A thought that ran through my head.Thoughts?
6/5/2008 9:15:23 PM
Probably good for us in the long-term. Huge pain in the ass and possibly dangerous in the short (5-20 years) term.
6/5/2008 9:17:31 PM
6/5/2008 9:25:09 PM
Duh. But I am sure there will be a camp who think that punching holes in the earth to satisfy their oil crack habit is a good idea.
6/5/2008 9:28:19 PM
SAY IT AIN'T SO!!! </Randy Watson>
6/5/2008 9:28:31 PM
that boy can sing
6/5/2008 9:32:17 PM
6/5/2008 9:33:55 PM
It's the only way we'll get off oil. Feel good alternative energies are great, but when the average working american looks at their bills at the end of the month, they're going to go for whatever is cheaper, and as long as that's oil, then oil will be what they use.
6/5/2008 9:36:11 PM
provide me with an affordable electric car and ill buy it.
6/6/2008 8:42:25 AM
That thought wouldn't have have run through your head while reading the NY Times, did it?Tom Friedman was thinking the same thing the other day.I actually tend to agree. I'd like to see $5/gal. by the end of summer, $10/gal. by Christmas, and $20/gal. by this time next year. [No joke.][Edited on June 8, 2008 at 6:09 PM. Reason : ...]
6/8/2008 5:48:41 PM
Yeah... That'll only make life and work impossible for most Americans, myself included.
6/8/2008 5:51:05 PM
I for one believe that punching holes in the earth to satisfy our crack habit is a good idea.^ But he'd like it![Edited on June 8, 2008 at 5:54 PM. Reason : .]
6/8/2008 5:52:40 PM
^^ Then stand up for yourselves.A green Manhattan Project is the only one of Barack Obama's talking points to have had any lasting effect on me. I prefer a more free market approach. The gradual increases in the price of gas have almost boiled this American frog alive, albeit slowly. I say sit back and let global demand push oil into the stratosphere.All the more incentive for some tinkerer in his garage to make his first billion inventing a solution to the destructive short-run effects of such a catastrophic increase in price. This is still America, rightThis should be intuitive. People don't act unless conditions are actually shitty.[Edited on June 8, 2008 at 6:12 PM. Reason : ...]
6/8/2008 6:01:38 PM
^^ Justify
6/8/2008 6:07:48 PM
^^ How so? Should I go bomb a Chinese manufacturing plant, or go shoot an oil speculator in the face?As a college student with no money and living in a crappy student apartment, I don't exactly have much power to do anything about the change in oil prices besides stop driving myself except when I need to (and even then it's getting retardedly expensive, as I can't cut out any more driving at this point unless I want to stop hanging out with my family each week).[Edited on June 8, 2008 at 6:10 PM. Reason : ^]
6/8/2008 6:09:46 PM
Invent an engine that runs off of shit....profit.
6/8/2008 6:19:59 PM
6/8/2008 6:21:16 PM
6/8/2008 6:27:43 PM
Haha, but I don't want to write to the government about it, I want them to butt out on the issue because whatever they do will probably make it even more expensive for me (including short-term solutions like subsidies that don't fix the underlying problem, or long-term solutions like CAFE standards increases).Like I said, no money to contribute to stock. Stock is useless for me as I'm risk-averse given my current resource pool. Quit driving also isn't an option, as when I go job hunting in the area I can either find somewhere to work on campus (for a ridiculously short drive that won't cost me TOO much so I wouldn't mind driving) or find an engineering firm off-campus in Raleigh somewhere that pays enough to justify the longer drive (I have a shitty inefficient car and can't replace it, which is why driving is an issue).We'll see, though. There are other people in the same boat, there just isn't really a winning solution for this situation for me besides speculation cooling off a bit and letting prices fall back down a bit. Hell, if it was all our politicians making all the retarded statements that keep resulting in market panics I'd be writing letters out like crazy ("BITCH BE COOL!"), but I don't know how much an Israeli state department employee is going to care when i ask him to stop being so nasty in the news about a country that wants his country to be blown to bits.
6/8/2008 6:35:34 PM
oh Christ...yes, we should have gotten off oil years ago. FUCK! We should have started getting off oil when we passed the peak in the US.Finite resource, you're going to get off it one way or the other. The absolute last way it will happen is for people to realize shortages are coming, drive up prices. How much? Until people fucking stop protesting prices and stop using it.
