Energy Wars | Art Berman

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  • čas přidán 28. 05. 2024
  • Whoever controls the energy supply controls the new world order.
    Russia and China are deepening their relationship, Western allies in the Middle East are joining the fossil-fuelled BRICS alliance spanning the globe, and the Wagner group is loosening Europe’s grip of Africa. The tectonic plates of geopolitics are shifting along new fault lines as rising powers focus on securing resources while the old Empire in the West pretends it can decouple economies and energy. The world is at war, but only one side is being honest about what for.
    Acclaimed energy expert Art Berman says this is the culmination of millennia of human fallibility. This is a conversation that takes us from 3000 BCE and the discovery of what he calls the most disruptive technology humans ever had right up to today and the energy wars blooming around the world. We discuss our psychological disposition to immaturity, our cognitive shortcomings when examining complexity, the secrets of holy texts and even morality. Art explains how energy is reshaping geopolitical alliances, which leaders understand the reality of our situation, and why technology cannot solve our problems.
    🔴 Art Berman: www.artberman.com/
    🌎 Support Planet: Critical: / planetcritical
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    🌎 Twitter: / crisisreports

Komentáře • 378

  • @timothydoyle373
    @timothydoyle373 Před 28 dny +47

    Art Berman is a wise man living in foolish times.

    • @channelwarhorse3367
      @channelwarhorse3367 Před 28 dny

      fossil foolish, pen at names, with love

    • @phil20_20
      @phil20_20 Před 25 dny +1

      Was there ever a wise time?

    • @therealdesidaru
      @therealdesidaru Před 21 dnem

      He's full of shit. Making a film is NOTHING like the production and consumption of energy. Fuck 'em. If we knocked off that part of the economy that is IRRELEVANT TO LIFE, we would have enough energy for EVERYONE. Stupid shit like art and music, opinions, television, it's all bullshit that no one should be paid for (dollar equivalent to oil) doing absolutely NOTHING that benefits humans or nature. They should be the first drawn down. People, like in this video, whose opines are not as valuable as horse dung. Worthless. Waste of time and energy this is.

    • @hardikpatel4763
      @hardikpatel4763 Před 21 dnem

      @@phil20_20 yes during the Buddha and the several hundred years after his influence, his Wisdom religion prospered. Buddha literally means Wise

    • @Withnail1969
      @Withnail1969 Před 19 dny

      She isnt grasping his message that there is nothing we can do about any of this.

  • @OgreMan-cg6ok
    @OgreMan-cg6ok Před 28 dny +21

    The whole relationship between overshoot, energy and geopolitics viewed through the lens of psychological drivers is the source of the human dilemma. Great episode, thanks.

  • @danothemano4129
    @danothemano4129 Před 28 dny +22

    Every time I hear Art Berman my respect for him grows, and you too Rachel what a thought provoking program!

  • @evilryutaropro
    @evilryutaropro Před 28 dny +13

    Art is a great communicator and a wise man. I have a lot of respect for him. Our situation is really tough but it would be even worse if it weren’t for people like Art speaking up

    • @Withnail1969
      @Withnail1969 Před 20 dny +1

      I'm not sure if it makes any difference but at least we can understand it.

  • @scottharding4336
    @scottharding4336 Před 27 dny +10

    I work in a hospital laboratory. Our current system is 100 percent reliant on plastics. It's hard to imagine modern medicine without them. They're cheap, disposable, and easy to mold into innumerable shapes.

    • @Withnail1969
      @Withnail1969 Před 20 dny

      Agriculture too. Piping, greenhouses, pots, plastic sheeting to keep down weeds. It's everywhere.

    • @hankking4483
      @hankking4483 Před 12 dny

      Right and there's literally nothing that could ever possibly exist imaginable that could be used instead! Literally NOTHING!! We MUST have plastics or die, and Alan is NOT a shill!!! Not to mention the fact that you don't have to *burn* any fossil fuels to create plastic, they're made from petroleum. So you could cut fossil fuel *emissions* to zero, and have no limit on plastics other than what you can create using electric resources.

  • @cal48koho
    @cal48koho Před 27 dny +6

    Ive known Art for Decades and he really displayed his polymathy in this segment. Thank you Rachel!

  • @braeburn2333
    @braeburn2333 Před 25 dny +5

    Art points out so well, that to change the climate, we need to find a way to live comfortably on much less industrially made (fossil fuel intensive) things that we "think" we need. We need to "Do More with Less".
    This was the mantra in the 70's when people started going back to the land. Publications like The Mother earth News were a paper forum of good ideas on how to do more with less. For instance: How to run a generator on waste wood gas. How to cook your food using a methane digester. How to convert a small engine to run on alcohol with a few simple hacks to the carb.
    Today people know so much more about growing chemical free food, and living locally and more simply. Inexpensive and often reliable solar equipment is available now. I haven't paid an electric bill in seven years, and I hope I never have to again. The cost of my entire DIY system was about as much as I would have forked over tot he electric company in about 4 or 5 years anyway, so I'm free of their long fingers reaching into my wallet each month. I'm free in many ways I never even knew about.
    People who relearn how to be mcGyvers with free and used materials feel more empowered, and resilient and confident in life than people buying expensive perfect materials that will be immediately replaced on the shelf by a new one made in a factory somewhere far away.
    I personally made a huge leap 6 years ago and started living in an off grid cabin on 13 acres of land I had gotten a good deal on in 2011. My ecological footprint is now less than 20% of what it was when I was living in the rat race like everyone else. My expenses are even lower. My total expenses are now around $400/month excluding nothing. The only government assistance I get is free health care which I almost never use. I only have to work for money 10 hours a month now. The rest of the time I do what I please which is usually building a better homestead using free and local used stuff. This huge amount of free time allows me to cook good meals using basic (as local as possible) ingredients. My body is healthier than its been in a long time. My friendship and social connections have never greater. I am also able do a lot of volunteer and free work for friends and neighbors. You can buy a pre made house and a premade life, but you will have to pay rent or pay a bank. If you build up your home from scratch using free and local used materials, you can be living in a small but well insulated cabin in a few years. In effect you can retire without a 401K, or a trust fund, or nearly any savings at all if you can radically lower your expenses and your need for money. I recommend you look into getting some, even an acre of land in a place where you don't need to navigate expensive and complicated regulations or land where you have to ask someone's permission to build on or even live on. Land without zoning or regs is the best, otherwise someday someone from the office of making you sad arrives and kicks you out of your own home because its not good enough for you, according to them. There are places where the government can't do that, hoever. Seek out those places before you find your dream land.
    I never imagined that building up your life from scratch, on a shoestring was possible, but since I've done it, I can say, it definitely is. My house, for instance only cost about $10,000 because a lot of free windows, doors, cabinets, etc were found.
    It was hard at first. I lived in a tent for the first 6 months on my land then an old mouse infested RV, then 6 years ago I moved into the 400sf cabin I live in now and helped build. I heat with my own wood, (already dead trees are only used), I grow more and more food every year, I feel more financially secure than I ever have and yet I have never made so little money.
    Who knew, that we don't have to work so hard to save the planet? We just need to do more with less. 😊

    • @joshuafillmore364
      @joshuafillmore364 Před 22 dny +1

      Thanks for sharing. Living the good life. Keep up the great work!

