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PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

THE Energy Waste Thread (merged)

How to save energy through both societal and individual actions.

Re: Why we waste oil

Postby rogerhb » Sat 15 Jul 2006, 16:41:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', 'A')gain, I think that most of what you describe as waste is just none of your business.


Absolutely, because selfishness, greed and arrogance solve all known problems....

Note to gego, we share this planet.
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby gego » Sat 15 Jul 2006, 17:24:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rogerhb', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', '
')
Note to gego, we share this planet.


So the fact that we are neighbors grants to you no right to decide how I live my life, so long as I do not commit an act of agression against you. Fairly competiting for resources is not an act of agression against you. Should I come to your home and assess your lifestyle to determine if it meets my standard or frugality or efficiency.

It is true that one man's large use of resources will make them run out a little quicker, but by the same token any use will deplete them. This is a planet with limited resources and nature has set things up so that she selects the fittest to survive and the weakest to perish.

It is not your right to use force to prevent another to acquire resources to the best of his ability so that you or others can have them instead. This is not only a violation of the laws of nature, but also the laws of man. The founders of the USA listed liberty as the second highest value after life itself. These are my values. I am not responsible for your life or the lives of your family, nor are you responsible for me or my family.

I suggest that your socialistic values have caused historically, and will cause in the long run much more human suffering than has freedom.
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby rogerhb » Sat 15 Jul 2006, 17:51:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', 'T')he founders of the USA listed liberty as the second highest value after life itself. These are my values. I am not responsible for your life or the lives of your family, nor are you responsible for me or my family.


With freedom comes responsibility.

It's ironic that a species that started as small cooperating groupings appoints selfishness as one of the highest ideals.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', 'I') suggest that your socialistic values have caused historically, and will cause in the long run much more human suffering than has freedom.


Is socialism now responsible for overshoot?
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby gego » Sat 15 Jul 2006, 18:23:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rogerhb', '
')With freedom comes responsibility.


Sounds nice but it means nothing. The only responsibility that nature assigns us it to ourselves and out families. This idea that we are responsible for others because we are free is nonsense.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')s socialism now responsible for overshoot?


Hardly. Socialism is responsible for a much higher death rate than freedom.
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby rogerhb » Sat 15 Jul 2006, 18:32:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rogerhb', 'f')reedom


Sounds nice but it means nothing.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')s socialism now responsible for overshoot?


Hardly.


Glad we've got that sorted out.
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby oilfreeandhappy » Sat 15 Jul 2006, 23:11:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Elan_Rasa', 'O')bservation: We tend to waste oil and don't use it responsibly (especially the US).
This point can be argued, but when you consider that about 3% of the world's pop is using 25% of the world's oil, I consider most of it's use as wasteful. Consider that most of the oil goes towards transportation purposes and maintaining an infrastructure (suburbia) that is a waste of most of our resources.


I am bothered by this post.

First of all, how do you conclude that resources are "ours"? For the oil in the USA, typically the landowner owns what is under his ground, and then oil companies contract with the landowner to explore, drill, and extract the oil in return for specified payments. Nobody else has an ownership right unless they buy the oil or the products which are made with the oil. The gasoline in my gas tank is mine, not "ours". If there happens to be oil under my land, it is mine.

What superior judgement do others have to evaluate what I do with what I own? I consider that my wife waste money buying some of the junk she buys, but she considers what she buys valuable and useful to her. Maybe you would agree with her or maybe with me, but you have no right to interfer with her decisions, nor do I so long as she and I agree on how much of our money she will spend and how much I will spend.

It may not be wasteful in the opinion of an SUV owner to drive at 15 mpg; that may be your opinion, but we all have our opinions. To someone else, the most recent purchase of clothing by you may be considered wasteful. To you it is not a waste because you got back, in your judgement value equal to what you gave up.

I think that "waste" is a highly subjective and highly critical concept. Perhaps "waste" is just the difference between what you value and what the "waster" values.

There is no collective good or bad, just what is good or bad for specific individuals, and each of us has the greatest interest in representing his own best interest. Perhaps another way to view the fact that 3% of the world population is using 25% of the oil is to applaud the great success of those 3% of the population.


