Moderator: Andrew
Fact Finder wrote:Corporations have no loyalty to anything or anyone except Mammon and Lucre. Despite their existence as "people" in a legal sense, the absence of any soul within that construct makes that entity sociopathic in it's very being. They only serve their own interests. That ANY social benefit is derived is simply an afterthought or a ploy to extract more profit.
Wow! So down down really deep you feel this way about Journey and rock music too. After all, they are corporations too, right?
Take off your blinders and take a good look around.
It's sad that you can be so down on excess. Give it a try sometime, you might like it.
Rick wrote:cudaclan wrote:conversationpc wrote:cudaclan wrote:Keeping this post to a minimum, what Calbear94 says is dead-on. Petroleum based fuel is as fast food compared to alternative. Fast food is quick and cheap. The repercussion is accelerated death. Healthy conscious eating habits cost more but considerably the better choice. Upfront costs for alternative fuels are expensive but return gains offset the initial cost. Petroleum refineries are few and costly. Who do you think started the bio-diesel alternative? It was the "backyard" environmentalist/scientist. Start growing a "Victory Garden" and start eating "healthy".
The U.S. and every other country in the world are nowhere near ready to be weaned off oil. Yes, we should spend money on alternative energy but getting off oil isn't going to happen any time soon. Gore said we need to do it in 10 years. Not gonna happen.
We lag behind many countries with alternative energy. Do the research, do a search.
More than just energy. The thing with this country is, they try to milk every last dollar out of anything before they move on to something better. It slows us down. Greed is our enemy here.
Greg wrote:cudaclan wrote:Personally, this is not a financial issue; it is a conscience, moral and ethical belief.
Yes it is a financial issue.
Fact Finder wrote:We won't see alternitive fuels until we start getting rid of the ones who like "buisness as usual".
We will see alternative fuels when and if they are economically feasable. Right now nothing can compete with oil on this grand a scale.
Calbear94 wrote:Alternative fuels are economically feasible now. For example, Brazil has been able to meet 50% of its fuel needs with ethanol.
Fact Finder wrote:We won't see alternitive fuels until we start getting rid of the ones who like "buisness as usual".
We will see alternative fuels when and if they are economically feasable. Right now nothing can compete with oil on this grand a scale.
7 Wishes wrote:Fact Finder wrote:We won't see alternitive fuels until we start getting rid of the ones who like "buisness as usual".
We will see alternative fuels when and if they are economically feasable. Right now nothing can compete with oil on this grand a scale.
Bullshit. The tecnhology exists right now for America to derive 90% of its energy needs from solar within 10 years. The problem is no President will subsidize any alternative fuel industry, as Big Oil is in their collective back pockets.
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
RedWingFan wrote:7 Wishes wrote:Fact Finder wrote:We won't see alternitive fuels until we start getting rid of the ones who like "buisness as usual".
We will see alternative fuels when and if they are economically feasable. Right now nothing can compete with oil on this grand a scale.
Bullshit. The tecnhology exists right now for America to derive 90% of its energy needs from solar within 10 years. The problem is no President will subsidize any alternative fuel industry, as Big Oil is in their collective back pockets.
If a President NEEDS TO SUBSIDIZE it, then it's NOT ECONOMICALLY FEASABLE.
conversationpc wrote:RedWingFan wrote:7 Wishes wrote:Fact Finder wrote:We won't see alternitive fuels until we start getting rid of the ones who like "buisness as usual".
We will see alternative fuels when and if they are economically feasable. Right now nothing can compete with oil on this grand a scale.
Bullshit. The tecnhology exists right now for America to derive 90% of its energy needs from solar within 10 years. The problem is no President will subsidize any alternative fuel industry, as Big Oil is in their collective back pockets.
If a President NEEDS TO SUBSIDIZE it, then it's NOT ECONOMICALLY FEASABLE.
Will the libs then be crying about "big sunshine"?
Rick wrote:conversationpc wrote:Will the libs then be crying about "big sunshine"?
Now dammit, that was funny!
7 Wishes wrote:Fact Finder wrote:We won't see alternitive fuels until we start getting rid of the ones who like "buisness as usual".
