I get the point of the original post and in spirit I agree with it. I don't think there's anything glamorous in having less purchasing power, of competing with others for dwindling resources, etc.
However, just because it's not glamorous doesn't mean that a) it's not coming, and b) in some ways we won't be much better off for it.
I think about all this from time to time. I think in some ways people think romantically of it because it conveys a simpler existence, which isn't necessarily a bad thing. Think about it - do we really all need cell phones to be connected 24/7? Do we need instant access to the internet all the time, any time? 113 channels of shit on the tv to choose from? Of course, you can always simplify your life voluntarily without the world crashing down by simply doing away with these things (I don't have a cell phone, and eventually I'll talk the wife out of cable

).
More than that, though, one thing all these luxuries and stuff do is require you to work longer and harder to avoid work. Huh? Example: I have a gas-powered push mower - a simple machine with a 4 cycle combustion engine, 15 years old, no assisted driving, all the pushing comes from me. This thing is supposed to make life easier and faster over, say, a manual reel mower. This is supposed to save me time and energy so I have more time for leisure. However, the mower originally cost more than a reel mower. That money has to come from somewhere, so I trade in my hours for a handful of dimes in order to get that money. Then I have to buy gasoline and oil for it forever, more hours for dimes. Eventually I need spark plugs, air filters, a replacement pull rope, and so on. Now, I've made this mower last 3 times longer than it should have - the deck has rusted out and I've welded on patches, reused air filters for years, etc. Nevertheless, it weighs twice as much as a reel mower, and a reel mower's only cost after you buy it is sharpening the blade (same as a gas mower, btw), which I can do with a $2 file that will last me for 20 years.
And so it is with everything - the dishwasher that saves me time by washing the dishes breaks every 5 years and requires several hundred dollars for a new one. Cordless drills drill a hole faster, but the batteries go dead every two years, requiring replacement. Cars get me to work faster but cost thousands of dollars to buy, maintain and operate, especially over a self-reproducing horse out in the field. Bottom line is all these time-saving leisure-creating devices really do is shift the way you work, from out in the field to the office cubicle. Americans work 8 hours per week
longer in 2008 than they did in 1900, despite all these time-saving luxuries. The more stuff you have, the more conveniences, the more money it requires to both buy them and keep them up. Americans need big-ass houses to hold all the crap of "normal" living, from riding lawnmowers to weedeaters to snow shovels to two full outfittings of clothes for "work" and "play", etc. I'm no exception - matter of fact, up until a few years ago, I'd say I was a fairly protypical American, though I've always been on the frugal side of things. I have a good-sized house and lots of stuff just like everyone else here.
Think about how many people put themselves into servitude for *years* in order to buy all this stuff. Is it worth it? I think most "doomers" say no, and that's what they're romanticizing - a lifestyle in which there's more time for play, for culture, for hanging out with friends, even at the expense of truckloads worth of junk. No way would I ever go back to the idea of using credit cards to buy all kinds of instant gratification stuff, trading in my future hours. This realization starts to hit home as you get older and into middle age that, hey, I don't have *that* many years left, do I want to slave away for my stuff forever?
I bought a new, American-made hoe the other day. It's not nearly as fast as a gas-powered weedeater, but it's a lot quieter, and free other than the food in my belly. And it'll last 50 years. Now how can I argue with that?
After fueling up their cars, Twyman says they bowed their heads and asked God for cheaper gas.There was no immediate answer, but he says other motorists joined in and the service station owner didn't run them off.