Re: Trouble Coming to OKC?
Originally Posted by
MikeOKC
Fair enough. I remember the 60's and 70's as well, many of the things never came about because the technology for the dreams weren't there. Today, with AI, nanotechnology and raw processing power, so many things are about to change. And don't forget, many things from the 60's did progress in unbelievable ways. The computers that took us to the moon? There is actually more processing power in smartphones today. I think the thing to look at is the last 20 years. That's a better gauge as to where we're going. You seem so skeptical, I would urge you to read Ray Kurzweil or watch 'Transcendent Man.'
To bring this all back around - my point is that Oklahoma City needs to concern itself with all of our eggs being in the same basket as fossil fuels. If the 'next big thing' were to happen next month CHK and the like would be in no position to buy their way into the future. The wealth of CHK, for example, is still in the ground with only promises and hopes - that still rely on the burning of fossil fuels. Yet, we've handed over a huge neighborhood to this dying industry.
If nothing else, I would hope our little discussion here might encourage some to really think about this and consider Oklahoma City's future under conditions I have outlined. It's not a ridiculous notion or even a fanciful one - it's a probable one.
MikeOKC, tell me exactly how oil and gas is a dying industry when its one of the only growth industries in this country? Do you not forget that CHK is natural gas, not oil? Devon is both oil and gas, as is Sandridge. Continental Resources is oil. It's a fallacy to conclude that we all ALL of our eggs in one basket with oil and gas when we have major employers that outnumber the oil and gas companies based in OKC. We forget about the $6.7 billion biotech industry just NE of downtown, Boeing, American Fidelity, Hertz, Tinker AFB's OKC Air Logistics Center, FAA, MidFirst Bank. Oil and gas companies are the tallest nail because it is a very profitable industry with high paying jobs. An industry that is hiring because they are devoting their resources to domestic energy. How is that a dying industry?
Your concern about CHK's habits go without realizing that Sarbanes Oxley regulates and audits the crap out of company business practices. Enron and the oil bust of 1982 were all pre-SOX business practices. Now we have audits on audits, and if screw ups are consistent, the government fines these companies big money. So either CHK has financial resources outside of our knowledge for all of this expansion, or the media still can't get past McClendon's large salary he received a couple of years ago.
There are large reserves in America we can't tap because of environmentalists. So again, elaborate on this 'dying industry', that would not only affect Oklahoma City, but Tulsa, Denver, Calgary, Midland-Odessa, Edmonton, Kamloops, Wyoming. Not to mention Houston would be doubly screwed.
Continue the Renaissance!!!
Bookmarks