by shortonsense » Thu 04 Jun 2009, 00:57:22
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', '
')However, the doomers certainly have a valid point that petroleum is virtually ubiquitous in the world economy and is used in such huge amounts today that replacing it will be very difficult.

I do not assume that "virtually ubiquitous", your attribution to Doomers, and "valuable commodity", what I consider an accurate representation, are one and the same.
I also do not assume that in EITHER circumstance, that the basic substitution regime you have described happening in the past ( whale oil and crude ) can't keep right on happening.
I do, however, assume that it isn't going to continue for much longer, because it just doesn't need to.
Human history through the eyes of Monte and Malthus is one of squalor and death in the near future, idiot monkeys in a cage gobbling up food without the brains to know how to get more.
And yet while Malthus was relying on the baser instincts of man to perpetuate his own destruction, there were others, greater men, men who would no more listen to such nonsense then Thomas Edison would be discouraged by a thousand failures.
Men who took a by product of the earths very internal workings, a sludge with only the ability to bring down property values because of its smelly and oozing uselessness, and turned it into the fuel to first build, and then power the world as we know it today.
And yet the awesome use of that sludge to build the world as we know it today is already obsolete, dust in the ash bowl of history. The power of tomorrow arrived years ago, but it was never cheap enough, fossil fuels are just too darn easy ( and will continue to be so for awhile yet ), but in the end it won't really matter. The future is already here. We powered the transport of this planet with fossil fuels, but for those with vision, and the ability to understand that a small pebble can make a pretty large ripple in a still pond, it isn't hard to imagine what OUR world might look like, as we make it look more like the transport system we installed years ago on ANOTHER world.
Powered by the sun, millions of miles from their place of origin, not an oil change or corner muffler repair shop in sight, slow, sure, but more durable than the average Pontiac, and prospecting in the cold isn't easy on a chassis or a person.
How much longer before this obvious fact dawns on even the sheeple of the world, and THEY demand cars which don't require $4-$5-$6/gal gasoline? And as fast as Malthus was reduced to a footnote on how NOT to predict the end of the world, and Ehrlich after him, and Monte here locally, suddenly, the world is different because for all the whining naysayers who have been proclaiming the end of mankind since its beginning, there are others who are already looking beyond the horizon which even us amateurs can already make out in the distance. They are arguing about the power and weight of the super capacitor required to run the car as long as a lithium-ion battery pack will now, whether or not neighborhood nukes are really the solution to dispersing the grid, or if small windmill and solar assemblies are the way to go.
So...you want to believe the world is going to end? Cool...its a free country. The good news is, from any reasonable perspective, that it won't matter in the least, because those who are changing the world certainly aren't about to be dissuaded by lumps on a log any more than Edison was discouraged by his first couple of hundred failed attempts at making the light bulb.