1/2/2019 10:41:19 AM
It's good to see Bill Gates throwing more support behind nuclear energy generation technology. It's the only viable (current) energy solution path forward for anyone actually worried about CO2 emissions.
1/3/2019 8:59:30 AM
https://www.wral.com/-the-only-thing-we-can-do-is-adapt-greenland-ice-melt-reaches-tipping-point-study-finds/18139737/
1/22/2019 2:10:47 PM
1/24/2019 10:55:29 AM
^^"adapt" has been the logical and realistic option for the last 15 years anyway, for anyone with half a brain.
1/24/2019 1:31:39 PM
um, ok? There's also the option of trying to "prevent". Or the option of "adapting" while also trying "mitigate"?[Edited on January 24, 2019 at 2:28 PM. Reason : ]
1/24/2019 2:10:49 PM
deny climate change, deny climate change, deny climate change, the only thing we can do is adapt anyways...
1/24/2019 2:27:07 PM
^^perhaps one day you'll realize that unless governments push nuclear energy nobody in power is taking this seriously.
1/25/2019 4:07:01 PM
Um, okay? Taking what seriously?
1/25/2019 4:58:43 PM
Climate change mitigation. Unless there's a lot of money involved and an expansion of government power, nobody in power is interested.
1/29/2019 2:22:09 PM
https://news.yahoo.com/trump-sounding-off-climate-change-loses-argument-actual-climatologists-government-ones-212948898.html
1/30/2019 1:42:27 PM
Green energy is very profitable, but the fossil fuel industry has massive regulator capture that's hurting everyone.Look at how Trump is dumping money into coal... it's completely idiotic. US could be changing the culture to promote rail travel over airplanes... we could be building quality national rail travel but we're not.It's dumb how much money is in our country, but we have to wait for billionaires to deign to want to invest in something for the public good versus just using the will of society and doing it.
1/31/2019 12:50:44 AM
It is not a culture problem keeping passenger rail down, it is an engineering problem. Passenger rail is simply bad technology. Steel wheels on steel rails are great at moving heavy things efficiently. Passengers are not heavy. The vast majority of the weight of a passenger train is the train itself. As such, there is not much energy savings moving passengers by rail versus by bus, but it does suffer horribly in every other respect. First, due to separation requirements, rail cannot move as many people as a similarly configured bus line because rubber tires on asphalt produce dramatically quicker stopping times than steel wheels on steel rails. Which means at high speeds train separations are managed by signals and measured in fractions of miles rather than the dozens of feet maintained by drivers for buses. Second, the right-of-way (ROW) of a dedicated bus line can handle grades as high as 10%, while rail requires bulldozing the countryside and city around the ROW to achieve a 1% and less grade at great expense and dislocation. If a rail line needs to cross an elevated bridge over a river, or another rail line, that means the line must be elevated for miles on either side of the river to gradually achieve that altitude. Same problem for turning radius: a train needs miles to make a turn at high speed. Thirdly, it is exceedingly difficult to schedule passenger trains on the same tracks as freight trains (freight stopping distances are measured in several miles). Usually, passenger lines with even moderate traffic render the line unusable for freight at all. Meanwhile, an asphalt road has no trouble carrying buses, trucks, and cars. Passenger rail is big in some countries because those countries choose to subsidize the hell out of it. So, in that sense it is kinda a cultural issue. Americans already subsidize amtrak and urban rail a ridiculous amount, thank goodness they have a lower limit to how much they with subsidize ineffective technology compared to some other countries.
1/31/2019 2:13:02 AM
your steel wheels conspiracy post was amusing the last time you posted it too, you should start a youtube channel
1/31/2019 8:55:50 AM
Clowns to the left of me, Jokers to the right
1/31/2019 10:09:42 AM
Whoah, I hadn't heard the steel wheel conspiracy before. Thanks!https://www.npr.org/2019/01/30/690003678/massive-starfish-die-off-is-tied-to-global-warming
1/31/2019 10:25:20 AM
1/31/2019 10:44:33 AM
It's amusing how easily moron thinks it is to "change the culture" of anything in this country.We've been trying to "change the culture" surrounding guns since the frontier closed.
1/31/2019 10:47:46 AM
1/31/2019 11:02:34 AM
says the man who's never heard of normal force
1/31/2019 11:15:51 AM
^^(physics is the foundation of my studies and degree from State)
1/31/2019 11:41:00 AM
^ And yet stopping distance is a conspiracy theory to you? I guess you're trying to play dumb for comedic effect?^^ of course I have. What made you think otherwise? [Edited on January 31, 2019 at 2:14 PM. Reason : ^]
1/31/2019 2:12:19 PM
Lol, I gave you too much of a hint already
1/31/2019 4:57:49 PM
Are you bothered I used the word "friction" instead of "static friction"? Because the normal force is not this. The thing that matters to stopping ability and climbing ability is the static friction of the wheels on the rolling surface, or dynamic friction if the wheels are sliding, nothing to do with the normal force per-se (whose job here just keeps the two objects from passing through each other). So, either your joke is too deep for me or you yourself are fucking up and trying to pretend otherwise.
1/31/2019 6:54:51 PM
Nope, that's not the problem[Edited on January 31, 2019 at 7:54 PM. Reason : Cool to learn normal force doesnt have anything to do with kinetic friction tho]
1/31/2019 7:53:06 PM
That is not what I said, A+ trolling though.
