Donate Bitcoin

Donate Paypal


PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Novel: "State of Fear"

A forum to either submit your own review of a book, video or audio interview, or to post reviews by others.

Postby AnnaLivia » Thu 10 Mar 2005, 16:05:15

I gotta set something straight here, because I just noticed I screwed up on my last post.
FoxV said this (I have edited it down):$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') am fully aware of global warming and its consequences. I am aware that global warming is both real and present.

What I am saying is that all those Global warming models are based on assumptions that fossil fuel consumption (CO2 production) will accelerate for a long time to come (if not indefinately). Global warming is based on continued fossil fuel use. Peak Oil is based on the end of fossil fuel use. These too states of world crisis contradict each other.

In the end I am not concerned with Global warming because Peak Oil (and the imminant political/economic world crisis it is causing) is a far more immediate problem as well as the ultimate solution to global warming.


Then I said this:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 't')hanks for your replies, FoxV. now i know what you meant.

from the statement above it is obvious that your "threat prioritizer" is indeed functioning.


Which I bet helped make Ludi rightfully frustrated, because she(?) then said this:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')h frikkin never mind.

Why do I bother?


OK. I must be more worn out than I thought, because what I should have said was that FoxV’s threat prioritizer was functioning, but selectively. We all live on a planet that is and has been wired to blow…with ever-escalating tensions and madmen at the helm. Fox was saying he(?) recognized this. (Also, statistically, a nuclear accident is unavoidable. Yet we ignore that threat. We find it very easy to not think about that fact at all, on a daily basis. Our capacity to ignore the parts of reality we don’t want to face is apparently enormous.)

So, while I agree it’s a pretty good idea to become alert to the closest peril, I also think Fox’s “imminent danger-o-scopeâ€
"O hell, here comes our funeral. Let us pry....for our missed understandings."
AnnaLivia
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 113
Joined: Sat 16 Oct 2004, 03:00:00
Location: same as everyone

Postby Xelat » Thu 10 Mar 2005, 16:24:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('FoxV', '
')and keep in mind that the coal use they talk about relies on cheap oil to be available to mine and transport. If Oil is too expensive to use then so is coal (http://www.lifeaftertheoilcrash.net/PageTwo.html)


This is utter NONSENSE. Coal has a EROEI of at least 8 currently - probably higher. Furthermore the projection that it may have EROEI less than 1 in the near future is a linear projection of EROEI measurements which were selected so as to give a pessimistic viewpoint. Furthermore - projection of a ratio linearly is one of the stupider ways of prejoecting anything - this same projection gives a negative EROEI for coal in the near future - WHAT IS A NEGATIVE EROEI? Negattive energy returned on energy invested? Nonsense.
User avatar
Xelat
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 68
Joined: Wed 10 Nov 2004, 04:00:00
Location: Los Angeles

Postby Liamj » Thu 10 Mar 2005, 18:55:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AnnaLivia', 'I') gotta set something straight here, because I just noticed I screwed up on my last post.

Goodonya for noticing & remedying AL, and thanks for 'threat prioritiser' idea/clarification.

[quote="AnnaLivia"] ....Yet we ignore that threat. We find it very easy to not think about that fact at all, on a daily basis. Our capacity to ignore the parts of reality we don’t want to face is apparently enormous.

So, while I agree it’s a pretty good idea to become alert to the closest peril, I also think Fox’s “imminent danger-o-scopeâ€
User avatar
Liamj
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 864
Joined: Wed 08 Dec 2004, 04:00:00
Location: 145'2"E 37'46"S
Top

Postby Ludi » Thu 10 Mar 2005, 21:15:51

Thank you, Anna.
Ludi
 

State of Fear

Postby Pfish » Sat 30 Apr 2005, 12:05:27

Just got through reading Michael Crichton’s book State of Fear. Perhaps not his best effort—some of his other works have better plots and storylines. Crichton uses a fictional setting to make three great points.

