A bit more on Dime...

Posted by Clint at 3:45 PM on 12/15/2004   (6 Comments)

Here are some more links on the whole Dimebag thing. That's it, no more Dimebag news after this (unless it's really good)...

Nightclub Shooter's Mother Talks About Son

Photos of Dime's Final Resting Place

Video Report of Public Memorial Service

Getty Images of Public Memorial Service

Phil Anselmo Barred From Dimebag's Funeral

Phil Anselmo Laments Dime's Death

Fan Made Dimebag Tribute Video


Eyewitness Says Club Shooter Was Calm As 'Nightmare' Unfolded

Posted by Clint at 6:22 PM on 12/10/2004   (7 Comments)

From mtv.com:

A lot of fans didn't understand what they were seeing when a man jumped onstage and shot guitarist "Dimebag" Darrell Abbott in Columbus, Ohio, on Wednesday night, with many believing it to be part of the show. But one fan understood immediately,

"You'd expect somebody [who'd do this] to be crazy and jumpy, real sketchy. But he was calm and collected. ... He seemed to know his targets." — eyewitness Kevin Holycross

because he was standing just a few feet away.

Having befriended Damageplan drum tech John "Kat" Brooks before the show, 28-year-old Kevin Holycross found himself standing off to the side of the stage as the band began performing. "The beginning of the nightmare," as he called it, started 40 seconds into the first song, when gunman Nathan Gale walked up to the guitarist and "shot him in the side of the head, almost point blank" (see "Dimebag Darrell, Four Others Killed In Ohio Concert Shooting").

The crowd, not registering what happened, continued clapping and screaming, Holycross said, with people leaning over the balconies shouting, "It's a hoax! It's a hoax!" But knowing it wasn't, Brooks began screaming, "What the f---? What the f---?" Holycross said.

Holycross followed Brooks to the side of the stage, where a security guard was trying to subdue Gale and got shot as a result. As the shots continued — one hitting Brooks in the leg — people began to realize what was happening and started screaming, "Call 911!" as they ducked for cover.

I actually talked to the gunman probably an hour before this all happened. ... He asked how many bands were playing, and I said, "Well, there's going to be three locals and then Damageplan." He was just standing there, and he was like, "Ah, I don't want to see these locals, I'm only here for Damageplan, that's it."

— Dave Sheets, 23

The word "assassin" was stamped on everyone's hands that were 21 and over. It's just a weird coincidence. They came onstage, he was doing great, he was jamming out, and then hit a note and went down. I turned back around to the stage and it was just smoke. No one was onstage. The rest of the band was gone.

— Matt Shipp, 22

At first I thought it was a hoax, you know, part of the act. Then Vinnie went over to the microphone over by the bar and said, "Call 911, this ain't no joke." He fired off a couple more rounds and reloaded his clip.

— Jeremy, 16

Two of our security were chasing him before he got to the stage. When I saw Dime fall, I knew it wasn't part of the show, which is why I called 911. The sound guy for Damageplan was yelling, "Let go of Dime!" because he had the gun to Dime's head.

— Brian Kozicki, 20, lighting tech at the Alrosa Villa

I'm a nurse, so I ran down and said, "Let me help." I did chest compressions for 15, 20 minutes at least. I just wanted to keep going, I didn't want to give up on him. I know the shooter was still onstage at the time. I remember hearing more shots.

— Mindy Reece, 28

I was in just too much shock. I didn't know what to do. Dime was just lying there and I knew he was gone. It sunk in immediately. I'm at a loss for words.

— Tim Aaron, 24

In the midst of the chaos, Gale remained calm.

"He wasn't screaming," Holycross said. "Everybody's screaming at him, but I didn't see his mouth move one time. He didn't look like he was flipping out, you know what I mean? You'd expect somebody [who'd do this] to be crazy and jumpy, real sketchy. But he was calm and collected. He wasn't rapidly firing shots, he wasn't back and forth with his gun. He seemed to know his targets."