  • @bgiv2010
    @bgiv2010 Před 27 dny +6

    The real four horsemen are: colonialism, corporatism, commercialism, and consumerism.

  • @TennesseeJed
    @TennesseeJed Před 28 dny +29

    Art knows the oil predicament! Thanks Rachel for having him on!

    • @Silks-
      @Silks- Před 27 dny

      He certainly does. I’ve watched lots of his podcasts, but something doesn’t quite sit right with me from his message.
      At the beginning he blames our energy use on the individual (5:00), saying (paraphrased) ‘we’re all acting in our self interest, and when there are 8billion people on the planet it works against the self interest of everyone.’
      What isn’t addressed is b1g-01L obfuscating the evidence showing people the catastrophic consequences of using it, of extracting the maximum amount as possible, of making as many products as possible and shoving them down our throats, of controlling politicians to eliminate anything stopping them from doing so. How can one expect a population to make good decisions when they’ve been fed so much mis/disinformation over the decades?
      The global south especially has had a raw deal out of mineral/FF extraction, being (imo) the most impacted from the consequences.
      Is this blame shift to the individual done on purpose by Art on behalf of c0rp_rat1ons, or has he been hanging round the likes of them so often he genuinely believes it? On his website it states ‘he’s the energy world’s unfiltered voice.’ To me that’s suspicious. He’s extremely likeable and speaks a lot of truth, and that’s what could allow this manipulation of who to blame to be so effective.
      22:40 defending the companies again. He claims he isn’t, but he is.
      Well done to Rachel as she raised the point I was making, that the average consumer isn’t to blame. Art uses good logic, and truthful, to answer this question, however he puts a spin on it by saying (25:12) ‘we can’t just stop oil [or civilisation will collapse]’ which is true, however that’s not the only option and nobody’s seriously suggesting that. Even the movement Just Stop Oil wants to only use the strict bare minimum of keeping everyone alive. We will have to make extreme sacrifices, and the only way that will realistically happen is if we limit extraction which will drastically reduce the standard of living and there will be deaths from it, however it will allow a more controlled collapse as opposed to a sudden one when it becomes unfeasible to extract any more oil (or one of the other meta crises gets us first).
      I’m not sure Art’s corrupted and portraying this narrative on behalf of 01L, I personally don’t think he is, just indoctrinated by all the years spent working for them, it doesn’t matter too much either way, the issue is his message is dangerous and inhibits serious change if people blame themselves as opposed to the true cause.
      Our politicians are C0r_upt, we need a s0cial1st re_olut1on.

    • @Silks-
      @Silks- Před 27 dny +2

      My message is being c_ns0_rd so I’ll try send it in segments:
      He certainly does know the predicament. I’ve watched lots of his podcasts, but something doesn’t quite sit right with me from his message.
      At the beginning he blames our energy use on the individual (5:00), saying (paraphrased) ‘we’re all acting in our self interest, and when there are 8billion people on the planet it works against the self interest of everyone.’

    • @Silks-
      @Silks- Před 27 dny

      What isn’t addressed is b1g-01L obfuscating the evidence showing people the catastrophic consequences of using it, of extracting the maximum amount as possible, of making as many products as possible and shoving them down our throats, of controlling politicians to eliminate anything stopping them from doing so. How can one expect a population to make good decisions when they’ve been fed so much mis/disinformation over the decades?
      The global south especially has had a raw deal out of mineral/FF extraction, being (imo) the most impacted from the consequences.

    • @Silks-
      @Silks- Před 27 dny +1

      I had a lot more analysis but I pressed copy for me last message which made me lose the whole lot I copied in my initial comment and I can to write it again. One key point was his straw-manning stop oil movements. In reality they propose limiting the oil used to the bare minimum. This will only be achieved by limiting extraction. It won’t happen with our corrupt system. Socialist revolution with the idea of limiting Ff use like XR is the only way to have a controlled collapse.

    • @Silks-
      @Silks- Před 27 dny +2

      Lots still being removed. We’re so screwed, we can’t even discuss this existential threat.

  • @robertpaulson6388
    @robertpaulson6388 Před 27 dny +5

    Rachel's beautiful voice and accent (to my American ears) coupled with Art's insights = Completely awesome!!

  • @iceman7207
    @iceman7207 Před 26 dny +5

    Great Interview Rachel. Every time I see another interview with Art, my respect grows. The people he mentions, Nate Hagens and Bill Reece are well worth a watch as well.
    This is the sort of thing you will never see in the mainstream media and that unfortunately our politicians do not understand.
    If you want to put economics and in context with Energy, check out Dr. Tim Morgan's Site, Surplus Energy Economics.

  • @mariannegibson1407
    @mariannegibson1407 Před 27 dny +5

    Wonderful interview. Having watched Art Berman quite a few times before, this gave something new - it was clear Art wanted to articulate something different or articulate his thoughts more clearly, as in a different kind of focus on both background and consequences to his usual energy message, and Rachel was so sensitive, thoughtful and responsive in her questions and in letting him develop that. Grateful thanks to you both :)

  • @dougashton2607
    @dougashton2607 Před 28 dny +11

    Art Berman is an Immediate watch.

  • @j.s.c.4355
    @j.s.c.4355 Před 28 dny +9

    Art Berman mailed it in the first six minutes. No tweak to the system can have any meaningful effect as long as we prioritize our own personal short-term self-interest. We need to think in centuries, not months or quarters or fiscal years.

    • @Silks-
      @Silks- Před 27 dny +3

      No. It’s the fault of oil companies, not the individual. Arts a corporate shill, a very clever one admittedly, but still.

    • @dalewolver8739
      @dalewolver8739 Před 26 dny

      @@Silks- No it isn't. It's people breeding like flies. It's our dna to breed uncontrollably, just like every other lifeform. However other lifeforms have natural negative feedback limits. Our feedback will be when we no longer have cheap energy or biosphere to allow us to live. We are nothing but intelligent CANCER

    • @Tuljalan
      @Tuljalan Před 25 dny

      @@Silks- Sure, we do not want petrol for our cars, it's the oil companies who are forcing it in our reservoirs.

    • @Sergio_21M
      @Sergio_21M Před 25 dny

      ⁠@@Silks-stop using your computer, phone, heat, and turn the lights off you oil company shill.

    • @Thomas-wn7cl
      @Thomas-wn7cl Před 22 dny

      @silks who buys the oil? Individuals. No one forces them to buy SUVs and trucks. Who buys tons of consumer items that take tons of energy to use? People do. Check out Nate Hagen's view on human's hard wired psychology. Humans have hunter gatherer psychology, medieval institutions, and god like technology. What could go wrong?

  • @justcollapse5343
    @justcollapse5343 Před 3 dny

    Thanks for platforming Art Berman, Rachel. A terrific conversation was had that we hope will have been both challenging and enlightening for some of the Planet Critical audience. Hopefully some will be awakening to the understanding that there really is no solution to extreme ecological #overshoot, and that by attempting to solve for the wrong predicament our misdiagnosis only exacerbates our existential situation. Some might like to take the opportunity to check out our presentations at the University of Tasmania with Bill Rees and Richard Heinberg on the subject of our complex and 'wicked problem'.

