Martenson does talk about these later on, tho social security,medicare etc are the only ones i think he mentions, if you want me to continue with the rest of his presentation, will do so.
I've had the rare and fortunate opportunity over the last 2 years to study almost full-time world affairs, economics, human behavior, and history. I've read many many authors with many conflicting perspectives and I can say with authority that Chris Martenson is one of a very small number of thinkers in the world that understands most of the major economic and biophysical forces at play today.
So yes, if you want to understand what is going on I recommend you complete Chris Martenson's Crash Course. Other thinkers worth your time include Jason Bradford, Albert Bartlett, Saul Griffith, David Holmgren, and Richard Heinberg.
fyi: Jim Puplava of the Financial Sense Newshour did an excellent one hour interview with Chris Martenson today. You can get the podcast here:
http://www.financialsense.com/fsn/main.htmlI'm not too aware why bank deposit insurance matters here.
Bailout loans end up as public debt which will be accounted for.
There is a high probability that several more large financial institutions will fail. If this occurs the US government will be on the hook to pay deposit insurance and will lose money loaned via bail outs. The point is that when looking at government debt it is important to include all liabilities, not just the amount borrowed to fund daily operations.
I don't believe they are, at least not within our lifetimes. The peak oil thing keeps coming up and goes away. So either we don't really know how much is left or there has not been an active investigation into alternative sources. I don't mean solar, wind here, just the sources that would be more expensive to extract. The reason that has not happened is it has not been worth it since there was enough already at cheap rates.
The middle east has proven reserves for at least another 100 years (if not longer). What about developments that make deeper off-shore drilling feasible. Canada's always bragging about its tar sands and making it look like its bigger than whats in the middle east. Care to put a figure on how much untapped oil there is under the oceans
You views align with those of the majority and it is understandable given the poor information provided by our governments and mass media, and given the market price swings that can easily be interpreted as false alarms that imply there is no problem.
I could provide a book's worth of reasons on why we have an imminent energy problem but I would only be repeating high quality information that is available from many sources such as
www.theoildrum.com. Instead I will try to convince you with common sense and everyday observations:
- As proof that peak oil is a fact and not just one of many competing theories it is instructive to review US history. Early in the last century the US was the world's largest producer of oil and the world's largest exporter of oil. US production has been in decline since the early 80's and the US is now the world's largest importer of oil. Why? Because US oil fields were finite and depleted over time. The majority of high quality low cost oil comes from so called "giant" fields in the Middle East, Mexico and a few other places. Most of these giant fields are getting old and some, such as those in Mexico, are already in rapid decline. We are finding new oil but it is just barely keeping up with the decline in existing well production. Data suggests we will cross the threshold into permanent decline in a few years. My guess is within 3 years. For more information get the latest report by the International Energy Agency. They are the official world authority and until last year were predicting we had nothing to worry about for decades. Last year they did an abrupt about face and using politically correct words are now saying we have a crisis. It's mind boggling that the mass media has not reported more on this seminal report.
- Last year we observed oil prices climb to $150+ a barrel. If you study the data over this period you will see that world production did not increase in response to the high price. Why? Because production was already operating at maximum capacity.
- We are now in an economic depression. Conventional wisdom would suggest that oil prices should be falling due to depressed demand. Instead we are seeing a slow steady rise in oil prices. Why? Because demand is slightly larger than supply, and supply is constrained at this price.
With regard to alternate energy and the scale of the investments that will be required to replace fossil energy there is no better summary than a talk given by Saul Griffith here:
http://fora.tv/media/rss/Long_Now_Podcasts/podcast-2009-01-16-griffith.mp3Trying to be a pragmatist, to understand what the current system is and how it got where it is. Most of my reading is constrained to reputable magazines or papers on this subject. The people that get paid for their product as opposed to those that teach.
Now if there were a conflict of interest in what the majority of the world's economists or leaders were speaking off you would be right. Actually leave out the leaders, they are the biggest liars, what about those economists tho
Is there a conflict of interest in what they are saying ?
