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116 comments on Putting Peak Oil In Perspective
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116 comments on Putting Peak Oil In Perspective
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Which in the long run, is probably worse. It will give us a lot more time to burn ever dirtier coal, cut down every tree in sight, drill the entire planet in search of hydrocarbons, pollute the oceans and rivers, build nuclear power plants and solar panel factories with ever decreasing safety standards, etc.
We may not even notice the actual peak when it comes. Just ever rising prices, more and more people falling out of the middle class every year, an ever shrinking economy. Until we're just another Third World country.
I'm quite optimistic about Venezuela's chances. They might very end up in better shape than the US - at least those who don't spend their money on second homes in Florida.
But he was the only populist they could blame things on, so he got the blame.
We aren't a country similar to the 1930s, when a lot of people lived on farms or small towns where they were fairly self-sustaining. People in those days tended to save for rainy days. Right now the U.S. savings rate is zero, and the government is into deep deficit spending to try to keep the economy going.
That's why I can never discount the "cliff" theory. We don't have a parachute if the debt bomb goes off.
What we might find (one possibility) is that we slowly slip into a decline that we can only diagnose long after the fact when it might not be fixable.
If you haven't read Jared Diamond's "Collapse", I highly recommend it. Not all Collapses are the same. Some take weeks, some take years, some take many generations.
Collapse is great. I also recommend Guns, Germs, and Steel, his previous book (which won him a Pulitzer). It's sort of the complement of Collapse: it explains how Western civilization came to dominate the world.