by ubercrap » Sun 12 Jun 2005, 02:06:12
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('fossil_fuel', '
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i think the answer should be obvious. yet the average person and the media got way more worked up over y2k. why?
There are so many reasons:
People believe the "alternatives" are "replacements" for oil products/conventional oil/fossil fuel power.
Understanding the alternatives and their scalability and feasiblity makes one's head spin, and most average people don't have the education or drive to understand them.
People forget about factoring the maximum rate that alternative oil can be realistically produced/extracted.
The precise effects of Peak Oil are unpredictable, just about anything could happen.
People don't understand the technology and energy are not interchangeable.
People don't understand that what virtual "miracle technologies" that do show promise- like energy positive fusion and practical nanotech (basically harnessing huge amounts of energy, or hugely conserving energy respectively), if possible, are most likely so far away in the future to as to render them irrelevant in dealing with peak oil in the near/intermediate term.
People don't understand how embedded fossil fuels are in modern industrialized society.
Y2K was a clear, understandable computer problem. Bad code=computer no workie= bad: everybody knows everything is run by computers.
Don't discount there was an element of "sexiness" in Y2K with the date corresponding to historical doomsday prophecy.
Also, abbreviating "a computer code problem involving the processing of dates shifting over from 19XX to 2XXX could cause havoc with computers worldwide controlling everything from nuclear missiles to hospital equipment" to the convenient and catchy "Y2K" made lame news reporters feel cool and mentioning it made old lamos feel like they were "hackers."
The solution to Y2K was clear: analyze every electronic and computer device in critical use, throw around a few billion dollars, reprogram or replace as necessary.
There was a virtual "industry" created just to fix the problem=
easy $$$ opportunity.
There was an ironclad date when we could see if Y2K was going to be a global catastrophe or a non-event.
There is what I like to call the "Titanic" factor. People believe that modern fossil-fuel driven industrial society is just so big and important, that it is impossible to sink or fail.
And many more...