I don't disagree. However, what you speak of has been a long slow transition over the last 40 years or whatever. This is sudden, unexpected, and causing thousands to lose their jobs on a near daily basis across the country. Just driving through town this evening, I took note of the fleets of trucks parked in the oilfield office parking lots, the workover rigs parked in the yards, the drilling rigs stacked out, the pipe yards full of unused pipe, the rental companies with every square inch of their yard crammed with un-rented equipment, the dump trucks, dozers, side-booms, trackhoes, backhoes, skid steers sitting in yards, the hot oil rigs, bobtails, transports, wireline trucks, swab rigs sitting around. Each one of those idle trucks, rigs, and equipment represents a man or woman who was providing for their family and a valuable service two weeks ago. In a town of 3000, hundreds of lost jobs is a brutal blow. They will all be needed again, hopefully soon, but chances are some of them will be on really hard times until their expertise is demanded once more. All of us in "the patch" are aware of the ups and downs, but low oil prices coupled with the near shutdown of nearly the whole country is a blow nobody could have seen coming. It's tough, and of course many industries are hurting, but generally speaking, people don't dance a jig when other industries are crippled. When gas goes down, it's yippee freaking skippy.
Didn't mean to get grouchy. That one just hits real close to home.
Carry on.