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Reasons to be optimistic

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General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby snowhope » Fri 30 Mar 2007, 20:21:18

Reasons to be optimistic? You have got to be bloody joking?!!!

I have held off from responding, yet since I saw this thread first posted, I couldn't believe it! I agree with previous comments from Airline Pilot, Montequest, Aaron, Neopo, etc.

I have been an optomist all my life. I see the positive side of things not the negative. Yet Peak Oil, which I became aware of only 2 years ago, changed me from optomism to pessimism within half an hour of discovering the subject. Everything I have read and researched on the subject has reinforced that pessimism. The only thing that has negated it slightly is the thought that it might not happen quite as quickly as I first thought it would, yet I could be wrong on even that aspect. :(

My friends, there is no doubt we are in for hard times. For anybody to say we should be optomistic, really does show their mis-understanding of the situation our civilisation will face over the coming decades. You only have to understand exponential population growth, the concept of economic growth and the way we humans are so inclined to take the easy path, to realise that we are approaching the next depression and that it will be worse than the last one 75 years ago. :(

And if you are looking for justification of that statement, I really couldn't be bothered, because if you don't see it by now, then you won't see it until you are hungry.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby cultural_sublimation » Fri 30 Mar 2007, 20:22:41

This discussion on the climate is slightly off-topic, but I do have one important observation to make, which others in this thread seem to have forgotten. It's silly to point out a number of geographically disparate points in either continent. From an energy perspective, it makes much more sense to look at where the population lives! Sure, Finland is a frozen hell in winter, but why do you think only 5 million people live there?

For a clearer picture, try superimposing a map of the European population on top of another one showing mean January lows. What do you find? The overwhelming majority of the people live in areas with very mild climates! Look at the most populous countries in western Europe: Germany, UK, France, Italy, Spain, and even the Netherlands. Not exactly known as frozen wastelands, now are they? Yes, I know that parts of these countries can be cold in winter, but guess what? These colder parts are also the most sparsely populated areas! In fact, it's interesting to observe that a significant percentage of Europeans lives in a fairly contiguous area that extends from southeast England, to the Low Countries, the Paris area, and the northwest of Germany. People here are so "spoiled" by the gentle climate, that any day with a below freezing maximum temperature is considered very cold (and there's not many of those per year).

Anyway, I am not gonna embark on the whole my-climate-is-nicer-than-yours debate. I'll just reiterate the point I made two posts ago: from a climate perspective, and for the bulk of its population, you can say that Europe is a very gentle place to live. Period.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Gazzatrone » Sat 31 Mar 2007, 05:16:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('snowhope', '
')
I have been an optomist all my life. I see the positive side of things not the negative. Yet Peak Oil, which I became aware of only 2 years ago, changed me from optomism to pessimism within half an hour of discovering the subject. Everything I have read and researched on the subject has reinforced that pessimism. The only thing that has negated it slightly is the thought that it might not happen quite as quickly as I first thought it would, yet I could be wrong on even that aspect. :(


Try this post of mine arguing for a bigger threat than Peak Oil alone.
THE FUTURE IS HISTORY!
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Newsseeker » Sat 31 Mar 2007, 09:06:03

I think a very good question to ask now with the release of the GAO report is, "What are governments doing to address PO?" If the answer is nothing then there is very little reason to be optimistic.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Lore » Sat 31 Mar 2007, 09:29:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Newsseeker', 'I') think a very good question to ask now with the release of the GAO report is, "What are governments doing to address PO?" If the answer is nothing then there is very little reason to be optimistic.


Nothing is being done, because there is no public or political will to make the hard changes that a transition would cost them. Governments are hoping to "kick the can down the road".
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby retiredguy » Sat 31 Mar 2007, 11:27:58

If one subscribes to the Peak Oil Theory, then one has to believe that life as we know it today is not sustainable? Correct?

Given that, what does an optimist do that is different from a pessimist? Does an optimist do nothing, expecting that technology or "yankee ingenuity" or government action will ameliorate the transition to a new sustainable paradigm with a minimum of disruption? Or is an optimist pro-active? In the latter case, what is the course of action?

