We are not going to run that shit on coal liquids or tar sand
byproducts or oil shale distillates or ethanol or biodiesel, or
second-hand french-fry oil. Nor on solar, wind, nuclear, or hydrogen.
You can run things on that stuff, but not the biggies we run at their
current scale. If the Democrats really want to get serious and act
responsibly, they'd better not squander whatever is left of our credit
and collective confidence in a futile campaign to keep this racket
going. They'd better prepare the public to start living differently.
Where to begin? They can start by recognizing that massive long-haul
trucking of goods has to end and be replaced by improved, electrified
rail plus water transport -- with trucks used only for the final, local
leg of the journey. To reach this point of recognition, the Democrats
will have to overcome the entrenched interests of the trucking industry
-- but, by now, most of the truck drivers in this country have been
successfully converted into right-wing Republican zombies, so it might
not be so difficult to overcome them. They will also have to overcome
WalMart and its "warehouse on wheels" composed of thousands of
18-wheelers full of discount goodies incessantly in motion for
"just-in-time" delivery to the big box outlets. And, of course, by
"WalMart" I mean not only the company itself but the millions of
Americans who think they can't live without it.
Do the
Democrats have the guts to go against this tide? My guess is probably
not. But, get this, too: sooner rather than later, whether we like it
or not, we're going to have to replace WalMart with an entirely
different system for retail trade -- probably resembling the system of
multi-layered local trade networks that were destroyed by WalMart. And
the further off we put this task, the more difficult it's going to be.
So, real political leadership will have to inform the public that the
time has come to start making other arrangements.
Instead
of supporting the fiction that happy motoring can continue forever, the
Democrats should create an "Apollo Project" to restore the US passenger
rail system, too. (We hear a lot about an "Apollo Project" to develop a
miracle fuel for our cars, but that ain't gonna happen and we'd be much
better off devoting that investment to public transit.) This will
baffle and piss off a lot of the public, but it is necessary if we are
going to survive as an advanced civilization. Please notice, by the
way, that I am not suggesting we deprive anyone of the right
to drive a car, only give them the option of getting somewhere by train
instead. And don't worry, the politicians will not have to do a thing
to restrict automobile use -- circumstances will do it for them as the
world plunges into a permanent oil crisis that does not go away.
Another thing the Democrats can do with their new power is reorient
the activities of the US Department of Agriculture -- and especially
legislated cash subsidies -- away from the "agribusiness" Big Boys to
small-scale, local farmers. We are silently and stealthily approaching
a crisis situation with the American food supply. Most localities now
only have a two or three-day food supply, and any number of crisis
events in the offing could disrupt the three-thousand mile chains of
frozen pizzas and Cheez Doodles that the public depends on for basic
sustenance. We desperately need to reactivate what's left of the
productive land around our towns and cities, and to repopulate it with
people who can grow real food.
The Democrats will have to
contend with the imminent cratering of suburbia whether they like it or
not. The "housing bubble" is the first leg down for a development
pattern that has no future. What's out there now is a vast over-supply
of exactly the kind of houses in the kinds of places that will not have
value in an energy-scarcer world. The overbuilding of tract houses is a
tragedy caused by reckless and irresponsible behavior in the lending
industry and in the government officials who regulate interest rates
and the credit supply. The investments are already lost, and the
individual carnage is going to be extreme, but the depth of the problem
will reveal itself slowly for two reasons: 1.) both homeowners and
realtors will desperately try to maintain the fiction that these
properties still have high value, and 2.) individuals who are in
trouble with their mortgage payments will never reveal their dire
situation to their friends and neighbors because it is too humiliating.
The news about default and re-po will only arrive with the moving vans
(if the individuals can afford to hire them).
The collapse of suburbia will be the Democrats chief inheritance from the "free-market" economically neo-liberal Republicans who were too busy money grubbing at all levels to notice that there was such a thing as the future.
The tragedy of suburbia will finish off whatever is left of
Reagan-Bush1-Bush2 Republicanism -- although the truth is that Bill
Clinton did as much to promote this way of life, indeed, to turn
suburban development into a new basis for the US economy when
manufacturing crapped out.
The nation as a whole -- however
it reconfigures itself politically in the aftermath of this fiasco --
is going to have to come to grips with a lot of hard truths. One will
be that "energy independence" means a whole different scale and system
for daily life, not just "new and innovative" fuels for cars. As long
as we are stuck in a foolish national wish-fest aimed at keeping all
the cars running and propping up all the trappings of car-dependency,
we will remain lost in a wilderness of our own making. And whoever the
next president of the US turns out to be, whether a Democrat or the
leader of a party that has not yet coalesced, will have all that
he-or-she can do to keep this nation from completely falling to pieces.
LINK: Clusterfuck Nation
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