We will see alternative fuels when and if they are economically feasable. Right now nothing can compete with oil on this grand a scale.
Bullshit. The tecnhology exists right now for America to derive 90% of its energy needs from solar within 10 years. The problem is no President will subsidize any alternative fuel industry, as Big Oil is in their collective back pockets.
7 Wishes wrote:...The tecnhology exists right now for America to derive 90% of its energy needs from solar within 10 years. The problem is no President will subsidize any alternative fuel industry, as Big Oil is in their collective back pockets.
RocknRoll wrote:"BP Solar is the world's largest manufacturer of PV systems with manufacturing facilities worldwide. The added manufacturing capacity is part of BP Solar's plan to expand photovoltaic systems production worldwide"
RedWingFan wrote:If a President NEEDS TO SUBSIDIZE it, then it's NOT ECONOMICALLY FEASABLE.
Fact Finder wrote:Dude, wake up. T. Boone is trying to sell you air. Invest with him if it's your choice.
RedWingFan wrote:If a President NEEDS TO SUBSIDIZE it, then it's NOT ECONOMICALLY FEASIBLE.
7 Wishes wrote:RedWingFan wrote:If a President NEEDS TO SUBSIDIZE it, then it's NOT ECONOMICALLY FEASIBLE.
Um, then by that logic, the oil industry should not exist. It is the most highly subsidized industry in the world, and yet it continues to yield record profits.
Fact Finder wrote:"At current oil prices, we will send $700 billion dollars out of the country this year alone — that's four times the annual cost of the Iraq war. Projected over the next 10 years the cost will be $10 trillion — it will be the greatest transfer of wealth in the history of mankind."
Enough of this nonsense. Buying oil from overseas is not a transfer of wealth, it is the purchase of a fungible good in exchange for money. We derive a great deal of good from this exchange. Buying a Big Mac/DVD/shoes/etc.. is not a transfer of wealth, and neither is buying oil.
A transfer of wealth is better explained by looking to welfare and social programs via the Great Society. Obamas plan to take money from Big Oil and send every American a check is a transfer of wealth.
I forget who said it, but we all need to remember...."A government that robs Peter to pay Paul, will always be supported by Paul."
We have alot of Pauls on this forum.
He Probably Won't Invite Us to Go On a Cruise, But There Would Be Plenty Of Room
Global warming hysteria has been very good to Al Gore. He's made a fortune on his book, his movie, and associated enterprises. How does he spend that fortune? Most recently by buying a 100-foot houseboat; how else?
People don't usually think of 100-foot houseboats with gigantic, fuel-burning engines as a low-footprint form of entertainment. But Gore, characteristically, claims that he owns a green 100-foot houseboat, the "Toyota Prius of houseboats," as the yacht's builder puts it. Gore christened his boat Bio-Solar 1--"BS 1" for short--because it runs on bio-diesel fuel and, one of these days, Gore is planning on adding solar panels. I'm not sure just what the solar panels will do, but they definitely won't be powering the craft's gigantic engine or engines.
Gore assures us that his 100-foot houseboat is so "green" that it "will create 40-50% less carbon emission and use half the fuel of other similar houseboats." Let's take that claim at face value. I haven't been able to find data on carbon emissions by "similar houseboats"--there aren't many 100-foot houseboats around--but I located this information about a much smaller (60 foot) houseboat:
Generally speaking, they burn just on 10 gals an hour at full cruising speed. (10 mph) This includes the Westebeak generator's 1.5 gal an hour to look after electricity. Whilst anchored, depending on how cold the air conditioning is and other power outlets running, the generator will burn just over 1 gal an hour 24/7.
