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Kiddo is better educated and higher earning than you, gramps.
That's nice.
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I'll say exactly what I mean: you don't know what the **** you're talking about. I don't blame you, you learned a couple cool conspiracy theories and lack the ability to see outside of your lens. Product of your environment.
If you say so.
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This is an idiotic argument. I said shale is more damaging than oil, you responded that China mines shale. That doesn't disprove anything I said. China mines shale, which is more damaging than oil. Get it?
What's to get? I've pointed out a nation who have been consistently improving their processes when the US and other western nations have only recently begun to get back into their formerly turfed shale oil programs. What's truly idiotic is that I must physically make the link for you to get it. Shale oil and tar sands have been traditionally more costly to produce and were much more environmentally abrasive just a couple short decades ago, granted. But they've quickly gained ground and the tech is constantly evolving. They're likely soon to employ microwaves for agitation benefits and that's aside from their recycle programs.
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Btw, [url=http://www.oilcrisis.com/TarSands/]it takes the energy equivalent of two gallons of oil to get three gallons out of tar sands[/url], its much less efficient than current oil sources. There's a reason China mines shale, liquifies coal, and displaces millions of its citizens so that it can flood its valleys to create the world's largest hydroelectric dam - which destroying entire cities:
China is desperate.
I didn't ask for your views on China's longstanding indifference to its people. We're talking about the process and the material. Stick with the program, bucko. Any alternative energy source tapped on a grand scale, in any nation will have similar effects. It's unavoidable. If you put up enough wind or wave turbines, air and ocean currents are altered. If you lay out enough solar cells to power a people or tap geothermal in mass, similarly sized environmental changes occur.
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Thats why China is doing these things. Thats why [url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1595235,00.html]well over 5,000+ people officially die each year mining coal in China[/url]. Because China lost the geopetrol competition with the US, with the US outmaneuvering China on several oil pipelines that they wanted, but couldn't get because we got them first. They need energy, so now they are forced to invest in more expensive and difficult energy resources.
They have not overcome a hurdle, they have become desperate enough to face higher costs.
correction: slightly higher costs which their experience in the process is reducing every year. Of course, it's not a 500,000.00 USD Honda Hybred...That's supposedly green despite the real costs which went into manufacturing it, so it's ok....lol
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Except they don't source and mine these properly, because the operational costs on shale are already so expensive that its hard to cut a profit. You can't really sell shale under $70 a barrel, and the harder you try to minimize the pollution you create, the less likely you are to make a profit in the industry, so you cut corners.
The EROI's vary according to quality, extraction technology, and the like. Your 70 USD could easily apply to crude sourced from a less than ideal location or method.
Try again.
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Firstly, it takes electricity or power to create oil, which, if you have it, you can just as well use it to charge an electric vehicle. Anyone can transport a generator, photovoltaic cells, or hell, burn that oil for electricity in a generator to charge a car. Both technologies have their own ways to function outside of the grid.
Stop the presses! :) You're suggesting it's a 1:1 proposition now? hahahaha.. priceless
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But more importantly, its rather silly to think that being able to grow your own corn is what is saving us from authoritarianism. This is one of the least relevant arguments you can make. Oil is saving us from a one-world government. Which apparently already exists. Hilarious. I guess conspiracy theories don't have to make sense, you just have to want to believe, huh.
Corn? Who mentioned corn prior to all this? I did mention organic matters... That darn box has got you really snookered.
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Try carting an entire corn field or oil well with you to keep your gasoline car off the grid.
You can't.
Case closed.
There it is again! :) The miraculously growing internet thread corn. Pops up without rhyme or reason.
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Petrol vehicles already have every single limit in place, so there is nothing new 'scary' that hybrid vehicles are doing. And you keep hinting at these scary conspiracy theories around you, but look: everything you do is within a grid. You are posting on loveforum, you work your job, you send your kids to school, you have a credit card, you own a telephone. Do you seriously ****ing believe that growing your private corn farm in the middle of the Arizona desert is all thats keeping you from police state right now? Your anger is seriously misplaced.
Well I'll be corned. The corning never stops.
Yes, I think it's safe to assume and agree together that I am now currently posting at love forum. The rest of it is just you fishing.
and... If you're suggesting that the internal combustion engine has made all the technological leaps it can, that would a very silly statement to make. Worse than "corn!". :)
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As for the petroleum market, if our cars switch to hybrid, we won't have to mine all these expensive sources of oil - like shale or liquified coal - which would keep oil cheaper. Reduced demand = reduced price. Its Economics 101.
