No Oil, No Civilisation: Oil is Still the Life Blood of the Modern World, By James Reed
Oil isn't just some dirty relic of the past; it's the beating heart of everything we take for granted.
First off, oil isn't just about gas-guzzling SUVs or jetting off to Bali. It's in everything. The plastics in your keyboard, the fertilisers that grow your food, the asphalt on your roads, the synthetic fibers in your clothes— even the wind turbines and solar panels the renewable zealots worship wouldn't exist without petrochemicals. You don't get to snap your fingers and replace that with "good vibes" and a prayer to the sun god. Oil's embedded in the supply chain of modern life, and ripping it out doesn't just stall your car—it collapses the whole system. Civilisation as we know it—hospitals, cities, global trade—runs on energy density, and oil delivers that like nothing else.
Now, the climate alarmists love to scream about carbon footprints and melting ice caps, clutching their pearls like the world's ending tomorrow. Sure, CO2's a factor, and nobody's saying we should choke the planet for fun. But let's get real: the apocalyptic timelines they peddle are speculative at best, and their solutions are often impractical or straight-up grift. Fossil fuels, including oil, still account for over 80 percent of global energy because they're reliable, scalable, and dense. Compare that to renewables—wind and solar sound "cool" until the wind dies or the sun sets, and you're left shivering in the dark with a dead grid. Batteries? They're improving, but they're nowhere near ready to store energy at the scale we need, and mining the lithium and cobalt for them trashes the environment anyway. So much for "clean" energy.
The renewable energy cult: it's less science and more religion—blind faith in tech that's not ready, propped up by subsidies and guilt trips. They act like oil's some evil dragon we can slay with enough willpower, but they ignore the carnage of their own dogma. Shutting down oil rigs and pipelines doesn't just spike energy prices—it does over workers, jacks up food costs, and leaves developing nations stuck in poverty because they can't access the cheap, abundant energy we took for granted to build our cushy lives. You want to talk justice? How about not condemning billions to misery for your green fantasy?
Oil's not perfect, but it's the backbone of progress. It dragged us out of the muck—infant mortality down, life expectancy up, starvation slashed. Renewables can't claim that yet, and betting the farm on them is like jumping out of a plane with a half-built parachute. The smart play isn't ditching oil—it's using it smarter while we figure out what's next. Nuclear's the real contender, by the way, but the eco-crowd hates that too because it doesn't fit their pastoral aesthetic.
Oil's still king. The modern world doesn't run on hopes and dreams—it runs on crude. The climate hysterics and renewable evangelists can clutch their rosaries and chant "net zero" all they want, but until they've got a better engine, they're just yelling at the tide.
Civilisation's not a sin to atone for; it's a miracle to sustain. And oil's still holding everything together.
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