WE ARE IN A MOTHERFUCKING RECESSION AGAIN THAT STARTED IN AUGUST.POLITICS BE DAMNED THE LAST THING WE NEED IS MORE POVERTY INDUCED THROUGH GOVERNMENT REGULATION.WHEN IS ENOUGH SUFFERING ENOUGH MR OBAMA? Goddammit all he cares about are his banker friends. You would think he'd have some soul and think of the poor and working class for once jesus.
9/15/2011 11:30:16 PM
9/15/2011 11:45:02 PM
9/16/2011 12:38:32 AM
9/16/2011 7:34:31 AM
9/16/2011 7:38:20 AM
^^China just got done giving its solar companies tens of BILLIONS of dollars. Who can compete with that much free money?[Edited on September 16, 2011 at 9:37 AM. Reason : China pretty much runs the solar game]
9/16/2011 9:36:41 AM
NEWS FLASH!!!The American Jobs Act of 2011 has been introduced in the House.H.R. 2911.http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d112:h.r.02911:
9/16/2011 10:34:06 AM
Let's hope it passes.
9/16/2011 10:48:30 AM
9/16/2011 1:22:03 PM
9/16/2011 1:24:18 PM
9/17/2011 7:59:59 AM
9/17/2011 1:22:39 PM
Yeah, I read where China invested at least 20 billion more than the US in solar industries.
9/17/2011 3:48:49 PM
9/17/2011 5:36:18 PM
^^^^There are no government regulations anymore? What reality are you living in?[Edited on September 17, 2011 at 5:37 PM. Reason : ]
9/17/2011 5:37:25 PM
9/17/2011 10:16:52 PM
This bill would fund just as much useful infrastructure as the last one did: not much. Certainly nothing worth the money.
9/18/2011 12:37:36 AM
stop using your brain and pass it. Pass it... pass it, just pass it. Pass it.O sounds like he has a kidney stone these days
9/18/2011 6:26:20 PM
THE LAST ONE WORKED SO WELL, WE MUST PASS THIS BILL!!!WELL, WE MUST PASS THE BILL ONCE THE DEMOCRATS IN THE HOUSE INTRODUCE IT.WELL, WE MUST PASS THE BILL ONCE THE DEMOCRATS INT THE HOUSE INTRODUCE IT UNDER ANOTHER NAME, BECAUSE I TOOK SO LONG TO GIVE IT TO THEM THAT ANOTHER CONGRESSMAN INTRODUCED THE REAL AMERICAN JOBS ACT OF 2011.
9/18/2011 7:00:10 PM
[/thread] until next monthhttp://latimesblogs.latimes.com/washington/2011/09/obama-jobs-speech-right-now-dick-durbin.html
9/19/2011 8:47:13 AM
Solar company gets half a billion dollars in a one-time loan, goes under, right wing declares end of the "Green Jobs Myth", rants that this is what happens when the government chooses winners and losers and that there's no way solar is simply too expensive to compete with oil.Meanwhile, oil and gas companies get their yearly $3.5-4 billion subsidy and tax cut package, keeps chugging along being the most profitable industry on planet Earth. Right wing is mum as usual because only liberals complain about oil companies and God knows it's more important to disagree with liberals than actually have consistent principles.[Edited on September 19, 2011 at 10:44 AM. Reason : .]
9/19/2011 10:43:35 AM
9/20/2011 9:20:00 AM
^^ I've seen what people consider subsidies for oil&gas and came to the conclusion they are anything but. The vast majority were tax breaks that all businesses have access too (depletion, amortization) or don't reduce their taxes at all, just shift them it time (depreciation), unlike the direct subsidies for solar and wind. I am entirely against all tax breaks. If you are going to impose a tax then there should be no such thing as a tax deduction or tax credit. But what the oil&gas industry is getting is neither of these and is simultaneously paying a special tax on gasoline and utilities that only they pay, unlike solar and wind which took not just a hefty tax credit of almost half the consumer selling price but loan guarantees too, and went bust. To be consistent, all we need to do is be against loan guarantees for oil & gas companies, which I'm pretty sure everyone here would be. As such, it is only you that is inconsistent, being in favor of loan guarantees for one industry but not another.[Edited on September 20, 2011 at 10:42 AM. Reason : .,.]
9/20/2011 10:38:40 AM
9/20/2011 11:44:30 AM
Yes, "nuance", such as lies and half truths. The republicans subsidize this shit out of stuff too. Why not pick on that rather than making up falsehoods about an unpopular (yet fairly unsubsidized) industry just to score points for team blue? Just because you don't like them doesn't mean any tax rate below 100% is a subsidy.
9/20/2011 2:47:19 PM
Lmao yes. Tax breaks for one industry (oil and gas) that competes with another (solar) is in no way comparable to a subsidy, nope nope nope.