The first is Global Warming requires a more objective opinion. The author makes a case for the fact that the earth might be undergoing a natural warming period—if it is warming at all. A couple of facts he points out is in the 70’s scientist were touting a global cooling period. He states there are as many scientists questioning the concept of global warming as there are supporting the phenomenon. Note: I am not here to support his view (one crisis is enough for me.) Read the book and do your own research.

Second point. Whenever you look at problems in society, look towards the senior/retired/experienced professionals for accurate opinions (this sounds familiar.) They have no axe to grind or agenda to promote. They do not make money with their views, but they serve as a voice of reason and fact.

Third point, and this is the main thrust of the book. Newspapers, magazines and TV have started to use the words “crisis” “critical” and “ terrorism” to a greater extent in covering events in our world. In fact, Crichton points out exactly when this started to occur—in October of 1989—when the iron curtain fell and the Soviets were no longer a threat to the western world. Governments, lawyers and the media float us from one crisis to the next in order to keep us obedient, fearful and paying taxes—it is in essence of what makes the western world go around.

In the epilogue, Crichton points to one of America’s darker periods in talking about the eugenics debacle. Presidents, Nobel Laureates and leading citizens of the day lined up in support of castrating undesirables to preclude “their” genes from spreading into “our” culture. To me it is amazing how eugenics has been written out of US history while Hitler’s barbaric cleansing is a reminder of what happens “when madmen rise to power.”

So…..to the point…..if we had a single item in today’s news that would scare the crap out of the public and put us in a State of Fear….wouldn’t it be Peak Oil? Nothing affects Wall Street like the price of oil. And as the recent weeks have reminded us, nothing can affect our lives like the supply and demand of crude. If the above three wanted to keep us in a State of Fear why not play the Peak Oil card? Maybe PO is too close to the truth and the rest of this crap AIDS, global warming, Ebola, mad cow, mean bees and terrorism are nothing more than a smoke screen.
"If what we had was a dog and pony show what we have now is a canine-equestrian extravaganza"
User avatar
Pfish
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 191
Joined: Mon 03 Jan 2005, 04:00:00
Location: Leucadia in the summer and Baja in the winter

Re: State of Fear

Postby Tapas » Sat 30 Apr 2005, 12:26:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pfish', ' ')
Maybe PO is too close to the truth and the rest of this crap AIDS, global warming, Ebola, mad cow, mean bees and terrorism are nothing more than a smoke screen.


Ding! ding! ding!
We have a winner. The naked truth facing us to too hard to handle. Better shove PO under the rug and hunt some terrorists.
User avatar
Tapas
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 184
Joined: Sat 05 Feb 2005, 04:00:00
Top

Postby Ludi » Sat 30 Apr 2005, 12:29:58

The only thing Crichton makes a case for is his own ignorance.
Ludi
 

Postby Tapas » Sat 30 Apr 2005, 12:44:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '
')The only thing Crichton makes a case for is his own ignorance.


Michael Crichton is an intelligent writer. I wonder why in this case he chose to downplay the effects of Global Warming and pretty much dismiss it. Did he sell his soul to the powers that be?

Global Warming is real. It is a growing crisis that has been studied and tracked by hundreds of researchers and scientists. They have a general consensus on this global phenomenon that is being triggered by human activity. The only thing they disagree on is the critical level and date.

In any case, humanity will soon find the truth. The wait would not be too long.
User avatar
Tapas
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 184
Joined: Sat 05 Feb 2005, 04:00:00
Top

Postby Golgo13 » Sat 30 Apr 2005, 13:59:16

User avatar
Golgo13
Lignite
Lignite
 
Posts: 270
Joined: Mon 13 Dec 2004, 04:00:00

Postby Pfish » Sat 30 Apr 2005, 19:28:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tapas', '
')
Global Warming is real. It is a growing crisis that has been studied and tracked by hundreds of researchers and scientists. They have a general consensus on this global phenomenon that is being triggered by human activity. The only thing they disagree on is the critical level and date.


At the start of the book. I held pretty much the same thoughts. But remember, this is exactly what eugenics was about: very smart and respected people giving opinions based on non-scientific fact. All Crichton is saying is that we need a national debate.

