Thursday, June 16, 2005

A catastrophic intellectual laziness dams the minds of energy industry players; although frankly I suspect cunning--not unawareness. Electricity costs money, and overweight felines enjoy crisp Benjamins with their fish. They want to obscure "moderation" (a synonym for "off switch") by affirming our "need" for unlimited power. It is our god-given right to plug things in!

The NWF and its American Indian allies win a small battle to protect a
gasping species that not long ago teemed backwards from the sea. The barons cry war crime and promise to raise the rates with the roof. Investors who prefer a steady profit stream to an uninterrupted river would prefer their customers forget that they really don't need to have the lamps on in every room. Nor do empty parking lots have to be lit up like baseball stadiums at night. In fact, even if people left to their own devices decided to leave those devices running, we could power down power use by huge percentages just by shutting things off at work.

A hundred years ago, no one would have suspected such a battle was necessary. In another hundred, they may not remember it at all.

3 comments:

soap said...

The intellectual laziness (the cunning, you're right) may start with the corporate fatcats, but I think it's part of their brilliantly counterintuitive propaganda to encourage us to cast the blame on them and therefore absolve ourselves as consumers. They take the heat so the real culprit doesn't have to. And let's not forget that it's all these luxuries (well-lit stadiums, lamps lit day and night, hot water whenever you want it) and the ignorance-is-bliss attitude that accompanies them that make America seem so advanced and so enviable to the rest of the world.

Erik said...

I'm not sure why the rest of the world would envy a country which is so loud and obese and culturally disconnected (especially since the world ostensibly dislikes us so much). And yet everyone I talk to who comes here says it's great; it's so much better than Germany, Turkey or the Philippines, China or Mexico... It doesn't seem to matter whether or not we're American... Overindulgence is an (absent) mindset of humanity, spreading fast.

soap said...

There's a difference between America and Americans; neither is essentially postive or negative, and there are endless versions of each.

Do you really think Americans are loud? You should meet my neighbors.