by Colorado-Valley » Fri 22 Apr 2005, 04:26:19
I posted this on my Lord-of-the-Rings discussion board, with interesting results:
"Tolkien's prophesy seems to be becoming true. The great resource wars have already begun, but probably too late for countries like the U.S. and Western Europe, whose economies are based on cheap oil and third-world imperialism to keep resources flowing to them.
"The big resource, the one that makes all the others possible, is oil. And oil seems to be disappearing fast. You can argue if you want, or propose whatever kind of alternative fuel you want to base your misplaced optimism on, but none will work, at least if you want conventional industrial society, which of course we all do. But 6.5 billion people trying to live on the last of the oil is simply not going to work.
"The U.S. is bankrupt. It has spent the last of its resources propping up the wealth class and attempting to control the Middle East by brute force. Its army is trapped in Iraq, being bombed and attacked 60 times a day, and its "allies," the Shiites, are holding 300,000 -strong rallies demanding the occupiers leave. This cannot last, and everyone who looks beyond the U.S. corporate media fairy tales knows exactly what has happened.
"The U.S. stock market -- because of the rising cost of oil -- has fallen about 900 points over the last month, 400 points in the last three days. The U.S. is now $8 trillion in debt, piling up huge deficits every year. Ford and General Motors are in danger of collapsing, the housing bubble is about where the tech bubble was a few years ago before it crashed. Americans personally are heavily in debt, and using up the equity in their homes to continue to finance "the American lifestyle."
"President Bush is giving a speech this week about energy and conservation. What's he going to do, wear a sweater like Jimmy Carter and tell us to turn our thermostats down two degrees? He and Cheney have been tellling us for the past four years that "the American Lifestyle is non-negotiable."
"It doesn't matter to me, since I've never been a fan of an "affluent" lifestyle that just means death and misery for the rest of the world and long-term destruction of our basic natural resources, like clean water, forests, rivers, coral reefs and a million other things crucial to life on this planet.
"But there's a quandary. Without billions of barrels of cheap oil, 6.5 billion people can not come close to feeding themselves. It's called population overshoot, and was only possible because inexpensive oil made it possible to turn worn-out soil into a rich growing medium injected with petro-chemical fertilizers and pesticides. It allowed giant tractors do the work of millions of slaves or serfs.
"This is all coming to an end, one way or the other. We, fellow ringnuts, have been blessed to live in the time of the end of all things -- at least in the industrial sense. The world as we knew it is about to get "very interesting."
"My ideal would be Tolkien's -- to somehow powerdown into a million little Shires where people live a much different, but still satisfying life. A basically healthy life, in which nature is cared for and considered an ally. The winners would be people who live on small farms and do craftman-type trades.
"The alternative, of course, is that of Sauron. Horrible resource wars that blacken the landscape and lead to death and destruction on a grand scale as the military-industrial state tries to grab the last drops of oil, and then turns to enslavement and serfdom to try to preserve its power in a post-industrial landscape. You would not get to be a small farmer; you would become agricultural stoop labor in some vast corporate farm. Something not unlike a gulag.
"So right now all of us are staring into Galadriel's mirror. I don't like what I see. How about you?"