Here is an article with more info on global warming.

http://www.lewrockwell.com/miller/miller16.html

How hot do we get on this board when somebody dismisses Peak Oil? Why do Michael Lynch and others avoid coming into this forum and posting? Answer: because we have already made up our minds. (BTW, I have read Lynch's arguments and I disagree with him.)

Science has no preconceived notions or fantasies. Scientific argument only gets stronger with more debate and facts.

Back to the main question: When do govenments play the Peak Oil card?

PP
"If what we had was a dog and pony show what we have now is a canine-equestrian extravaganza"
User avatar
Pfish
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 191
Joined: Mon 03 Jan 2005, 04:00:00
Location: Leucadia in the summer and Baja in the winter
Top

Postby nero » Sat 30 Apr 2005, 20:35:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ack to the main question: When do govenments play the Peak Oil card?


Didn't Jimmy Carter already play the peak oil card? I definitely don't think these manufactured crisis are used to keep people in a state of fear. Primarily because people aren't in a state of fear, in fact they are in a state of complacency. If people were really in a state of fear about global warming, we might actually be able to do something about it (Kyoto is a joke) but instead global warming has become a punch line for Dennis Miller. These manufactured crisis such as killer bees, ebola, immigration, Y2K, SARS etc. are mostly entertainment. Don't get me wrong, there is usually something news worthy behind the crisis, but then the 24 hour news channels come along and torque it into a crisis to generate ratings.

The real question in my opinion is when will Lou Dobbs (CNN) have a "Peak Oil" segment on his nightly program?
Biofuels: The "What else we got to burn?" answer to peak oil.
User avatar
nero
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1433
Joined: Sat 22 May 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Top

Postby dark-suzie » Sat 30 Apr 2005, 20:39:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ack to the main question: When do govenments play the Peak Oil card?

I dont think they neccisarily will.
It would be admitting weakness if they did. A country like the US would have nothing to gain.
Smaller countries, i see no reason why they dont publicly address peak oil.
(this is of course reasonably assuming that all world governments arent really in conspiracy against there peoples, serving the needs of only the ones who can afford to controll them exe: Wealthy lineages, Cooperations, Mafia Barons, Who ever rolls in fat cash.
But thats conspiracy theory.
But really. How much does a senator or governer REALLy cost? Does any one other than the willfully ignorent really trust the state?)
I think this is what is largley governing the actions of Hugo Chavez, and some south american states.
Say fuck of to bush before bush bears his fangs.

I think shits going to get really messy in the next couple years.
User avatar
dark-suzie
Wood
Wood
 
Posts: 42
Joined: Tue 05 Apr 2005, 03:00:00
Top

Postby sjn » Sat 30 Apr 2005, 20:48:51

Governments won't play the "Peak Oil Card" until it's in their interests to do so. Why would you expect any different? Governments certainly want their public to feel threatened by fears that they can be seen to address. Whether that's to blame certain minorities for all societies ills or to create a foreign enemy with which to distract and decieve. What they don't want though, is for the public to be afraid of something that the government is unable to do anything about; if that was to happen the goverments would soon lose their power and chaos would reign supreme.

As for Eugenics, it is real science. It may be distasteful and the methods historically imployed have certainly been appalling both by the Nazi's and the US; but it is none the less valid from a practical point of view. Genetics affects Homo Sapiens just like any other life form. The biggest problem with eugenics to my mind is who makes the decisions on what are beneficial traits and how they come to those decisions. Nature is usually the best placed, evolution hedges its bets on the future, a diverse genepool will more likely come up with sucessfull traits in unpredictable future environments. Also be aware though that a large part of the Eugenics movement in the US was practised by normal individual American citizens, by conscious decisions about who would make "appropriate" breeding stock for their own offspring. I've read that this form of eugenics is still commonly practised within the Jewish community in the US.

