If you understand energy and its foundational role in making the economy happen, then you understand something that few others do. Im not sure why this energy blindness exists, but it is as mysterious as it is widespread. Perhaps, the implications are just too profound for many people to really entertain?
After all, if energy is that important, and its now winding down, what does that mean for the long march of human progress and our own sense of what the future might hold? At a minimum, it means that things simply wont carry on as they have been. No more endless growth. No more increasingly complex systems; heck well be lucky to simply keep what weve got now operating and properly maintained.
It all comes down to the amount of oil thats available because oil is the KING of all energy sources. And the king is weak and fading its entirely possible that well never again see as much oil come out of the ground as we did back in 2018. That might have been the actual peak
There are warning signs everywhere that oil supplies are extremely tight and that spare capacity simply doesnt exist at the moment. Someday oil will forever be in the rearview mirror and this is why an economic collapse is inevitable.
Please, take the time to learn this data and ponder not just what it means to the world, but to yourselves and your loved ones.
Watch the video...
In the second part of this video for subscribers, I unpack both the complexity of the oil business and its relationship to our economy, but also something called the credit impulse which is also flashing a strong recession (depression?) warning signal.
He presented similar info in a much longer video a couple months back. The same charts were shown. Seems a compelling case supporting the notion that the future of humanity may look very Amish.
There is enough oil at the North Slope in Alaska for a second pipeline. There is lots of oil Biden removed from leasing. There is lots of oil in the Arctic. The Germans ran WW II with Silesian coal made into gasoline at Auschwitz. We have lots of coal. We do have too many people which will be taken care of by another "1816 year without a summer" event."