by Pops » Fri 02 Jun 2006, 10:56:58
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Colorado-Valley', '
')It seems like I've learned more here in two years than I did in 12 years of formal education.
Boy ain’t that the truth!
I was talking to my neighbor last night and of course gas prices came up. Now he’s just a good old boy, went to a one-room school about 100 years ago but he got me started and I was off to the races! SA, Mexico, Venezuela, petro-dollars/rubles/dracmas, the North Sea, North Slope and all the rest – and finally when I took a breath he said, "You sure make things complicated!"
When my kids were young and they would ask me a question my response was usually, "How much do you want to know?" – if I knew much about the question, that is. That’s the conundrum here; the more info you assimilate and the harder it is to remember the simple facts.
There are some very smart people around here who have filled out my knowledge base to an amazing degree. Many, like Mr. Bill, Rockdoc, pup55 - well too many to name actually, have enlightened me; some have changed my opinions; some encourage me and some scare me.
Luckily, nowadays the time I spend here is directly proportionate to the amount of computer work I (should) do – which is getting less all the time, so I get a chance to go outside and do real stuff more and more.
After 2 years I usually wind up posting one long, opinionated, rambling rant (like this) per day and along with a snide comment or two to PMS or spec

I don’t usually get involved in the various debates anymore – I’ve done that till I was blue in the fingers.
I find it helps me to go back to my first post every once in a while to see how my basic outlook has changed.
Here is the first and last part of my first post here at PO.com on April 3, 2004
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Hello all,
It seems to me that it is pretty obvious that any finite resource will have a mid point of availability. It isn’t a huge leap them to understand that the high point of discovery indicates the eventual high point of production. While economists can wax about “demand destruction” and “replacement technology” the difference is that this “commodity” is fundamental to our ENTIRE way of life, there is no replacement technology to this fantastically “dense” energy source and the few possibilities will take years and huge investments to even get close. Demand destruction in this case relates to the reduction of the world FOOD supply for kripe sakes!
… I don’t believe there will be an oil “crash” soon, but there certainly could be an economic crash as the cost of oil and virtually everything else begins its inevitable rise. That is the wild card; how long do we have to prepare before the cost of preparing is out of reach or the necessities unavailable?