It wont be as cost effective as buying it overseas. It'll employ some people but not in the sort of jobs most people want to go into. It'd be great if we had better mass transit, since the power loss wouldn't be so significant.sorry capt
ahh, with the serious problems we have today, running out of nat gas in 100 years would be about number 2 million on the list of priorities.
It's not about your douche bag comment Russia has more, we have enough to do what the freak wants
It wont be as cost effective as buying it overseas. It'll employ some people but not in the sort of jobs most people want to go into. It'd be great if we had better mass transit, since the power loss wouldn't be so significant.
Wow dude, he was making a joke about Michigan because Billy lives there and we often rip on Michigan. Or is ripping on Michigan more right-wing scum?
And said welder has converted cars to CNG. And then converted the same cars back.say's the welder rigt
there are more 100,000 jobs in the oil industry than most other son
I know what they pay. I also know most people don't want to be in it. Same with CNG. And I know that the market for it isn't as big as your or SF thinks.cool beans I'm just pointing out your clueless on what oil industry jobs pay
Yeah, and that infrastructures in place. You don't have a set infrastructure for CNG. It'll require a lot of jobs that people in general don't want to do (working their physical ass off). But even if it does give people jobs, you don't have as big a market for the product as you think. Using CNG for personal transportation isn't efficient.you don't know dick billy
what does a petrolium engineer start at or average
I'm in the business, we get thousands of application for accouting jobs that pay way less than engineering jobs.
your failing on this one son
Yeah, and that infrastructures in place. You don't have a set infrastructure for CNG. It'll require a lot of jobs that people in general don't want to do (working their physical ass off). But even if it does give people jobs, you don't have as big a market for the product as you think. Using CNG for personal transportation isn't efficient.
Unfucking real. You think 50k is not a "decent" year's salary, but you have the stupidity to support higher taxes while half the nation's workers pay absolutely no federal income taxes, which I have paid my entire life into SSI and Medicare since 1965. You're worse than a hypocrite. You're an ignorant indoctrinated drone who parrots what he's told.
Yeah, and that infrastructures in place. You don't have a set infrastructure for CNG. It'll require a lot of jobs that people in general don't want to do (working their physical ass off). But even if it does give people jobs, you don't have as big a market for the product as you think. Using CNG for personal transportation isn't efficient.
1. Cite where I have advocated higher taxes.
2. Cite half the nations workers pay no federal income tax.
You support the party that kept your wages low your whole life.
If you are sixtythree and made 50k last year, you would have made over 90k if reaganomics hadn't been instituted, and by your standards Reagan is a socialist. What your side is working towards is complete collapse of the system so it can be replaced with a more totalitarian, easier to run system of their creation.
Think of it. Roughly half the people in this country routinely vote for the party that only works for 2% of the population and works against the other 98%.
1)
Oh... so because you personally might have experienced better times then, we should throw out government statistics and the economic conditions as a whole?
Pretty much. Stastistics are readily manipulated, often based on incorrect or the wrong data, open to the interpretation of the originater of said statistics as well as the presenter. Surely you know this.
Do you understand what CAUSES the trade imbalance? The largest component is OIL. You want to bring that wealth back to the US? So do I. Here is how we do it.....
We need a 'going to the moon' type national initiative.... this one will be to convert transportation in the US from oil based gasoline to nat gas consumption. Make it a 3 or 5 year plan. In that time we do the following:
1) Drill our nat gas sites in the US
2) Owners of gas stations have that time to add nat gas distribution
3) Automakers have that time to retool their lines and escalate production of nat gas vehicles
4) Consumers using older vehicles can in the meantime convert existing vehicles to nat gas using tech already available.... subsidize it for those families making under $50k per year.
Transportation consumes about 70% of our oil consumption. Eliminate the bulk of that, drill nat gas here, increase oil production in the US and we can reach energy independence.
Obviously we can also increase R&D into clean/alt energy to develop the technologies of the next decade and beyond.
Do the above and you are going to eliminate the bulk of our trade deficit, return the money to the US, put US workers back to work, all of which increases domestic spending which will snow ball into the other sectors of the market.
That is all fine and dandy except electric cars with CNG reserved for trucks is a more effective solution.
Competition for natural gas will be too high for cars to afford. The infrastructure already exists, demand is lowest at night, when most cars are charging, the load balancing effect helps the utilities, the cars themselves become part of a smart grid upgrade. Furthermore electric cars use much less energy overall .
Exactly. As credit become more available to more people the incidence of personal debt started to rise along with a corresponding decline in personal savings. And a big part of that was due to government intervention in banking practices, encouraging if not outright mandating increased credit to lower and lower income families.I think it really starting picking up steam post-WWII and wasn't really an issue prior to that because the bulk of the population had little money and little available credit. If has increased since the 1980s with substantial increases in household debt and decreases in personal savings.
The definition of "middle class" has certainly undergone changes over the decades. In the 50's the standard view of a middle class family would have included a 2 bedroom home (3 BR for upper-middle class), a single car in a detached garage, a single family television, etc. By the mid 80's that view had changed to 3-4 BR home, 2 cars in an attached garage, two or more televisions, etc. Today, a minimum standard for middle class includes a bedroom for each child plus (by previous standards) extra large master bedroom for the adults, 3 or more cars, television in most rooms including the kitchen, more than one personal computers, cell phones for each member of the family, etc. etc. etc. By the standards of the 50s, today's "typical" middle income family would have been considered in the wealthy category. As such, because the standards for the term "middle income" have risen significantly, it would not be inaccurate to describe the middle income of today as better of than 30 years ago, in spite of the economic woes of today.Depends on how you define "middle class" and "worse off."
Please! In poorer countries even cheap, used electronics are beyond the purchasing power of the middle class. European countries are not poor. Try looking at rural China. The middle class would look on the purchase of your "dirt cheap" used electronics as a "someday if we get lucky" dream. There are over 6 billion people on this planet, and of that there are probably 4 billion who are worse off than the worst of our poor. I can tell you first hand that the average American - and from your reactions that includes you - haven't a foggy clue what it really means to be genuinely POOR. Even the majority of our "poor" do not know. Poor is not eating off of food stamps while living in a run down 2 bedroom apartment in a cheap assed rent-assistance district in the slums. By standards of the world, that is middle class.Relative to other developed countries I don't know what our poor are all that well off. Americans have larger homes than Europeans and the Japanese in general because we have lots more land and more rural populations. Consumer electronics are a pretty bad measure of how well off a person is. Used consumer electronics are dirt cheap. This is just a bad argument.