  • @RobertJohnson-gj3cl
    @RobertJohnson-gj3cl Před 27 dny +4

    Encouraging listening to Art Berman. He is definitely in the ballpark of big truth, in mentioning David Bohm , the Garden of Eden , Iain McGilchrist and overshoot etc. Unfortunately the human condition is being analyzed by the consciousness which created it. The answer will come by putting the pieces of the puzzle together from the perspective of a shift of consciousness , a new awareness out of fear and the beliefs and ideologies which deny fear and reality. Keep up the good work.

  • @leskuzyk2425
    @leskuzyk2425 Před 27 dny +5

    Civilization will collapse WITH oil as well.

  • @riikkapauliinaussa1910
    @riikkapauliinaussa1910 Před 27 dny +4

    Does he have a podcast? He is one of the few people I've listened to that's able to point out interdependencies and connections and to go to the root of the phenomena.

  • @BrianFeugret
    @BrianFeugret Před 25 dny +2

    Another masterful delivery by Art Berman who has a true talent for laying out the terms of complex issues. As societies and individuals we are more interested in believing the stories we tell ourselves than the things we really know. We know that we live in a world ruled and limited by the laws of physics. The so called solutions we so easily taunt are the tapestry of these reassuring stories. Climate policies are irrelevant and we are committed in the next few decades to a level of warming that will greatly reduce our numbers. We have alredy hit +1.5C in 2024, we will breach +2C by 2040 and +2.5~3C by 2050. This alone is an apocalypse. A rapidly unfolding climate apocalypse is merging and amplifying the collapse of the natural world in the context of dwindling natural resources deemed essential to today’s 8 billion humans. We’d better ask how to prepare ourselves for what is coming than pouring resources into story telling ans doomed solutions.

  • @pinardemircan1749
    @pinardemircan1749 Před 14 dny

    I give you a standing ovation Art Berman ! This is the "art"of taking attention away from the appropriate solutions. I do not say that you were not right in criticising humanity and human attitude, capitalism, wars but this is the time we must take quick action ! You can take it easy if you have a bunker!

  • @kazparzyxzpenualt8111
    @kazparzyxzpenualt8111 Před 27 dny +4

    Live simply so that others may simply live

  • @coreyh.7871
    @coreyh.7871 Před 28 dny +1

    Love that you’re getting to the nitty gritty of our species issues and relationships with the world around us. Thank you from a person who understands this hyper-object.

  • @erisu69
    @erisu69 Před 21 dnem +1

    Another fascinating and valuable perspective. It's almost the ultimate zoom out on the human species and its likely downfall. Thank you as always Rachel for your hard work - please know that it is greatly appreciated.

  • @borealphoto
    @borealphoto Před 26 dny +2

    "Billions of people will die". Everybody dies and I used to think "billions won't be replaced", which makes it more palatable, but it's really "billions will be born, live and die in misery".

    • @grindupBaker
      @grindupBaker Před 26 dny +1

      yep but the adults, well maybe 15 years, who manufacture them will not be slowing down because .... guess what ... the sole purpose of Life is competition to the death and the premiere method of supremacy is to produce the most progeny. It's actually the DNA doing the thinking & planning & the vessels like you'all and me are merely vessels not much more in control than robots.

  • @Slick-666
    @Slick-666 Před 28 dny +9

    Is it weird that these are the highlight of my Wednesdays now, lol?

  • @davidgarza1301
    @davidgarza1301 Před 21 dnem

    The car is the modern horse. Powerful insights thank you Art and Rachel.

  • @chadreilly
    @chadreilly Před 26 dny +3

    Sounds like the Houthis are heroes. I hadn't thought of it that way before. They're stopping oil

  • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885

    "The Religion of Technology" by Professor David F. Noble is a good book on the "religious belief in technology"

  • @tedratcliffe2498
    @tedratcliffe2498 Před 27 dny +6

    I loved this one; great job! Art is just great at cutting through the BS.

  • @PimpinNinja2U
    @PimpinNinja2U Před 28 dny +8

    Thank you Art for pushing back on the "just stop oil" crowd, including Rachel. Do we need to stop? Absolutely. Can we? Not really.

    • @sjoerd1239
      @sjoerd1239 Před 28 dny +1

      As opposed to the business as usual crowd?

    • @PimpinNinja2U
      @PimpinNinja2U Před 27 dny

      @@sjoerd1239 BAU isn't the answer either. There are no good answers. Being simplistic about "just stop oil" isn't a good answer either. Don't be obtuse.

    • @sjoerd1239
      @sjoerd1239 Před 27 dny

      @@PimpinNinja2U
      Berman wasn't standing up to the business as usual crowd, so don't give me your nonsense.

    • @RyobiCEO
      @RyobiCEO Před 27 dny

      Rachel is a kook

  • @danielfaben5838
    @danielfaben5838 Před 16 dny

    The wise decision is to learn to sit. Watching all the activity of my mind is the start of understanding my actions. There is enough messed up past that I don't really require making too much more of it. The entertainment and squirm inducing memory in there is vast. By the time I am prepared to die, I might have a more peaceful and authentic view of my past and the most practical relations with that particular present. Perhaps I will have understood forgiveness, patience and trust. What else could I ask for? What might you wish for?
    Less energy use is the best idea. Be ready to perish when we don't get to be serviced.

  • @rockstarinfinity9363
    @rockstarinfinity9363 Před 26 dny

    Hi Rachel. Excellent podcast! Your questions, comments and insights are quite profound. Millions of people should listen to this. Mr. Berman is truly one of the experts on energy and our existential predicament.
    4 pillars, 4 horsemen, and I'd like to share 4 Alphas.... Awareness, Attitude, Action and most importantly, Adaptation. As Dr. Rees points out, the human species is only following our biological nature on the journey to...... Omega

  • @rockadoodoo
    @rockadoodoo Před 27 dny +1

    Great show. I’m an Art Berman fan

  • @Seawithinyou
    @Seawithinyou Před 28 dny +1

    So love Art up front knowledgeable wisdom regarding this critical energy blindness future 😇💖

  • @iluvmuusic
    @iluvmuusic Před 22 dny

    Brilliant interview. Well done, Rachel!

  • @georgebarda3903
    @georgebarda3903 Před 27 dny +2

    Please remember just stop oil is seeking specifically to stop the granting of NEW fossil fuel licencing, which the IPCC and the IEA both say must happen AND is consistent with a viable transition to renewables.

    • @AlanDavidDoane
      @AlanDavidDoane Před 27 dny

      There is no viable transition to renewables without the majority of humanity dying within a year.

  • @PeterJohnston-uw4fm
    @PeterJohnston-uw4fm Před 28 dny +1

    Many, including Prof William Rees, would argue that agriculture is the most destructive technology ever devised by humans.

  • @frustratedatheist9885
    @frustratedatheist9885 Před 24 dny

    Art Berman is concise and clear, I appreciate his insight. My heart when he recommended Dr.McGilchrist, I hope you can get him on, and I recommend his books and videos.

