These are really good questions Bob. Rifkin has said that his ideas are 
generally not welcomed in US where the military industrial complex has such a 
strong hold. As Roberto Verzola has pointed out in his comment on grid parity

'Since solar rooftos are a *distributed* form of generation, the whole
p2p concept applies! Of course, as on the Internet, the two major
trends, p2p and client-server, will continue to fight it out for
supremacy. and it is by no means certain which trend will become
dominant.'

Rifkin writes about trends that are already happening, like Roberto Verzola, 
not hypotheses about what might happen, based on what has happened in the past. 
That I think is a reason why he appeals to those who make powerful decisions. 
And like Orsan says he sees how their business interests can best be served by 
aligning with what is already happening.

However, capitalists are also human beings. They don't just think as their 
class dictates, although that may be a very large influence. To treat them as 
the enemy ignores the possibility that there might be a part of them that 
actually agrees with you. Rifkin explores that part. I see him as an undercover 
activist, and I applaud what he is doing. 

Orsan, your objections to green energy won't stand up to the practically free 
electricity being produced now in parts of Germany, and whatever harm is done 
by wind turbines cannot be compared to the co2 smog produced by coal fired 
power stations. Our biggest threat as Naomi Klein points out is climate 
warming, rarely mentioned on this list, and devastating in its suicidal 
implications.

I agree with you Orsan, that historical analysis is useful to understand the 
past, but actually we face a totally new situation, with totally new tools 
which never existed before. We have to find our common humanity to overcome the 
threat of extinction.

Anna






> On 8 Apr 2015, at 23:40, Bob Haugen <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> On Wed, Apr 8, 2015 at 1:04 PM, Anna Harris <[email protected]> wrote:
> I don't think much good would be served by initiating a discussion on this 
> list,

I can understand from the first responders (including me) why you
might think so, but I was not being sarcastic when I thought it was a
great discussion topic. And were the discussion to continue, and you
to explain why you respect Rifkin's ideas, I promise to refrain from
further knee-jerk responses and cheap shots at his expense.

But here's Rifkin apparently talking about "the beginning of the end
of the capitalist era" to a bunch of rulers of the capitalists. I am
aware that some of those people do see the end of fossil fuels, but I
have not seen any signs that they see the end of capitalism. So why
are they listening to him? What does it mean about the world today?

Brian Holmes wrote something on this list awhile ago where he thought
the leaders of the Chinese CP were watching the failures of the US and
Europe and did not want to repeat them. Possibly part of the same
story?

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