6/8/2008 6:37:32 PM
6/8/2008 6:43:56 PM
Ya, I read the article by Friedman, and I wasn't impressed. The basic premise is fine (that higher oil prices will lead to fundamental changes in infrastructure and energy usage) but his socialist idea of price floors and government-funded alternative energy research is the wrong approach.
6/8/2008 6:58:10 PM
I get the former criticism, but not the latter.What's the beef with government-funded alternative energy research?
6/8/2008 7:02:31 PM
The market is much better at allocating resources than the government. Investors are almost always better at picking winners than bureaucrats, and they are less prone to corruption and / or deception.
6/8/2008 7:05:38 PM
the best solution to high prices, is high prices themselves
6/8/2008 7:10:53 PM
Investors got us into this crisis.
6/8/2008 7:11:26 PM
explain.
6/8/2008 7:12:02 PM
i don't think you can say investors are the cause. speculation exacerbates it, but its real demand (and the fact that we're running out) that's making prices sky rocket
6/8/2008 7:15:19 PM
Influence peddling with scientifically disingenuous data in Congress and the public. The oil lobby stalled the environmental imperative to actively seek and develop alternatives almost single-handedly for most of recent history. We could have made this a strategic priority twenty years ago if we weren't so busy debating whether global warming existed at all, or whether oil was going to run out in another 20 years or another 100.[Edited on June 8, 2008 at 7:33 PM. Reason : ...]
6/8/2008 7:31:29 PM
i dont know which side to be on yet...gamecats last point is kinda a good "oh burn" imo
6/8/2008 7:59:41 PM
And you didn't read my post! Amazing how that can go back and forth. I'll just run through some of it again. I'll emphasize the point that I didn't get across clearly, as I think it's important (skip to the end).
6/8/2008 8:07:17 PM
lol just call them black people man..."sketchy assholes" just sounds like you are trying too hard to "not be racist" omg we cant be racist!!!]
6/8/2008 8:09:31 PM
6/8/2008 8:15:33 PM
Ok, I've been bugged by bums in this area that are white and black (though surprisingly nothing else), and that's what I mean when I say sketchy assholes. Y'all can read it as black people if you want but those aren't the only people that ride the bus.^ Yeah, I grew up in the suburbs and I'm used to being civilized and minding my own business. I've always been a target for sketchy assholes and that's why I don't ride the city bus.
6/8/2008 8:24:34 PM
I dont own a car
6/8/2008 9:12:49 PM
6/8/2008 9:16:46 PM
6/9/2008 12:22:19 AM
6/9/2008 12:46:31 AM
the problem is that even if a new idea was invented tomorrow it would take years before it was actually in full use. paradigms are hard to break
6/9/2008 1:16:10 AM
plus if gas goes up way high police departments are not gonna be able to drive around as much and therefore more crime will occur
6/9/2008 1:17:16 AM
last i recall they leave their patrol cars running more or less constantly while on duty. i doubt they'll stop going out because of prices. they will probably just be spending more like most of the rest of us.
6/9/2008 3:06:14 AM
6/9/2008 3:35:44 AM
6/9/2008 3:36:02 AM
bikes wont work in my department, not even an option
6/9/2008 3:37:22 AM
the population of NYC, Chicago, Philly and San Fran are going to go through the roof. not needing a car is wonderful.
6/9/2008 8:33:58 AM
6/9/2008 9:44:08 AM
It is irrelevant to the statement I asked you to support.You said that "investors got us into this crisis". I asked you to explain, and you said something about the oil lobby and environmentalism.
6/9/2008 11:18:03 AM
everybody talks about alternatives to oil, but the reason they have not become mainstream yet is that oil prices haven't gotten high enough yet to cause the market to invest in them. maybe the current fuel prices are high enough to spur that investment, maybe not. it's anybody's guess.
6/9/2008 11:09:46 PM
i would think what obama is saying is better...i would think the government solving the problem would be way better than letting the free market which is dictated by greedy capitalists
6/10/2008 2:08:16 AM
[carlface]We tried that back in the 70's. Windfall profit taxes and price controls. Lets have a history review:
6/10/2008 3:02:40 AM