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Beyond Petroleum
You couldn’t call it a dialogue. It was more like a momentary rip in the global power continuum, a spill of outrage on the stage of a major oil conference in London.
On Tuesday, two Greenpeace activists interrupted a speech by British Petroleum chief of staff Steve Westwell — sandwiched him at his podium, trespassed on time and space that didn’t belong to them, and spoke to an audience that hadn’t come to hear them. They had about 20 seconds, not much time to talk about the complexity of ecosystems or draw attention, say, to the plight of the Gulf of Mexico’s Sargassum algae. They did the best they could.
One unfurled a banner that read “Go Beyond Petroleum.” The other, as she was being ushered off the stage and out of the hotel, shouted, “We need to speed up progress and make a push to end the oil age.”
That was it. Time’s up. That’s how protest is — shouted and emotional, sometimes illegal. Even when it’s videotaped and the world gets to witness those 20 seconds of public theater, all we hear are slogans, all we see are disruption and scuffle: disorder, quickly dealt with. Money gets its hair mussed a little, then returns to its agenda. Nothing seems to change. The disorder implicit in that agenda returns to “let our children worry about it” status, and we remain on the track described by Ronald Wright in A Short History of Progress, his investigation into why civilizations collapse:
“The concentration of power at the top of large-scale societies gives the elite a vested interest in the status quo; they continue to prosper in darkening times long after the environment and general populace begin to suffer.”
As though still on the podium with the BP exec, I claim a little more time to open up that Greenpeace slogan, to address its implications not in the abstract but in the presence of those who profit from our stagnation within the oil age, whatever that might mean. After all, it’s their future too.
For it to matter whether or not we move “beyond petroleum,” there has to be a spiritual, not just a technical, dimension to the concept. It implies, I think, a fundamental break with the domination impulse by which we have “tamed” nature over the millennia of recorded history and built our unstable civilizations, propped up by war and conquest. Moving beyond petroleum means moving beyond our uncritical acceptance of a fragmented world and fragmented sense of responsibility.
Indeed, it means moving beyond the gospel that competing fragments, each looking out for its own “self-interest” (a.k.a., capitalism), is the highest form of order we can hope for. Rep. Joe Barton of Texas, the highest-ranking Republican on the House energy committee, demonstrated the sham nature of this system last week, when he apologized to BP for the $20 billion escrow account President Obama ordered the company to establish, calling it a “shakedown.”
Turns out, A) “Of the five Gulf Coast states, Mr. Barton’s Texas is the only one whose beaches, fisheries and tourist haunts are not threatened by oil spewing from BP’s ruined well,” the New York Times reported; and B) “. . . the oil and gas industry have been Mr. Barton’s biggest source of campaign money . . . contributing $1.4 million since the 1990 election cycle,” the Times added.
At the very least, capitalism in its unregulated, most virulent form — fragmentation capitalism, you might say — which was set loose in the Reagan era, has to be contained. No small task. U.S. District Judge Martin Feldman, a Reagan appointee (with stockholder interest in the drilling industry), recently overturned Obama’s six-month moratorium on new deepwater drilling in the Gulf (which would affect operations at 33 of 3,600 sites), siding with the argument that one blown deepwater well is “no proof” the others constitute a threat — no matter that the consequences of another accident would be cataclysmic.
The decision is proof of the status-quo aversion to long-range thinking — or thinking that goes “beyond petroleum,” thinking that muddies the profit game with ethical, moral and ecological concerns.
The “no proof” argument has long been the dodge of last resort for polluters, whether corporate or governmental. For instance, the U.S. Department of Defense — the biggest polluter on the planet and supreme enforcer of the global status quo — maintained, as long as possible, that there was no proof the mystery illnesses Vietnam vets (not to mention the Vietnamese themselves) were suffering had anything to do with Agent Orange. Ditto, Gulf War Syndrome. Irrefutable proof takes decades to accumulate; in fragmentation capitalism, the aim of the game is to take advantage of this and avoid responsibility for as long as possible.
