biffvernon wrote:clv101 wrote: a decision either way will end up being fairly inconsequential so no point fussing too much about it.
No, I can't quite work out which way would have provided the greater access to cheap oil either. Is there anything else that matters?
YES, Biff
Something you've never quite grasped, and that is the political reality of trying to implement any sort of solution to a serious physical problem like Peak Oil. What you are seeing played out in Europe now is a game where different groups of people's different self-interest clashes in such a way that
agreement becomes impossible. This isn't just a problem for the EU. The same problem exists in the Transition Town movement, and nearly tore the Green Party apart two decades ago.
We aren't all in it together. "We" (Europeans) aren't in the same boat as the Chinese. And the Greeks aren't really in the same boat as the Germans - or at least they don't want to be. What you are seeing now is that when the shit hits the fan, hard decisions have to be made about who gets what power and who takes which cuts in living standards.
What you are seeing is a foretaste of what is going to happen as the shit
hits the fan elsewhere. It's only happening in Europe first because they have a particular set of political problems that don't exist elsewhere, because the EU is in effect a
partially-formed federal state. This was always going to lead to serious problems eventually, regardless of peak oil and banking crises. A partially-formed state can survive when times are good, but not when they are bad.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)