    • @chadreilly
      @chadreilly Před 24 dny

      Iain will just say people use their right brain too much. What good will that do?

  • @andrewwoods8153
    @andrewwoods8153 Před 28 dny +2

    Always love you and your guests. Our thinking is always suitability stressed. The conclusions are inescapable. Bearing in mind we , that is most us are relitively wealthy people who indulge ourselves in unrealistic imagination of business as usual, but the sobering fact, absolute, is that when an individual population overshoots it must suffer the consequences. Every effort has to be made in every direction, dethroning the obesity of wealth and governance structures actually leading and engaging disciplinary actions to shift in the right direction will at least ensure some survival.

  • @foresthappel1543
    @foresthappel1543 Před 22 dny

    That was excellent!!!!!

  • @cyberpunkalphamale
    @cyberpunkalphamale Před 19 dny

    Thank you for sharing

  • @harrybaulz666
    @harrybaulz666 Před 6 dny

    Anyone and everyone who has aligned with the west have always prospered! The issue is not energy or economic ..it is political pure and simple

  • @colleenmacinnis935
    @colleenmacinnis935 Před 23 dny

    I understand and agree with many of your points. The way that you say “there are no solutions and any solution you think of will be a bad one” is defeatist. It may be correct but it means that we do not understand the problem deeply enough. You cannot solve what you do not understand. The vast majority of people on earth have little knowledge of the multiplicity of problems and how they interact. Making this seem unsolvable. As we suffer the results of these issues , there will be moments that positive actions can be taken. I will not call them solutions. Not one but many. It isn’t impossible and in fact it could catalyze a transition to a more enlightened society. Living a simpler lifestyle is a major benefit. We suffer from the excesses of our age and this will correct.

  • @Ritastresswood
    @Ritastresswood Před 24 dny +1

    52:30’. “Preparing the ground for resource grabbing…”. With respect to Ukraine, the resource grabbing began decades ago, with the move to bring Ukraine into NATO and the EU. Partly for its resources, and partly because Ukraine is a great springboard from which to threaten and ultimately dismantle Russia.

  • @thurstonhowellthetwelf3220

    Great talk thanks, interesting to hear about the horse, obvious really, but I never thought about it clearly

  • @evilryutaropro
    @evilryutaropro Před 28 dny +2

    I do think we should maybe consider strategic rationing of some sort whereby things like agriculture and it’s supply chains have a fundamentally higher priority than anything else. This could look like all sorts of things but I think we should start with prioritizing food and let luxury goods fall to the wayside.

  • @bellakrinkle9381
    @bellakrinkle9381 Před 28 dny +1

    Art, you are a patient man, I could never do what you do. People are simply too ignorant to make any sense to me. Few will crack a book or two in order to find the most realistic solutions. BTW, love your new headset!

  • @j85grim4
    @j85grim4 Před 28 dny +2

    Oh wow another pleasant surprise. I was hoping to see Art on here actually. Very good 👍. Checkout Ruben Nelson if you get a chance Rachel. He's a unique character, you will like him.

  • @bgiv2010
    @bgiv2010 Před 27 dny +1

    You literally want us to be more concerned about being the one to knock over the tower than we are about playing a game where we know the tower will collapse in the first place.

  • @sparksmacoy
    @sparksmacoy Před 19 dny

    Art did propose a catch all solution, use less energy. I do think we need to compose a list of no-regrets (or at least minimal regrets) solutions otherwise people will just do nothing. This list can be researched and backed up to the nth degree but it is needed or no action will be taken which will absolutely end in tears.

  • @leskuzyk2425
    @leskuzyk2425 Před 27 dny

    The Late Bronze Age Collapse -- "1177 BC" being the written book. Worth knowing of, for reference.

  • @denisdaly1708
    @denisdaly1708 Před 26 dny

    Great guest Rachel

  • @kenpentel3396
    @kenpentel3396 Před 27 dny

    Thank you

  • @greggardiner895
    @greggardiner895 Před 28 dny +2

    Breathe and Smile 😊

    • @greggardiner895
      @greggardiner895 Před 28 dny

      czcams.com/video/AuQ4Hi7YdgU/video.htmlsi=8YhxwiJ9_vXrtHvX

  • @snowflakeca2079
    @snowflakeca2079 Před 27 dny

    The comment about
    “No one is forcing us to use oil” is
    DEFINITELY not correct or even real.
    Without a mode of transportation quick, readily available and cheap, you are so
    Okay not going to even be able to afford Property Taxes, let alone everything else….
    Excellent conversation.
    Thank you for having it.

  • @jonc67uk
    @jonc67uk Před 27 dny +1

    Crop failures from environmental factors are already accelerating with access to modern fertilisers. You can't grow crops in 45c as the plants metabolism shuts down due to the heat. Assuming they don't get flooded by heavy precipitation. There are alternate building materials and methods that don't require steel in large amounts, or concrete. The whole modern civilization thing is completely unsustainable as it is.

  • @glenwarrengeology
    @glenwarrengeology Před 24 dny

    I think agriculture was the most disruptive tech, with it we can change whole ecosystems and increase populations.

  • @eroceanos
    @eroceanos Před 27 dny

    This guy is great. Honest and straightforward. Art should read Clio-dynamics. He misses a few points, for example: the structure of the monetary and rentier capitalist system. That is what is impeding the transition to an ecological civilisation.

  • @MrPsaunders
    @MrPsaunders Před 27 dny +9

    Horses are a technology, ignore the neigh-sayers.

  • @life42theuniverse
    @life42theuniverse Před 24 dny

    The homonyms of ‘growth’: An increase in ‘value: monetary or moral’, increase in size, increase in ‘age is maturity’, ... It creates a mental association between profits/more and goodness/better.

    • @life42theuniverse
      @life42theuniverse Před 24 dny

      Growth czcams.com/video/kZA9Hnp3aV4/video.htmlsi=IAi2G6E8HRONShu1

    • @life42theuniverse
      @life42theuniverse Před 24 dny

      The dilemma: We need to grow beyond fossil fuels while degrowing population, without halting the birth of new children. Returning to a neo-pre-oil era with global population near 1-2 billion.

    • @life42theuniverse
      @life42theuniverse Před 24 dny

      New colonies on the Moon or Mars aren’t solutions, they are only backup insurance for survival of mankind. There isn’t enough energy for 6 billion to migrate off planet.

  • @iczgighost
    @iczgighost Před 24 dny

    Thank you Art and Rachel. I was introduced to Art Berman's cogent energy perspectives through Nate Hagan's Great Simplification podcasts. I am happy to have discovered the Planet: Critical podcasts today! While I resonate with most of his discussion, I respectfully disagree with Art's assertion at 1:10:40 about some truth existing in all misconceptions. From a neuroscience perspective, it would be much more accurate to say there's short term survival utility in these misconceptions (cognitive bias/psychological defenses). The level of delusion in your average human differs only by degree from a floridly psychotic person. In the Western perspective, most of us are conditioned to see the world through this practical fictional concept/psychological function called the self. The wisdom traditions see this vestigial self-centered perspective as the root-cause of our apparently inevitable demise. Nature bats last. Unfortunately, so does this eternally ignorant aspect of human nature.