When Gale ran out of bullets and stopped to reload, people screamed, "He's out, he's out, get him!" Holycross said he and four or five other guys onstage tried to charge the shooter. "We're by the guitar amps, we're on stage right, and he's on stage left behind Dimebag's stack," he said. "And we get about to the drum set when he puts another clip in the gun. It only took a second or two."

Gale then fired two more shots, but they didn't seem directed at anyone in particular, more like warning shots to get away, Holycross said. Two or three police officers were in the venue by then, he said, with the officers on the floor distracting Gale while another came through the back door. It appeared Gale was trying to put his gun down on the bass amp when he was shot and killed by police, Holycross said, but authorities have said Gale was threatening a hostage when he was shot by the officer who snuck in the back door.

Once Gale was down, people tried to give CPR to Abbott, and Holycross tried to get Brooks out the back to get help. Police asked Holycross to give a statement, but he was too upset to do so at the time.

"Imagine being in the coldest place on earth with no clothes on," Holycross said. "I wanted to throw up. I wanted to bawl. I wanted to run and find a gun. To see this guy shot in front of me, one of my idols, it was scary as hell. It was the scariest thing I've ever seen, it was the saddest thing I've ever seen, it was the most horrible thing I've ever seen. I wish I had never seen it."

Afterward, Holycross was struck by the memory of an incident that occurred prior to the show. While standing near the tour bus around 9:30 p.m., he said, he saw Gale and another man come up and ask Brooks if they could party with the band. Holycross said Brooks responded, "They're not partying, they don't party."

"What do you mean they don't party?" Gale responded irately, flipping off the bus as he walked away, staggering.

Holycross said it doesn't exactly explain everything, but he wonders, was Gale drunk or on drugs? Was he looking for an opportunity to shoot Abbott earlier, or did he shoot him because he was denied the opportunity to party with him? Whatever the case, Holycross said he doesn't think it matters, "except for closure."


DIMEBAG's Killer Wanted To Sue PANTERA For 'Stealing' His Lyrics

Posted by Clint at 3:38 PM on 12/10/2004   (0 Comments)

From BLABBERMOUTH.NET:

The Associated Press is reporting that the man who shot guitarist "Dimebag" Darrell Abbott once told a friend that Abbott's former band, PANTERA, stole his lyrics.

Jeramie Brey said gunman Nathan Gale (Photo#1, Photo#2, Photo#3) once showed up at a friend's house saying he wanted to share songs he had written. The pages of lyrics were copied from PANTERA, but Gale claimed he had written them, Brey said.

"He was off his rocker," Brey told The Columbus Dispatch. "He said they were his songs, that PANTERA stole them from him and that he was going to sue them."

He later told Brey that he planned to sue PANTERA for stealing his identity. Brey and friend Dave Johnson said Gale's behavior frightened them and they distanced themselves from him several years ago. But other friends said they never considered Gale capable of violence.

On Wednesday night, the 25-year-old former Marine charged the stage at a show by Abbott's new band, DAMAGEPLAN, and gunned down four people including Abbott before a policeman fatally shot him.

Police said Friday they still didn't know Gale's motive, and they may never find out. Some witnesses said Gale yelled accusations that the revered guitarist broke up PANTERA, but police had not verified those reports.


Update: R.I.P. Dimebag

Posted by Clint at 11:47 AM on 12/9/2004   (5 Comments)

DamageplanThis is what I can gather by reading tons of conflicting news reports and forum posts: About 30 seconds into Damageplan's set, while they were playing the song Breathing New Life, a man jumped onto the stage and shot Dimebag five times and then started shooting into the crowd. Three other people were killed, Damageplan's guitar tech and two people in the audience before a police office ran into the club and shot and killed the shooter who was holding a hostage in a headlock. Some people are saying that the shooter was yelling about Dimebag breaking up Pantera and ruining his life.

It is also interesting to note that yesterday was the anniversary of John Lennon's murder 24 years ago. Compare the photos of Dimebag's shooter Nathan Gale with Lennon's shooter Mark David Chapman.