Beyond petroleum, beyond the short-sighted exploitation and fragmentation of the planet, there is life itself, awaiting our discovery in its ever-unfolding complexity. Beyond petroleum lies the human future, at peace with itself, at peace with the planet, secure in its context and evolving toward whatever comes after us.
We have to start growing up. This won’t be easy, of course. Getting there will require a concerted, planetary effort, and the ascendance of values – reverence, humility, love – bigger than the ones that drive the age of oil.
- Posted in


26 Comments so far
Show AllI would stick with the tried and true label Predatory Capitalism.
If one holds nature in the highest regard it is difficult to go very wrong.
If Salazar overthrew the 2009 Ban against drilling permits won by the Center for Biological Diversity, in DC Circuit Court, against permitting Mississippi Canyon block 252, where the gusher is located, among others why is there so little mention of this fact in the "progressive press"? Not to implie that this fact shoud be in this article.
"Moving beyond petroleum means moving beyond our uncritical acceptance of a fragmented world and fragmented sense of responsibility.
"Indeed, it means moving beyond the gospel that competing fragments, each looking out for its own 'self-interest' (a.k.a., capitalism), is the highest form of order we can hope for."
I think the elite corporatists have figured this out and are moving in that direction. That is why they appear to be trying to form some sort of world-wide alliance of corporatists, as they connect more closely year by year with the intent to rule through a corporatocracy with the muscle provided by the US military. The only difficulty is in getting the little people to accept their roles as easily discardable slaves.
It is in fact of lower order, and promotes evil, which is devolution.
Koehler is the one who needs to really grow up and get it through his head that people are already trying to live petroleum free but it is easier said than done.
There may be a few who are lucky to work closer to home and don't have to travel much or even at all if they get to work from home. Most of us are not that lucky. After all the hard work and studying I went through, I might actually be one of those lucky few but most people will still choose to stick to high volume traffic jams with the spoiled brat tourists adding to the mess. Preach all you want about "growing up" but tell it to the Pentagon that sucks up the most oil or businesses who don't give a shit about people being economically forced into driving when metro is unreasonably expensive and no real repairs or upgrades get done for all the fare gouging. Why don't you tell the morons who don't give a shit about traveling hell and how it decreases true productivity and creativity to grow some damn brains and realize the beauty of getting a job closer to home even if it doesn't pay as much as working inside the city. The traffic jams have gotten incredibly worse these past two months that even mpg reading is now below 20 miles per gallon ! I'll be glad to go at the end of this month now that the contract is coming to an end.
In the meantime, let's stick to the fact that BP screwed up and only a corporate moron would make stupid statements about oil demand causing BP to fail. BP chose a bad rig and operated it beyond its limits. On top of that, capitalism rewards top crooks like Tony Hayward while small guys like us would get punished if we did the same thing.
Seeing how beholden the federal and some state governments are to BP I wouldn't call them morons...BP bribed all the right people to assure they could make errors and stupid statements without fear of consequences.
Excellent article. The abuse of power runs through our world from top to bottom, inside each of us and all around us. To understand anything that happens, you have only to consider the power dynamics: who comes out on top? The only real deep counter force to this universal mathematics lies in the spiritual understandings practised by far too few throughout history. It seems a terribly unequal struggle, with humankind the perpetual loser. We need a miracle.
For over ten years science and the oil industry have been well aware of the potential catastrophic hazards of deep sea oil drilling. Deep sea oil-drilling operations encounter methane hydrate deposits in many parts of the world. As a drill spins through the hydrate, the process can cause it to dissociate. The freed gas can easily explode, causing the drilling crew to lose control of the well. Another concern is that unstable hydrate layers could give way beneath oil platforms or, on a larger scale, even cause tsunamis.
The Deepwater Horizon rig was drilling in Block 252 of an area known as the Mississippi Canyon known to contain methane hydrate-bearing sediments. The platform was operating less than 20 miles from a methane hydrate research site located in the same canyon at Block 118.
