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pstarr wrote:It's simple math. The earth supported a billion people at a time until around 1850 and the beginning of the fossil fuel epoch. Coal/oil allowed for a human population bloom, like yeast in a petri dish (or beer barrel) or algae in a summer pond. We've used up the nutrients. We dug all the convenient phosphorus, concentrated ores, and are now already on our hands and knees screening the earth for the remaining valuable elemental dust. Using the rest of the (difficult-to-extract) oil to do so. There won't be more. sorry. In spite of what you Human Exceptionalists want us to believe.
Questioning Dieoff is a religious proposition, either Creationist or Techtopian, that somehow mankind is not vulnerable to age-old forces. Unless we luck out and uncover perpetual energy under the roots of an giant, off-world, maple tree, we are FUBAR. Sooner rather than later. Arab Spring? Next it will be Planet Earth Spring.
We are living on subsidies now. Debt, rusting infrastructure, and inertia. Get Your feces together in a neat little pile, tie it up in an ole' sack, toss that over your shoulder and get the heck out of dodge. Now. Just my advice.

Discounting a drop in population totally would be an unrealastic position but questioning a 'die off event' is simply a matter of acknowledging that we will have enough fossil fuels for agriculture alone for many years to come and could hold it back for perhaps a century. Also it is possible that either renewables or nuclear will be able to provide enough energy for food.pstarr wrote:Questioning Dieoff is a religious proposition, either Creationist or Techtopian, that somehow mankind is not vulnerable to age-old forces.


Roryrules wrote:I note with interest that you still haven't answered my questions. And I find your doomerish Malthusianism quite charming in a quaint, backward kinda way. So thanks for the advice, but no thanks.


It's not just food (though it is pretty clear the 'Arab Spring' was sparked specifically by high fuel and food costs.) The real problem is the USA's dependency on myriad 3rd-world countries that are one riot or epidemic away from chaos. The breakdown of waste treatment and recent cholera crisis in Haiti is a premonition. I doubt we have the military strength to occupy 200 desperately poor nations that have "our" stuff.dorlomin wrote:Discounting a drop in population totally would be an unrealastic position but questioning a 'die off event' is simply a matter of acknowledging that we will have enough fossil fuels for agriculture alone for many years to come and could hold it back for perhaps a century. Also it is possible that either renewables or nuclear will be able to provide enough energy for food.pstarr wrote:Questioning Dieoff is a religious proposition, either Creationist or Techtopian, that somehow mankind is not vulnerable to age-old forces.


Roryrules wrote:pstarr wrote:It's simple math. The earth supported a billion people at a time until around 1850 and the beginning of the fossil fuel epoch. Coal/oil allowed for a human population bloom, like yeast in a petri dish (or beer barrel) or algae in a summer pond. We've used up the nutrients. We dug all the convenient phosphorus, concentrated ores, and are now already on our hands and knees screening the earth for the remaining valuable elemental dust. Using the rest of the (difficult-to-extract) oil to do so. There won't be more. sorry. In spite of what you Human Exceptionalists want us to believe.
Questioning Dieoff is a religious proposition, either Creationist or Techtopian, that somehow mankind is not vulnerable to age-old forces. Unless we luck out and uncover perpetual energy under the roots of an giant, off-world, maple tree, we are FUBAR. Sooner rather than later. Arab Spring? Next it will be Planet Earth Spring.
We are living on subsidies now. Debt, rusting infrastructure, and inertia. Get Your feces together in a neat little pile, tie it up in an ole' sack, toss that over your shoulder and get the heck out of dodge. Now. Just my advice.




pstarr wrote:Thanks Revi. I understand from reading your many posts that non-coastal (non-vacation) Maine is a poor place. Do you think it is typical of other rural ('invisible') regions? My guess it is and that the MSM is negligent in reporting on a vast poor America.


Plantagenet wrote:
Groovy, man! Can I get this with foodstamps?







Pops, I'm confused. Which category do I fit into?Pops wrote:teenage boys religious cultists denialists.













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