ROCKMAN wrote:Adam - Actually long ago for me the PO date debate shifted from mildly entertaining to annoying distraction. Not quit as bad today but originally dominated the entire discussion.
jupiters_release wrote:I'm sure I'm not the only one who got burned out a decade ago waiting for 'the end' with oil at $147 barrel, and gave up on following (and preaching) the energy data.
Since I assume peak oil is really happening still currently is there an updated version of the "Crash Course" or any other overview of global production data/decline rates I can brief myself with and maybe share with others?
pstarr wrote:Be careful Sum, some would like to see ETP maintained as a constrained model. You know, tied up in controversy.
Pops wrote:PO is not the foremost threat.
We are in a very unstable political/economic situation
jupiters_release wrote:Does anyone think first world countries can or attempt to extend 'BAU' in the first world by destroying demand through unprecedented levels of war and genocide in second and third world countries?
SumYunGai wrote:Peak oil is the reason for the season, Pops.
SumYunGai wrote:Pops wrote:PO is not the foremost threat.
We are in a very unstable political/economic situation
Peak oil is the reason for the season, Pops.jupiters_release wrote:Does anyone think first world countries can or attempt to extend 'BAU' in the first world by destroying demand through unprecedented levels of war and genocide in second and third world countries?
Nothing will work to extend BAU. BAU has been over for years. There is no way out for modern industrial civilization. First world countries are the ones most at risk. The bigger they are, the harder they fall. Collapse will be very rapid.
jupiters_release wrote:BAU to me is lights on, food in the stores, and oil in the gas stations which isn't over yet. Reading the latest Etp thread Shortonoil mentioned something about 13 years when the graph says kaput in 5ish years..
jupiters_release wrote:Since I assume peak oil is really happening still currently is there an updated version of the "Crash Course" or any other overview of global production data/decline rates I can brief myself with and maybe share with others?
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