The scary thing is that the research is to learn how to harvest these vast deposits of methane hydrates to replace oil as our main energy source as oil becomes more scarce. Science estimates that mining methane on the sea floor is at least ten times more hazardous than drilling for oil.
Why is this subject not being discussed in the mainstream media?
from the article:
~ We have to start growing up. This won’t be easy, of course. Getting there will require a concerted, planetary effort, and the ascendance of values – reverence, humility, love – bigger than the ones that drive the age of oil. ~
Global Start Date: September 22, 2012...
unanimous, planetwide rejection of the modern world...
cessation of industry, electricity, private property...
individual engagement in local living...
“The concentration of power at the top of large-scale societies gives the elite a vested interest in the status quo; they continue to prosper in darkening times long after the environment and general populace begin to suffer.” Wow, that is one of the most profound statements that I have ever read that describes where we are, and how difficult, if not impossible it will be to change our society.
Capitalism is always touted to be the best economic system going, but it has one major flaw, it is a reactionary system. Not a system that looks into the long term future to determine what is the best thing for society.
Take oil for example. It is a non renewable, finite resource that is extremely important to modern society, and it also pollutes the environment. Now if some utopian system was in place over the last few hundred years, that had the long term interest of society in mind, it would have been very clear that Oil should be valued and its use should limited as much as possible. Mass transit would have been used where ever possible, cars would have been small and got great milage, and car pooling would have been a requirement. Also things would be made locally because it would be crazy to waste oil, and pollute the environment making something on one side of the planet and then shipping it to a "consumer" halfway around our world.
But we didn't have a crazy system like that, we had our "wonderful" system of capitalism. When oil was plentiful, capitalism's reaction was to price it cheaply and use it foolishly. Cars were big got low MPG, and useless crap was manufactured or food grown in one part of the world then shipped thousands of miles to its "consumers". This all wasted a truly precious resource, and polluted the only planet we have.
Now any sane thoughtful person could have, would, have, should have, seen this was insane. It is not rocket science that this situation was not sustainable, and to put it mildly would not end well. But capitalism doesn't care about the long term future of society and resources. It just cares about the here and now and how everything and everyone can be exploited for short term profit.
So now here we find ourselves, drilling miles down into the earth for the black stuff, beyond hat is technically feasible, so we have what may be an unstoppable blowout of oil and methane gas in the GOM. We have pumped enough CO2 into the atmosphere to create what may be a run away greenhouse effect. Ahh the wonders of capitalism, the best economic system ever created by man.
In the end people always end up reaping what they sew, so I expect we are about to harvest one bumper crop of turd-blossoms real soon.
Great post NC-Tom.
Capitalism is hit-and-run economics. Capitalism hits the environment hard, stuffs its pockets & runs away, leaving the mess behind. The tipping point is at hand. I agree that the harvest of that bumper crop draws near.
It's not just BP. Myopic capitalism is what drives the hit-and-run vehicle of global destruction.
“The concentration of power at the top of large-scale societies gives the elite a vested interest in the status quo; they continue to prosper in darkening times long after the environment and general populace begin to suffer.”
For example:
"Judge denies request to maintain deepwater drilling ban"
http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/06/24/gulf.oil.disaster/index.html?hpt=T1
"A federal judge on Thursday denied the Obama administration's request to stay his ruling lifting a moratorium on offshore drilling until an appeals court could review the case."
BTW, the ban was only on drilling deeper than 500 feet. So there really was no ban on drilling.
Good Grief.
...And I just heard Fred Thompson comment on his radio program that banning drilling was like to stopping all commercial flights because of one plane crash. Come on, Thompson and conservative listeners; this analogy doesn't work. Not one of these corporations knew how to handle a disaster like we have now; how were they allowed to drill as deep as they were without an emergency plan in place? We may mourn the loss of a couple of hundred passengers and flight crew from one plane crash, but most plane crashes don't cause the amount of damage equivalent to what this one oil disaster has done. Why is it ok to continue drilling when they still lack the knowledge and ability to prevent another disaster like this one and when they are far from cleaning up the mess it has already caused?