Yahoo story

Rolling Stone story

A pretty comprehensive collection of news reports

NBC story w/pics & video


R.I.P. Dimebag

Posted by Clint at 1:48 AM on 12/9/2004   (4 Comments)

DimebagTonight my guitar hero Dimebag Darrell was shot and killed on stage while playing with his band Damageplan. Dimebag was the sound behind Pantera and widely recognized as one of the best metal guitars players of all time. I saw Pantera in concert at least six times and every time I went it was mostly to see Dime play guitar. Guitarists and air-guitarists alike have lost a true legend. Click here for more details on this tragic and bizarre story.

My all-time favorite Pantera song


something must be done...

Posted by Clint at 2:20 AM on 12/8/2004   (0 Comments)

ok, i'm up late fixing someone's computer and i thought i would take a break and rant about something that is very dear to my heart. i would just like to say that carson daly must be taken care of. will someone out there please remove carson from this great planet earth and send him to hell where he came from? he stands for everything that is wrong and unholy in this world and his lack of intelligence is only overshadowed by his complete lack of personality and charm. how is it that john lennon was assasinated, but the tub of unremarkable crap that is carson daly continues to have his own (albeit crappy) t.v. show?

pardon my typos, run-on sentences etc, it's late, i'm sleep deprived, and the newcastle has been flowing. hey i think i pulled a zack! hi zack! cool seeing you at pauls the other day!

if lon's not busy being a cool indie kid maybe we can hang out this month...


10 things about me...

Posted by Clint at 4:04 PM on 8/23/2004   (3 Comments)

1. I paid off my truck a couple weeks ago. Debt: $0.00

2. I'm really sick of this site's design. I want to redo it, but I am lazy.

3. I haven't picked up a guitar in like two months.

4. I don't care about the presidential race. Sue me.

5. Jury duty sucks.

6. I am starting to like country music. Any minute now pigs will begin to fly.

7. I saw Van Halen on Friday. It was fun for old-guy rock.

8. My roommate and I painted most of the apartment. There are now two red walls.

9. Ashley, got a dog. It's a chihuahua/poodle mix. Small dogs rock.

10. Anytime I make a numbered list, I can't think of the last item.


I think Google loves fucking with webmasters

Posted by Clint at 3:30 PM on 6/10/2004   (4 Comments)

A couple of weeks ago I was up to #2 for "clint anderson". That is the highest my site has ever ranked. The next day I wasn't even listed. A few days later I was a steady #7. Today I am at #2 again, but I'm sure it will be short-lived.


Check out this article posted on Axis of Logic...

Posted by Clint at 2:00 AM on 5/14/2004   (4 Comments)

Timelines Surround American's Beheading

A good conspiracy is unprovable. I mean, if you can prove it, it means they screwed up somewhere along the line. - Jerry Fletcher


Nick Berg - Beheaded in Iraq Video

Posted by Clint at 6:15 PM on 5/12/2004   (4 Comments)

It reminds me of a scene in the movie Clerks. Below is a transcript of the scene. It does not necessarily reflect my views on the subject, but I'm sure it echos the sentiments of many other people.


RANDAL
You know what else I noticed in Jedi?

DANTE
There's more?

RANDAL
So they build another Death Star,
right?

DANTE
Yeah.

RANDAL
Now the first one they built was
completed and fully operational
before the Rebels destroyed it.

DANTE
Luke blew it up. Give credit where
it's due.

RANDAL
And the second one was still being
built when they blew it up.

DANTE
Compliments of Lando Calrissian.

RANDAL
Something just never sat right with
me the second time they destroyed
it. I could never put my finger on
it-something just wasn't right.

DANTE
And you figured it out?

RANDAL
Well, the thing is, the first Death
Star was manned by the Imperial
army-storm troopers, dignitaries-
the only people onboard were
Imperials.

DANTE
Basically.

