Skip to main content

"Drill, baby, drill"?

I don't understand people who say alternative energy sources aren't ready yet. If we're talking about cars, we've had electric ones for at least half a century, and we have all sorts of means of creating electricity, including existing alternative energy technologies, such as solar, wind, and thermo; all of which could be more efficient (kind of like our internal combustion engines), all of which could benefit from further investment in research and infrastructure, but which are already being used now.

It's funny to hear the Republicans attack some Democrats for their tendency towards protectionist rhetoric, to hear Republicans deride Democrats for not accepting the forming global economy, and then to hear Republicans complain that we're giving too much money to foreign countries for their oil, and that we should be self sufficient when it comes to such matters.Then they briefly endorse alternative energies (which they never really want to talk about, unless it means nuclear power plants can be constructed) before getting to what they really like: the idea of drilling for more oil in places previous generations, largely unaware of the looming environmental crises, would have considered unwise.

Instead of the short term, protectionist solutions favoured by the party in the pocket of big oil--solutions which won't even begin to show their meager results for years--we should work with any companies and countries willing to implement, improve, or create new and existing 'alternative' technologies with an eye to more power and better efficiency. As we debate, methods of so called greener living are being explored and implemented. We should encourage this at home and abroad. It should be among our top priorities. Finding new, environmentally sensitive sites to drill for oil should not.

Comments

  1. One of the unmentioned benefits of having more electric cars on the road is that, due to the nature of the vehicles themselves, the slower speeds where they tend to operate more efficiently will mean a decrease in the extent of injury and death resulting from crashes.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I hadn't thought of that. That's a major benefit, especially considering the money and productivity that will be saved as a result.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

For Every Problem, a Solution (4)

God as depicted throughout the ages.  No Alanis Morissette, and, no, that isn't ironic.

An introduction to a book that doesn't exist:

Prose and verse are generally accepted as distinct writing formats with their own rules, styles, and grammars.  Though their borders are somewhat vague, they have come to be seen as something of a dichotomy in the eyes of the general public.  There are, however, at least 3 other popular approaches to writing as exhibited in picture-books, comicbooks, and plays.  Though sometimes given short shrift, these styles are accepted as literature.  They are included in libraries, book stores, and academic study.  Most importantly, they are read. In the general case, there is clearly writing being done in the creation of any one of these.  But what of the wordless comic or silent play?  Should we consider scripts written, but fully realized plays, comics, and picture-books, to be performance, art, or some other kind of non-literature?  These worries of theory are kinks to be worked out, surely, but they are not of immediate practical concern to the writer...

My room is a mess, my painting unfinished.

...and I still haven't found a good alternative to my scanner with its missing power-cord.  Almost finished with this painting, though.  I just need to put in a bus seat in front of and behind the passenger. Incidentally, the Seattle Metro buses have the ugliest upholstery I can remember seeing, and I spent five years working at a used furniture store.