lollardfish: (Default)
lollardfish ([personal profile] lollardfish) wrote2005-12-03 12:58 am

Today's Talking Points

The three keys to our energy independence:

1) Diversification - Develop and use /all/ sources of energy. Coal, Oil, Natural Gas, Solar, Wind, Hydroelectric, Geothermal, Biodiesal, heck, even Nuclear. Use them all.

2) Innovation - Develop new forms of energy. Develop new ways of using old forms of energy more efficiently with fewer hazardous biproducts.

3) Conservation - Use less.

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It's a total package. Oil /is/ part of the solution. But so is wind. Saving energy = saving money. Saving money is a conservative value.

P.S. If someone could come up with a "k" so that the keys to energy solution spelled out our Vice-President's name, that would make me cheerful.

[identity profile] mia-mcdavid.livejournal.com 2005-12-03 02:34 pm (UTC)(link)
4) Kick Halliburton out of the White House.

[identity profile] minnehaha.livejournal.com 2005-12-03 04:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Kinetic?

K. [OK, I'm feeling really clever at this point]

[identity profile] lollardfish.livejournal.com 2005-12-03 05:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Shannon came up with that one too. And Knowledge.

Doesn't quite go somehow :)

[identity profile] groomporter.livejournal.com 2005-12-03 06:07 pm (UTC)(link)
We need a president who will take a stand in the way that JFK set the goal that "in the next decade" we would put a man on the moon. A similar goal could be set to reduce our dependence on foreign oil (and not just by drilling more of our own), and reduce pollution. This would not only benefit everyone, but could spur research and investment in products and industries that could improve our economy in general. (It could also possibly give us products and proccesses that we can sell/lisence to developing countries before they become the pollutors we have been.) The problem is, it will be a process, and not have a single event that marks success the way the moon landing did.

At the same time we need to encourage industry to make non-petrolium investments in the oil producing countries, because as we reduce our importation of foreign oil they will see reductions in their gross domestic products. -We do NOT want them resenting us for pulling the rug out from under their economies. If we can encourage the growth of local (non-nationalized) industries it can create a healthy middle class, and there will be fewer disaffected young men who are interested in driving car bombs, as well a a greater chance to move towards more democratic leanings.