Biden -- Energy Gasbag
Biden is one of those politicians who honors the old notion of looking like he might be an idiot, and then he speaks and removes all doubt. Democrats are determined to punish America over energy. They seem consumed by the lunacy that energy is like alcohol -- a good-time elixir consumed at parties that leads to headaches in the morning.
It's not. The prosperity of the US has sprung from a few well known sources: Democracy and Capitalism, and Energy. Cheap abundant Energy. Biden, however, is befuddled when it comes to the role of energy in the economy. Worse, he thinks it's better for America if energy costs more.
Based on his support for punitive strategies like cap-and-trade, it's clear Biden wants to enact as many de facto taxes as possible on Americans who utilize the energy that makes the economy move.
Biden's Coal Slaw
The classic definition of a gaffe is when a politician accidentally tells the truth, and specialists like Joe Biden can work wonders with the form. On Tuesday Barack Obama's running mate blew an easy question about coal, revealing volumes about liberal energy politics.
Working the rope line in Maumee, Ohio, the Senator was asked by an environmentalist why he and Mr. Obama support "clean coal." "We're not supporting clean coal," Mr. Biden responded. Then, riffing on China's breakneck construction of new coal plants, he continued, "No coal plants here in America. Build them, if they're going to build them, over there."
Coal happens to be the indispensable workhorse of the U.S. power system, providing about 50% of the country's electricity. Many Democrats nonetheless despise coal -- because of pollution before the era of scrubbers, but especially now because of carbon emissions. Al Gore favors an outright moratorium on coal-fired power in the name of climate change. Meanwhile, any scheme to tax and regulate carbon -- like the cap-and-trade program backed by Mr. Obama and John McCain -- would hit coal first and hardest, effectively banishing it from the U.S. energy mix.
Mr. Biden, then, only stated an obvious if politically unutterable truth. The real costs of green ambitions won't be paid by well-heeled coastal liberals, but will fall disproportionately on the Southern and Midwestern states that depend on coal for jobs and power. The blue-collar voters of Pennsylvania, Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia and so forth will get hurt most -- notwithstanding Mr. Biden's campaign reinvention as the scrapper from Scranton.
As for "clean coal," the Obama campaign actually supports it. But this too is a political bait-and-switch, perhaps explaining Mr. Biden's confusion. In theory, clean coal would require capturing greenhouse gas emissions, compressing them into liquid and then pumping it underneath the earth. Even if the technology were ready for commercial deployment tomorrow, to sequester just 25% of yearly U.S. CO2 emissions would mean moving volumes more than twice as large as the world's current oil pipeline system can handle. That will require an enormous amount of money, and generations to build.
That an eminence like Mr. Biden is clueless about coal suggests how little official Washington has thought through the consequences of its anticarbon agenda. His blunder is also notable because it exposed the realities that politicians prefer not to voice amid an election campaign. Coal-state voters should be watching what their politicians really have planned for them come January.
It's not. The prosperity of the US has sprung from a few well known sources: Democracy and Capitalism, and Energy. Cheap abundant Energy. Biden, however, is befuddled when it comes to the role of energy in the economy. Worse, he thinks it's better for America if energy costs more.
Based on his support for punitive strategies like cap-and-trade, it's clear Biden wants to enact as many de facto taxes as possible on Americans who utilize the energy that makes the economy move.
Biden's Coal Slaw
The classic definition of a gaffe is when a politician accidentally tells the truth, and specialists like Joe Biden can work wonders with the form. On Tuesday Barack Obama's running mate blew an easy question about coal, revealing volumes about liberal energy politics.
Working the rope line in Maumee, Ohio, the Senator was asked by an environmentalist why he and Mr. Obama support "clean coal." "We're not supporting clean coal," Mr. Biden responded. Then, riffing on China's breakneck construction of new coal plants, he continued, "No coal plants here in America. Build them, if they're going to build them, over there."