And they know how to prevent plane crashes with thorough flight training and preventative maintenace on planes.
Beyond Petroleum is still a pipedream for now. Just ask my stupid family and relatives who still insist that I buy shares of Exxon stock. Oil stocks continue to flourish despite the latest on BP. Until no more oil can be found to extract, the drilling will continue no matter what.
It's nice to see a couple of good people storming in and putting the BP CEO to shame but as we all know, it won't change a thing. What will change a lot is first of all changing our sources of fuel. If we change from fossil fuels to hemp and algae, we would see a difference across the board. Both hemp and algae are the best biofuels which require no petroleum to work with and are environmentally friendly. Algae is carbon neutral and hemp releases far less carbon dioxide than fossil fuels when burned. Sulfur is also released from fossil fuels when burned while neither hemp nor algae release sulfur. And believe it or not, both hemp and algae will actually enforce conservation, fuel efficiency, and changing people's driving habits humanely. Finally, hemp and algae are Mother Nature's greatest gifts to mankind and there was no good reason to outlaw hemp in the first place. Wanna be petroleum free? Then first think hemp and algae and the rest will follow.
PS: How many of you prefer solar panels and wind turbines to be made with coal instead of durable hemp fibres?
I also found an interesting picture from Facebook to share.
http://www.facebook.com/people/Bryce-Cutting/760279110
The revolution could commence in the form of citizens' arrests of elites, politicians, corporate CEOs, shareholders, and bankers. There would have to be a loosely coordinated series of such arrests across the country, large enough to steal public support away from the elites. It would be chaotic but it would be good. The police would have to cooperate with the citizens' arrests. It would be smart for anyone who knows a cop to ask them their views and if they support an "adjustment". Successful revolutions usually depend on the cooperation of the police.
This post is surely purposefully facetious. If only we were rational the revolution as described above would be. But then if we were rational we would not be where we are now.
We are inescapably in for the rough ride. In other words the revolution will happen as it always does, completely irrationally in self-destructive spasms. In fact the revolution has started and has never ceased. The intensity of the conflict is presently great and we will come out the other end severely battered and perhaps wiser. To be wiser the cause of this irrationality needs to be discovered and eradicated, which is a process, before, now and forever.
It already has been discovered. Widely spread and forever repeated written evidence is that more than 2500 yrs ago in many parts of the world, identity (or race) and other exclusive belief systems were seen to be the central irrationality that threatened the future. Tribalism or individualism, as it is sometimes called, is childish. But then we all know this more immediately from our experience on the playgrounds of preschool and thereafter. We are all coloured by it and involved.
We can continue the revolution now simply by rejecting identity and exclusivity, the identity conceit, first within ourselves and then amongst others. All race or identity, all understandings of God, are common to mankind. Differences are superficial and only the mad accentuate them. We are brothers and sisters, one and all. Those who pretend and insist otherwise are the problem.
A somewhat useful list of the most common identity conceits: the distinctive rich; the professional victim; all monotheists such as Jews, Christians and those of the Islamic faiths; nationalists; racists; all chauvinists, sexists and----well, anyone can see that the list is incredibly long.
We are identifying this in ourselves and in others all the time but that is no reason to desist. What is wrong now is that we have been lazy. Under the influence, notably this last century, of the USA we have in fact glorified the identity conceit. But the identity conceit is inescapably childish nonsense and Mother Earth is telling us this in no uncertain terms.
Right now the USA is staunchly blaming BP. What a joke. The revolution's best weapon is often laughter, and the USA with its structures of authority and validity is a joke. Any who call themselves US citizens are clowns.
"Anyone for a general strike?"
Professor, that would be liking asking most Americans if they are ready to think and act smartly like Europeans. We here on CD would say yes but most of this country thinks not.