RANDAL
So when they blew it up, no prob.
Evil is punished.

DANTE
And the second time around...?

RANDAL
The second time around, it wasn't
even finished yet. They were still
under construction.

DANTE
So?

RANDAL
A construction job of that magnitude
would require a helluva lot more
manpower than the Imperial army had
to offer. I'll bet there were
independent contractors working on
that thing: plumbers, aluminum
siders, roofers.

DANTE
Not just Imperials, is what you're
getting at.

RANDAL
Exactly. In order to get it built
quickly and quietly they'd hire
anybody who could do the job. Do
you think the average storm trooper
knows how to install a toilet main?
All they know is killing and white
uniforms.

DANTE
All right, so even if independent
contractors are working on the
Death Star, why are you uneasy with
its destruction?

RANDAL
All those innocent contractors
hired to do a job were killed-
casualties of a war they had
nothing to do with.
(notices Dante's confusion)
All right, look-you're a roofer,
and some juicy government contract
comes your way; you got the wife
and kids and the two-story in
suburbia-this is a government
contract, which means all sorts of
benefits. All of a sudden these
left-wing militants blast you with
lasers and wipe out everyone within
a three-mile radius. You didn't ask
for that. You have no personal
politics. You're just trying to
scrape out a living.

The BLUE-COLLAR MAN joins them.

BLUE-COLLAR MAN
Excuse me. I don't mean to
interrupt, but what were you
talking about?

RANDAL
The ending of Return of the Jedi.

DANTE
My friend is trying to convince me
that any contractors working on the
uncompleted Death Star were innocent
victims when the space station was
destroyed by the rebels.

BLUE-COLLAR MAN
Well, I'm a contractor myself. I'm
a roofer...
(digs into pocket and
produces business card)
Dunn and Reddy Home Improvements.
And speaking as a roofer, I can say
that a roofer's personal politics
come heavily into play when choosing
jobs.

RANDAL
Like when?

BLUE-COLLAR MAN
Three months ago I was offered a
job up in the hills. A beautiful
house with tons of property. It was
a simple reshingling job, but I was
told that if it was finished within
a day, my price would be doubled.
Then I realized whose house it was.

DANTE
Whose house was it?

BLUE-COLLAR MAN
Dominick Bambino's.

RANDAL
"Babyface" Bambino? The gangster?

BLUE-COLLAR MAN
The same. The money was right, but
the risk was too big. I knew who he
was, and based on that, I passed
the job on to a friend of mine.

DANTE
Based on personal politics.

BLUE-COLLAR MAN
Right. And that week, the Foresci
family put a hit on Babyface's
house. My friend was shot and
killed. He wasn't even finished
shingling.

RANDAL
No way!

BLUE-COLLAR MAN
(paying for coffee)
I'm alive because I knew there were
risks involved taking on that
particular client. My friend wasn't
so lucky.
(pauses to reflect)
You know, any contractor willing to
work on that Death Star knew the
risks. If they were killed, it was
their own fault. A roofer listens
to this...
(taps his heart)
not his wallet.


This is my freetime...

Posted by Clint at 1:26 AM on 4/8/2004   (5 Comments)

Once, again I jumped ship and got a new job. I'm working for another mortgage company. For the first time in my life I had to turn down a counteroffer and it was intense.I hope to stay there for a few years. It's seems kind of ironic considering the fact that I probably won't have a mortgage myself until 2010. In Orange County, $300,000 won't even buy a shanty.

Oh, my title is Senior Linux Engineer. Cool.

t.v.


Grey Tuesday

Posted by Clint at 6:20 PM on 2/24/2004   (3 Comments)

In support of Grey Tuesday, I have posted a full copy of the Grey Album by DJ Danger Mouse. If you haven't heard of the Grey Album, read the Rolling Stone Review.

Click Here To Download


What is "Peak Oil"?

