^ Did you read what I wrote? If you did, you would realize my point is that your point is irrelevant. If the article is 100% true then the market will order Ethanol producers to produce as much energy as they can without cutting into food consumption. If the article is 100% false then the market will order Ethanol producers to produce as much energy as they can without cutting into food production.
8/13/2006 12:45:06 AM
maybe if we had unlimited land to grow corn on...are we ready to contribute that much land? will money make it magically appear?
8/13/2006 2:10:59 PM
i apologize for thinking physics first and economics second, i guess i put too much stock in science and dont have ultimate faith in economic models.
8/13/2006 2:12:45 PM
^^ If land is in short supply then the price of corn will rise; if the price of gasoline, which Ethanol is a substitute of, does not rise then people will stop wasting expensive corn in the production of cheap Ethanol. ^ You can be forgiven, those of us that understand it often forget how difficult the economics of resource allocation can be for some to grasp. Another way of thinking about it is to view prices as humanity's way of making sense of reality. It is how humans find out if a resource is plentiful, or if others have better uses for a resource than we do. It is how we answer the most complex question ever to confront the human race: what should be produced and how should it be produced? People that try to ignore the price system are trying to ignore reality, which is what it sounds like your article was trying to do.[Edited on August 13, 2006 at 3:51 PM. Reason : .,.]
8/13/2006 3:49:22 PM
of course, most people dont see economics as everything like you do.
8/13/2006 5:16:59 PM
Economics is just economics, it is nothing more than it is. And I know you don't see economics in anything because you simply fail to grasp the complexity of reality around you. Life is not as simple as the energy conversion equations from your physics textbook, it involves the intricate interactions between self-interested human beings, which cannot be solved by simply plugging them into matlab.
8/13/2006 5:43:28 PM
it's not all as simple as capitalism as our savior either
8/13/2006 5:46:25 PM
No, it is the system we have in place to handle the problem you were complaining about. Now, if you want to complain it isn't working perfectly and we should replace the price system with some form of feudal or committee based system, go for it, I'll respond to you in kind. But don't make blanket complaints that the system is failing by pretending the system doesn't exist. It is intellectually dishonest.
8/13/2006 6:01:52 PM
Now the picture becomes clear. Evidently, this effort by Wal-Mart is a pre-emptive strike against the oil industry, which allied with some underperforming, now-defunct German stores to create the company's first profit fall in a decade!!1Courtesy of Drudge...http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/08/15/D8JH2Q400.html
8/15/2006 5:09:35 PM
http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/economics/laureates/
8/15/2006 5:45:08 PM
Somebody still believes in rational self-interest.It's so cute.
8/15/2006 5:51:15 PM
so basically ethanol is corn liquor mixed with 15% gasoline, what If I made my own ethanol at home with some everclear and gas.
8/16/2006 12:01:24 AM
^How much is 85% of a gallon of everclear? Might be cheaper to stick to gas.
8/16/2006 7:38:24 AM
Here's a fortune article on the cost of ethanol- same type of data: http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2006/08/21/8383659/index.htm?cnn=yes
8/16/2006 2:25:49 PM
After reading the basics, I'd say this is what you're looking for:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wind_power#Debate_for_and_against_wind_power
8/16/2006 2:34:19 PM
If the poor start having difficulty affording food then give them food stamps. Government meddling in the corn market would be destructive. Besides, the price of corn is no where near the record high set in 1996.
8/16/2006 3:18:29 PM