster here, but this is happening A LOT. I know of at least one guy with about a dozen names now, as if that might throw somebody off a trail or something. If it's not against the rules it's asinine, for sure.

Thank you Toecutter, for your insightful-as-usual breakdown.
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby katkinkate » Wed 28 May 2008, 07:35:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('eastbay', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Aaron', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', 'I')'m not sure who to respond to:
Ibon [ 180 Posts ] Search
sicophiliac [ 38 Posts ] Search
erl [ 4 Posts ] Search
she [ 1 Post ]
Can you help me figure out to whom I should address my reply?

How about TreebeardsUncle?
For Shame...
THIS IS NOT A NEW MEMBER, BUT AN OLD ONE MULTI-NAMING.

I don't understand how anyone would have the time to play games like that. Multi-names? I just don't get it. Why not just be who you are and go with that? I mean, there're only so many hours in a day for goodness sakes ....


Maybe he's got more hours.
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby Itsallcomindown » Wed 28 May 2008, 10:21:16

Hydrogen fuel cells do work but not the way they are being marketed. You can go to www.runyourcaronwaternow.com and it will teach you how to make them. I've got some friends making them now and selling them for 300.00 a piece. They are basically hooking the cell, which is full of water, up to the car battery and letting the batteries electricity zap the water to make the hydrogen. All you have to do is fill the cells up about once a week with water. The process is completely reverseable and won't lower the value of your car. I believe it's also possible to use these in gas powered generators but more research is required. Anyway, check out the site.
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Re: How did this all happen anyway??

Unread postby vision-master » Wed 28 May 2008, 10:53:09

Scam. :cool:
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