How does it look silly? You have to take a long view. And maybe we haven't even peaked yet! Serious decline hasn't set in for sure. We haven't lost 10 million barrels a day for sure, much less 40 million barrels a day. We don't know when that's going to happen, or what kind of economic situations we'll face as production declines.
In some ways, I've come to understand that peak oil is a way of describing the usage of all the Earth's resources in a way that is unsustainable. It's like saying, "Nice wheels" when you see a cool car. You name a part as a way of naming the whole.
Maybe oil is the first beam to break, and food is the second. Maybe food breaks first and beats oil to the punch. Maybe finance breaks first and the idea of using price as a proxy for availability unhooks from our presupposed ideas of how this is going to play out.
The world is a complex place and a lot of factors compete with each other for importance.
I believe that if you understand one part of the whole, you get a picture of the whole and can work your way across different scenarios and ideas to come to a more complete picture of what's happening.
It sure is interesting that the world of finance is in so much trouble right around the time that the peak oil people are calling for the global production peak.
Ten years from now I bet the picture we see in the rear view mirror will be much more clear than whatever we're seeing today.
I had such clear ideas about what was going to happen in finance about two years ago and made some money speculating. Over the summer, the 4th of July week, I lost the thread. Every page of every newspaper I read had stories about oil and related issues. The shoeshine kid on the corner knew about Ghawar, and I figured that was the signal to bail. I called in my investors and pulled the plug on the commodities boom and here we are in the middle of a commodities crash.
I don't know what to do now. I'm really at a loss. I'll tell you what I'm buying, though. I probably go to five different grocery stores every week. For one reason or another I can combine trips and end up in front of a different store almost every day. This one has green beans, ten cents a can. That one has chicken quarters two for one. The next one has beef on sale half off AND two for one.
I'm at 60 days of food in the pantry and I just saw 20lb turkeys on sale for 29 cents a pound. I'm going to take the white meat and make turkey jerkey, and the rest is getting pressure canned.
Whatever you want to have a year from now, you better buy that shit now. I don't think anyone really knows what's coming next. So, buy it cheap and stack it deep. Tea candles, $6 for a hundred. You bet your ass I buy a bag every time I pass that store. There's a 50lb bag of rice with my name on it at teh Costco, too.
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