Would those of you who are pro-active optimists please provide your plans of action?

Don't just provide a laundry list of general solutions; be specific as to how your particular plan will see you safely to the land of sustainability.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Ibon » Sat 31 Mar 2007, 11:37:49

My most optimistic scenario is transformation through a series of brutal consequences that force their way into the collective conscious breaking down step by step this consumption paradigm and imposing change toward sustainability. Change by force and default through natural consequences eventually molds culture to further transformation by design.

How soon we make real changes depend on how soon we get wacked by the consequences of doing nothing.

The catalyst of disruptive events is what is needed to jump start our governments and culture toward real changes toward sustainability.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Ibon » Sat 31 Mar 2007, 11:50:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('retiredguy', '
')
Would those of you who are pro-active optimists please provide your plans of action?


You have to simulaneously embrace two seemingly contradictory approaches:

1) Live you life as an example to others minimizing your energy footprint and chip away at the denial by discussing this with people whenever you have a receptive audience.

2) Acceptance and patience waiting for external events that act as catalysts and use these events to open the eyes of those that remain in denial.

There is no use to throw pearls before swine and demonstrate in front of shopping malls when the current paradigm is so entrenched.

Sit back and watch the show but like a tiger in the forest leap out of your ambush and raise the consciousness of those around you when your prey shows a moment of weakness following disruptive events.

Waiting for opportunities may seem passive but it is actually important to maintain your sanity. So in the meantime don't forget to also celebrate and enjoy the abundance around you.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby retiredguy » Sat 31 Mar 2007, 12:38:31

Ibon,

I like the way you think. I'm doing the passive-aggressive thing myself.

The point I was trying to make is that if one truly believes Peak Oil is imminent, whether one is a pessimist or an optimist, one needs a plan of action. Most of the pessimists, aka doomers, have posted their particular plans. The optismists seem reticent to supply details of theirs.

I consider myself a realist. I'm preparing, the best I can, for the worst. I like my lifestyle, so if things turn out better than expected, that's a bonus.

I have a rather dim view of human nature. My credo has always been to have low expectations of my fellow man. I have seldom been disappointed, but then, neither have I been surprised. Erring on the self-reliance side has served me well.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Iaato » Sat 31 Mar 2007, 15:17:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', 'Y')ou have to simulaneously embrace two seemingly contradictory approaches:

1) Live you life as an example to others minimizing your energy footprint and chip away at the denial by discussing this with people whenever you have a receptive audience.

2) Acceptance and patience waiting for external events that act as catalysts and use these events to open the eyes of those that remain in denial.


Another way to look at this contradiction is in terms of maximum power. People self-organize themselves for the economy by processing materials and energy for maximum production and use. The energy that you do use as a person needs to result in behaviors that reinforce the system's performance (or else eventually you as an individual will be replaced within the system). Since the economy system's performance is changing due to changes in energy inputs, those reinforcements need to change to incentivize behaviors that are more sustainable, less competitive, more cooperative, less energy intensive, etc. There's a lot of vested interest in the system as it was, and there is still a lot of system reinforcement for old ways. It will only be when the pirates stop making money, that we will see calls for change. In other words, it may be no coincidence that we're seeing a convergence of crashing economy this month with the overdue confessional report of the Feds in the GAO report produced this week.

So back to Ibon's two seemingly contradictory ideas--
1) there is an obligation to speak out and to role model the current and pending changes in the system, since peak oilers seem to be the bellweather species for the change (most sensitive to the changes). And 2) wait for more tipping points in the system to then take the next step in downsizing/downscaling/leading the way.