You are correct that corporations need to be seriously disciplined. Changes to lifestyle can help as is noticed by the difference between Europe and the USA on that issue. Most voters throughout Europe are also very sensitive about their governments and don't want their pols betraying them. Contrast that to the US where we see either the Limbaugh/Boortz dittoheads saying no to government and yet accepting corporate abuse or the Obamabots calling for more of the same but lying to themselves that the Democrats are like the Europeans. The governments on all levels throughout Europe actually provide an infrastructure to make personal responsibility rewarding whereas governments here in the US on all levels knowingly keep a languishing infrastructure in place to keep people ignorant and divided.
Are we mad enough, yet? To DO it?
As I look around my neighborhood, I doubt it.
Bob Koehler is a great columnist and a great guy. He spoke at the 32nd Annual Athens Human Rights Festival here in Athens, Georgia last month. I'm an opinion columnist for the Athens Banner-Herald (www.onlineathens.com) and I wrote about BP and corporate crime in my columns on June 5 and 19. I hope readers will check out those columns. To see photos of the Athens Human Rights Festival, please visit my website, www.edtant.com. Have a great day, folks, wherever you are!
I'm writing a small manual tentatively titled, "Who Made the Climate Change Inventions Live?" It's easier to say who killed the electric car. It's hard to do the positive things, but some small groups of people, probably ordinary people, are going to do them.
BP SILVER LINING
Sadly, it requires calamities such as the BP gusher, and 9/11, to force measures that were so obviously needed beforehand.
This event underscores the crucial need, not only to enforce drilling safety, but to reduce our dangerous fossil fuel dependence through conservation and renewable energy development--which industry has obstructed through decades of lobbying, misinformation, & fabricated science, with help from cooperative administrations, defaulting legislators, and an apathetic populace.
This environmental disaster provides our president with special opportunities to detooth the energy cartels, and forge ahead with these vital reform measures.
If he eludes this mandate, history will judge him harshly.
In climate change news, right now there's a category 5 hurricane off the Mexican coast, in June. This almost never happens. Don't worry, it's on the Pacific side.
The concept of revolution raised by the excellent post, rtdrury 3.18pm, is an essential part of this debate. The MIC and Israel and the hangers-on are the enemy of mankind, prepared to kill anyone, anywhere; whimsically, joyfully and irresponsibly as in a wet dream. Any who need further proof must see an analyst; soon!
rtdrury's version of the revolution has great merit but it has to be developed.
My contribution is as follows:
1: The revolution has never stopped and never will.
2: Thoughtful action is the only thing to prevent massive breakdown and destruction that is the logical outcome of the actions and intentions of the enemy above.
3: The alternative of violent insurrection is not revolution but collapse, which will and always has been indistinguishable from the massive breakdown referred to in the second above.
4: Leaders are required: logically, the mass does not lead, it follows. Consequently rtdrury's version 'The police would have to cooperate with the citizens' arrests.' is wishful thinking. Great changes take place in human affairs because some individuals say, or sometimes even just one individual says, enough! rtdrury correctly sees that these individuals are rarely violent. The recent Flotilla to Gaza is a leader. It was heedless of executive support. It peacefully and assertively accessed a freedom it demanded for itself and for everyone.
5: This means we have to reclaim the understanding of individual. Individualism is a stupidity that the current and insane USA is to all intents and purposes structured on. Essentially and for all their faults, Jesus, Confucius, Laotzu, Mandela, Moses, Gandhi, Castro and Che Guevara, Mordechai Vanunu and many others were and are the individuals who lead.
6: This means that the followers are missing. The only way to resolve this matter is to get out and lead. The followers follow.
The revolution is with us.
Americans don't give a crap ...period...
The majority of them.....they aren't stupid, just
like to pretent they are, act ignorant, ignore and
keep the status quo because it suits them, they don't
care about their children, their pets, our wildlife
except for hunting with their four wheelers.
They would sell their mother, their father , their
siblings, and children to these corporate whores to
keep this way of life another day.