The state of the world is never far from my mind, not because I, personally, can do a whole lot about it, but because, well, it sucks eggs a lot of times.
I ran across an excellent comment at The Oil Drum the other day, and asked Joe if I could quote him. If you want to read the whole thing you’ll want to click here. It’s a bit long so I’ll put it below the fold.
As I’ve said before, I’m trying my best not to dwell on the energy crisis; but as I watched gas prices drop all the way to $3.95 this week I’m hearing people say that everything will be OK. I don’t think it will. Think back twenty years, and think about how much has changed. I keep trying to imagine ten or twenty years from now, what will our world be like?
On August 14, 1969 my uncle, Rod Davis, was in the Air Force stationed at Biloxi, Miss. This is his recollection of events:
There was a Hurricane named Camille headed their way.
He was assigned to the Hurricane Hunters at Keesler AFB. Understanding Hurricane threats was their business. Well ahead of Camilles’ arrival they issued national and local warnings and as a result the govenors of Missisippi and Louisiana issued evacuation alerts and the National Guard was called up. At Keesler AFB they scrambled all of the local aircraft out of the area and then battenned down the hatches in preparation. Even after all of the preparations they still sustained major damage but no loss of life.
The locals were another matter. They completely downplayed the threats of Camille and instead planned Hurricane parties up and down the coast. The bars even created a new cocktail (The Hurricane – 90 proof) and issued souvenir Hurricane glasses to the revelers.
When Hurricane Camille made landfall on the Mississippi coast it was the 2nd of 3 CAT V hurricanes in the world during the 20th century but was the most powerful tropical Hurricane that had ever been recorded making landfall. Official winds reached in excess of 190 mph. It flattened everything in it’s path. Hundreds of people were killed and even in Alabama over 1,000 businesses were completely wiped off of the face of the earth. To say it was a trainwreck would be an understatement. After the worst passed the airbase organized local relief efforts so they got to see first-hand the devastating effects. Those fools partied in the face of of one of the worst Hurricanes in history.
In reference to Peak Oil today I see a much larger threat yet I also see the same complacency. The impact of Peak Oil will make even Hurricane Katrina look like a minor interruption in comparison. The problem with Peak Oil is it won’t happen in a matter of hours so you won’t see the storm clouds and high winds and there won’t be the calm after the storm. Instead it will happen over years…decades really but the effects will be lethal. Also there won’t be national resources or organizations like FEMA coming to the rescue. As national governments’ resources dry up so will they. For the most part people will be on their own.
When President Bush said that America is “addicted to oil” he didn’t get it quite right. What he should have said was “American is dangerously dependent on cheap oil”.
What to do? In my opinion personal education is the most critical thing to do right now. With a few exceptions I consider main stream media to be clueless. Television and radio pundits (the chattering classes) should be rounded up and charged with mal-practice. At the same time politicians pander to the lowest common-denominator: stupidity.
People need to drop any illusions that we can stop it or cure it or worse yet deny it out of existence. Like Cammille in 1969 it’s coming but there’s no stopping it. The best we can hope for is to mitigate the disaster through intelligent preparation.
If we are going to have any chance at all we will have to find the leadership in the shaving mirror, not the TV screen. In other words the answers will come from grass roots efforts and not from global centralized organizations.