And I would add 3) the reason you wait for more tipping points and not get so far out in front with the ideas of system change and powering down when talking to joe sixpack that you get totally shut out. This is really scary stuff. Unless the changes are emergent in reaction to sudden crisis, policy changes on a large scale won't happen until there is a bit of systemic change in structure and some OBVIOUS system cues (such as $4 a gallon gas and shortages) to hang the policy changes on. I would suggest that the optimists in this discussion here are not seeing the subtle system cues currently being provided that the pessimists are seeing that indicate a need for a huge shift in self-organization of the system rather than just a little tweaking. Those subtle system cues include things like the concepts of overshoot and net energy (nice post, Gazzatrone).
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby rdberg1957 » Sat 31 Mar 2007, 16:04:42

Optimism, pessimism. To be or not to be, that is the question.

At some point we will cease to be. All of us, our kin and our descendants. The earth is a time-limited incubator of life. Our sun will heat up and swallow the earth within a billion years or so. The existence of life-bearing planets is limited to a portion of their existence as bodies, contingent upon the life of the stars upon which they depend.

The question is whether or not we will cut that existence short ourselves, destroying not all, but much of life with us or whether we will find a way to live within that which our planet will support. We US citizens are more legitimately worried than our European neighbors because we are out on a limb, more likely to collapse sooner than others because of our huge dependence on the increasing flow of oil.

Currently, the factors which tip the scales toward pessism far outweigh those which push toward optimism. We are all finite; things can change either for the better or worse. But given what we know now, I have little reason for optimism about the world around me.

Technology advancies are incredible. Research into aging is awesome. I recently saw an episode of Charlie Rose show in which a panel of scientists discussing aging were unlocking the mechanisms of aging and disease. All this discovery is dependent on oil and coal. The technological advances have been energy dependent: computers, jet engines, medical equipment, agriculture.

Peak oil is one of many environmental mega-problems which face not only the oil-dependent, but Europe and the Third World as well. We are at or close to the nexus of multiple severe problems where one may compound the other. Global climate heating will make agriculture much more difficult at the same time we are attempting maintain food production and use crops for fuel. Fresh water shortages are imminent or present in parts of the world now and may be exacerbated by drought. The oceans are losing many of their creatures due to overfishing and temperature changes.
Six billion of us humans are taxing all the earth's resources, depleting soil, oil, water, air, wildlife.

Depending on the rapidity of depletions of resources and climate change, our ability to adapt is likely to be overtaxed. Many of us are likely to die premature deaths unless: our population is decreased by half without war (war uses incredible amounts of energy); and we find some technological breakthrough (s) which allows us to continue using energy at current rates or better or we decide to adapt to living while using 1/10 or 1/20 of our current energy consumptions; and we conserve ocean resources, allowing them to replenish; and we eliminate 90% of greenhouse gas emissions very soon. The list goes on.

The not so long-term tasks ahead for survival of humanity are great, our current efforts are weak and only by a few. Hence, the reasons for pessism over optimism. No technological fix is currently known which will provide prodigious amounts of energy without exacerbating global warming. Is it possible? Maybe. Likely. I think not. Will we reduce our population voluntarily? No evidence for that as a species. We need to do all these things and more and currently most of the planet is going in the wrong direction with one or all of the above mentioned problems, not just the US. Growing sugarcane, worse yet corn, for fuel while many starve is no answer.

The evidence is growing that we are fast moving in the direction toward our own extinction. How or when that will happen I don't know. Our species will be extinguished; at some point our flame will flicker and die. I would prefer it to be later rather than sooner. I would like to see us develop into something better than we currently are. We humans are wonderful and awful, intelligent and crazy, lovable and detestable. We are all these things. Let us work to become the best we can be before our flame is extinguished. May we still be here a million years from now!

What then is my hope? That the few who understand the problems will become many; that more will join in to invest their energies into making important changes which may delay our demise. That we will strive to love the planet and all its creatures with all our might, that we will love ourselves enough to stop our mad drives for world dominance, exploitation at any cost. If our species should end 20 years from now or 20,000, I will be satisfied if we have changed for the better, become better human beings. Obviously many others will not be satisfied with this, but so far I can find no other satisfaction than to be the best human being I can be today.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby threadbear » Sat 31 Mar 2007, 16:31:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'I') have been in the sustainable design for most of my adult life. I have been involved in the organic food industry for 20 years and co-developed a Cohousing Community of 13 homes with shared land and property, including a 7,000 sq. ft. Common Building replete with a wood and metal shop, recreations and guest rooms, shared kitchen and dining, offices and rental spaces, etc. I have solar electric and hot-water heating panels on my roof. I telecommute and walk to town to shop.

