by ProudFossil » Mon 02 Jun 2008, 22:15:55
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Monkeydust', 'T')hat's a fair point, and you may well be correct. All I am saying is that there's a big difference between the standard of living of Albanians and a 'die-off', and this is a distinction a lot of catastrophists don't seem to be able to make.
I agree and use this as an answer to the doomers. When you say die-off you are implying a massive number of deaths. If you were to say a massive lowering of the standard of living then I could agree with you. There might be localized mortality in great numbers but again that is nit-picking in my estimation, especially when applied globally.
I believe there are two much bigger problems facing us, one related to PO and the other not related to PO except in a very indirect manner.
First there is the problem which a few have touched on and that is how the population is going to adjust (notice I did not say adapt) to a more rural lifestyle. How many of the young yuppies and generational Xers will accept having to do manual labor to grow, prepare and store their food. I am 70 years old and can remember spending hours preparing and caning the produce from our garden. Along those lines how many people today, especially in the US, even have the rudimentary skills needed to produce their food on a year round basis, let alone the surplus to feed the urban population, especially with animal power? Also where is the equipment to be found which can be used with simple horsepower, not tractors. These are problems which will greet us here in the US with the decline in oil, possibly not so much in Europe which still has a more individualized farm population.
The second problem I have, which is even more immediate, is that of water. What happens to the urban population when the pumps stop. Look at Los Angeles. It gets a large percentage of its water from several hundred miles away. Without the use of electricity to pump that water to them, death will come quickly. Most of the California farmland is dependent upon irrigation. Whoops, without the water, it returns to a dusty, sandy desert.
It is my turn to chastise this entire web site about PO. You are concerned with PO for a valid reason, i.e., the decline of our way of life. But I think you are basically doing the same thing the environmental global warming people are doing. You are wringing your hands about the UK, Europe, and the US. These countries are already doing much, either correctly or incorrectly, in the alleviation of the problem of climate change. But the real culprits (if there are any) are across the Pacific and could care less what you are saying. The same is true of PO. So you are all basically blowing into the wind for your own self satisfaction. You are lambasting our governments about changes you think need to be done to stop the impact on climate change and/or PO. You are talking to the wrong people. You are wringing your collective hands, woe is us, but are really doing nothing to stop the effects from China and India. If you want to get their attention, QUIT BUYING THEIR GOODS. That will a whole lot more than simply complaining to Parliment or Congress. Also quit using the petroleum products on a daily basis. Don't buy the products made from petroleum. Quit the fast food places. Recycle or better yet use things over and over instead of throwing them in the land fill, especially plastics. Reduce the usage of oil now, not when it becomes more scarce. Learn how to be more self-sufficient. Do ride the bicycle. Walk. Turn the lights out. A million things done by 340 million people will make a statement. START LIVING AS THEY DO IN ALBANIA (or select your own chosen 2nd world country).
Start worrying about where your next glass of water is coming from. That will becoma a more important result indirectly of PO than how you are going to get to grandma's house. No water and you die in a few days. There is where the ultimate die-off could come from, not starvation or even disease.
Thank you for letting me be on the soap box. I live in the southwest desert and have seen the effects of the local water supply going empty due to the failure of a pump. It is not pretty.