libertygrl
Member
- Joined
- May 26, 2007
- Messages
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Secondly, everyone would do very well to read, or re-read, Osan's post, above. That's the thread winner.
I actually copied and saved it for future reference it was THAT good!

Secondly, everyone would do very well to read, or re-read, Osan's post, above. That's the thread winner.
Same here, although in retrospect, I'm guessing that they are just worth a certain amount of money and the money can only be spent on certain things (my local grocery store has little tags that say "WIC approved" on some items) so if things get out of kilter the "customer" will quickly be able to buy less and less with them.
It wasn't that long ago that I saw people in line with paper food stamps which would surely cause problems for the grocer should prices be changing rapidly. The electronic cards probably mean instantaneous transfers....
BIG difference between WIC and SNAP.
We have a lot of NG, and that can be converted to liquid fuel too. Also, a lot of coal and oil shale, same with Canada plus tar sands and some oil.
The easy oil and gas in the U.S. are long gone. These "reserves" in the U.S. are difficult to extract. Current and future wells are drilled with questionable return on investment, or "return on energy used". Each year that goes by leads to a lower return on energy used. Much of the U.S energy reserves could never be extracted at a profit.
Thanks for all the responses. There's alot to think about but I think I'm starting to see possible scenarios emerging.
The reason why I started this thread is because as a kid, I used to hear older relatives talk about how tough the Great Depression was and I remember seeing old movies with people in major cities living in tenement houses , waiting on breadlines, going from city to city trying to find work, etc. (while the very wealthy would be partying at the hottest night spot)
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I was just wondering if our collapse would resemble something like that or something like the Soviet Union's, or worse! This country has had tough times before but the thought of the dollar collapsing has me most concerned because how will people survive if they can't use it anymore? (unless you have gold/silver of course)
The easy oil and gas in the U.S. are long gone. These "reserves" in the U.S. are difficult to extract. Current and future wells are drilled with questionable return on investment, or "return on energy used". Each year that goes by leads to a lower return on energy used. Much of the U.S energy reserves could never be extracted at a profit.
Yeah, my understanding is that horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing have revolutionized the energy market. In my area, the Utica and Marcellus have revitalized Western Pennsylvania, parts of West Virginia and Eastern Ohio. There are numerous other shale plays across the country as well, including the Eagle Ford, the Bakken, etc. These aren't discredited plays, either. If anything, we're merely on the very cusp of exploiting them. The potential is San Francisco, 1849.
ETA: This is not to say that shale gas and oil will "save" us; only that there is a market there.
If our very first reaction to it is to tell Washington, D.C. to get bent, our financial collapse will look like an economic recovery...
It wont resemble the great depresion because people "knew" how to live back then plus we have global interests now days where back then we we're much more issolated in terms of global trade.