Finally, Michael Crichton is an intelligent writer but he has always had an agenda. David Brin wrote a rather interesting critique of Crichton in is blog: Michael Crichton vs Science
User avatar
sjn
Elite
Elite
 
Posts: 1332
Joined: Wed 09 Mar 2005, 04:00:00
Location: UK

Postby Tapas » Sat 30 Apr 2005, 21:23:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pfish', '
')Science has no preconceived notions or fantasies. Scientific argument only gets stronger with more debate and facts.


I like your spirit. We all should have a skeptic mind and debate everything till the evidence is strong enough to hold a hypothesis and then further our research, go for independent verification till we have to a theory. This is the way science advances.

What causes Global Warming?

Our atmosphere mainly consists of nitrogen and oxygen. These molecules do not heat the atmosphere. The greenhouse effect is caused mainly by carbon dioxide. It traps solar heat. Billions of tons of greenhouse gasses have been spewed into the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels. Burning forests have added to the damage. CO2 levels have gone up by 30% since the Industrial Revolution.

Global warming changes the climate. As climatic cycles get disrupted, they bring in drought, hurricanes and typhoons affecting crop yield. Countless species are forced to migrate. Many ecosystems disappear. Polar ice caps start melting. By 2050 the sea level is expected to rise 5 feet flooding coastal areas. As many as 150 million people living in Bangladesh, Egypt, Holland and India will loose their homes. The sea level may rise by 300 feet if all the ice melts.

The earth's temperature could rise by as much as 10 degrees F over the next 100 years.

Here is an excellent essay that tracks how the scientists tracked CO2 as the key to Climate Change from 1950 to the present.

The Carbon Dioxide Greenhouse Effect

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')All through these decades, a few geologists had continued to pursue the original puzzle raised by Tyndall and Chamberlin - had changes of CO2 been responsible for the greatest of climate changes? These were the vast slow swings, lasting tens of millions of years, between eras like the age of dinosaurs with summer-like climates almost from pole to pole, and eras like our own when continental ice caps waxed and waned. There was no consensus about the causes of these grand shifts, and it was nearly impossible to reliably measure the atmosphere many millions of years back. Nevertheless, by the 1980s, scientists turned up evidence that CO2 levels had been elevated during the great warm eras of the past.

A key point stood out. In the network of feedbacks that made up the climate system, CO2 was a main driving force. This did not prove by itself that the greenhouse effect was responsible for the warming seen in the 20th century. And it did not say how much warming the rise of CO2 might bring in the future. What was now beyond doubt was that the greenhouse effect had to be taken very seriously indeed.


I would encourage an intelligent reader to do their own research on the subject of Global Warming.

For starters, please join these two Yahoo Forums:

Climate Archive - Excellent collection of recent articles on Global Warming

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ClimateArchive

Paleontology and Climate discussion:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Paleontology_and_Climate

Here are some additional material -

NOAA Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory:

Ozone layer (stratosphere)

http://www.cmdl.noaa.gov/ozone.html

Greenhouse gases (troposphere)

http://www.cmdl.noaa.gov
User avatar
Tapas
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 184
Joined: Sat 05 Feb 2005, 04:00:00
Top

Postby MicroHydro » Sun 01 May 2005, 00:58:58

AIDS is killing 3 million people per year, and still growing. This might not be a "crisis" to most yet, but it certainly will remain to be part of the long emergency.

We were lucky with SARS. If it had become a global pandemic, hundreds of millions of deaths were possible. Maybe not a full blown "crisis", but certainly a near miss. The virus still exists in animals. Maybe the next time SARS crosses over to humans, we won't have the resources to contain it.

Y2K would have caused some real economic problems if the problem had not been identified and corrected in advance. The failure of a crisis to materialize was due to a lot of hard work by many thousands of programmers, which cost many millions of dollars.

Global climate change by definition can never be perceived as a "crisis" because long gradual trends will always be masked by short term fluctuations. The fact that oil prices fell on Friday does not negate the fact that they are headed up long term. The world climate is changing whether one chooses to pay attention or not.