If we assume that a boat spends six hours cruising (60 gallons) and 18 hours at anchor (18 gallons), that boat--one-half the size of Gore's--will consume 78 gallons of fuel for every 24 hours of use. Let's take Gore at his word and assume that his much larger boat will emit just half as much carbon into the atmosphere as this benchmark. That would be 39 gallons per 24 hours. If you get 25 miles per gallon in your car, you would have to drive 975 miles--farther than from Chicago to New York--to emit an equal amount of carbon. And that doesn't count the jetski on the back of Gore's elephantine boat, which, you can be sure, takes real gasoline:
Personally, I don't care whether Al Gore spends his entire day pursuing gasoline sports--four-wheeling, flying private airplanes, cruising in an over-sized yacht. He's rich, and he's entitled. But Gore got rich by telling the rest of us that the planet faces a crisis, that civilization is threatened, and that it is urgently necessary for all of us to stop emitting carbon at the earliest possible moment. Meanwhile, Gore himself goes out of his way--after all, most of us get by without cruising on 100-foot boats--to emit extraordinary amounts of carbon.
It is reasonable to conclude that Gore does not really believe that the planet is undergoing some kind of crisis, and does not really believe that a high priority should be placed on reducing carbon emissions. He is in it, in other words, for the money.
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
RossValoryRocks wrote:...You want to pay $8.00/Gal then follow Obama off a cliff and hit oil with a "Windfall profits tax" and take away the tax breaks...hell it might hit $12.00/Gal as the oil companies will simply pass it on to us the consumers...
RossValoryRocks wrote:...Obama is idealistc and naive on energy policy and if he gets elected he will not improve the economy he will destroy it.
Calbear94 wrote:RossValoryRocks wrote:...You want to pay $8.00/Gal then follow Obama off a cliff and hit oil with a "Windfall profits tax" and take away the tax breaks...hell it might hit $12.00/Gal as the oil companies will simply pass it on to us the consumers...
If we don't commit to alternative energy soon, then higher oil prices is what we can expect for the future. The longer we wait, the higher the eventual price of oil will be.
Calbear94 wrote:RossValoryRocks wrote:...Obama is idealistc and naive on energy policy and if he gets elected he will not improve the economy he will destroy it.
Quite the contrary, he is intelligent and well-versed regarding energy matters. Naive is McCain proclaiming that he is for energy change, while merely arguing for a continuation of the status quo. He took $1 million from big oil in July alone and then he unveils his plan for domestic expansion in the gulf. Also, the vast majority of his personal wealth comes from his wife, Cyndi, whose family own a large auto dealership empire in Arizona. Don't think for a second that the recent rise in gas prices has not significantly curtailed auto sales.
The other brilliant focal point of McCain's policy is to build 45 new nuclear power reactors...a forty percent increase in the number of such facilities in the US. This, in essence, would be turning back the clock on energy development in the U.S. thirty years!...back to the 70s when the last major oil expansion (ALASKA) took place, and when many of the current nuclear power facilities were built. This is what McCain considers to be moving forward? McCain's energy plan would also damage the U.S.'s already diminished foreign policy reputation around the world. To simultaneously be trying to lead global nuclear non-proliferation and expanding the use of nuclear technology at home reeks of hypocrisy and stupidity. Talk about non-sense...geesh.
RossValoryRocks wrote:I take it back...you aren't a nit-wit, you are just fucking stupid.
RossValoryRocks wrote:His wifes wealth is from a beer distribution company...
RossValoryRocks wrote:...and he is not allowed to touch by pre-nup.
RossValoryRocks wrote:...Nuclear power is not the same thing, or ever CLOSE, to nuclear proliferation. Iran doesn't want nuclear power moron, they want a BOMB, that is nuclear proliferation.
RossValoryRocks wrote:...Peaceful use of nuclear power is IDEAL, and is encouraged by us and the rest of the world. We offered to give to Iran the type of reactor that doesn't require enriched fuel, they won't do it (see the statement above about the bomb). The newer technology allows teh reactor to use uranium that has a much lower enrichment level and therefore produces a smaller amount of nuclear waste..
RossValoryRocks wrote:...You have no idea what the hell you are talking about.
RossValoryRocks wrote:...Yup moron, just keep following the new liberal messiah off the cliff.
RossValoryRocks wrote:HAHAHAHA! Come on man...be realistic...Oil is not subsidized...it does get some tax breaks for investing it's own money in things like :::GASP::: alternative energy, finding new sources of oil, better extraction techniques for older oil fields to get more out of them...but they are NOT subsidised at all.
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