Let’s face it. We’re spoiled.
Even in our tough economy, most Americans enjoy a myriad of conveniences we take for granted.
We awake to a warm house, turn night into day with the flip of a light switch, jump into a hot shower, get dressed and grab a cup of fresh brewed coffee before heading to work in our car or on the bus. On the way home, we stop at the grocery store to pick up a few items from the 40,000 choices offered there.
What do all these things have in common? They are made possible by fossil fuels. But we have become so accustomed to these creature comforts that we no longer associate them with fossil fuels.
Like the fairytale “Princess and the Pea,” we have the luxury of being discomforted by the smallest things. In that story, the heroine’s royal pedigree is secretly tested by hiding a pea under 20 mattresses and 20 feather beds. She is proven to be of royal blood when she emerges the next morning after a sleepless night, complaining about the uncomfortable bed.
That’s us. We have become the Princess and the Pea.
We grimace at the mere thought of “dirty” fossil fuels and embrace the idea of “clean” energy. Oil, coal, diesel fuel and even natural gas? Ick.