My point is just that the whole energy independence thing is a red herring since energy is traded on an open market. If we suddenly had to depend only on energy produced in the U.S. the resulting price increases would be prohibitive for everyone but the military (and we already have strategic oil reserves).
The whole concept of energy independence is a political cudgel to turn energy politics into security politics by taking advantage of people's mercantilist intuitions about resources. But in a global free market those intuitions are wrong. Strictly speaking you don't get to decide where your energy comes from. Often it is cheaper to get it from nearby sources but it is all part of the same pricing system. So yeah, increased domestic production might make us more independent in the sense that foreign countries won't have quite the same ability to knock prices up but there isn't a magic line where suddenly we're "independent".
Lets say we have 100 oil. 50 of it is produced in the Middle East and the U.S. uses 40 but currently produces 20. The remaining 30% is produced by other countries. An OPEC embargo leaves us with 50 oil about doubling the price (for convenience, usually supply curves are exponential but I'm not an economist I don't know what the price would really do beyond going up, a lot.). If the U.S. increases production to 40% prices pre-embargo will be lower (since we have a supply of 120) but prices will still increase by a similar amount when we lose 50 of that 120 supply leaving us with only 70 oil. If the whole world turned against us prices would triple (according to our invented price model) as we would have only 40 in supply where once we had 120.
In order to make it so the rest of the world really couldn't affect us we'd have to be producing a preponderance of the world's energy such that foreign embargoes would only slightly affect total supply. Either that or we embargo foreign energy imports. But we'd be independent like chopping off your legs makes you independent of bicycles. Also, I imagine if our transportation infrastructure was such that it didn't use gasoline we'd be much better insulated from price shifts in foreign oil. Like if our cars were all solar powered or if we were taxing CO2 to a prohibitive extent already. But in those cases technology has either rendered oil irrelevant or our economy has already internalized the cost of a foreign oil embargo.
Hopefully I'm making some sense.
Hopefully I'm making some sense.
You are. I obviously haven't thought the issue through clearly and it's not something I care deeply about, since ethanol is silly for many other, larger reasons, therefore I won't waste your time with further questions. Definitely moving the whole "energy independence" thing to the "I have no idea" column for now.
Here at Less Wrong, the Future of Humanity Institute and the Singularity Institute, a recurring theme is trying to steer the future of the planet away from disaster. Often, the best way to avert a particular disaster is quite hard for ordinary people to understand as it requires one to think through an argument in a cool, unemotional way; more often than not the best solution will be lost in a mass of low signal-to-noise ratio squabbling and/or emoting. Whatever the substance of the debate, the overall meta-problem is quite well captured by this catch from this month's rationality quotes:
Attempting to target the meta-problem of getting people to be slightly less mad when it comes to abstract or general thought, especially public policy, is a tempting option. Robin Hanson's futarchy proposal is one way to combat this madness (which it does by removing most people from the policymaking loop). However, another important route to combating human idiocy is to find technologies that make humans smarter. Nick Bostrom proposed that we should work hard looking for ways to enhance the cognition of research scientists, because even a small increase in the average intelligence of research scientists would increase research output by a large amount, as there are lots of scientists. But improving the decisionmaking process of our society would probably have an even more profound effect; if we could improve the intelligence of the average voter by about one standard deviation, it is easy to speculate that the political decisionmaking process would work much better. For example, understanding simple logical arguments and simple quantitative analyses is stretching the capabilities of someone at IQ 100, so it seems that the marginal effect of overall IQ increases would be quite a large marginal increases in the probability that a politician was incentivized to focus on a logical argument over an emotionally appealing slander as the main focus of their campaign.
As a concrete example, consider the initial US reaction to rising oil prices and the need for US-produced energy: pushing corn ethanol, because a strong farming lobby liked the idea of having extra revenue. Now, if the *average voter* could understand the concept of photosynthetic efficiency, and could understand a simple numerical calculation showing how inefficient corn is at converting solar energy to stored energy in ethanol, this policy choice would have been dead in the water. But the average voter cannot do simple physics, whereas they can understand the emotional appeal of "support our local farmers!". Even today, there are still politicians who defend corn ethanol because they want to pander to local interest groups. Another concrete example is some of the more useless responses that the UK public has been engaging in - and being encouraged to engage in - to prevent global warming. People were encouraged to unplug their mobile phone chargers when the chargers weren't being used. David McKay had to wage a personal war against such idiocy - see this Guardian article. The universal response to my criticism of people advocating this was "it all adds up!". I quote:
Toby Ord has a project on efficient charity, he has worked out that the difference in outcomes per dollar for alleviating human suffering in Africa can vary by 3 orders of magnitude. But most people in the developed world don't know what an "order of magnitude" is, or why it is a useful concept. This efficient charity concept demonstrated that the derivative
d(Outcomes)/d(Average IQ)
may be extremely large, and may be subject to powerful threshold effects. In this case, there is probably an average IQ threshold above which the average person can easily understand the concept of efficient charity, and thus all the money gets given to the most efficient charities, and the amount of suffering-alleviation in Africa goes up by a factor of 1000, even though the average IQ of the donor community may only have jumped from 100 to 140, say.
It may well be the case that finding a cognitive enhancer suitable for general use is the best way to tackle the diverse array of risks we face. People with enhanced IQ would also probably find it easier (and be more willing) to absorb cognitive biases material; to see this, try and explain the concept of "cognitive biases" to someone who is unlucky enough to be of below average IQ, and then go an explain it to someone who is smarter than you. It is certainly the case that even people of below average IQ *do sometimes*, in favourable circumstances, take note of quantitative rational arguments, but in the maelstrom of politics such quantitative analyses get eaten alive by more emotive arguments like "SUPPORT OUR FARMERS!" or "SUPPORT OUR TROOPS!" or "EVOLUTION IS ONLY A THEORY!" or "IT ALL ADDS UP!".