To: spinestein
Correct. Fossil fuels will never again be cheaper than they are now but must become progressively more expensive, as the supply is nonrenewable and the demand for energy can only increase exponentially. At some point in the next few decades, alternatives will make more economic sense for everyday mass energy use, and gasoline will be a luxury fuel, like when "Grampa Steve" takes his antique 2006 Dodge Viper out for a spin. The impact of energy on our economy has an evolutionary effect. The specialization that certain fuels allow becomes like pillars propping up our economy. When the supply of those fuels is threatened
recall the extinction of the dinosaurs? Entire swaths of our economy will become extinct, virtually over night. The folks whom are eager to say alternatives are the answer, are rarely engineers. If they are, they should be aware of the kind of the incredible lifestyle changes their alternative will require. Im an engineer and when I talk lifestyle changes Im referring to the kind of changes people do not make unless they are forced to make them. Necessity is the mother of invention. Necessity is measured in blood and starving children. This most recent generation of Americans is numb to such things
14 posted on
07/30/2006 11:15:11 PM PDT by
humint
(...err the least and endure! --- VDH)
To: humint
You're foolishly taking a LONG TERM view.
People are only supposed to think 6 months to 2 years ahead, at most. We're supposed to stifle our concerns about the distant future until these concerns grow into problems and then the problems fester into crisis. Then we're supposed to run around like headless barnyard fowl until the crisis claims all it's victims and count ourselves lucky if we survive to ignore the next concern.
Sheesh, I can tell you're an engineer.
20 posted on
07/30/2006 11:43:33 PM PDT by
spinestein
(Follow "The Bronze Rule")
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