Peak oil is not a "crisis" either. The most dramatic short term consequences are undesirable political and economic shifts that were likely even if oil remained abundant. The year to year changes otherwise will be gradual enough that whatever happens, it will become the new normal, rather than a crisis.
"The world is changed... I feel it in the water... I feel it in the earth... I smell it in the air... Much that once was, is lost..." - Galadriel
User avatar
MicroHydro
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1242
Joined: Sun 10 Apr 2005, 03:00:00

Postby k_semler » Sun 01 May 2005, 03:14:06

I have noticed the following about "problems" presented by the media, and PO fits neither of these:

1. If the problem effects the nation, or a significant part of it, present it as Problem-->Solution. This is done to give closure to the case, and not have people worry about it.

2. If it does not effect the nation, or only a very very small portion of it, (ie 1 or 2 families), then it is OK to present only the problem. But make sure that preventitive measures are spoken about so it has less ability to effect the masses of people

3. If it is a live event that effects a very small portion of the nation, (a bank robbery, high speed chase, hostage situation), then cover it miniute by miniute until the situation is resolved. After all, the good guys always win, dont they?

4. If it is a live event that effects the nation or a large portion of it, (Sept. 11, August 15 2003 blackout), then focus on that event's possible solution. Then cover the event until the solution seems to be in sight, and cease coverage. The viewer/listener is then left to thier own devices to assume it turned out good. (who really didn't know that our electrical infastructure is one of the oldest in the world, and little better than some third world countries?)

Unfortunatly, PO fits in none of these catagories. It will effect our nation, (and world), on a massive scale and there is no solution even remotly in sight of solving the situation which will impact the globe. Yes, some solutions have been proposed, but at best it is as if using a peice of plywood to deflect an incoming 4" mortar. Until PO fits one of these four models, then it will not be covered to any significant amount in the mainstream media. Currently, PO just does not fit with the media's model of presentation. They decide what the population thinks about everything, and it will not be divulged until thier message can be taylored to brainwash the masses effectively to further enhance thier own personal debit.

Almost every event covered by the media can be linked to an increase in consumer goods if you look hard enough. (terri shaivo=living will, 09/11=guns, other PPE, 0815/2003 blackout=generators, Y2k=gasoline; generators; food; ammo; weapons; "yay it's 2000" paraphanalia, superbowl=beer, war="support our troops" stickers on cars, high speed chase=more insurance and cellphones). All media coverage encourages people to go spend money to stimulate the ecomomy. PO encourages thriftiness, which would undermine our modern debit-driven economy. PO will get no coverage until it is far too late, and all the signs of the depression are in full swing.
Here Lies the United States Of America.

July 04, 1776 - June 23 2005

Epitaph: "The Experiment Is Over."

Rest In Peace.

Eminent Domain Was The Murderer.
k_semler
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1797
Joined: Mon 17 May 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Democratic People's Republic of Washington

Re: State of Fear

Postby TrueKaiser » Sun 01 May 2005, 17:05:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tapas', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pfish', ' ')
Maybe PO is too close to the truth and the rest of this crap AIDS, global warming, Ebola, mad cow, mean bees and terrorism are nothing more than a smoke screen.


Ding! ding! ding!
We have a winner. The naked truth facing us to too hard to handle. Better shove PO under the rug and hunt some terrorists.


BZZZZZZZZT
sorry but aids is real, just head over to Africa to find more visible effects.

global warming is real and scientists recently found the smoking gun to prove we are the cause http://msnbc.msn.com/id/7665636/

ebola is real and is one hell of a nasty bug, if it wasn't real why would the us government have it in it's biological arsenal.

mad cow is real though more rare then the media would have you believe.

killer bees are very real, though the name is a misleading. they don't really go out of their way to kill people they just reverted back to their wild behavior from the domesticated bee's that we are so used to.

terrorists are real but al-qaidia(or how ever you spell it.) isn't.
Religion is excellent stuff for keeping the common people quiet.
'Napoleon Bonaparte'
User avatar
TrueKaiser
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 503
Joined: Thu 28 Oct 2004, 03:00:00
Top