  • @robertseaborne5758
    @robertseaborne5758 Před 25 dny

    Thanks Rachel for another valuable interview cum political lesson. The Liberal democratic values that underpin the dominant unipolar world order have failed to adapt to the rapidly changing geopolitical, socio-economic circumstances and the technological advances of the 21st century. Moreover, the unipolar world order has also failed to meet the socio-economic and cultural needs of the vast majority of the global population. Consequently the transition out of a Western centric unipolar world order into a rapidly emerging Eurasian centric multipolar world order, has become inevitable, necessary and dangerous.

    • @allenmaa7064
      @allenmaa7064 Před 24 dny

      Let me ask you, if recent history were to be considered is it the West or the East or the Global South that is more likely to be the source of, the beneficiary of, the victim of this danger?

    • @robertseaborne5758
      @robertseaborne5758 Před 24 dny

      @@allenmaa7064 A lot depends on how far the present champion of Liberal values and a unipolar world order ie; the U.S., will go to continue and defend it's aspiration to become the economic and military global hegemon. In the unlikely event that future U.S. administration somehow gains sufficient nous to accept the inevitability of a Eurasian centric multipolar world order, then it could continue to be a leader, albeit among equals. Only then might the danger be mitigated, possibly even eliminated.

    • @allenmaa7064
      @allenmaa7064 Před 24 dny

      @@robertseaborne5758 One disruption that we all need to think more about in terms is AI. Should we abandon the entire framework of polarity power? Imagine a world of Asymmetrical AI warfare? Imagine a world where Western technological supremacy is rendered moot in a few decades. Today the West can lip service international law - what happens when the US has to return to the table asking for a rules based global order after Gaza because its vast empire can no longer predict or provoke conflict?
      Thanks for this back and forth, its fun.

  • @Reotha
    @Reotha Před 27 dny

    53:18 i applaud youre observation of the west role in africa coz alot of people this side of the continent have always preached this messaage that they're here for our resources not to give us democracy and free market mantra.

  • @bellakrinkle9381
    @bellakrinkle9381 Před 28 dny

    And then there are those that need to over complicate the entire world, which diverts people's attention away from any possible direct resolution to the problems at hand: energy, and how best to survive the complex times ahead of humanity.

  • @OgreMan-cg6ok
    @OgreMan-cg6ok Před 28 dny +5

    What Art German is blind to, is that we are at terminal crisis point now, not some convenient managed future point, and we have no choice but to direct our energies toward saving something of civilization.

    • @antonyjh1234
      @antonyjh1234 Před 28 dny +2

      How a brand new account like yours can tell anybody he is blind to things is beyond me. If you believed, if you are a you, then you would stop oil immediately. change your life immediately, now. If you are ai somebody should pull the plug, agi is supposed to take twenty five percent of our current electrical usage.

    • @OgreMan-cg6ok
      @OgreMan-cg6ok Před 27 dny

      @@antonyjh1234 I agree, just stop oil now, tax wealth now, restore true democracy now and on and on. I think you may have misunderstood my comments, easily done. Why does the age of my account effect the validity of my remarks?

    • @antonyjh1234
      @antonyjh1234 Před 27 dny

      @@OgreMan-cg6ok I meant in your own life, stop oil, have you? If you haven't been able to remove it from your life, then how will society? The issue with new accounts, especially lately with ai, when smoking and Big O companies tried to sow doubt to slow down change, they set grass roots foundations and people up that would sow doubt and confusion. Saying he is blind to anything does this. Considering you are saying just stop oil now, something that went against his message, did you not watch the video?

  • @treefrog3349
    @treefrog3349 Před 27 dny +1

    "Energy" is merely the symbolic talisman of human arrogance. Our culturally-instilled, ebullient, self-centered focus has allowed humanity to utterly "miss the point". The collective interaction of ALL life has made human life viable and possible. We, as a species, are actually "biting the hand that feeds us". Our arrogance, and our greed, prevents us from seeing that fundamental, foolish, self-defeating arrogance.

    • @dbadagna
      @dbadagna Před 26 dny

      "Civilization is a heat engine."
      --Tim Garrett

  • @dalewolver8739
    @dalewolver8739 Před 27 dny +1

    Re "What can we do" one thing would be to modify our behaviour in baby steps. Have businesses only operate 3 days a week. Allow people only to drive (except for emergencies) on odd / even days. Stop subsidization of ff. Make lobbying (bribery )a crime again.

  • @Rnankn
    @Rnankn Před 25 dny +4

    Art Berman suffers from capitalism blindness

    • @alan2102X
      @alan2102X Před 25 dny +1

      Among other things, such as neo-Malthusianism. See my comment from 5 minutes ago (sort comments by "newest first").

  • @CharlesBrown-xq5ug
    @CharlesBrown-xq5ug Před 28 dny

    《 Arrays of nanodiodes promise full conservation of energy》
    A simple rectifier crystal can, iust short of a replicatable long term demonstration of a powerful prototype, almost certainly filter the random thermal motion of electrons or discrete positiive charged voids called holes so the electric current flowing in one direction predominates. At low system voltage a filtrate of one polarity predominates only a little but there is always usable electrical power derived from the source Johnson Nyquest thermal electrical noise. This net electrical filtrate can be aggregated in a group of separate diodes in consistent alignment parallel creating widely scalable electrical power. As the polarity filtered electrical energy is exported, the amount of thermal energy in the group of diodes decreases. This group cooling will draw heat in from the surrounding ambient heat at a rate depending on the filtering rate and thermal resistance between the group and ambient gas liquid or solid warmer than absolute zero. There is a lot of ambient heat on our planet, more in equatorial dry desert summer days and less in polar desert winter nights.
    Refrigeration by the principle that energy is conserved should produce electricity instead of consuming it.
    Focusing on explaining the electronic behavior of one composition of simple diode, a near flawless crystal of silicon is modified by implanting a small amount of phosphorus on one side from a ohmic contact end to a junction where the additive is suddenly and completely changed to boron with minimal disturbance of the crystal pattern. The crystal then continues to another ohmic contact.
    A region of high electrical resistance forms at the junction in this type of diode when the phosphorous near the ĵunction donates electrons that are free to move elsewhere while leaving phosphorus ions held in the crystal while the boron donates a hole which is similalarly free to move. The two types of mobile charges mutually clear each other away near the junction leaving little electrical conductivity. An equlibrium width of this region is settled between the phosphorus, boron, electrons, and holes. Thermal noise is beyond steady state equlibrium. Thermal transients where mobbile electrons move from the phosphorus added side to the boron added side ride transient extra conductivity so they are filtered into the external circuit. Electrons are units of electric current. They lose their thermal energy of motion and gain electromotive force, another name for voltage, as they transition between the junction and the array electrical tap.
    Aloha

  • @seandepagnier
    @seandepagnier Před 26 dny +1

    I think this man is conflating the situation. We could cut consumption to a fraction without meaningful sacrifice. Look at switzerland vs the USA in terms of emissions. They use 1/4th the resources but live longer.

    • @borealphoto
      @borealphoto Před 26 dny

      Switzerland's real emissions are 231% higher than what they emit on their territory.