Elan Rosa - this post should answer your original question and remove all confusion. This is the "Me First" American attitude, and this is how most Americans think.
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby gego » Sat 15 Jul 2006, 23:35:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('oilfreeandhappy', '
')Elan Rosa - this post should answer your original question and remove all confusion. This is the "Me First" American attitude, and this is how most Americans think.


This reminds me a Sunday School lesson that was forced upon me when I was a kid (I am a long time athiest, but I was sent to church by my parents). The lesson was god first, others second, self third. This is a perversion of values, and a sure road to failure. It is biologically absurd. It is psychologically devistating to value selfabnegation. Only someone who does not value himself and his progeny would take such a position, and frankly, I think those who profess to do so are frauds, because when push comes to shove, they will put themselves first anyway. The egelatarian persona is just an expression of wanting to be taken care of by others.

Would you refuse to let your child or your spouse take a seat on a Titanic lifeboat in favor of someone else, or would you yourself stand on the deck rather than to take a seat yourself also? Give me a break.

As life turns out, it is the people whose tanks are half full who are the most greedy, while those with a full tank can afford to be generous and caring. The way to fill up one's tank is to exercise a high degree of caring and providing for one's self.

You think that selfishness is bad. Tell that to mother nature who has programmed into each creature the agressiveness to seek survival. If you truly think that greed is evil, then you are an evolutionary dead end, and rightfully so.
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby rogerhb » Sun 16 Jul 2006, 00:13:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', 'T')he lesson was god first, others second, self third. This is a perversion of values, and a sure road to failure. It is biologically absurd. It is psychologically devistating to value selfabnegation. Only someone who does not value himself and his progeny would take such a position.


So ants and honey bees are biologically absurd? Nature cares not one whit about the individual.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', 'I') think those who profess to do so are frauds, because when push comes to shove, they will put themselves first anyway. The egelatarian persona is just an expression of wanting to be taken care of by others.


Just because you are greedy and selfish does not mean everyone else is.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', 'W')ould you refuse to let your child or your spouse take a seat on a Titanic lifeboat in favor of someone else, or would you yourself stand on the deck rather than to take a seat yourself also?


So the rule "Women and children first" was never respected? That is news.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', 'Y')ou think that selfishness is bad. Tell that to mother nature who has programmed into each creature the agressiveness to seek survival. If you truly think that greed is evil, then you are an evolutionary dead end, and rightfully so.


I find it insane that people think the way to organise society is by promoting greed.

If this truely is the prevailing attitude then die-off here we come.
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby gg3 » Sun 16 Jul 2006, 00:31:02

Apparently my critique of the entitlement mentality, and comparison to spoiled welfare queens who whine about the dole getting cut back, hit a little too close to home for at least one person here.

---

Gego is engaged in a form of psuedo-libertarianism that is also often seen in chronic stoners whose main concern is getting government out of (the patch of pot plants in) their back yards. It's all about rights, implicitly about entitlements, and never about responsibilities.

The libertarian principle that government (or the community at-large) should not interfere with agreements or actions among consenting adults, also necessarily includes the principle that consenting parties should not impose costs on non-consenting third parties. These costs are known as externalities.

Externalities can be displaced across space or across time. If I dump my garbage over the back fence, and the neighbor has to clean it up now, that's spatial displacement of an externality. If I simply let my garbage accumulate in my basement so that someone else has to clean it up after I die, that's time displacement.

Oldfashioned pollution was largely a spatial externality: the folks downstream had to suffer the impact or clean it up. Resource depletion and climate change are time-displaced externalities: like the profligate national debt, future generations will suffer the impact or have to clean it up.

What Gego fails utterly to realize is that, of the general set of possible choices one can make, there is a large (and increasing) subset of choices that impose externalized costs on others. Those "choices" are illegitimate. They are not exercises in freedom, they are exercises in fraud.

---

The key to Gego's arguement is right here: "This reminds me a Sunday School lesson that was forced upon me when I was a kid (I am a long time athiest, but I was sent to church by my parents). The lesson was god first, others second, self third."

He is still rebelling against his parents, and against his pastor. He is stuck at the child's stage of ego development that says "ME FIRST! ME! ME! MEEEEE!!!!"