Coal happens to be the indispensable workhorse of the U.S. power system, providing about 50% of the country's electricity. Many Democrats nonetheless despise coal -- because of pollution before the era of scrubbers, but especially now because of carbon emissions. Al Gore favors an outright moratorium on coal-fired power in the name of climate change. Meanwhile, any scheme to tax and regulate carbon -- like the cap-and-trade program backed by Mr. Obama and John McCain -- would hit coal first and hardest, effectively banishing it from the U.S. energy mix.
Mr. Biden, then, only stated an obvious if politically unutterable truth. The real costs of green ambitions won't be paid by well-heeled coastal liberals, but will fall disproportionately on the Southern and Midwestern states that depend on coal for jobs and power. The blue-collar voters of Pennsylvania, Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia and so forth will get hurt most -- notwithstanding Mr. Biden's campaign reinvention as the scrapper from Scranton.
As for "clean coal," the Obama campaign actually supports it. But this too is a political bait-and-switch, perhaps explaining Mr. Biden's confusion. In theory, clean coal would require capturing greenhouse gas emissions, compressing them into liquid and then pumping it underneath the earth. Even if the technology were ready for commercial deployment tomorrow, to sequester just 25% of yearly U.S. CO2 emissions would mean moving volumes more than twice as large as the world's current oil pipeline system can handle. That will require an enormous amount of money, and generations to build.
That an eminence like Mr. Biden is clueless about coal suggests how little official Washington has thought through the consequences of its anticarbon agenda. His blunder is also notable because it exposed the realities that politicians prefer not to voice amid an election campaign. Coal-state voters should be watching what their politicians really have planned for them come January.
6 Comments:
Uuum I think CNN has a job waiting for you...lol...That was some informative shyt...
mr. slish,
Biden has an enormous talent for mangling simple issues.
He thinks it's possible for Americans to pay less for energy if they pay more.
Unfortunately for him and the country, economics does not work that way.
A high price for gas means equally high or higher prices for alternative energy.
Sunlight, wind and crude oil are all free. But it takes a lot of money to convert them from their raw forms into energy we can use.
test
No_slappz: And it's on record for the whole world to see that Peabody Coal was a major contributor to Obama's campaign. Fine. I still prefer Obama.
I'm more interested in your views on race and ethnicity. I don't want to misrepresent your views but let me try to represent them at least. You have a problem with Blacks and Latinos because as you read the statistics they account for 98% of the violent crime in _________ (in fuzzy on that part, in Brooklyn, NYC as a whole, NYS, the USA or the World?)
Wherever this place is be it fact or fiction, what do you make of a small city like El Cajon, California, which has very few Blacks or Latinos in it but whose crime problem is a result of the Aryan Brotherhood and bikers and their intra-White wars over the Crystal Meth trade?
What do make of the rest of the Mountain West where the selfsame Aryan Brotherhood and bikers account for more violent crime than the Latinos or Native Americans do?
kelso, a couple paragraphs below is a list of open cases the El Cajon police department is investigating. The links will connect you to photos and descriptions of the suspects. There are a couple of thugs who look like white aryans. But most of the suspects, particularly the suspects in gun-related crimes, are hispanic and black.
You seem determined to believe things are not what they are. For a guy who knows his stats, you are in deep denial about crime rates -- particularly rates of violent crime -- among blacks and hispanics.
Undoubtedly, there is press coverage of El Cajon that focuses on the crystal meth trade and attempts to present this town as a the place where white murderers go to practice their trade. But the local police department has failed to solve only ONE murder, and that murder was committed 3 years ago. Moreover, the suspect is black.
Either every murderer gets caught, or there are few murders.
You should give me some numbers to support your claims of white violence and mayhem.
As you mentioned, El Cajon is a SMALL town hurt by violence tied to crystal meth. You have opened your position with the admission that few people are involved. Hence, you've undermined your basic argument, which appears to be based on the notion that criminal activities are equally distributed among all groups in the US. Not true.