Postby sjn » Sun 01 May 2005, 19:49:08

Of course these things are real. Just because they're used as a smoke screen to cover more immediate globally significant dissonance doesn't mean they aren't real. If "The End Of Life As We Know It" is going to make these things irrelevant to most people they suddenly don't matter so much. Personally, I think that matters like "Global Climate Change" and habitat destruction are massive issues that could potentially result in the Earth becomming uninhabitable. I've previously been very concerned about vCJD though given the uncertainty of the next few years it suddenly seems less important. I think AIDS is going to be a big problem here in the UK. I know many young people who just don't care, they have unprotected sex with just about anybody and everybody, I think this will actually have a very significant impact over the next few years. Ebola seems to be nothing new. The lastest research into the "Black Death" actually pins the disease to an Ebola variant as opposed to Bubonic Plague which has terrorised Europe for best part of the last 400 years. Islamic terrorists have been made into an easily identifiable enemy. The persecution of innocent muslims results in radicalisation which creates the very problem it set out to solve; this is of course entirely deliberate.

And yet all these issues are easily dismissed individually. They can all be addressed in some symbolic way, with small sucessess built into major triumphs. How might any government address an issue like Peak Oil which threatens to undermine the most fundamental assumptions upon which civilisation is built?

(Sorry if I haven't made a lot of sense, I've had rather a lot to drink... oh well...)
User avatar
sjn
Elite
Elite
 
Posts: 1332
Joined: Wed 09 Mar 2005, 04:00:00
Location: UK

Postby Ludi » Sun 01 May 2005, 21:50:40

Of course Micheal Crichton is an intelligent person and writer, that doesn't absolve him from ignorance, or a kind of stupidity. I know PhDs who are incredibly "stupid."
Ludi
 

Postby bobcousins » Sun 01 May 2005, 21:50:44

I often wonder about this. Peoples perception of risk, and what makes a good story, are seriously skewed. I am sure there are good reasons for this. People want to be scared. But not too much.

There is some natural selection at work among governments and the media, but I'm not sure about what makes the public tick. Possibly on one hand it is helpful to know about unusual threats, but you don't need to be told about actual everyday threats. On the other hand, you don't want to be paralysed by fear. Basically, keep people excited, but let them sleep at night.

There is a chemical in the body that makes fear exciting. This varies between individuals, as you would expect. This is important, because it encourages some individuals to take risks, which may be advantageous to the group. Equally, you need some individuals to play it safe. Risk taking also reduces with age. I believe all this behaviour is the product of evolution, but is now exploited in various modern ways. Killing mammoths is no longer possible, so we satisfy our need with a horror movie or bungee jumping

The ideal scare needs to line up with inherent fears of the populace, and the interests of the state. The ideal scare for the media is something, well scary, but not very likely to happen, and can be forgotten about by the time of tomorrow mornings newspaper.

So what makes the news here is a man bitten by a "deadly" banana spider. He didn't die, so its not that deadly. I haven't checked, but I think the number of people dying from spider bites in the UK is zero. The real risks are car accidents, heart diease, lung cancer, but these are not good stories.

People are naturally xenophobic, and governments lay claim to protecting the people, so an ideal scare is threat of invasion by some other people - commies, al qaeda, canadians- they all work. It needs to be something tangible and credible though. Asteroids are no good. People are not scared of them. And the government can't pass laws against asteroids. Equally global warming isn't really scary. Having your house flooded every year is though. To tackle global warming entails enacting unpopular measures. No good. Passing laws against foreigners is much better. It doesn't matter that they don't pose any actual threat. In some ways it is better, because when your policy fails it doesn't matter.

So the dynamics of scaring people, gaining legitimacy to protect people who think they are scared, and being scared, generally add up to scares which miss real threats completely.
It's all downhill from here
User avatar
bobcousins
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1164
Joined: Thu 14 Oct 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Left the cult

PreviousNext

Return to Book/Media Reviews

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests

cron