I have personally walked the walk and professionally talked the talked anticipating influence and consequent impact on the society.

I have failed but I am optimistic.


I'm more optimistic after seeing "Who killed the electric car?" The peak oil problem is clearly not as problematic as all that, if we lived differently. A slow changeover to different systems should drop the demand and keep the price where it is or down. There is no way, in hell that China will be fuelling their cars with gasoline. They will definitely go electric....and yes I'm fully aware of all of the problems associated with generating that much power and fully confident that there are work arounds.

Have you seen this dvd, Pstarr? Also, where have you done all of your prep work?
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Iaato » Sat 31 Mar 2007, 17:24:14

I just found the website below by Folke Gunther

http://www.holon.se/folke/kurs/logexp/logexp_en.shtml

I really like his simple definition of sustainability: To be sustainable, a society cannot be dependent on storages (of either materials or energy). That says it all. Given that definition, our reliance on technology, and the size of our population, I can only be pessimistic.

check out his worm farms, too.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Ludi » Sun 01 Apr 2007, 17:24:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', 'T')he peak oil problem is clearly not as problematic as all that, if we lived differently.



The problem a lot of us see, the fact is, we don't live differently and there is little evidence most people intend to live differently nor are most people taking steps to live differently.


That, to me, is a reason to be pessimistic.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Twilight » Sun 01 Apr 2007, 21:08:51

Reading this, I think optimism and pessimism are relative anyway.

What's an optimist in the mainstream? Someone who believes the only way we're going is up, up, forever, towards fusion, flying cars and off-world colonies.

What's a pessimist in the mainstream? Someone who thinks this is as good as it gets. The 9-5 grind, generation after generation, forever.

What's the difference between an optimist and a pessimist here? That after observing the collapse of Western Civilisation within our lifetimes, humanity may or may not recover? The extent to which our descendants will attain sustainability, social complexity and specialisation of labour?

It's like two worlds of debate which don't register on each other's scales.

Everyone who understands constraints to exponential growth is a doomer.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby NEOPO » Sun 01 Apr 2007, 22:25:26

you mean realist? :)

Dont ya hate the word doomer? I know I sure do and I find that true doomers are few and far between.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Cyrus » Sun 01 Apr 2007, 22:34:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('NEOPO', 'y')ou mean realist?
Dont ya hate the word doomer? I know I sure do and I find that true doomers are few and far between.
Jack is special 8)


Oh, we're still here. :)
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby jbeckton » Mon 02 Apr 2007, 08:27:48

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('retiredguy', ' ')The optismists seem reticent to supply details of theirs.


If everyones understanding and expectaions of PO were the same then you could compare 2 different "plans of action". However, thats not the case, as I look back through old threads I get the feeling that about 30-40% of the posters on this board at any one time feel that PO & the effects of PO are right around the corner (a year or 2 away). About the same percentage feel its 5-10 years away and the remainder of posters feel that its decades away or just nonsense.

Now you already have at least 4 groups. Now, take into account how fast people feel that these effects take place, and to what degree they effect every day life.

In the end you are left with dozens of different scenarios resulting from everyones opinions on all of these variables. You cannot compare apples to oranges. There is no such thing as splitting it down the middle, optimists and pessimists.

If you consider someone who thinks there is "no problem" an optimist, then what plans would you expect him to make?

Not to mention that there is surely a big difference between what everyone says on this board and what they really do. Ever heard about someone who went to actually meet someone they met on the internet? They are usually shocked to find that they were not who they said they were.

Would you be suprised? I wouldn't be suprised if half of the people who say that they are building farms and raising cattle in preperation were really living in the suburbs driving SUV's and planning that trip to Florida while saving for their kids college funds.

People can say whatever they want, what are they really donig?
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