by mos6507 » Fri 21 Nov 2008, 15:40:29
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dohboi', '
')Nicely put, and I largely agree. But are you claiming that cheap oil prices (and the expectation of continuing cheap oil prices) had nothing to do with the inflation of this housing bubble in the first place?
The timing of the housing bubble was mostly due to the the boom in ARM mortgage resets from homeowners who never should have qualified for houses buying in to the ponzi scheme at the tail end, and being the last sucker holding the bag when housing inentories reached a critical mass and prices well out reach.
High energy prices only put an additional downward pressure on exurb home values. The dysfunctional CDO market and the herdlike mentality of the banking industry in gobbling them up just created this domino effect that could have happened at any time in modern history.
If you want to start talking about the energy availability that enabled home construction in the first place, really you might as well expand the view to that of
all of industrial society as a whole. Obviously without cheap energy, society as we know it ceases to exist. So that's really too much of a convenient catch-all to use as an argument. It's kind of like the Church lady who no matter what she was discussing, always reduced things to "could it be......... SATAN??"
When TSHTF due to peak oil, we're going to be well off the plateau, and the pain will be far worse than a traditional depression. There simply won't be any debate as to the main driver of the suffering by that point. That's the period in which the general public finally wises up and the powers that be try and fail to plug the dyke as the law of receding horizons kicks in.
I mean, nobody should really give a crap about the statistical peak of oil production. What people are concerned about is the impact of peak oil on quality of life. I think people have to come to grips with the idea that the
deep suffering of peak oil that we fear so much is significantly offset in time from the statistical peak. What we experienced over the summer when gas hit $4 will be seen as a minor irritant in comparison. And peak oil is not the only way we can experience collective suffering.
I mean, if it makes you or others feel better to have peak oil take "credit" for the financial crunch, fine. I just don't buy it, and I think we'll look back on this crisis in the years ahead and realize that it was a mild false alarm compared to the main event.