Years ago, I wrote a post about how cheap air travel to Europe was ruining America. My point was that the Americans visiting Europe were confusing what they experienced as a tourist with the reality of life in Europe. These progressive American fans of two-hour lunches and 6 months of maternal and paternal leave didn’t have a clue about how average Europeans lived. Indeed, a couple of years later, the Foundation For Economic Education came out with a study that showed the poorest 20% of Americans were better off than the average European. Basically, the average European suffers from high taxes, high prices, tiny homes and cars, and, increasingly, less freedom. But tourists sipping tea in London or shopping in Paris rarely, if ever, see this, or understand it if they do.
Nonetheless,
with little understanding of economics or history, they decide that America
must become Europe. Socialism, Obamacare, and gay marriage are just some of
those European imports that Americans have to deal with today.
We are
seeing something similar play out on a grander, global scale—or at least in the
West, where prosperity has dulled the brains of much of the population.
Naturally,
I’m talking about the green energy hoax. Here in the West, we have people so
spoiled by prosperity that they have the luxury of pining for a time when we
weren’t poisoning our earth with fossil fuels or risking apocalypse with
nuclear power.
On both sides of the Atlantic, you have a perfect mix of brain-dead green energy cultists and fascist elites who seek to harness the power of that cult to control everyone. That’s a toxic combination because energy controls pretty much everything.
The
reality is that inexpensive, reliable energy is the single biggest driver of
prosperity in all human history. And it’s not even close. Inexpensive, reliable
energy drives virtually everything that we Westerners enjoy: Our food, iPhones,
transportation, heating and cooling of homes, televisions, hospitals, schools,
movies, plumbing, video games, Starbucks, and the Zambonis at hockey games!
Everything.
It’s not
that energy didn’t exist previously. It did. But the difference is that it was
inefficient, hard to get, and expensive. The first significant source of fuel
for humans was wood. That lasted for tens of thousands of years. Although the
first recorded use of coal was in China between the 4th and 3rd millennia BC,
in Europe, for two thousand years, coal remained an insignificant source of
energy. Change came in the 17th century because England had felled most of the
easily accessible trees and was in need of energy. With the advent of
large-scale mining, coal rapidly became the most significant source of energy
in Europe.
This
would be the status quo for the next 300 years until the first successful oil
well, drilled in Titusville, Pennsylvania in 1859. Over the following decades,
tens of thousands of wells would be drilled and, by 1900, the US alone would be
producing 20 million barrels of oil a year. That oil was first used to produce
kerosene for heating and lighting homes, then gasoline for automobiles and,
eventually, powering electricity plants as well, although coal was the dominant
fuel for powering electricity production well into the late 20th century.
In the
latter half of the 20th century, nuclear power emerged as a viable vehicle for
producing electricity and was joined by fracking-driven natural gas early in
the early 21st century.
Of course, renewables had been around for centuries, first with windmills and watermills, then hydroelectricity and, eventually, solar. Renewables always remained a small sliver of the power generation, however, only becoming slightly material in recent years due to heavy regulation and subsidies.
But now,
for the first time in human history, we have a segment of the population,
largely Western liberals, who want to restrict the use of inexpensive and
reliable energy.
For the
last 400 years, mankind has been marching forward in the direction of
increasing the amount of energy we consume. As a result, lifespans have
increased dramatically, prosperity has flourished, technology and sciences have
advanced dramatically, and lives have become exponentially more varied.
Believe
it or not, all of that is held together by a tenuous electricity grid. Not
sure? In 2019 the Air Force said the following about an Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) attack:
A successful EMP attack on the U.S. could lead to a
nationwide blackout of the electric power grid and a shutdown of critical
infrastructure reliant on the grid, including, but not limited to,
communications, transportation, food and water supply, and sanitation. Such a
shutdown could last as long as a year, and without such critical
infrastructure, a large fraction of the America could die from starvation,
disease, or the effects of general societal collapse.
That
gives some indication of how dependent Americans are on energy. But it’s
probably not going to be an EMP that cripples America and the West. It’s going
to be the fiction of green energy.
In 2011,
Angela Merkel announced that Germany would shut down all 17 of its nuclear
reactors. Last year, the last three were shuttered. In 1990 Germany generated
25% of its electricity from nuclear; now it’s finally zero. And it shows.
While harassing citizens to conserve energy,
Germany has gone from a net exporter of energy to a net
importer. In addition, in 2010, German GDP growth was ahead of
every single nation in the EU and double the average. By 2022, it was half the
EU average and, over the next six years, it’s predicted to be dead last in the EU and behind only Belarus and war torn
Russia and Ukraine on the continent. This is all in pursuit of the
goal of cutting CO2 emissions 65% below the 1990 level by 2030.
On this
side of the pond, we have California banning the sale of gasoline-powered
cars by 2035 and a wave of blue states lining up behind
them. This at the same time the state is asking existing electric
car owners not to charge their cars while leaning on fossil fuels to stave off
the return of rolling blackouts.
The
reality is that the green energy revolution is a fiction. Green energy is
incapable of providing the energy requirements developed nations require and
the green energy movement is a cult. In fealty to that cult, Western nations
are wasting hundreds of billions of dollars every year on “green energy”
programs—most of which fail. Between
2020 and June of 2023, Western nations spent $1.34 trillion on green energy
“investments“ while private companies spent tens of billions more annually.
Basically,
for no discernable benefit, and arguably with many negative consequences,
Western nations are setting fire to 2% of their GDP annually and expect to burn
even more going forward. That would essentially mean that GDP would have to
grow at 2% annually just to tread water, an unlikely prospect in the face of
tightening energy supplies and skyrocketing costs.
And this
is all because people with no understanding of science, economics, or history
operate under the illusion that civilization is a virus on the pristine earth.
Western civilization as we know it will not survive the economic suicide of the
green revolution.
Perhaps
that’s why Western elites are inviting into their countries tens of millions of
third-world “migrants” who aren’t familiar with inexpensive and reliable
energy. At some point, those who do remember them will become the minority, and
the elites can finally drop the fiction of concern.
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