Maybe you should explain Econ 101 to OPEC... they don't appear to be listening and never have... but why should they? The US would hate to have it's dollar hedged on 20 dollar barrels at any rate.. it's not like they have much gold or silver behind anything... nor an open ledger. Boy oh boy did I nearly shard myself laughing at the US when it was forced to return the stores it was safekeeping for other nations last year after decades of remaining untouched. Think of how many various sources they had to reconstitute, reform into known dimensions, and stamp on a spur of the moment. Too funny. :)
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Yeah let me explain economics, here:
There's always a "shortage", demand outpaces supply, thats why the price of oil is as high as can give them the most profit. Many people would like to buy more oil, but they restrict their usage because they can't afford it at this price. The more oil there is, the more demand, the less demand, the lower the price of oil. So shortage is arbitrary in this context, to increase or decrease the supply, or to increase or decrease the demand - will all effect the price of oil, regardless of whether or not oil has a "terminal shortage."
yes, yes... supply is limited to a level of sought demand... there are not shortages... just manipulations, environmental movement facism, and spin doctoring. Tell us something we don't know.
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And how "efficiency" --> "because of the lack of oil" ---> "props up the unsecure dollar" & "media monopoly" --> "therefore we invent global warming" is the most ridiculous chain of logic I have ever read. You're going to have to learn to explain yourself a little better, because no one but you has any idea what you even by that.
Ask your professor.
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Everything has false advertising and hype. I agree that electric vehicles aren't as environmentally friendly as advertised, but they are a step up from what we already have, and the electric grid is more mutable than the petrol grid, allowing more innovation to occur in the source of the energy, since it won't require changing the engine of every single car on the road. Its easier to build a new plant than to get 10 million people to change their engines, fueling habits, and car types.
I'll agree that hybrids still aren't where they should be. There are costs to the batteries, but the technology has improved tremendously the past 10 years.
As has shale and oil sand techs.
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I also don't see how you can say Wind and Solar are not sustainable. Considering Wind and Solar are renewable and some of the least utilized sources of electricity, considering wind powers 20% of Denmark, 13% of Spain and Portugal, and 7% of Germany (World's second largest exporter). Solar, as well, is highly utilized by a lot of nations, 90% of homes in Israel use solar powering because of Israel's poor relations with their local oil exporters in the Middle-East.
As an adjunct, they're fine. As a broadly encompassing venture, they'd disrupt wind currents, surface and atmospheric temps and render the world worse off.
The pollution created as a manufacturer by-product would extreme as well.
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I think you are too eager to write off a lot of energy sources, and oddly defend a worse energy source in the process.
On the contrary, I'd love solar cells to make the next big shrink. I spend 6 months of the year living off 2 x 80 watt panels and would welcome a lighter and smaller cargo.
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I've read of many biological alternatives. I hope you're not referring to ethanol-derivatives like corn biofuel. E20-E85 will only cause new humanitarian problems.
CORNED AGAIN! lol
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Okay, I'll bet you I have citizenship in more nations than you (3), speak more languages fluently than you (4, + one dead language), have lived in more countries than you, and traveled to more countries than you.
That's nice.
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I will absolutely agree with you that there are transnational political trends, both in capitalism, militarism, mass media, that are superceding the political wills of nations and causing people to follow a different tune, especially when it comes to organizations like the WTO and the IMF. However, I don't believe that just because there are some people out there who are eager to take away your rights that you should be skeptical of every change in front of you, some changes are good, some changes are actually scary to the powers that be (GE owns NBC, GE causes tons of global warming), Detroit has high influence in Congress, though it has waned in recent years, Detroit opposes higher fuel standards and tries to deny global warming.
There are a lot of different political momenta going on in this world and to conflate them all as one single political momentum is simplistic and ignorant.
Political science is obviously not one of your majors or minors.
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Hydrogen shares some of the costs but doesn't emit pollution in consumption, and emits less pollution in mining as well.
Norilsk? heh...
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Everything has a cost. Nuclear energy has a high cost but with proper storage the pollution is minimal and manageable, and the energy created has a lower environmental impact than equal energy creation via coal or gas.
Spent fuel is a ticking time bomb which can't be safely handed down to the next generation without deadly accidents occurring along the way. Intentional or natural.
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I see nothing wrong with blanketing unused space with photovoltaic cells. Instead of roof tiles put solar panels. Instead of blowing up rocks to get to the shale, cover a space with solar power. Even if not as an absolute replacement, these technologies, in conjuction with the processes already going on, reduce both our emissions and dependance on non-renewable substances.
I agree, at least in part. The emissions are a joke. Volcanoes regularly spew out more emissions than we can as whole.. sometimes many years worth. But I'm for anything which keeps us off the grid and out of gulags. Unfortunately, every action has an equal but opposite reaction.
The Elitists won't and don't permit widespread grid abandonment. It destabilizes their grip.