Posted by Clint at 5:27 AM on 2/22/2004   (5 Comments)

by Matthew David Savinar - lifeaftertheoilcrash.net

All oil production follows a bell curve, whether in an individual field or on the planet as a whole. On the upslope of the curve production costs are significantly lower than on the downslope when extra effort (expense) is required to extract oil from reservoirs that are emptying out.

Put simply: oil is abundant and cheap on the upslope, scarce and expensive on the downslope.

For the past 150 years, we have been moving up the upslope of the global oil production curve. "Peak Oil" is the industry term for the top of the curve. It's often referred to as "Hubbert's Peak" a reference to King Hubbert, the geologist who discovered that oil production follows a bell curve.

Once we pass the peak, we will go down the very steep downslope. The further we go down the slope, the more it costs to produce oil, and its cousin, natural gas.

In practical terms, this means that if 2000 was the year of Peak Oil, worldwide oil production in the year 2020 will be the same as it was in 1980. However, the world's population in 2020 will be both much larger (approximately twice as big) and much more industrialized than it was in 1980. Consequently, worldwide demand for oil will outpace the worldwide production of oil by a significant margin.

The more demand for oil exceeds production of oil, the higher the price goes.

Ultimately, the question is not "When will we run out of oil?" but rather, "When will we run out of cheap oil?"

When will Peak Oil occur?

The most wildly optimistic estimates indicate 2020 will be the year in which worldwide oil production peaks. Generally, these estimates come from the government.

A more realistic estimate is between the year 2004-2010. Unfortunately, we won't know that we hit the peak until 3-4 years after we actually hit it. Even on the upslope of the curve, oil production varies a bit from year to year. It is possible that the year 2000 was the year of peak oil production, as production has dipped every year since.

The energy industry has quietly acknowledged the seriousness of the situation. For instance, the president of Exxon Mobil Exploration Company, Jon Thompson, recently stated:

By 2015, we will need to find, develop and produce a volume of new oil and gas that is equal to eight out of every 10 barrels being produced today. In addition, the cost associated with providing this additional oil and gas is expected to be considerably more than what industry is now spending.

Equally daunting is the fact that many of the most promising prospects are far from major markets � some in regions that lack even basic infrastructure. Others are in extreme climates, such as the Arctic, that present extraordinary technical challenges.

If Mr. Thompson is that frank in an article posted on the Exxon Mobil webpage, you have to wonder what he says behind closed days when he talks about oil depletion. (note - if you read the link, read it in the context of what Matthew Simmons says - see below)

Even the Saudis are aware of the situation. They have a saying that goes, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet airplane. His son will ride a camel."

That sounds pretty bad, but if gas prices get too high, I'll just carpool or take public transportation more. Why should I be concerned?

Almost every current human endeavor from transportation, to manufacturing, to electricity to plastics, and especially food and water production is inextricably intertwined with oil and natural gas supplies.

Food Production and Oil:

Commercial food production is oil powered. Most pesticides are petroleum (oil) based, and all commercial fertilizers are ammonia based. Ammonia is produced from natural gas.

Oil based agriculture is primarily responsible for the world's population exploding from 1 billion at the middle of the 19th century to 6.3 billion at the turn of the 21st.

Oil allowed for farming implements such as tractors, food storage systems such as refrigerators, and food transport systems such as trucks.

As oil production went up, so did food production. As food production went up, so did the population. As the population went up, the demand for food went up, which increased the demand for oil.

Within a few years of Peak Oil occurring, the price of food will skyrocket because of the cost of fertilizer will soar. The cost of storing (electricity) and transporting (gasoline) the food that is produced will also soar.

Water Supply and Oil:

Inexpensive oil is also needed to construct and maintain the massive infrastructure that delivers our fresh water.

Healthcare and Oil:

Oil is largely responsible for the advances in medicine that have been made in the last 150 years. Oil allowed for the mass production of pharmaceutical drugs, and the development of health care infrastructure such as hospitals, ambulances, roads, etc . . .

