Wednesday, August 31st, 2005 11:51 am
Something I saw sums it all up: I feel like Niven and Pournelle lost control of the script and it's been handed off to Stirling. This is just getting nuts. I mean, right now Baghdad looks like a better, safer, more civil place to be than New Orleans. I desperately want to go paddle around a half-submerged modern ruin, but at this rate I'd get shot at as a looter and chased by a post-apocalyptic, mohawk-sporting gang on steam-powered jetskies.

Will there be wider social effects from this? The US has been getting dangerous assured of our own moral and cultural superiority lately. Will watching a city devolve into utter barbarity over 2 days rattle our sense of security? When they start shooting at the looters, where else will the riots start? There are going to be all kinds of ugly racial issues to be exploited.

Gas prices at $4/gallon by next week, people are saying. Looks like $3something most places already. We've broken the alltime record gas price, no more fudging with inflation to obscure it. Finally, another energy crisis in my lifetime! I was raised to expect this at any moment. I think there should be a Critical Mass to go ride through the SUV dealerships on the eastside.

The really amazing thing is the lack of ability of the large institutions to assimilate the information quickly enough. Mass media and relief efforts both. Both of them seem 12-14 hours behind the information readily available on the internet. Once again, the several billion eyeballs of the internet win. If the emergency operations had been transparent, someone would have noticed that there were two levee breaks, not one. Or that the helicopters which were supposed to be dropping giant sandbags kept getting diverted to rescue missions. We're only just starting to see the power of decentralized, informal organization through the internet, and so far it has a pretty good record for managing to outperform classic bureaucracies. This would be the first time it has challenged pure governmental operations, though. At some point, people have to start wondering why we need all those inefficient monsters around in the first place. That will be interesting.
Wednesday, August 31st, 2005 07:35 pm (UTC)
http://www.seattlegasprices.com/
Wednesday, August 31st, 2005 07:39 pm (UTC)
I can almost side with the looters. Is it really worse for stuff to get stolen when otherwise the stuff would be irreperably water-damaged?

Man, I'm glad I bought a car that gets easily 52mpg...
Wednesday, August 31st, 2005 07:51 pm (UTC)
Just bought my September bus pass today. Maybe I should've bought a three-month.

You should make a midint post.
Wednesday, August 31st, 2005 07:55 pm (UTC)
Finally, another energy crisis in my lifetime!

I'm amazed it took this long, really. The Anonymobile isn't horrible, mileagewise, but our next car, to be bought in the next year or two, will be a hybrid. It's too bad that having a family puts a strict lower bound on the acceptable size.

As for goverment zeebs not knowing how to use a browser, well, consider the age of the people running things.

There's one thing to be thankful for: this is a useful rehearsal for man-made catastrophes.
Wednesday, August 31st, 2005 07:56 pm (UTC)
I got my September pass yesterday. The don't sell three-month off-peak passes, dang it. It's an ugly color. That better not be a bad omen.
Wednesday, August 31st, 2005 08:06 pm (UTC)
I buy peak. It's not *always* peak when I'm traveling, but often enough that it's just easier. Regular commute hours, etc.
Wednesday, August 31st, 2005 08:09 pm (UTC)
That, and a whole lot of the looters are looting food, water, and diapers. As someone pointed out elsewhere, even if they had money and were quite willing to buy these things, there's nobody there to pay. You're hungry, your kids are hungry, what else would you do?
Wednesday, August 31st, 2005 08:13 pm (UTC)
You all get Good Citizen Cookies.

I still want to make a "My vehicle gets 50 miles to the bagel" bumper sticker, but I'm not sure where it would fit on the bike.

And... we should feel blessed, honestly, that we live somewhere HALF SENSIBLE in the urban-planning department. I was appalled, but not surprised, at the lay of the land in Wisconsin. I'd never want to live somewhere where billions of dollars have been sunk into a transit-hostile infrastructure.
Wednesday, August 31st, 2005 08:17 pm (UTC)
Mmm. Cookies. :)

I would LOVE to see that bumper sticker. I guess you could put it on your backpack...
Wednesday, August 31st, 2005 08:25 pm (UTC)
Sounds like it would make a great Unamerican Activities (http://www.unamerican.com/catalog/index.htm) sticker. They come nice and thin and fit great on a bike frame. You should write the guy to suggest it.
Wednesday, August 31st, 2005 08:31 pm (UTC)
The Prius is awesome, incidentally. And surprisingly roomy.
Wednesday, August 31st, 2005 11:58 pm (UTC)
My friend [livejournal.com profile] blackavar refutes that argument rather nicely (http://www.livejournal.com/users/blackavar/28466.html).

(Although less so now that the Superdome food supply ran out. But as of yesterday and the day before, when a lot of the food looting happened, this was true.)