    • @alan2102X
      @alan2102X Před 25 dny

      @@borealphoto Regardless, the OP's point is correct. The U.S. has VAST waste built-in to everything it does, with emissions being just one of the downstream effects. We could be living very good lives (better lives in fact) on perhaps 20% of current levels of consumption.

    • @borealphoto
      @borealphoto Před 25 dny

      @@alan2102X The OP is just plain wrong. The Swiss' consumption emissions per capita are on par with the USA.

    • @alan2102X
      @alan2102X Před 25 dny

      @@borealphoto You're not getting it. This is not about Switzerland specifically. It is also not about emissions specifically.

    • @borealphoto
      @borealphoto Před 25 dny

      @@alan2102X I got it the first time and you're wrong, in denial.
      You can live with 20% of your income today. Why aren't you doing it?

  • @chadreilly
    @chadreilly Před 26 dny

    "It doesn't mean that we should just stop renewables..." Maybe it does mean that.

  • @snowflakeca2079
    @snowflakeca2079 Před 27 dny

    We need
    “New Pillars”
    1 st principles thinking

  • @antonyjh1234
    @antonyjh1234 Před 27 dny +1

    The ordinary consumer doesn't have a choice"
    But we don't have to be willing participants.

    • @squeaker19694
      @squeaker19694 Před 27 dny

      The problem is that most western governments laws don't allow people to live simply. You can't just live in a mud hut. Tiny houses aren't even legal in most places.

    • @mitkoogrozev
      @mitkoogrozev Před 26 dny

      True, that's why I am a unwilling participant.

    • @antonyjh1234
      @antonyjh1234 Před 26 dny

      @@mitkoogrozev I wonder if the word supporter, would have had more emphasis. The ordinary consumer can't say " I don't have any choice so where are we going on our skiing trip" and get to absolve them of guilt because there is no other choice, other than not going of course.

    • @mitkoogrozev
      @mitkoogrozev Před 26 dny

      @@antonyjh1234 If I get what you mean, then I would say it doesn't go far enough . As such I would expand it to : "I don't have a choice in participating in this shit system, and it winds me up so much, that to be able to continue existing without blowing my top off, I have no choice but to go on a skiing trip to chill down" . Even the entertainment is basically part of said system that people are unwillingly participants in. It's essentially there to be able to keep people going without rebelling. And we gotta take into account that they are probably completely unaware, which removes even more 'blame' from them ( not that I believe in praise or blame, since those are free will tied concepts, and fee will is utter nonsense, just trying to get a point across without going into this side subject ).

    • @antonyjh1234
      @antonyjh1234 Před 26 dny

      @@mitkoogrozev With 636kw of energy in a tank of diesel, around 3 months of my electrical energy in a sub tropical summer with the air con going 24-7, going skiing seems like cutting a hole in the titanic where the ice berg is going to hit, no matter where you have to drive from. Escaping the system, when I am a result of the system, while taking the best parts forward and enjoying ourselves, on a sinking ship? Now that is going to take skill. To tell people any oil related products have come because people died in other countries and oil is all around me, props up the system and our lives revolve around it and money, without direction, just more, makes it hard to live in the belly of the beast at times for sure.

  • @kazparzyxzpenualt8111
    @kazparzyxzpenualt8111 Před 27 dny +1

    Greenpeace took out a full page to present a photograph of a dissipated tanker captain named Hazelton in the NYTimes, the clever caption read:
    THIS MANS DRIVING DID NOT CAUSE THE EXXON VALDEZ OIL SPILL.
    YOURS DID!

  • @gregorydenton8107
    @gregorydenton8107 Před 20 dny

    Thanks for the episode, interesting perspectives particularly "horse technology" (first I've heard of that as the #1 disruptive tech in human history :). There should have been more talk of climate breakdown and biodiversity loss. Unfortunately (to say the least), continuing to burn fossil fuels and stopping immediately will have the same effect on industrial/consumer societies: collapse. Erratic weather is already having a large negative effect on crop yields around the globe. However, now that I think about it, "stopping oil now" will be much better for non-human species. Humans are f***ed either way and colonialism was the main culprit.

  • @sela2611
    @sela2611 Před 28 dny +11

    so we're fucked, conclusion

    • @j85grim4
      @j85grim4 Před 28 dny +6

      Welcome to reality. Otherwise known as the doomasphere.

    • @antonyjh1234
      @antonyjh1234 Před 28 dny +2

      No, we can change.

    • @j85grim4
      @j85grim4 Před 28 dny

      @@antonyjh1234 Okay. Come back here in 5 years and let me know how we have changed.

    • @antonyjh1234
      @antonyjh1234 Před 28 dny

      @@j85grim4 How have you changed in the last five years? Do you only comment doom and gloom on environmental podcasts?

    • @j85grim4
      @j85grim4 Před 28 dny

      @antonyjh1234 I have changed dramatically in the last 5 years. I went from a techno optimist snob who looked down my nose at people who didn't drive an electric car to someone who understands now e.v.s are just a PR stunt that won't solve anything. I now have a community of people that speak the truth and are attempting to build a parallel society so when this one inevitably crumbles, all will not be lost....hopefully.

  • @futures2247
    @futures2247 Před 26 dny +1

    key point seems to be its over population thats the issue

  • @leonsappl
    @leonsappl Před 10 dny

    The coining of the term energy blind, whilst succinct, I find to be somewhat of a misnomer. I've never categorically sought out its etymology but imagine it's in reference to psychological "blind" spots in human cognition. As i've reflected on this choice of word (and perhaps this is purely semantic intellectualism) I've come to believe "energy illiteracy/fluency" (and for that matter material illiteracy) is actually a more accurate description of the issue at play. But that sounds a bit clunky and definitely doesn't have the poetic nor cultural ring to it as the former. Anyway, energy illiteracy provides a truer representation of the fundamental issue at play; we are born energy/material literate (or rather we begin life with energy as our mother tongue) but through cultural conditioning we stop speaking it to be replaced by the abstraction of currency (ie. representation of value). A good example is if you ask young children to choose between coins they will choose the most numerous quantity or largest size irrespective of their value. The majority of adults, however, have completely transitioned away from speaking the language of the material world and now only see reality through this financialised lens. if you have ever learnt another language you'll recognise the process from initially translating every word/phrase to eventually speaking, thinking and feeling in that new language. So often i see this expressed by people conflating the abstract cost/price of something with its material or energetic value. they have essentially translated theit understanding of the material world into their primary language that being money. we think through a financial lens and without realising translate all these discussions. well misunderstandings and errors often occur as a result. it doesn't matter how cheap solar or wind is priced within the human economy. the real price is how much energy/resources were used to manufacture etc. that's why king Hubbert proposed energy tokens instead of currency. he spoke in fluent energy but few policy makers today do.

  • @Stoddardian
    @Stoddardian Před 21 dnem

    It's not just the other half of the world that is dissatisfied with the current dispensation. Vast numbers of Western populations are fed up too. Fed up with the permanent oligarchy. Fed up with mass immigration. Fed up with the endless deconstruction of our identity. Fed up with forever wars.