Everything Else and Oil:

Oil is required for a lot more than just food, water, medicine, and transportation. It is also required for nearly every consumer item, sewage disposal, garbage disposal, street/park maintenance, hospitals & health systems, police, fire services, and national defense.

Thus, the aftermath of Peak Oil will extend far beyond how much you will pay for gas. Simply stated, you can expect: war, starvation, economic collapse, possibly even the extinction of Homo sapiens.

This is known as the post-oil "die-off". The term "die-off" captures perfectly the nightmare that is at our doorstep.

What do you mean by "die-off"?

Exactly what it sounds like. It is estimated that the world's population will contract to 500 million during the Oil Crash. (current world population: 6 billion)

Are you serious? That's over 90% of our current population. How could that many people perish? Where does that estimate come from?

That estimate comes from biologists who have studied what happens to every species when it exceeds the carrying capacity of its environment in one life giving aspect or another.

For instance, bacteria in a petri dish will grow exponentially until they run out of resources, at which point their population will crash. Only one generation prior to the crash, the bacteria will have used up half the resources available to them. To the bacteria, there will be no hint of a problem until they starve to death.

While comparing humans to bacteria in a petri dish is a bit uncomfortable, the similarities are numerous:

The first commercial oil well was drilled in 1859. At that time, the world's population was about 1 billion. Less than 150 years later, our population has exploded to 6.3 billion. In that time, we have used up half the world's recoverable oil. Of the half that's left, most will be very expensive to extract . If the experts are correct, we are less than one generation away from a crash. Yet to most of us, there appears to be no hint of a problem.

We need not look solely to the petri dish to predict what will happen to the planet. We can look to our own history.

Take the case of the famous Irish potato famine. For well over a century, year after steady year, the British encouraged and the Irish developed a near-total dependency upon a single dietary mainstay, the potato, and the population of the island grew from 2 million people to more than 8 million.

Then suddenly in 1845, a parasitic fungus turned the potatoes into sticky, inedible, mucous globs. Within a generation the country was devastated, more than half the population died or emigrated, and those who remained were reduced to a poverty that diminished only a century later.

In some ways, planet Earth's future is likely to be worse than Ireland's past. The severity of the potato famine was offset by the fact that many of the Irish could emigrate to the land of plenty: America. This allowed those who remained to make the most of what little resources were left.

Unlike the Irish, we have nowhere else to go. But we do have lots of WMD's to toss at each other.

Oh, by the way: you want to know what the bacteria do as their population crashes?

They eat each other.

I still can't imagine that number of deaths. It's just too ghastly to imagine. Only 10% of us are going to make it? How can that possibly be?

I know how you feel. This is all very difficult to handle, both emotionally and intellectually. As former UK environmental minister Michael Meacher recently wrote, "It's hard to envisage the effects of a radically reduced oil supply on a modern economy or society. The implications are mind blowing."

Perhaps the following explanation, while a bit over simplified, will help to illustrate the situation:

As explained above, oil production follows a bell curve. Thus, if the year 2000 was the year of peak production, then oil production in the year 2025 will be about the same as it was in the year 1975.

The population in the year 2025 is projected to be roughly 8 billion. The population in 1975 was roughly 4 billion.

Since oil production essentially equals food production, this means that we will have 8 billion people on the planet but only enough food for 4 billion or less, since even in 1975 we were unable to feed everybody.

Now think about it this way: say you, me, and 6 other people were locked in a room, with only enough food and water for 4 of us. At least 4 of us will die from starvation. Another one or two will likely die as we all fight each other for what little food we have.

That's what will happen if we are fighting with just our fists. Give each of us weapons, and you can imagine what that room will look like when were done with each other.

If you're asking, "What about switching to renewable energy to keep the food production up?" - just keep reading - we'll get to that on page two.

Where are you getting this information from? Who else is talking about Peak Oil? What type of backgrounds do they have?

When you're done reading through this site, take a look at this page. It has links to over 50 news articles about Peak Oil, all are from highly reputable sources. You will find, much to your dismay as well as my own, that everything on this site is supported by facts.

