- Pääjutut

- Osastot

- Viihde

- Yhteiskunta

- Hallinto

Hallintokeskus

Julkaise artikkeli

progressive
The peak oil culture wars



(Mon, 12 May 2008 19:30:43 -0500 (CDT)) ---
link www.salon.com


The peak oil culture wars
Sky-high oil prices are not primarily the fault of evil hedge fund
speculators, writes Paul Krugman in his Monday New York Times column. If they
were, then at some point oil stockpiles would have to rise in order to support
prices that are not justified by demand. But that's not happening.

Fair enough. But then Krugman goes on to say that normally, it is critics from
the left, outraged at capitalist manipulation, who inveigh against
speculation. But this time around, he says, it's the right that's yelping the
most. Krugman explains that this is because conservatives don't like taking
the bus.

... The odds are that we're looking at a future in which energy conservation
becomes increasingly important, in which many people may even -- gasp -- take
public transit to work.

I don't find that vision particularly abhorrent, but a lot of people,
especially on the right, do. And so they want to believe that if only Goldman
Sachs would stop having such a negative attitude, we'd quickly return to the
good old days of abundant oil.

Some conservatives may indeed look down their noses at rubbing shoulders with
the hoi polloi on buses and subway trains. But the antipathy expressed by the
right toward the peak oil camp (which is where Krugman is positioning himself,
even if he doesn't utter the magic words), goes much, much deeper than a mere
distaste for energy conservation.

Partisan conservatives pooh-pooh peak oil (and human-caused climate change)
because they think that to concede that these challenges are real and must be
confronted is to acknowledge that greed is not always good, and that free
market capitalism must be restrained, or at least tinkered with substantially.
Peak oil and climate change are fronts in the culture wars, and to some
conservatives, watching the price of oil rise as the Arctic ice melts, it
might feel like being in Germany at the close of World War II, with the
Russians advancing on one front while U.S.-led forces come from the other. The
propositions that cheap oil is running out and the world is getting hotter --
as a result of our own activities -- threaten a whole way of life. The very
idea that dirty Gaia-worshipping hippies might be right is absolute anathema.

Given that many on the left also see peak oil and climate change as cultural
battlefields, as weapons with which to assault enemies whose values they
politically and aesthetically oppose (see James Kunstler), it's no wonder that
some conservatives are fighting back like caged rats, or that they want to
blame speculators for oil prices, or biased scientists for climate change.

Of course, it doesn't have to be this way. Sensible people could agree that
well-regulated markets incorporating the appropriate prices for environmental
pollution and energy consumption will provide powerful incentives to allow
humanity to avoid devastating energy shocks and the complete despoliation of
the planet. We don't have to consign ourselves to totalitarian dichotomies in
which vegan organic gardeners stand on one side, threatening to employ the
power of the state to deny everyone else their right to eat bloody porterhouse
steaks; while across the trenches stand ranks of right-to-keep-and-bear-arms,
give-me-my-SUV-and-suburban-gated-community-or-give-me-death Ayn-Rand
disciples, draped in the furs of newly extinct mammal species, for whom a
lifetime in hell would be infinitely preferable to a government-mandated solar
power water heater.

But you know how it is -- first you agree to a cap-and-trade carbon-dioxide
emissions limiting system, and before you can say "Kyoto Protocol" the New
World Order Government is telling you which cartoons your kids are allowed to
watch. Or, god forbid, that you have to take the bus.

-- Andrew Leonard

[demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type image/png which had a name of htww.png]


"Mark Graffis" (mgraffis@gmail.com).





You may contact Vunet.org staff via E-mail address (MSN, Yahoo! or email) : ">Contact Us.

>> print article
>> text version

36 readers online
TOOLS
>> print article
> text version
readers picks
popular videos
popular articles
todays top ten
watch music videos
Write comment for this video
go to random article
send story tip
join mailing list







































































































38.103.63.59 does not exist, try again