Uranium tastes better.
No, seriously, what the heck are you trying to say with this?
Uranium tastes better.
No, seriously, what the heck are you trying to say with this?
Try to fuel a power plant with those ribs. That sauce had better be damned spicy.
I predict a fascinating and enlightening explanation.
Seriously?
Seriously?
Assuming we’re just talking about cars, not, like, digital watches and such.
This wikipedia article on alternative fuel vehicles is a start. Note that this article doesn’t include any technologies that haven’t been invented yet, these are all systems that actually exist. These things might cost more and offer worse perfomance than an IC vehicle, but the technology is already mature. The reason we don’t use these things on a wide scale right now is left as an excercise for the student.
Can’t we also use bioplastics and biofuels? Some of the advances with algae based biofuels are almost getting competitive with petroleum based fuels.
(Note: sorry all my links are to wikipedia, but I am pressed for time and can’t be bother to find more scientific links. They do illustrate the point though.)
We also have nuclear (as others have mentioned), solar, wind, geothermal, and hydroelectric power to fall back on in a pinch.
Story time: I have a friend that works with US government services (mostly the Navy) examining questions like these. From what I hear, they are not really that worried about energy; there are solutions out there to replace our dwindling petroleum stocks. What they do worry about is water and food. How are we going to feed our growing population with the potential (probable) disaster of climate change? How are we going to get enough fresh water to provide all the varying interests when we may have droughts and large changes in rainfall patterns? These are the issues they worry about and they are paid to do nothing but worry about them. Energy is lower on their list though they are positioning themselves in this regard.
Good grief. Another Peak Oil end of the world thread. :rolleyes:
I’d say that our prosperity (over that time period) is based more on coal than on oil, but that doesn’t work as well as a rant point, since we won’t be running out of coal anytime soon, right? And our ‘system’ isn’t entirely dependent on any kind of exponential increase in demand. Do you even know what an exponential increase in demand is?
Thanks, but no. After you’ve seen a couple dozen Peak Oil end of the world videos on the internet you pretty much have seen them all, and I seriously doubt there is going to be anything different in this one than in the other dozen I’ve seen.
Did they have electricity in the 19th century? Or, where is the coal going to go? I won’t even get into your bald assertion that ‘technological advances’ or ‘energy alternatives’ (may which ALREADY exist), but where do you expect all the coal to go? Or, when you say 19th century technology, you don’t actually mean it, right?
Why would the grid go down again? Are the laws of physics changing as well a la Dies the Fire? Will trains suddenly stop working? Will electricity stop working as well?
So, we are a good 30 years out before the end of the world (unless you are planning to shuffle off sometime soon of course)? No worries then.
So, give up one useless and unnecessary thing and emphasize another useless, unnecessary course of action? Sounds like a plan. Howz’at workin’ out for you so far?
But what will you do when the starving hordes descend on your ‘agrarian utopian fantasies’, as Der Trihs puts it?
Because all the other technology is going to stop working, right? Well, maybe if you trek across the country you can find the Sword of the Lady and set all to rights…just watch out for the CUTers and those assholes in Boise, right? You’ll be fine, I’m sure. One thing I’d add to your list would be…long bows. Don’t forget the importance of long bows…
So, just a drive by post of a link and some new age bullshit coupled with Peak Oil apocalypse hand wringing, huh?
-XT
Good point. And while you have some time to augment your valuable holdings by organizing locally and making the inevitable change to DC water pumping, stock up on our petrotechnology and hire a few cows and chickens for food and manure. Nonetheless, surface water is always easiest to reach.
Payable in potatoes, I expect.
You would be misguided to depend on yourself.
THAT’S IT. I’m going to warlord college and there’s nothing any of you can say to change my mind!
No need, bro.
Carry a plowshare instead of a sword and live well on 20 hrs/week, flexible schedule.
True - the non-misguided know to rely on the inevitable continuance of the power grid and advancing technology. Only the misguided will gather a group of likeminded and plan to retreat from the rest of the world.
ETA: Scissors beats paper, and sword beats plowshare every time.
ETA2: Also, I hear that subsitence farming sans tractors is hard work. Where do you get 20 hrs per week?
If this is your best, I have no further questions.
Did you know hemp can be used to make rope and cloth and paper? The Founding Fathers grew hemp.
Ah…so, you were only able to read the rolley eye smiley and my name tag, ehe? Well, that’s sad but not particularly surprising. But then I wasn’t really posting in the expectation of engaging YOU…you said you were just driving by and wanted to simply toss out some Peak Oil and associated new age claptrappery, so I figured you wouldn’t be back.
-XT
“You see in this world there’s two kinds of people my friend - those with swords, and those who dig. You dig.”
Classic. It will be a shame when we can’t watch movies like this once the world comes to an end and we are living in a 19th century pre-technology utopia. On the up side, I guess the changing laws of physics will enable farmers to produce food orders of magnitude more easily than they can even today, considering that they will only have to work 20 hours a week AND on a flexible schedule…
-XT
I know nothing in this thread makes sense, but this doesn’t make sense.
Actually, unlike the subject of the OP, this DOES make sense. But, you’d have had to have been following the OP’s thread on Lenin and his later thread in ATMB to get the connection, or what this thread actually is seemingly about…
-XT
Nah, it’s just that once they get to 20 hours they lose count, since they’ve run out of fingers and toes.
Can you answer begbert’s question, then? You know, the one about trading uranium for beef?