by Markos101 » Sun 24 Apr 2005, 07:26:37
I've got a few points to say about Peak Oil. Having already studied the subject, and made many posts on here regarding its consequences, I think it's safe to say that I've been through the depression-acceptance phase. I then found that I came back with the reaction that actually it probably wasn't going to be as bad as I thought. I call this the 'matured peak oiler' phase. Here's why.
Beware Doomsayers
When the Sept. 11th attacks happened, everyone was shocked. For a week or so, everyone was in a sort of stunned myopia as nothing of the sort had ever happened on US soil.
And then, after that, came media frenzy. Al-Qaeda is some mass network of independent terrorist cells operating from Bin Ladin's hidden hideout with millions of dollars of funding and the ability to spring up anywhere at short notice.
The truth was far from it. The US made only a single successful prosecution for any so called 'al-Qaeda' group in the US, and even then there was very dubious apparent ties to any such group, and actually the so called 'al-Qaeda training camps' in Afghanistan were not training 'terrorists' to overcome the West, they were actually to train fighters to create Islamic states in the East, and they had no interest in the US. The camps were originally funded by - guess what - the US(!) in order to train the guerilla fighters there to overcome the Soviets back in the 70s/80s. Ironically, the US may have actually profitted from such conflicts through the loans made to Russia via the IMF. If you understand finance, suddenly a lot of world events begin to make sense.
In fact, even the term 'al-Qaeda' was only used by Bin Ladin after September 11th - because that is what the US administration had decided to label it in the media. In fact, only a small group of very extreme Islamists were responsible for Sept. 11th, rather than it being the first rung in a series of devastating attacks orchestrated by Bin Ladin from his 'hideout' in Afghanisthan. And, of course, where is Bin Ladin now? No one ever thinks about him unless he is mentioned in the media, and of course, he isn't.
Despite this, all of a sudden, whoever was the biggest doomsayer got the power. Whoever gave the worst possible scenario, whether it be to bioweapons, nuclear or chemical, got more and more power to them as the fearing masses turned to them for a solution to this veiled and unseeable threat.
Such a technique is a classic dictatorship mass-psychology control game; present people with unending threat, and then present the solution. The result is, you can get a large mass of people to accept things they wouldn't normally accept, willingly, to solve that so-called problem. Use media and other forms of propaganda to create an image of the threat, because it is image that is king. And as soon as people like Clarke here in the UK (whom I believe is the most dangerous man on the face of this planet) come up with new 'solutions' to these 'problems' - such as the fact that legislation now allows the UK government to indefinitely imprison an individual, and now their friends and family too, without trial - people then say 'well, it's bad, but I guess we have to accept it, with all this unending illusionary threat going on around me that hasn't actually harmed a single hair on my body at all since I watched 9/11 on TV 100 times when the media got into a sales frenzy about it'. Such legislation harks real dictortorial government.
The same, although slightly different, thing is happening here. I see this in the complete ignorance directed towards food supplies. Again I hear 'oil production is directly proportional to food production'. And yet fertilisers are derived from natural gas and not oil, and Haber-Bosch is not the only way to intensively farm a mass of crops. It is used at the moment because, yes, it's the cheapest because it has become the most widely used method. And yes, gas prices will be hit by oil prices, and yes, some fertilisers are made from oil derived products. However, they are not the only types of fertilisers out there, but they are currently the cheapest, being the most widely used and produced (economies of scale). So all these doomer die-off scenarios are based purely on the fact that I think some people (a) Like being doomers - it gives you a sense of absolute power and (b) It might be a solution to the fact that they might not like their lives at the moment. Again, humans are by instinct problem solvers, and this instinct like all others can be abused.
Beware Anything That Consolidates Power Into Few Hands
And then we're forgetting the fact that most of the major oil companies derive from Standard Oil, which was started by John D. Rockefeller in the last quarter or so of the 1800s. An anti-trust case forced John to break up Standard Oil, with his ruthless business acumen, into smaller companies such as Standard Oil of New Jersey, which then all turned into, via a change of trading name, into Exxon, Mobil, Texaco...all of these are derived from the same one company.
Campbell claims that these companies have been merging and acquisitioning (if that's a word) because they foresee in 'truth' a less profitable future, specifically because of peak.
And yet at the same time, the nature of capitalism breeds larger and larger corporations, forming through mergers as those who apparently get the vote for the best service/product with the people's money get larger and merge into companies of a similar size.
The result is consolidation of control over oil supply into fewer and fewer hands, and since all human beings are corrupt, this spells bad news. If the people are dependent upon oil, then what power it gives to the few if only few have control over the supply of it.
When Cecil Rhodes started up De Beers, also funnily enough in the mid/late 1800s, he used to deliberately pull back supply in order to inflate prices. This is another classic industrial technique - increase the public's perceived preciousness of the commodity by pulling back its supply. In doing so, you raise price, and people become willing to pay more for it.
Campbell also I feel trivialises the situation by focussing purely on what he defines as 'conventional oil' at the exclusion of all other hydrocarbons. I don't know, and anyone can make conjecture about it. Peak is right, but just when it happens depends on the amount of oil being exploited in the future, and on that no one on this forum, whether they think they are an expert or not, can be sure. It also depends upon your definition of the word 'oil'.
Mark