Blacks commit almost 50% of the murders in the US. A group of peopel comprising 13% of the population account for 50% of the homicides. Meanwhile, their victims are also black.
What explains this?
If there is one factor that touches almost all groups where crime is prevalent, it is poverty. But a lot of factors go into the mix. Fatherlessness, illegitimacy, substance abuse, low academic achievement, single-parent households in which the parent is not an adult. Obvious stuff.
Meanwhile, I support the vigorous pursuit of criminals in the crystal meth trade. Despite my Libertarian views on drug use, I deeply oppose the violence that surrounds some aspects of the drug trade
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El Cajon PD Open Cases
Anyone with information which leads to an arrest on any of the open cases listed on this site could receive up to a $1,000 reward and remain anonymous. Call Crime Stoppers' anonymous tip lines at (888) 580-TIPS or email or text at www.sdcrimestoppers.com.
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Theft Of Catalytic Converter --
Please see the attached information sheet for details and a photo of the suspect.
Theft With Stolen ATM Card --
Please see the attached information sheet for details and photos of the suspects.
Garage Burglary -- Please see the attached information sheet for details and photos of suspects
Residential Burglary Arrest. --
Due to this attachment, the suspect was identified and arrested for this burglary. The information was developed due to the photos available on this web site.
Burglary of Utility Kiosk --
Please see the attached information sheet for details and photos of the suspect
Theft of Jewelry --
Please see the attached information sheet for details and photos of the suspect
Robbery of Arco Gas Station --
Please see the attached information sheet for details and photos of the suspects.
Robbery of Days Inn --
Please see the attached information sheet for details and photos of the suspects.
Burglary of Salon and Day Spa --
Please see the attached information sheet for details and photos of the suspect.
Assault With A Deadly Weapon --
Please see the attached information sheet for details and a sketch of the suspect.
Burglary and Identity Theft --
Please see the attached information sheet for information and photos of the suspects.
Armed Robbery Of A-1 Self Storage--
Please see the attached information sheet for information and photos of a suspect.
Burglary at Chromalloy --
Please see the attached information sheet for information and photos of the suspect and suspect vehicle.
Armed Robbery Of Save-A-Lot at 678 Jamacha Rd. -- Please see the attached information sheet for information and photos of a suspect.
Credit Card Theft and Vehicle Burglary Suspects -- please see the attached Information Sheet for information and photos of the suspects.
Carjacking at 515 N. Magnolia, El Cajon -- please see the attached Information Sheet for information and photos of the suspect.
Robbery Of Longs Drug Store at 790 Jamacha Blvd. in El Cajon -- Please see the attached Information Sheet for information and photos of the suspect.
Armed Robbery Of The Bank Of The West at 1234 E Main St. in El Cajon. -- Please see the attached Information Sheet for information and photos of the suspect.
Armed Robbery Of 7-11 at 375 W. Madison Ave in El Cajon --
Please see the attached Information Sheet for information and photos of the suspect.
Armed Robbery Of 7-11 at 335 Jamacha Rd. Please see the attached Information Sheet for information on the robbery and photos of the suspect.
Armed Robbery Of Convenience Store
Please see the attached Information Sheet for information on the crime and photos of the suspects.
Grand Theft Of Animal
This case involves the theft of a dog from the Westfield Shopping Center. Please see our Request For Information for more details
Grand Theft Of Jewelry
This is a case involving the theft of Jewelry from Parkway Plaza on 3-18-07
Please go to the Press Release for more information and photos.
Any information on this case, please contact PSO Thompson, 619 41-5547.
2005 Murder of Jeffrey Ross
Press Release and Composite sketch regarding the murder of Jeffrey Ross on the 1000 block of Decker Street, El Cajon in January of 2007.
If you have any information please contact the El Cajon Police Tip Line at (619) 579-4216.
If anyone's a gasbag, it's slappz!
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