For the sake of brevity, here is what just two highly credible individuals have to say about Peak Oil. As you can see, this is not the typical "end of the world" crowd:

Dr. David Goodstein, Professor of Physics and Vice Provost of Cal Tech University:

In his just-released book, Out of Gas: The End of Oil, Dr. Goodstein argues forcefully that the worldwide production of oil will peak soon, possibly within this decade. That will be followed by declining availability of fossil fuels that could plunge the world into global conflicts as nations struggle to capture their piece of a shrinking pie.

In a recent article on ABC, Dr. Goodstein had this to say about Peak Oil:

Worst case: After Hubbert's peak, all efforts to produce, distribute, and consume alternative fuels fast enough to fill the gap between falling supplies and rising demand fail. Runaway inflation and worldwide depression leave many billions of people with no alternative but to burn coal in vast quantities for warmth, cooking, and primitive industry. The change in the greenhouse effect that results eventually tips Earth's climate into a new state hostile to life. End of story.

Matthew Simmons, Energy Advisor to George W. Bush

In a recent interview, Matthew Simmons largely echoed Dr. Goodstein's sentiments. When asked if it was time for Peak Oil to become part of the public policy debate, Simmons responded:

It is past time. As I have said, the experts and politicians have no Plan B to fall back on. If energy peaks, particularly while 5 of the world�s 6.5 billion people have little or no use of modern energy, it will be a tremendous jolt to our economic well-being and to our health � greater than anyone could ever imagine.

When asked if there is a solution, Simmons responded:

I don�t think there is one. The solution is to pray. Under the best of circumstances, if all prayers are answered there will be no crisis for maybe two years. After that it�s a certainty.

Other than Simmons, has anybody else in the Bush administration mentioned Peak Oil?

Here is what Dick Cheney said in late 1999:

By some estimates, there will be an average of two percent annual growth in global oil demand over the years ahead, along with, conservatively, a three percent natural decline in production from existing reserves.

Cheney ended on an alarming note, "That means by 2010 we will need on the order of an additional fifty million barrels a day."

This is equivalent to more than six Saudi Arabia's of today's size.

What about people outside of the Bush administration? Does anybody on the left think this is a serious issue?

In 1980, Jimmy Carter told the American public that we needed to prepare in 1980 for the end of the oil age in 2005.

More recently, Michael Moore dedicated an entire chapter "Oils Well That Ends Well" in his book Dude, Where's My Country? to the end of the oil age and subsequent die off.

How will things progress once production peaks?

If you'd like to use history as a guide, I feel the following timeline is a reasonable approximation of what to expect in developed nations such as the United States:

1-5 years post-peak: Major recession comparable to those experienced during the artificially created oil shortages of the 1970's.

5-15 years post-peak: Recession worsens into a second Great Depression.

15-25 years post-peak: Society begins to collapse. Conditions in the United States begin to resemble those in the modern day former U.S.S.R.

25-50 years post-peak: Societal collapse worsens. Conditions in the United States begin to resemble those in modern day Iraq: electrical grid collapse, clean water shortages, super high unemployment, military police state. Many localities begin to resemble modern day third world countries such as Liberia.

50-100 years post-peak: Society begins to stabilize, albeit in a form drastically different than anything most of us have imagined.

If you want an in depth look at how things are likely to progress, read this when you get the chance.

Is it possible that we have already hit Peak Oil and are now in the first stages of the Oil Crash?

Yes. As stated above, we won't know we have hit the Peak until a few years after we hit it. Global oil production has dipped every year since 2000, so it is quite possible we've hit the peak.

Ample evidence exists that we are in the first stages of the Oil Crash. As of 12/03 the "adjusted" unemployment, which has been squeezed out of as much meaning as conceivably possible, still hovers in the 6% range. However, if you factor in the quality of employment, then the real numbers are closer to 12%-15%.

The rolling blackouts experienced in California during Fall 2000, the massive East Coast blackout of August, 2003 and the various other massive blackouts that occurred throughout the world during late summer of 2003, are simply a sign of things to come.