  • @jimbobcharles2782
    @jimbobcharles2782 Před 27 dny

    After listening to some quite rational insights into the complexities of self-interest being The-Issue, Art suggests listening to guru Ian Mcgilchrist, whose hypothesis is that there is a Devine Feild of Consciousness. Clearly we will be saved by the supernatural, aka the DFC.

  • @ErnestOfGaia
    @ErnestOfGaia Před 27 dny

    Chat gpt is referencing 3 sources about the 511 billion barrels of oil discovery a while back.

    • @pascalbercker7487
      @pascalbercker7487 Před 27 dny

      511 Billion? Really? Are you sure?
      The recent oil discoveries in Guyana and Namibia have significant potential, but the exact number of billion barrels these discoveries will add is not yet fully quantified.
      Guyana: The Bluefin well in the Stabroek block has added to more than 30 discoveries since 2015. This block already holds over 11 billion barrels of recoverable oil and gas. The exact contribution of the Bluefin discovery to this total is still being evaluated​ (ExxonMobil)​​ (News Room Guyana)​​ (Offshore Technology)​.
      Namibia: Galp Energia’s discovery in the Orange basin is significant, but the precise volume of oil discovered has not been disclosed yet. Previous nearby discoveries by Shell and TotalEnergies suggest that the region holds substantial reserves, potentially adding significantly to global oil reserves​ (World Oil)​.
      These discoveries highlight ongoing exploration success and the potential for substantial additions to global oil reserves as further evaluations and development plans unfold.
      I don't see 511 billion.

  • @jesperandersson889
    @jesperandersson889 Před 25 dny

    Horse and wagons and what have ya... true so true

  • @bgiv2010
    @bgiv2010 Před 27 dny

    "Without oil, civilization would collapse."
    Yes and insofar as civilization is destroying its own future, collapse is inevitable so what's the threat?

  • @kurtk4223
    @kurtk4223 Před 28 dny +2

    iain mcgilchrist needs to be ur guest...sorry didn't watch till the end

  • @davidschlessinger9945
    @davidschlessinger9945 Před 25 dny

    there is actually some contestation that there were horses in north america prior to European settlement

  • @Ritastresswood
    @Ritastresswood Před 24 dny

    33mins in…Wife said - Typical irrational thinking, if we just throw a wobbler, somebody will solve the problem. My husband said ‘you can say that, but I couldn’t possibly comment’.

  • @xqt39a
    @xqt39a Před 28 dny

    The rise of instantaneous global communication and global supply chains has created a situation UNPRECEDENTED in human history. Local crises of history have become today a global meta-crises. It is imperative that the human community come to terms with this new and heretofore unknown state of world affaires.
    Ironically Putin’s Valdai discussion club is addressing these very questions annually. Valdai includes 42 countries. The only viable way forward is for ALL countries to cooperate along these lines.. and the process has begun.
    What thinking person cannot see the necessity of international cooperation for the modern world’s culture to survive. This change may come to pass very soon ( or not ). I hope to live to see a world transition to global sanity. I love all humans, each is one is a magnificent creation of God, God has bothered to tell us to steward the earth. Let’s do it ❤.

    • @squeaker19694
      @squeaker19694 Před 27 dny

      He didn't really spell it out well enough in the bible. I recall reading something about man having dominion over the earth. We should have kept the nature worshipping pagan religions and we wouldn't have this problem.

  • @ErnestOfGaia
    @ErnestOfGaia Před 28 dny +1

    weird countries, right on

  • @Pasandeeros
    @Pasandeeros Před 26 dny

    30:15 "in fact there may not be.. ANY solution"
    Yep, that's right. This system of ours will come crashing down. It's inevitable.
    Two billion humans by 2100. And that's an "optimistic" maximum.

  • @dadsonworldwide3238
    @dadsonworldwide3238 Před 27 dny

    We are now close to streamlining efficiency in all 1900s structuralism knowledge based sectors. All agencies and institutions are facing challenges to properly innovate just like farmers did 150 yrs ago .
    It's new and difficult..Those who have compromised that we charged all the building upon are ready for repayments .
    The Renaissance in America or populas movements abroad with access to history of nations people places and things formulating emerging pragmatic common sense objectivism is new and wasn't some cia or even UN operation. If anything it is in the face of the big lobby activist groups.
    It comes Down achieving all our goals and for the first time ever urbanization & agency and institutions are facing streamlining just like farmers had 150 years ago. Where now they're cutting edge innovation allows 2% to farm and feed 8 billion people.
    Well our academics to even publishers ,unions are all about to be eaten like the public library has by the computational plow.
    Jethro tulls plow and fertilizer only gets pushed to remove people from the land to move into condensed living city's to meet the factory worker demands that then turned into office occupation in skyscrapers. All this is coming to an end. Perks and benefits incentivised to allow inefficient urban work to liberate all common sense marginalized groups leaving only criminals are all achieved. We rebuilt Europe, industrialized 3rd world nations who draw brand new borders..all these needs and demands are coming to an end.
    We should be celebrating all the self Sacrifice of multiple generations under 1900s structuralism expansionism was able to achieve.
    The ability to operate business in the middle of nowhere is empowering rural areas where only major city's could support things.
    Quadrupled logistics with ability to spread out medium density better quality of life infrastructure mixed in with nature restored family governance over the land because we can sub contract out skill and trade after buyers, sellers are under one roof in one domain where publishers & unions merge into online coops.
    Rural areas that own local power and utility have always worked cutting edge innovation lived with less footprints while urbanization is the opposite.

  • @Aktentasche1
    @Aktentasche1 Před 27 dny

    I want to know the answer to one question: How much of the global use of fossils (as a percentage) goes into 'necessities of life', if you will, such as food production and distribution or heating during winter? (I have an inclination that it has to be very low) point being that we would probably be very well served already by simply cutting the unnecessary bloat from our economic activities that nobody really wants to do anyway and serve no real societal purpose. Construction of houses... we can go back to building with earthenware or wood, we can construct a lot less, you don't actually 'need' heavy machinery to build a house, there are other materials that can be kept sterile for usage in medical applications etc. We need to get creative... things don't have to be done the way we are used to doing them at all.

    • @Aktentasche1
      @Aktentasche1 Před 27 dny

      Financial system and world trade has to collapse sooner or later anyway, so let‘s get it over with so that we can start reconstructing our economies.

    • @antonyjh1234
      @antonyjh1234 Před 27 dny

      It's hard to quantify a number as it is dependent on the country. Let's use USA. 10 percent of emissions are supposed to be from all food (animals crops) 20 percent of our energy is supposed to be electricity, we could halve that but let's leave it at that and electricity and food would be 30%. Add: Our energy" most modern countries or overall I don't know.

    • @antonyjh1234
      @antonyjh1234 Před 27 dny

      @@Aktentasche1 How soon do you think we can get people to start to refuse money for the reasons they do anything?

    • @Aktentasche1
      @Aktentasche1 Před 27 dny

      Look, personally I think it‘s not going to happen any time soon. But one would have to think that at some point it is going to be so glaringly obvious that how we are doing things is not working. And at that point we need to have an alternative conceptualized, ready to jump at the opportunity

    • @antonyjh1234
      @antonyjh1234 Před 27 dny

      @@Aktentasche1 My issue with my degrowth scenario of 60% reduction, at least, within an election term, is how does a member of parliament get to be in control and voted in on a platform of less jobs? We could offer everybody food, shelter and medical care for free but in return, they can't work. Money is a ticket to energy that isn't going to be there, so more money will enter the system, making people think they are getting richer, how is it possible to get voted in on a platform of less jobs in these times?

