by RdSnt » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 23:16:32
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tyler_JC', '(')Just to play the Devil's Advocate here)
Consumers will cut back on spending (aka, resource consumption), couples will have fewer children (overpopulation solution) and government will invest in the kind of infrastructure we need to survive in a post oil world. Less economic activity means less pollution and fewer greenhouse gas emissions, giving us more breathing room to deal with climate change while we develop new technologies to produce cleaner energy.
Depression? Bring it on.
Here's the problem, the current US GDP is 70% consumer driven. This means the consumer, in order for the governments bailouts to work, can't stop spending.
The current population of the US is propped up by an artificial level of consumer activity, manufactured with debt. A large portion of the jobs are dependent on that debt based consumption. We are already seeing the early layoffs due to the very recent decline in consumption. We have not see anything yet. I can easily see 10 million more jobs lost in the US by the end of 2009.
You will see that as poverty increases so does the birth rate.
And no, you won't see green investment on anything like a meaningful scale. You will see road work, on roads no longer necessary and bridges no one needs. The demand is for jobs now, green investments won't deliver that.
No one in government, and I'm talking globally here, is talking seriously about the future. They are talking about investing in legacy infrastructure; rebuilding what should be regarded as obsolete.
Gravity is not a force, it is a boundary layer.
Everything is coincident.
Love: the state of suspended anticipation.
To get any appreciable distance from the Earth in
a sensible amount of time, you must lie.