At the Paris Peak Oil Conference in May, 2003, Princeton Professor Kenneth Deffeyes, author of Hubbert's Peak: The Impending World Oil Shortage, explained that Peak Oil actually arrived in 2000 by noting that production has actually been declining since that time.

As further evidence of the production peak, Deffeyes noted that since 2000, there has been a 30% drop in stock values, interest rate cuts have not helped, 2.5 million have become unemployed and the employed have been unable to retire, budget surpluses have vanished, the middle class has vanished, and the World Trade Center has vanished.

If you need more convincing that we are already crashing, just check breaking news.

I just read an article that states that known oil reserves keep growing.

That article is most likely citing the U.S. government agency such as the United States Geological Survey or the Energy Information Agency (EIA). While USGS and EIA reports on past production are largely reliable, their predictions for the future are largely propaganda.

They admit this themselves. For instance, after recently revising oil supply projections upward, the EIA stated:

These adjustments to the estimates are based on non-technical considerations that support domestic supply growth to the levels necessary to meet projected demand levels.

In other words, they predict how much they think we're going to use, and then tell us, "Guess what, nothing to worry about - that is how much we've got!"

We had oil problems back in the 1970's. They were tough, but we got through them. How is this any different?

In 1973, OPEC stopped selling oil to the United States in protest of American support of Israel in the Yom Kippur or Ramadan War. This coincided with the peaking of U.S. domestic oil production. Without a supply of cheap energy, the US economy went into deep recession.

In the 1970's there were other 'swing' oil producers like Venezuela who could step in to fill the supply gap. Once worldwide oil production peaks (if it hasn't already), there won't be any swing producers to fill in the gap.

The oil shocks of the 1970's were like the tremors before an earthquake. The coming crisis is driven by resource constraints, not politics - although of course politics do enter into it.

It is not a temporary interruption but the onset of a permanent new condition. The warning signals have been flying for a long time. They have been plain to see, but the world turned a blind eye, and failed to read the message.

In the future, comparing the oil shortages of the 1970's to the Oil Crash of 2005-2050 will be akin to comparing a fender bender to a head-on collision.

Didn't the Club of Rome make this exact same prediction back in the 70's?

Unfortunately, the Club of Rome turned out to be correct.

Says who? None other than Matthew Simmons, who stated in 2000, "In hindsight, The Club of Rome turned out to be right. We simply wasted 30 important years by ignoring this work."

(scroll down to "Simmons")

The "end of the world" is here, once again. Y2K was supposed to be the end of the world, and it turned out to be much ado about nothing. What's different about this?

What's different is that this is the real thing. It isn't a fire drill. It isn't paranoid hysteria. It is the real deal.

Peak Oil isn't "Y2K Reloaded." In contrast to Peak Oil, Y2K was an "if", not a "when". We know that Peak Oil is going to happen. The only question is at what point between 2004-2010 it will occur, if it hasn't occurred already.

Y2K was "announced" in the early to mid 1990's, a full 5 - 10 years before the problem was to occur. Peak Oil will occur within 1 - 5 years, and we have made no preparations to deal with it. The preparations necessary to deal with the Oil Crash will require a complete overhaul of every aspect of our civilization. This is much more complex than fixing a computer bug.

Furthermore, oil is more fundamental to our existence than anything else, even computers. Had the Y2K predictions come true, our civilization would have been knocked back to 1965. With time, we would have recovered.

When the Oil Crash comes, our civilization is going to get knocked back to 1765. We will not recover, as there is no economically available oil left to discover that would help us recover.

Click Here For Part Two


One step closer...

Posted by Clint at 5:03 PM on 1/7/2004   (6 Comments)

I was going to write another useless diatribe, but I decided it would be cooler to link to the first-ever high resolution pictures of another planet.

Images of Mars






Thank goodness modern convenience is a thing of the remote future. -- Pogo, by Walt Kelly