A Short History of the Peak Oil Movement and Reflections on Wizards, Transition, and Reason
Let us start with persona, since one goes to any prizefight to see the metaphorical battle of two created characters, embodying sides, virtues, faults.
In this Corna… John Michael Greer, owner (by a whisker over Bob Waldrop) of the finest beard in Peak Oildom, Archdruid, moral descendent of Toynbee and Gibbon, considerer of declines in centuries, not weekends. No Zombies for Greer - we are Rome, and we might as well deal with it, dammit.
And in this Corna…Rob Hopkins, beardless founder of the Transition movement, permaculturist, endless energetic optimist and municipal leader, student of the first half of the British century, bent of reorganizing his community and the world to adapt to energy descent. If we could live without that energy once before, well, we can do it now, and let’s get at it.
For the record, I like them - and their work - both a lot. I met John Greer for the first time this summer, and immediately felt like I’d met my long-lost older brother - you know, the kind of person you like but can’t resist bickering with. We have the same publisher, we agree 85% of the time - and we fight like cats and dogs when we don’t. Once we were asked to blurb each other’s books, at the same time we were having an online debate, and we ended up proposing mock-insult blurbs for each other. This, I think, is probably a good representative of our relationship.
Hopkins I’ve never met and am not likely to - both of us adhere to the “stay off the planes” policy for the most part, so the odds are low. But Hopkins and I have emailed back and forth and interacted from time to time. I’ve written things critical of the Transition movement, and have always been impressed by the good humored and thoughtful way he takes criticism, and by the enormous amount of work he does. It is impossible to overstate how impressive Hopkins’ accomplishments in essentially creating the Transition movement are. Read Article
By Sharon Astyk