In light of that, I think we can safely write off the rest of his arguements as rationalizations.
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby CrudeAwakening » Sun 16 Jul 2006, 00:35:45

What some people evidently fail to realise is that a social system based purely on individual rights is full of internal contradictions. Individual rights can, and often do, conflict, and I haven't yet come across a satisfactory explanation of how these conflicts are to be resolved within such a system.

What exactly are these rights, anyway, and who confers them? And do they really exist without associated responsibilities? One person's right is another person's responsibility to preserve that right.

I like to think I have a right not to be murdered; but this right is just the flip side of someone else's responsibility not to murder me. The notion of rights without responsibility is pure B.S.
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby gego » Sun 16 Jul 2006, 01:20:51

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('CrudeAwakening', 'W')hat some people evidently fail to realise is that a social system based purely on individual rights is full of internal contradictions. Individual rights can, and often do, conflict, and I haven't yet come across a satisfactory explanation of how these conflicts are to be resolved within such a system.

What exactly are these rights, anyway, and who confers them? And do they really exist without associated responsibilities? One person's right is another person's responsibility to preserve that right.

I like to think I have a right not to be murdered; but this right is just the flip side of someone else's responsibility not to murder me. The notion of rights without responsibility is pure B.S.


I indicated that a free individual has a right to act as he pleases, so long as he does not commit an act of agression against another (such as murder in your example). Perhaps we are using responsibility in a different sense. When our Socialist friend, rogerhb, used "responsibility" I believe it was in the vein that we are responsible for our brothers welfare, which I beleive we are not. We may choose to be charitable but this is for our own benefit, not because it is our responsibility. I have no quarrel with the sense you use responsibility, which I regard an an moral obligation, i.e., not to commit acts of agression against others.

Furthermore, my use of resources (which then will be unavailable to others) does not fall within the definition of acts of agression against others, otherwise we all would be commiting acts of agression against future generations by using any limited resources, and they in turn would be commiting acts of agression against even later generations by their use, etc., etc., etc.

As to your assertion that individual rights are in conflict, I do not see your point. How is your right to live freely in conflict with my life to live freely, so long as we do not commit acts of agression against oneanother, which acts are outside of our rights? Hence our rights cannot be in conflict. Acts of agression, I think are commonly understood (murder, rape, theft, fraud, etc.) and I do not think any freedom loving person has ever claimed that these acts fall within the definition of individual rights.
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby gego » Sun 16 Jul 2006, 01:59:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'A')pparently my critique of the entitlement mentality, and comparison to spoiled welfare queens who whine about the dole getting cut back, hit a little too close to home for at least one person here.

---

Gego is engaged in a form of psuedo-libertarianism that is also often seen in chronic stoners whose main concern is getting government out of (the patch of pot plants in) their back yards. It's all about rights, implicitly about entitlements, and never about responsibilities.

The libertarian principle that government (or the community at-large) should not interfere with agreements or actions among consenting adults, also necessarily includes the principle that consenting parties should not impose costs on non-consenting third parties. These costs are known as externalities.

Externalities can be displaced across space or across time. If I dump my garbage over the back fence, and the neighbor has to clean it up now, that's spatial displacement of an externality. If I simply let my garbage accumulate in my basement so that someone else has to clean it up after I die, that's time displacement.

Oldfashioned pollution was largely a spatial externality: the folks downstream had to suffer the impact or clean it up. Resource depletion and climate change are time-displaced externalities: like the profligate national debt, future generations will suffer the impact or have to clean it up.

What Gego fails utterly to realize is that, of the general set of possible choices one can make, there is a large (and increasing) subset of choices that impose externalized costs on others. Those "choices" are illegitimate. They are not exercises in freedom, they are exercises in fraud.

---

The key to Gego's arguement is right here: "This reminds me a Sunday School lesson that was forced upon me when I was a kid (I am a long time athiest, but I was sent to church by my parents). The lesson was god first, others second, self third."

He is still rebelling against his parents, and against his pastor. He is stuck at the child's stage of ego development that says "ME FIRST! ME! ME! MEEEEE!!!!"

In light of that, I think we can safely write off the rest of his arguements as rationalizations.


