by Heineken » Sun 15 Jun 2008, 09:50:35
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', 'I')'m with VM and others--as long as fuel is available at any price, things are unlikely to get ugly.
It's when it's not available that people are going to start acting crazy.
They're doing $10 a gallon fuel in Britain and the world still turns (I think it does, anyway).
We haven't even started seriously down the whole carpooling thing yet. That's next, and that will provide a lot of relief to some people with long commutes.
Maybe $25 a gallon would start to create some friction.
I think the frog in the boiling water analogy is appropriate here--people will adjust to higher prices without freaking out so long as it is reasonably gradual and fuel is available for SOME price.
The 1970s only got ugly because of price control induced shortages.
To date, I don't think anyone could have predicted how little social unrest would be caused by $4.00 a gallon gas and nearly $5.00 a gallon diesel.
In terms of the matter under discussion, I don't think it's reasonable to compare any European country with North America. Distances in Europe are very much compressed compared with here, and communities are organized around public transport, the bicycle, and walking. In Europe most driving is optional, not necessary to life as it is here (as a result of the decisions and investments we've made as a society). I say that from the perspective of someone who has lived there AND here.
There are probably a few counties in Texas that compare favorably in size to England. And everything in them is all spread out.
Some of you seem out-of-touch with the American masses. There is tremendous friction right now, at $4/gallon, for many poorer people, as MD noted. This friction has the potential to spread rapidly up the economic chain. A rising unemployment rate, driven by higher gas prices, could do that viciously. Even in the lower-middle and middle-middle classes, many families are, right now, just a few paychecks away from starvation. And has been noted, many people are "getting by" by getting deeper into debt. Borrowed money is borrowed time, my friends.
America is organized about 95% around the
private automobile. Drive around with eyes wide open and you will see that for yourself. When the millions of Sheetz QuickMarts and Meineke Mufflers and Days Inns and Pizza Theaters go down, so will this country. There is no defense. As Kunstler has observed, we've made our choices and our investments and we will have to live and die with them.
Getting to work by carpooling is all well and fine, but what if people have no job to go to?
Remember, too, that $25 gasoline would not happen in isolation from other price impacts. It is a huge error to overlook this. If gasoline costs $25/gal, milk will cost $30/gal, etc.
And---how are we going to maintain those roads, with tumbling tax revenues and $200 oil? How will we fix the cracks and beat back the overgrowing branches? (This question has been examined in other threads.)