I'm sorry but that's a grossly uninformed opinion. The fracking boom has played a significant role in our recovery from the Bush recession and will undoubtably play a very important role in energy production and from a strategic standpoint it has all ready greatly reduced the volume of petroleum products that we import from the ME and other unstable regions of the world. The problems and issues involved with fracking can be readily managed with the appropriate level of regulation. You should also keep in mind that the money's we've been spending on importing petroleum products to our nation represents the greatest transfer of wealth in human history. Fracking has all ready greatly reduced that economic hemoraging and shows great potential to eliminate it all together. Now that money spent is circulated in our own national economy and is not being sent abroad where it does us little or no good.
I'd suggest doing some more stuyding on the issue from non-political sources before you make such ideological and emotionally based decisions. We can't afford to throw the baby out with the bath water. There are real and significant problems associated with fracking but the economic and strategic benefits can't be blown off with a knee jerk responses like this. The benefits are to great and the problems associated are very manageable. I'd suggest that the more rational approach is to identify the problems and issues related fracking and that the appropriate regulations identifying best management practices in regards to health, safety and the environment be enforced. Not only can this be done but it probably can be done within the existing regulatory frame work.