So you accuse me of being a stoner, of dumping my garbage on my neighbor, and of failing to develop an ego beyond the level of maturity of a child.

I will confess that in a sense I do dump garbage into the common area, as does every other living creature. Such dumping is impossible to avoid, however, I, within the constraints of reason and self interest do make an effort to do my best. For example, I do garden with safer methods such as animal fertilizer, kelp, and non harmful insect control. What I do consume, I earn in the economic system honestly, without the benefit of government grant of privelege, and if I am more successful that many, then I have earned what I consume. I do not need to apologize for my success and more than you need to apologize to someone starving in the third world for your relative success.

Your assertions as to drug use and retarded personality development are your own fantacy. Actually, I could make the argument that your choice to belittle me rather than argue the issue is a reflection of your own personality development.
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby CrudeAwakening » Sun 16 Jul 2006, 02:03:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', '
')I indicated that a free individual has a right to act as he pleases, so long as he does not commit an act of agression against another (such as murder in your example). Perhaps we are using responsibility in a different sense. When our Socialist friend, rogerhb, used "responsibility" I believe it was in the vein that we are responsible for our brothers welfare, which I beleive we are not. We may choose to be charitable but this is for our own benefit, not because it is our responsibility. I have no quarrel with the sense you use responsibility, which I regard an an moral obligation, i.e., not to commit acts of agression against others.

Ok, I see what you mean. But as Donne said, "No man is an island".
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'F')urthermore, my use of resources (which then will be unavailable to others) does not fall within the definition of acts of agression against others, otherwise we all would be commiting acts of agression against future generations by using any limited resources, and they in turn would be commiting acts of agression against even later generations by their use, etc., etc., etc.

I think that if you take more than your fair share of a communal resource, this could be construed as an act of aggression, particularly if this resource is critical for the maintenance of life of other members of the community. You may be infringing on other people's right to life.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')s to your assertion that individual rights are in conflict, I do not see your point. How is your right to live freely in conflict with my life to live freely, so long as we do not commit acts of agression against oneanother, which acts are outside of our rights? Hence our rights cannot be in conflict. Acts of agression, I think are commonly understood (murder, rape, theft, fraud, etc.) and I do not think any freedom loving person has ever claimed that these acts fall within the definition of individual rights.

Much depends on how broadly you define your rights. In this case, your right to live freely may conflict with my right to live freely; for example, your right to smoke conflicts with my right not to passively inhale your smoke. Now you can remove the conflict by specifying that your right to smoke applies only when you are in your own house, and that I have no right to enter your house, but this is a narrowing of the definition of this right - my point being that this takes into account your responsibility not to infringe my right not to inhale your smoke, and places a bound on your right to smoke. Thus "rights" are not quite as universal as you may like.
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby rogerhb » Sun 16 Jul 2006, 02:11:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', 'W')hen our Socialist friend, rogerhb, used "responsibility" I believe it was in the vein that we are responsible for our brothers[sic] welfare, which I beleive[sic] we are not.


Society, despite being denied by the Thatcherites, does exist and has for many thousands of years in many different forms.

There is world of difference between looking after weaker members of society and providing for people who refuse to help themselves and are technically anti-social.

What was that phrase? "needs and ability"....
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby gego » Sun 16 Jul 2006, 02:23:48

rogerhb,

Your point about ants and bees is in the "exception that proves the rule" category, but you point is taken.

Other than that, you did not address the clear programming into humans and most other creatures to promote their own self interest. You condemmed this natural inclination, which you also posses, using the negative word, "greed".

When delpetion forces down the numbers of human population, how many humans are going to stand up and say, "Take me, and let that stranger over there live instead"?

There will be some few without the drive to live, but the majority I think will fight to be amongst those left standing.

As for the preceived self interest of those in the USA, I think that there are two groups of people here. One group consists of those descended from those who entered the territory unwilingly. The other group consists of those who came of their free will or are descended from those who came volintarily.