  • @kated3165
    @kated3165 Před 28 dny +4

    ''We can't blame fossil fuels... also we need to think about the societal consequences of stopping fossil fuels!'' Yeah dude... its almost like we needed to start divesting AGES ago, when Climate Change was discovered and big oil industries spent the following decades doing everything their money could in order to prevent this divesting from happening (while also working to secure our dependency to oil)! Even to this day fossil fuel companies are STILL actively trying to push Climate change denialism so that populations won't push their governments to act... and they have infiltrated the top positions of Climate Change global meetings!!
    Its not easy for climate activists and climate scientists to push against the power and influence of these global giants have on governments... and without governments even acknowledging the emergency and direness of the situation, most people aren't going to wake up in time!
    We don't need to stop it 100%, we can continue a small usage for what is absolutely VITAL... but to continue the way we are? Its not just a couple billions who will be doomed. Our entire species along with all other species, could be doomed. The longer we wait to drastically reduce fossil fuels? The more DRASTIC the needed measures will be... and if we wait too long, our planetary destabilization will force us to a halt, and that option will be even less pretty...

    • @Jeremy-WC
      @Jeremy-WC Před 28 dny

      Yes we did but it goes back to the opening statement. If instead of being expedient and self interested we recognized what limits to growth meant in the 1970s and started to limit capitalism and put policies in that slowly reduced or maintained the population we could have had 1 or 2 more centuries of fossil fuel use before we hit where warming is today.

  • @ginamurray711
    @ginamurray711 Před 27 dny

    Prepare for the patchy die-off #PFTPDO

  • @glennmitchell9107
    @glennmitchell9107 Před 25 dny

    Where do the cool kids go for psychological analysis? To an old energy industry expert, of course.

  • @nullgate
    @nullgate Před 26 dny

    It’s as old as empire.

  • @stefanbernardknauf467
    @stefanbernardknauf467 Před 27 dny

    If iI remember well thé Aztecs don't inow thé wheel, or has this been proven wrong?

    • @georgenelson8917
      @georgenelson8917 Před 27 dny +1

      The prehistoric cultures in Mexico have produced toys with wheels ( little animals with 4 wheels ) in Archaeology, but no large carts etc. no draft animals to pull them .

  • @alanfortunysicart4919
    @alanfortunysicart4919 Před 21 dnem

    Nobody is forcing to use it; but there are no alternative in the market, that was intentional and the result of decades of lobbying and economic convenience.
    Fossil fuels are not only very useful, their density and distribution make power relations unfair, so even without a climate crisis and fairer energy system should be in place.
    We are not equally responsible of this crises, less than 80 companies and few countries are responsible for more than 90% historical emissions and material use.

  • @treefrog3349
    @treefrog3349 Před 27 dny +1

    Art Berman, Simon Micheaux, Nate Hagens, Joseph Tainter, and too many other very knowledgeable human beings have eloquently pointed our the error of our ways. Yet we, as a species, continue to be "led" by self-serving, narrow-minded, and self-interested plutocrats. Ironically, I feel very content to be an old man "on his way out". I am ashamed and embarrassed to see what the human species has done to itself.

    • @georgenelson8917
      @georgenelson8917 Před 27 dny +1

      Please note it is not just the rich to blame, it is the damn human species. Over population and over shoot of resources is also to blame by the POOR who keep breeding more to suffer and die and eat resources and extrude sewage and pollution.

  • @bgiv2010
    @bgiv2010 Před 27 dny

    "There may not be any solution."
    Can we talk about your favorite solutions or are you happy to do nothing?

  • @hankking4483
    @hankking4483 Před 12 dny

    This guy isn't even a shill--he's a consultant for energy companies TODAY. Why interview someone *currently making their money on fossil fuels?
    He says some smart things, but he's spewing climate defeatism on oil--which is the new climate denialism. It's decrepit, but that's what they're selling us now, "well, it's happening, but we can't give up oil, so we have to just deal with it." "Yes I'm an addict, but if I were to quit drinking I would have seizures, so I'm just gonna keep going till my liver gives out you see. It's actually my family's fault, we've been addicts for many generations. I can't stop drinking, because that would get rid of all carbs in my body. Do you know the percent of carbs in my body that come from alcohol? 90% of my blood sugar is converted alcohol. So it would literally shut down my brain to quit drinking, so the problem isn't so simple you see. There might actually be no solution."
    I'm not sure whether he's just been indoctrinated by working in oil for so long, or just justifying working for oil companies, or which came first--the chicken or the egg. The man made his money as a petroleum geologist. His Forbes profile says, "I am a petroleum geologist with 42 years of oil and gas industry experience." A couple of different points, but he's saying the "correct things," just shifting blame from oil and claiming, with false information as well as faulty reasoning that we "can't" get away from oil without collapsing society.
    First, he says that "health care is the number one consumer of plastics." This is patently false. See here: www.plasticsoupfoundation.org/en/plastic-facts-and-figures/ the largest consumers of plastics are, in order, packaging, building and construction, automotive, electrical and electronic--health care didn't even make the list. This article here www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7068768/ has health care consuming 2% of global plastic production by value.
    Further, there is no campaign against creating plastics out of petroleum. There is a campaign to stop *burning* fossil fuels. No one is saying "halt all global plastic production and health care as a whole." It's a scare crow argument on multiple levels, based on a false statement that health care is the "biggest consumer of plastics." There are ENORMOUS amounts of money in oil. I wouldn't be surprised at all if he's working for them. As people are having more and more awareness around the global situation, they're still going to want to shift the blame away from them--why? So they can keep exploiting the world and boiling the atmosphere for a few more years.
    The idea that "there are no simple solutions" is just defeatism. We could end capitalism today with the stroke of pens. The rich could distribute wealth equally, stop oppressing the poor of the world. End world hunger. Stop competing in endless wars and share. Very simple. The problem is the *will* of rich f*ckers like this guy to stop enriching themselves on oil--yes the very adolescents he is talking about. He is a poster child. Unless he's given his money away.
    You have to look out for shills, or for people who are just making cognitive errors to justify the way they spent their lives. i.e., 'It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.' Only replace salary with life savings, with personal identity, with seeing oneself as a good person, etc..
    He goes on to say "there may not be any solutions." Any solutions to a problem WE are causing? Specifically, a tiny number of us, who are ultra rich? At the very outset he blamed the average consumer for being slaves to fossil fuels. You can go off of fossil fuels, it's true. But you stand little chance of running for public office from your farm without transportation to a city center. Very little chance at having any influence. In fact, many people live today without fossil fuels in poorer areas. They have very little influence. It is people like this guy, who have made their fortunes on fossil fuels, who have influence and actually could change things. I wonder what his net worth is.
    H*ll--I just continued reading his bio--he's STILL a consultant for major energy companies? Why are you interviewing the opposition? Truly bizarre. I only came for the geopolitics.