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Should energy independence be a high priority in the US?

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Yes
91% 368 votes Total: 403 votes
No
9% 35 votes

The year is 2013, five years after peak oil. Gas is now over 11.00 a gallon. The average American no longer drives a car. Only the government and the military have access to large amounts of gasoline. It is a world none of us could have imagined.

The average American family of four has made drastic changes to survive. It is a cold Midwest morning, the alarm goes off at 7 AM. The family wakes up to a cold, 55 degree house. An electric spacer heater is the only form of heat, and all electric, nation wide, is shut off from 11PM-7AM. Through out the winter months, only three rooms are heated, the living room, the kitchen, and one bathroom. Because of this, all the beds are now set up in the living room. On top of each bed, are sub zero sleeping bags. These sleeping bags are the difference between life and death, as all across the nation people freeze to death every night in their homes. This has become so common that no one even takes notice anymore.

Our family gets ready for the coming day. They eat a meager breakfast of oatmeal, just oatmeal. There is no sugar. For lunch there will be a small portion of rice and beans, for dinner the same. There may be an occasional egg from the chickens they raise, otherwise, they will eat the same thing over and over until spring arrives. Then, there will be rhubarb, asparagus and spring onions from the large backyard garden, however, the garden will not produce substantial amounts of food until late summer. The entire family is very thin, and on the brink of starvation. America no longer has a problem with obesity. Thousands starve to death every year, in American, land of plenty.

The family eats quietly with heads down looking at their small bowls of oatmeal. Depression is a serious mental health problem. People feel desperate, and there is not the faintest flicker of hope there will be change in the future. The suicide rate is high, especially among teenagers and young adults who feel they have been cheated out of an important time in their lives. It is a time of great desperation for all.

Mom turns on the TV to the CNN channel. CNN is now the main contact with the outside world. There are no longer any local channels. Satellite TV is now free of charge and like every other existing business it is run by the government. The only private sector store still open is Wal Mart. Every other business went under within the first year after peak oil. Millions of people are now jobless and are kept alive by government food programs. Money


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

Should energy independence be a high priority in the US?

Yes
  • 1 of 34

    by Carla Heimerl

    The year is 2013, five years after peak oil. Gas is now over 11.00 a gallon. The average American no longer drives a car.

    read more

  • 2 of 34

    by Occam's Razor

    Energy independence should absolutely be of the highest priority in the U.S. and it will be soon whether we like it or not.

    Mankind

    read more

No
  • 1 of 4

    by Jack Thornton

    Energy independence is the idea that all of the power needs for a country can be produced within the country using resources

    read more

  • 2 of 4

    by Steve Lussing

    The foremost problem which the American consumer is currently facing with respect to what is increasingly being called the

    read more

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