Humans are very good at developing strategies that span up to 20 or 30 years. However, once the strategic goal gets to be more than 40 or 50 years out, something goes haywire and it's like the human mind is incapable of reacting appropriately to the challenge on which long-term strategy should be based.
It is not surprising that from an evolutionary perspective there would not be a well-developed ability to develop plans that span more than a human lifetime. There is little survival value to developing a 100 year plan if there is no way to pass the plan down generationally because there is no written communications (as there haven't been for most of human history). Today we obviously have the ability to have generational continuity to strategic planning if we wanted it, but it's like the possibility of this approach doesn't event occur to most people (to be fair, long term planning is a luxury that requires short and medium term problems to be more or less under control).
The Japanese talk about 100 year plans, but I wonder how seriously they take it.
The peak oil problem is exactly the kind of thing that calls for a 100 year plan, but I'm not sure the human mind is equipped to develop a 100 year plan or follow one once developed.
I don't think it is a matter of people being stupid, I think it is more like a person who is color blind--their inability to see color is not a function of their intelligence.
Examples of big problems that people just don't seem to really SEE because of the duration over which they occur include:
Peak oil
Social Security and Medicare funding issues
Overpopulation
Global warming
Rising sea levels
Perhaps having the ability to fully perceive long term problems would actually just contribute to a lot of misery and mental illness, since the problems of one lifetime are usually plenty to keep each of us busy.
If you ask most people what their plans are for the next 5 or 10 years they can probably tell you. If you ask them what their 30 year plan is, they have probably thought less about that one. Ask them what their 50 year plan is and few people will have a good answer. I think this same dynamic applies to us collectively.
But it seems to me that long term survival of human beings requires a coherent long-term strategy.
The human mind can develop and execute to perfection a 10 year plan; beyond that the effort seems to dissipate and focus is lost (part of the problem, too, is that circumstances frequently change in unanticipated ways). I think that ultimately the peak oil challenge will be to fit a 40 or 50 year solution into a 10 year strategy.





