by MrBill » Tue 26 Dec 2006, 05:54:56
americandream wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hy do you people come on here...this is a site bemoaning the wasteful wastern lifestyle that brought us to the impasse of peak oil and what do we have here...the Reverend Life's All Right Jack...I mean mate, you shoud be maybe position yourself as a consultant with say...Bloomberg...or Rupert Murdoch's Fox. Birds of a feather?
As for this Asian/Western bullcrap...lets not forget, as with Asia or any other skewered society, the West works well for some and not for others. In addition, all the libertarian benefits you enjoy were concessions to placate left wing sentiment during the Cold War. Wait a few years, and I reckon you may well be able to purchase the little girl next door and her dog on the street corner.
Nothing wrong with Bloomberg. I use it everyday. It is a good source of news and analytics. Because good policy is based on facts and data. As they say, "what matters, gets measured."
"this is a site bemoaning the wasteful wastern lifestyle that brought us to the impasse of peak oil" and advocating a "khmeres rouges" type cleanup are not why I am here.
I would like to talk about the real problems associated with post peak oil depletion. Thanks.
Peak oil is a geological fact and the discovery of a petroleum as a cheap source of energy is a natural extension of that fact. We have always known it was a finite resource. That means limited.
That I have different opinions than you should not be a problem? If everyone agrees with your ideas to mitigate the fall-out of post peak oil depletion, and that includes moaning about western lifestyles and advocating khmeres rouges cleansing pogroms, then you'll have public opinion on your side. Good luck with that.
UPDATE:The US dollar and the Thai baht. Comparing apples and oranges? $this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Mr. Market has once again had the last word. He always does. The only difference these days is that his verdict and the associated penalties come faster than in the past. The forces of supply and demand can't be suppressed, at least not indefinitely and sometimes not even for 24 hours.