Quite a few did warn beforehand about the current crisis.
Unfortunately, the most inaccurate sources of information also happen to be the most popular. These would include CNN, MSNBC, The Economist, The New York Times, etc. In addition, our universities are teaching economic theories that are only valid in a world of unconstrained resources, and this assumption is no longer true.
Improved public understanding of some very complex topics such as exponential growth, energy, monetary system, and debt is critical because until the populace gets educated there is little chance that our leadership will do the right things.
You are correct that some economic thinkers did predict a problem. These would include Peter Schiff, Warren Brussee, Richard Martin, Karl Denninger, Nouriel Roubini, and Mike Shedlock. Unfortunately none of these people have a broad enough view to understand the complete picture. Chris Martenson is one of the very few that does.
Well, thats the Austrian school for you
I've seen some of the literature on the mises site and a lot of it is interesting but in the end, i'm looking for correlation with the real world.
How popular is mises on college campuses ? Does it form part of the curriculum. What use would it be in a world that does not work the way they deem it should be. Sure it explains things here & there but its not what the current system is about is it.
One of my pet quibbles is their obsession with gold. If money isn't backed by gold its somehow worthless. absolutely true, and if a govt. is irresponsible with a fiat system, that will defnitely happen. But what about the majority of the world which DOES have responsible central banks etc. How worthless is their currency ?
They also don't like fractional banking either but its not profitable to run a bank without it. Any bank that did not do it would go out of businesses to rivals that DID do it. In short the Austrian school is advocating for monetary reform. All fine & good. But it needs buy in from the powers that be. And if it were in their interest it would have happened already. Finance & banking is the fuel that the economy runs on.
You make excellent points. You are correct that there is no need to back money with a commodity if the central bank acts responsibly. And you are correct that the design of our current system is a reality and has served us very well over the last 60 years. What has changed is that a fundamental assumption baked into the design of our current financial system is no longer valid, namely that year over year exponential growth is no longer possible.
Assuming oil is not a problem for the short term, I'd say its possible so long as GDP growth is possible. Does not have to be exponential. If we develop alternative sources of energy ie fusion, within the next 50 years who's to say where that limit is
Oil is a central problem as discussed above. However we are also bumping up against other physical constraints including global warming, fresh water, species extinction, and collapsing fisheries.
Having said that, I do believe that with abundant energy we can solve almost any problem. For example, you can desalinate sea water with lots of energy. You are correct to hope for a breakthrough in fusion because it appears to be the only possible silver bullet solution given the constraints of physics and biology. And you are correct that fusion is at least 50 years away given my review of fusion research around the world. The problem is that we do not have 50 years. We don't even have 10 years to solve the impending energy problem.
It's worth noting that it takes energy to produce energy. For example, imagine the diesel fuel consumed by machines used to mine, concentrate, and ship uranium. Or imagine the energy consumed to produce, fabricate, and ship the steel used in a windmill. If we leave things too long, and we may have already crossed that threshold, it won't be physically possible to create an alternate energy solution.
Humans have a genetic disposition to optimism, faith in leaders and technology, and for most, belief in a god looking out for them. The reality forgotten by many is that we are governed by the laws of physics and biology. Our species is now bumping up against these physical constraints.
What's your reason ?
Our current economic problems were caused by us living well beyond our means as manifested by excess private and public debt. Simultaneous to this, physical laws are lowering the ceiling of our "means". Either of these forces in isolation would be a very big deal. Together they represent a threat to civilization as we know it. A very big painful correction is on the near horizon, followed by a further slow steady decline in wealth as we currently define it.
And just to complete the picture, our leaders are trying to solve a problem rooted in excess debt with more debt. Where will we be if they succeed? And what will our capacity be to invest the 10's of trillions required for alternate energy?
Everytime some one tells me this it has the same affect as a fortune cookie telling me the contrary
I can understand why you feel this way. All I can suggest is that you should not listen to the talking heads. Do your own research of the facts and then draw your own conclusions.