I think those who came of thier own free will are generally more assertive and agressive in their personalities than the average population. Certainly to uproot one's life and take the action to relocate required a certain amount of "get up and go", expecially compared to those who failed to do so and continued to suffer that which the immigrants escaped. How could this trait, on average, not be more prevelant in the descendents or the current immigrants?
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby rogerhb » Sun 16 Jul 2006, 02:44:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', 'O')ther than that, you did not address the clear programming into humans and most other creatures to promote their own self interest. You condemmed this natural inclination, which you also posses[sic], using the negative word, "greed".


Negative word "greed"? We're positively greedy! :)

Mankind can take things to extreme. Most animals take what they need to survive and no more, they are conservative. Western mankind is greedy, in that it demands far more resources than mere survival, and instead is continually demanding more resources to deliver a better standard of living despite living on a finite planet.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', 'W')hen delpetion[sic] forces down the numbers of human population, how many humans are going to stand up and say, "Take me, and let that stranger over there live instead"?


I suggest you look at the Arabic behavior of the desert dwellers who despite living in a hostile environment consider it a matter of honour to provide hospitality to strangers.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', 'C')ertainly to uproot one's life and take the action to relocate required a certain amount of "get up and go", expecially compared to those who failed to do so and continued to suffer that which the immigrants escaped. How could this trait, on average, not be more prevelant in the descendents or the current immigrants?


Presumably it was watered down over time, everyone outside of Africa is descended from an immigrant at some point.

First rule of first aid, is don't put yourself in danger in order to assist somebody else. Eg, don't try to save a drowning person if you yourself can't swim. That said, if you can swim, even if you don't know the person the first reaction is still to try and help, even though you will get wet in the process. If we fail to take that approach then the term "humane" will be meaningless.
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby gego » Sun 16 Jul 2006, 03:13:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('CrudeAwakening', '
')Ok, I see what you mean. But as Donne said, "No man is an island".


True. But there is a big difference between volintarily associating with others for mutual benefit, and being compelled to associate such as the draft, or under manditory attendence public education along with the manditory payments.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') think that if you take more than your fair share of a communal resource, this could be construed as an act of aggression, particularly if this resource is critical for the maintenance of life of other members of the community. You may be infringing on other people's right to life.


We are back to the original argument that large use by one individual is waste, while smaller use by another is not.

When I was much younger and developing my own ideas about the world, I recognized that human labor by itself was of small value. I concluded this by comparing primitive labor intesive societies with societies with large investment in tools. The obvious difference is tools and the energy they use. I then observed that there was a large difference in the income levels in the USA, eventhough many of the high income earners had nothing to do with developing the tools. Most of the inventions were just stacking a little change on something invented by long dead persons. The income distribution seemed inequitable since the high income earners had just managed to capture a higher percentage of the wealth producted by someone elses invention. But later I realized that the world would be a much less developed place if the income from tools had been evenly distributed. With an equal income distrubution all income would be consumed currently and there would be nothing left for investment in new tools, so the economic pie would soon shrink back to what could be produced by labor alone. In order to have funds available for tool production there necessarily must be excess funds in some pockets. Without the tools there would not have been the oil extraction, and the population would not have grown to 6.5 billion people, but rather would have stayed down in the 500,000 range. That is a huge number of lives that would never have been lived, probably yours and mine included (and rogherhb too, but don't tell him that he may be here as a result of someone's long ago greed as he will just come up with some funny thing to say and make us wish we were that clever).

So the way I view it is that inequitable distribution of income gave many humans the pleasure of life than would not have been possible with a "fair" ditribution of wealth. I am convinced that we must return to 500,000 people, but that does not erase the benefit to the individuals involved, of all the extra lives lived over the last 400 years.

When you get into what is fair or what is excess consumption you are entering a world where you must impose your life values upon others, and instead of preserving life as you think you are doing, you may actually reach the opposite result.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')uch depends on how broadly you define your rights. In this case, your right to live freely may conflict with my right to live freely; for example, your right to smoke conflicts with my right not to passively inhale your smoke. Now you can remove the conflict by specifying that your right to smoke applies only when you are in your own house, and that I have no right to enter your house, but this is a narrowing of the definition of this right - my point being that this takes into account your responsibility not to infringe my right not to inhale your smoke, and places a bound on your right to smoke. Thus "rights" are not quite as universal as you may like.


