Gas 
            Hysteria
            Times Scares Readers with the Crisis Ahead
            Magazine story describes 
            a Mad Max future based one the work of one author.
     
            According to The New York Times Magazine, the world is reaching The 
            Breaking Point for oil production. The 7,400-word Aug. 21 piece by 
            Peter Maass was a gusher of scaremongering end-of-world predictions 
            claiming that a crisis is imminent.
     The Times piece was the worst of the oil stories over 
            the weekend and qualifies as one of the worst recently. Maass filled 
            his story with comments and views from Matthew Simmons, author of a 
            new book called Twilight in the Desert: The Coming Saudi Oil Shock 
            and the World Economy. The story did its best to paint a great 
            scary oil conspiracy as an inevitable crisis ahead, whether in a 
            year or 2 or 10.
     The Times piece was the worst specimen of recent gas 
            reporting. Here are some of the latest high and low points:
- Another 
              record: Maass joined the growing journalism crowd calling 
              oil prices a record. Just as others before him, Maass ignored 
              basic math and didnt adjust the prices for inflation. John 
              Roberts called gas prices astronomical on the Aug. 19 broadcast 
              CBS Evening News. At least Roberts choice of terms is 
              subjective. Maass was flat out incorrect.
            
 
- Easy oil: 
              The Times story quoted a Chevron advertising slogan saying the 
              era of easy oil is over. Maass didnt bother to point out that 
              Chevron is promoting a non-oil renewable energy agenda and that 
              in 2004 Chevron launched an expanded strategy to integrate 
              renewable energy applications into the Chevron portfolio. Our 
              strategy is particularly focused on investing in and advancing 
              wind and geothermal energy projects, according to Chevrons Web 
              site.
            
 
- Triple digit 
              levels: Maass cited a threat of oil hitting $100/barrel. But 
              then he quoted Simmons who said, I wasnt talking about low 
              triple digits. Yet the same story said that oil prices would drop 
              again. To quote Maass, So after a brief windfall for producers, 
              oil prices would slide as recession sets in. And that in turn 
              would boost economies once again, continuing the economic cycle.
              
            
 
- The sky is 
              falling: The Times piece did its best to paint a Mad Max 
              future for the world when oil maxes out  soon. The suburban and 
              exurban lifestyles, hinged to two-car families and constant trips 
              to work, school and Wal-Mart, might become unaffordable or, if gas 
              rationing is imposed, impossible. Carpools would be the least 
              imposing of many inconveniences; the cost of home heating would 
              soar  assuming, of course, that climate-controlled habitats do 
              not become just a fond memory. Gas rationing and even the 
              possibility that we might not have climate control? And this was 
              worthy of a Times magazine cover story?
            
 
- Be alert: 
              The Media Research Centers
              
              Aug. 22 CyberAlert pointed out that George Will on Sunday 
              scolded the media for its incessant, false reporting about record 
              high gas prices. According to the CyberAlert, Will pointed out 
              during the roundtable segment on ABC's This Week, (gas) is less 
              than it was in 1981, less than it was in 1935.