Cap and Scheme is dead

Thanks to the tea party, now lets go drill some deepwater wells.:clap2:

I know facts are stubborn things for you cons, but how about a link backing up your goofy assertion in the thread title?

Or, failing that, how about showing the forum how much proven oil there is for these "deepwater wells" you advocate?

Bah, to hell with the data. Let's just dig a whole lot of dry holes all over the place, and hope something springs up. That's not expensive or anything. :rolleyes:
 
Goverment making you too poor to afford your utilities solves nothing, but creating more serfs.

Indentured servitude is precisely what 1-2%'ers want.

Unfortunately, energy tax is no guarantee of that.
 
One could only hope that P-BO and the econazi agenda gets rammed up their asses so hard, they'll start poopin diamonds in a few weeks. All that coal, you know.
 
Thanks to the tea party, now lets go drill some deepwater wells.:clap2:

I know facts are stubborn things for you cons, but how about a link backing up your goofy assertion in the thread title?

Or, failing that, how about showing the forum how much proven oil there is for these "deepwater wells" you advocate?

Bah, to hell with the data. Let's just dig a whole lot of dry holes all over the place, and hope something springs up. That's not expensive or anything. :rolleyes:

Conservative nitwits who hang out here and all over the web have no clue about cap and trade
 
Goverment making you too poor to afford your utilities solves nothing, but creating more serfs.

The basic premise of cap-and-trade is that government doesn't tell polluters how to clean up their act...Getting all this to work in the real world required a leap of faith. The opportunity came with the 1988 election of George H.W. Bush. EDF president Fred Krupp phoned Bush's new White House counsel—Boyden Gray—and suggested that the best way for Bush to make good on his pledge to become the "environmental president" was to fix the acid rain problem, and the best way to do that was by using the new tool of emissions trading.


Read more: The Political History of Cap and Trade | Science & Nature | Smithsonian Magazine


:eusa_shhh::eusa_shhh::eusa_shhh:
 
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Republican presidents Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, and George W. Bush all supported or employed cap-and-trade.


The GOP changes its tune on cap-and-trade | Grist
 
Thanks to the tea party, now lets go drill some deepwater wells.:clap2:

I know facts are stubborn things for you cons, but how about a link backing up your goofy assertion in the thread title?

Or, failing that, how about showing the forum how much proven oil there is for these "deepwater wells" you advocate?

Bah, to hell with the data. Let's just dig a whole lot of dry holes all over the place, and hope something springs up. That's not expensive or anything. :rolleyes:

Sure .... Drill baby drill...it's not like we need clean water anyway
 
Thanks to the tea party, now lets go drill some deepwater wells.:clap2:

I know facts are stubborn things for you cons, but how about a link backing up your goofy assertion in the thread title?

Or, failing that, how about showing the forum how much proven oil there is for these "deepwater wells" you advocate?

Bah, to hell with the data. Let's just dig a whole lot of dry holes all over the place, and hope something springs up. That's not expensive or anything. :rolleyes:

Sure .... Drill baby drill...it's not like we need clean water anyway
And we drink how much sea water in this nation? You do realize that we don't do desalination here, and drinking sea water is bad for you? And as the Deepwater Horizon is quickly proving the Gulf o Mexico rapidly recovers from oil spillage since it is so damn common there naturally!
 
If you let government arrange a system where the upper 1% control all the resources, you are a serf. And that is the goal of ignoramouses like yourself.
 

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