1/31/2019 10:27:39 PM
Trying to prop up coal is pretty short sighted. I get the impression Trump is doing it just for votes. Killing it with regulations are one thing, but if it can't compete with natural gas, that's just too bad.Potential development that could further strengthen the natural gas advantage. This would be really great for China, given the hundreds of coal plants they have in operation.https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/2183466/chinas-plan-use-nuclear-bomb-detonator-release-shale-gasEven more promising, is Fusion energy production finally just around the corner?https://medium.com/s/2069/finally-fusion-power-is-about-to-become-a-reality-c6b8b5915cf5?fbclid=IwAR28xl0hgC2d4uTSOzvqFMBzQ94sdEAPyV9jm98LVK-FPFSn_GA2p74Ed-k
2/1/2019 8:35:02 AM
Heterogeneous retreat and ice melt of Thwaites Glacier, West Antarcticahttp://advances.sciencemag.org/content/5/1/eaau3433.full
2/2/2019 11:05:48 AM
Oil and Coal both make more money for the people at the top and create worse lives for people at the bottom. That's why those industries will continue to thrive world-wide.
2/2/2019 2:39:04 PM
Oil and coal have raised the standard of living dramatically for the entire world, especially for those at the bottom. Solar is nowhere near being ready to replace them in any significant way without adversely effecting the poor through more expensive electricity.
2/3/2019 8:00:52 AM
So we subsidize? It doesn't really matter if it's more expensive anymore, it only matters if it reduces co2 output
2/3/2019 8:04:39 AM
Solar is subsidized to death, and we have no realistic large scale storage means. Unless this country dramatically changes socially to being willing to terraform mountains and start installing pumped hydro storage facilities everywhere we can, there is no solution to this problem on the horizon. There are groups out there that want to rip out every dam we have now, despite them being our best renewable energy source and help tremendously with flood control and drinking water.
2/3/2019 2:49:38 PM
Protections for coal companies that allow then to escape their environmental damage is a subsidy much larger than anything the solar industry receives
2/3/2019 4:23:41 PM
https://www.npr.org/2019/02/06/692060375/2018-was-earths-fourth-hottest-year-on-record-scientists-say
2/7/2019 9:42:52 AM
https://www.npr.org/2019/02/07/691997301/rep-alexandria-ocasio-cortez-releases-green-new-deal-outlineCan't wait to see the backlash from the right about this. FOX hosts are going to have apoplexy.
2/7/2019 9:48:13 AM
https://twitter.com/jonathanvswan/status/1093536733101207552?s=21I don’t mean to pick on this one reporter but I’ve seen this over and over. Infrastructure projects are always expensive and I swear, the right has basically hammered into the mainstream mindset that the only fiscal stimulus that could possibly grow GDP are tax cuts for the wealthy (despite overwhelming evidence supporting infrastructure projects doing the same).[Edited on February 7, 2019 at 11:00 AM. Reason : For the record I have yet to read the report, but judging by twitter the cost is the big complaint]
2/7/2019 11:00:13 AM
axios is anti-left, of course they are going to make silly criticisms about this
2/7/2019 11:04:23 AM
From a political standpoint, the argument should be fairly simple: the Republicans latest supply side experiment failed, again, so now it's our turn. $2 trillion in deficit spending produced absolutely none of the desired results. No uptick in capital expenditures, no wage growth and no increased hiring. Just a bunch of stock buybacks and increasing the already record hoards of cash corporations have been stockpiling. So repeal the whole damn thing, except the changes to SALT/property taxes and tax cuts for households making <$400k, and do it our way instead. $2 trillion would go a long way towards increasing health care coverage, revamping our energy infrastructure, and the results would be immediately tangible.
2/7/2019 12:50:08 PM
^^^^Whoever wrote that outline is a moron. My Favorite parts Upgrade or Replace every single building in the country for state of the art energy efficiencyHave economic security for all who are unable or unwilling to workNot sure how fast they will be able to get rid of cows that fart too much and airplanesEliminating Nuclear Power PlantsAll Democrats have to do is not be insane and they can't do it.
2/7/2019 2:06:46 PM
I bet the criticisms were identical for the original new deal too.
2/7/2019 2:39:55 PM
^^ When you mention an outline, are you referring to the resolution framework?For reference, could you cite the page and line numbers where those items are mentioned within the framework? I was only able to locate the following excerpt on page 7, lines 16-20, when I searched the document:
2/7/2019 3:56:09 PM
call me crazy, but I’m ok with spending as much money as it takes to save humanity
2/7/2019 4:23:40 PM
Why would we be an interstate highway system when most people don’t even have cars?
2/7/2019 5:35:54 PM
2/7/2019 5:38:28 PM
^^^^ Never mind. It was in the FAQ, not the resolution framework.Resolution framework: https://apps.npr.org/documents/document.html?id=5731829-Ocasio-Cortez-Green-New-Deal-ResolutionFAQ: https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/5729035/Green-New-Deal-FAQ.pdf
2/8/2019 1:06:47 AM
2/8/2019 10:28:30 PM
2/9/2019 3:09:50 PM
Who cares. Universal Basic Income isn't some far far left concept.
2/9/2019 6:11:54 PM
https://www.quantamagazine.org/cloud-loss-could-add-8-degrees-to-global-warming-20190225/
2/25/2019 3:36:55 PM
https://gridarendal-website-live.s3.amazonaws.com/production/documents/:s_document/465/original/GlobalLinkages.pdf
3/14/2019 5:50:56 PM