I think we are down to splitting hairs. In a public place where I must go, then I think somking is an act of agression against nonsmokers. In a private place like a home or restaurant, where I have the choice to go or not, then I think it is the property owners right to make the choice, knowing he runs the risk of losing nonsmoker business if he does not prohibit smoking. There are other issues that may be a little difficult, but logic and reason would suffice to settle the issues if we could leave our prejudices, misconceptions and brainwashing behind.
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby Concerned » Sun 16 Jul 2006, 14:29:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', '
')
We are back to the original argument that large use by one individual is waste, while smaller use by another is not.

When I was much younger and developing my own ideas about the world, I recognized that human labor by itself was of small value. I concluded this by comparing primitive labor intesive societies with societies with large investment in tools. The obvious difference is tools and the energy they use. I then observed that there was a large difference in the income levels in the USA, eventhough many of the high income earners had nothing to do with developing the tools. Most of the inventions were just stacking a little change on something invented by long dead persons. The income distribution seemed inequitable since the high income earners had just managed to capture a higher percentage of the wealth producted by someone elses invention. But later I realized that the world would be a much less developed place if the income from tools had been evenly distributed. With an equal income distrubution all income would be consumed currently and there would be nothing


Considering that some people on higher incomes consume all their money and other people on more modest incomes manage to save and invest. I think the concept of instant consumption is false.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')left for investment in new tools, so the economic pie would soon shrink back to what could be produced by labor alone. In order to have funds available for tool production there necessarily must be excess funds in some pockets.

The whole idea of a stock market is to allow individuals with different amounts of capital to participate in business activity.

Again I don't think there is a requirement that a small strata of wealthy society is required to exist in order for technological advances to be maintained.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Without the tools there would not have been the oil extraction, and the population would not have grown to 6.5 billion people, but rather would have stayed down in the 500,000 range. That is a huge number of lives that would never have been lived, probably yours and mine included (and rogherhb too, but don't tell him that he may be here as a result of someone's long ago greed as he will just come up with some funny thing to say and make us wish we were that clever).

An interesting way of looking at the world.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')So the way I view it is that inequitable distribution of income gave many humans the pleasure of life than would not have been possible with a "fair" ditribution of wealth. I am convinced that we must return to 500,000 people, but that does not erase the benefit to the individuals involved, of all the extra lives lived over the last 400 years.


I think a "fairer" distribution of wealth could still have led to technological progress, through individuals coming together and investing via partnerships or stock market listings.

The rise in population is to my mind a dubious benefit if such a correlation is provable at all.

I would argue that smaller population and higher standard of living is more desirable than having children because you want to give the pleasure of life.

Some interesting thoughts though.
"Once the game is over, the king and the pawn go back in the same box."
-Italian Proverb
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby Vexed » Sun 16 Jul 2006, 15:48:52

Kilometers are shorter than miles. Save gas, take your next trip in kilometers. ~George Carlin
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Re: Why we waste oil

Postby oilfreeandhappy » Mon 17 Jul 2006, 01:40:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', '
')This reminds me a Sunday School lesson that was forced upon me when I was a kid (I am a long time athiest, but I was sent to church by my parents). The lesson was god first, others second, self third. This is a perversion of values, and a sure road to failure. It is biologically absurd. It is psychologically devistating to value selfabnegation. Only someone who does not value himself and his progeny would take such a position, and frankly, I think those who profess to do so are frauds, because when push comes to shove, they will put themselves first anyway. The egelatarian persona is just an expression of wanting to be taken care of by others.

Would you refuse to let your child or your spouse take a seat on a Titanic lifeboat in favor of someone else, or would you yourself stand on the deck rather than to take a seat yourself also? Give me a break.

As life turns out, it is the people whose tanks are half full who are the most greedy, while those with a full tank can afford to be generous and caring. The way to fill up one's tank is to exercise a high degree of caring and providing for one's self.

You think that selfishness is bad. Tell that to mother nature who has programmed into each creature the agressiveness to seek survival. If you truly think that greed is evil, then you are an evolutionary dead end, and rightfully so.


Interesting moral perspective. Is this from the book of Gego? Seems right up there with Gandhi and Mother Theresa.
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