Joe wrote:
However, being vehemently "right" is one of the most effective ways I know to make people roll the mental shutters down and switch off.
Absolutely.
When people indulge in wild , innacurate or hyperbolic assertion it tends to put off others not currently involved in the debate, or only just getting into it. . Thats why accuracy is so important. It worries me when people say things like 'conventional oil production will peak on Thanksgiving Day 2005' or 'where to set up a commune, ready for when the world runs out of oil and gas.'
I and others who know that Ken Deffeyes has a highly developed sense of humour, might 'get it' - that he is using hyperbole for effect, and is also taking a poke at a lot of pseudo-accurate economic forcasting. But most people won't. And thats the danger.
I imagine, unlike the dozen or so regular posters here, most casual viewers of this forum have no idea what hatchelt does or does not understand of the subject and will tend to take what he/she says at face value.
And that was my intitial reaction too. On reading "My friend and I are discussing where to set up a commune, ready for when the world runs out of oil and gas." I thought "This guy doesnt have a clue what he's talking about." from subsequent posts in this thread, It would seem he/she does. I stand corrected.
We've seen that happen to an extent in the climate change (aka 'global warming' ) debate. The debate has become highly polarised and politicised. Both sides have made extreme and/or unsubstantiated claims and, as you say, many people have 'rolled the mental shutters down' as a result.
It would be a shame if the peak oil debate goes the same way - grandstanding at the extremes, neither side taking each other or the middle ground seriously.