by Twilight » Fri 08 Aug 2008, 18:51:34
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', 'W')e do have to engage this 300 pound gorilla we derogatorily call "the sheeple" now don't we?
Of course, though I never use that juvenile term. The energy complex side of me would like nothing better than to dictate terms to people too stubborn to take constructive action themselves. But the private citizen in me engages them to tell them to engage themselves. Here is why.
When one must change, there are different sources of change and they come with a hierarchy of pain:
1) The easiest change is what you do yourself.
You are the expert in
your business. Nobody else has the potential to walk in and do better, because to most planners you are part of a unit of a thousand or a million. If you take personal ownership of what you have to do, you can adapt ahead of time in a more optimal way, with less stress and at lower cost. For example, structuring your life so you can go car-free, then taking that plunge.
2) Harder change is forced upon you by the market. This is when you waited too long to do (1) and lose a load of money to higher prices and ultimately are priced out of goods and services. This often happens at an inopportune moment and before you have had time to adapt or substitute. For example, finding your job is not covering your fuel needs for commuting to it after food and accommodation costs are accounted for, causing the difference to go on a credit card that will eventually bankrupt you. Also NE America's ongoing "Oh s*** I can't afford the heating bill because I didn't pay attention to the news" moment. This results in stressful costly adaptation in real time or even behind the curve.
3) Even harder change is forced upon you by the government. This is when you waited too long to do (1), (2) has already happened causing you to lose your ass, and your last resort is to vote for a living. This is where proposals such as described fit in - when nothing useful got done, and the obvious solution is to ask a higher power to take resources from a group which has them and distribute them among a group to which you belong, with a loss rate that in this particular case could end up being 50%.
4) Foreigners lose patience and yank support for something you didn't realise you needed.
Those of us who lurk or read some hobby board are familiar with mainstream thinking on energy and cost of living issues lately - there is usually a thread in an off-topic forum. Most of us will agree with the observation that (1) does not enter into anyone's mind, (2) is strongly resented but treated with fatalism or despair, and most conversation defaults to (3). Now I am going to be uncharitable and suggest that that is probably because the first two demand creative input while daydreaming government solutions demand little more than a shopping list of wants with a deus ex machina in there to make it work.
And this is what I hear more and more as the effects of resource (and credit) limits ripple out and touch more people. They decide that the future will still see them driving every day, flying to a family dinner at least once if not several times a year, and heating the street through French windows. Then they wish that it happen disproportionately at someone else's expense because of course they are victims and need a helping hand. No, I have seen how people live in other countries, and they need nothing of the sort.
I view a government-administered swap of old cars for new as resistance to change, a failure of imagination, and the surest possible way to have the taxpayer defrauded. I am not buying it, and I am not buying the thinking that produced it. There was a time when I too defaulted to wishing for benevolent arbitrators, but I see now that is was bargaining. A natural response, but in the long term not a healthy one.
What is more, a lot of these dreams have unintended consequences that would do energy and the economy more harm than good, and some would lead straight to (4). And hardly anyone ever asks, well what if I get my free stuff, but then I lose access to something more valuable when the next guy gets his bailout? Because obviously there is no way government economic engineering could turn around and bite you, right?
In summary, stick with (1) and (2) because (3) is not guaranteed, and I for one will be using my status as a voter to rubbish most of it.
If this sounds harsh, it is because we are past the point where Morpheus can sit down with Neo and have a long debate with helpful animated illustrations about the merits of the red and blue pills. Now we are at a drug store counter. Packet, leaflet, NEXT!