9/22/2011 12:09:15 PM
have they written the bill yet? you know, so we can "PASS THAT BILL!"[Edited on September 24, 2011 at 1:40 AM. Reason : ]
9/24/2011 1:40:19 AM
^^ Not when those tax breaks are equally used by the competing industry. The tax break that allows an oil company to depreciate their drilling equipment also allows the wind industry to depreciate their wind mills and the solar industry to depreciate their factories. Meanwhile, the subsidies for solar and wind CANNOT be used by the oil & gas industry. Similarly, the special taxes paid by the oil & gas industry are only paid by them and no other business in America.
9/24/2011 11:10:17 AM
They way the oil industry is able to use some the tax breaks is fundamentally different. A solar factory would be able to deduct the cost of investment into the machines on the assembly line over the life of the machines. Oil companies are allowed to deduct from the REVENUE they extract from the well (rather than the cost of the machinery pumping oil out of the ground). It treats oil in the ground like capital equipment and it allows the tax credit to grow when gas prices are higher and oil companies are earning some of their biggest profits.You just can't expect an industry with as much clout in Washington as big oil not to get special treatment[Edited on September 24, 2011 at 12:31 PM. Reason : .]
9/24/2011 12:28:47 PM
We need to remove regulation so people can get paid minimum wage to do jobs robots and the internet can do better and for free!
9/24/2011 3:55:12 PM
^^ The argument they are making seems to be that the land is worth less money now that the oil has been extracted, they are writing off that loss. I don't find this position without merit. Do you?
9/24/2011 6:25:31 PM
That's like buying an apple, eating it, then counting what you ate as a "loss".It's not a loss, it's what you bought the apple for.
9/24/2011 7:46:02 PM
Bad metaphor. No one buys oil land for the enjoyment of selling oil, they do it to make money. If a furniture company buys wood they write off the price of the wood, because the tax is supposed to be a tax on profits, not operating revenue, so costs of production are written off. In effect, the tax code is attempting to allow the oil company to write off the price of their wood, the price paid for land with oil in it.
9/25/2011 8:53:57 AM
I was only attempting to show that tax credits for manufacturing are not the same as tax credits for extraction industries.^Oil companies rarely own the land they are extracting on, they just lease the oil rights so the depreciation of the land isn't really a cost to them.
9/25/2011 10:33:18 AM
And in such instances where the oil company owns none of the land and is merely a driller paid on contract, they cannot deduct anything for the depreciation of oil extraction, as that tax deduction will be taken by the actual owner.
9/25/2011 11:05:02 AM
Do you think that Ethanol is subsidized? People rant about stupid ethanol subsidies all the time (rightfully so)but the primary "subsidy" is the Volumetric Ethanol Excise Tax Credit.There is a difference between tax credits and direct subsidies but their effect on the market is the sameBut getting back on topic, I still strongly support solar subsidies and all this noise about Solyndra is way overblown
9/25/2011 11:58:04 AM
^ Well, technically, yes, ethanol is subsidized. The government didn't just waive the gasoline tax depending on how much was Ethanol. The government is cutting a check to the ethanol producer in the amount of the tax. In effect, slapping a tax on Exxon and giving the money to ethanol producers is a subsidy.
9/25/2011 8:30:56 PM
9/25/2011 9:00:47 PM
has the bill been written, yet? you know, the one we are supposed to "PASS RIGHT NOW!!!"
9/25/2011 9:39:36 PM
9/26/2011 9:33:00 AM
9/26/2011 11:03:29 AM
9/26/2011 8:10:42 PM
9/27/2011 9:13:33 AM
9/27/2011 9:51:44 AM
To me, it seems like you have less of a problem with subsidies and more of a problem with uncontrolled deficit spending. I came here to defend the Solyndra loan and other similar loans. It is a fact that if we change our priorities we can easily afford to make those loans without adding to the deficit which makes all of your deficit arguments irrelevant to me. I'm not trying to defend the subsidies we give oil companies etc.
9/27/2011 10:51:38 AM
Keeping in mind that we do not subsidize the oil companies in any way, we actually have special taxes that only they pay, there are more reasons to be against subsidies than merely there impact upon the deficit. I am against deficits because I am against taxes, and Deficits Are Future Taxes (DAFT). Because of limited resources, subsidies cannot cause new business, they can only displace otherwise existing business. As such, subsidizing any industry will result in the erosion of unsubsidized business. Given that the subsidized business would not exist without the subsidy, it clearly consumes more resources (in dollar terms) than it produces, thus making Americans poorer than they otherwise would be if the resources had instead remained in use by the unsubsidized businesses, which produced more than they consumed (in dollar terms). So, no, I am against subsidies because they make our society poorer than it otherwise would be. That this impoverishment also increases the deficit (doubly so, as profitable tax-paying businesses go away to be replaced with subsidized business that does not pay taxes) makes all of our problems even worse.
9/27/2011 11:18:35 AM
If you look at it historically when Oil companies were just becoming established they recieved more help than renewables have when they are trying to establish themselves. http://i.bnet.com/blogs/dbl_energy_subsidies_paper.pdf?tag=content;siu-container
9/27/2011 12:01:20 PM
9/27/2011 12:55:30 PM
9/27/2011 2:00:42 PM
9/27/2011 4:20:31 PM