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Its not my opinion, with the vaccines it was seen there was a need that superseded the testing process beyond the most basic level so they were rushed to availability ahead of schedule. With auto standards, there was seen to be a need to reduce fuel consumption and ease gas prices so targets were set that are easily attainable by US manufacturers with regard to fuel efficiency.No you haven't, all you have done is given your opinion that "market forces may not be quick enough" to do what you personally see is a problem without saying what the problem is or proving that any problem exists with real data, proclaiming an opinion is your right but asking for laws to be improperly implemented because of an opinion is not.
Which does not address the original reason that vaccines take so long for FDA approval. Which would be..........?Its not my opinion, with the vaccines it was seen there was a need that superseded the testing process beyond the most basic level so they were rushed to availability ahead of schedule.
You claim there was a need, but provide no analysis. The need arose from long standing bans on perfectly good drilling grounds, a shift to imported oil, and the OPEC situation in the '70s. Not to mention refinery shrinkage and individual state mandates on fuel blends adjusted seasonally which all is because of..........?With auto standards, there was seen to be a need to reduce fuel consumption and ease gas prices so targets were set that are easily attainable by US manufacturers with regard to fuel efficiency.
To ensure that what gets put on the market is safe for human consumption and to ensure that there are as few side effects as possible.Which does not address the original reason that vaccines take so long for FDA approval. Which would be..........?
"Perfectly good drilling grounds" is not entirely accurate, aside from Alaska, we dont really have other large-scale accessible sources of oil on the mainland and our drilling in the ocean isnt making very much of a dent in our demand.You claim there was a need, but provide no analysis. The need arose from long standing bans on perfectly good drilling grounds, a shift to imported oil, and the OPEC situation in the '70s. Not to mention refinery shrinkage and individual state mandates on fuel blends adjusted seasonally which all is because of..........?
And that is fine, but the regulatory nature expands into every possible scenario 100% of the time when producing medicines and vaccines and has a burdensome testing/licensing phase so you cannot have your cake and eat it too.To ensure that what gets put on the market is safe for human consumption and to ensure that there are as few side effects as possible.
Completely false. Ca, Fl, Pa, and many midwest locales have are very oil rich, but only a handfull of those lands are accessible to oil producers."Perfectly good drilling grounds" is not entirely accurate, aside from Alaska, we dont really have other large-scale accessible sources of oil on the mainland and our drilling in the ocean isnt making very much of a dent in our demand.
What is the provable need. In other words everything is arbitrary out of D.C. because nobody knows for sure how much available oil exists and neither is the value of unaccessible oil known.Regulation's main goal, at this point, is to improve the usage of the oil we have left and make it's use more efficient so we can stretch our supply. Oil doesnt just fuel our cars, it goes into almost every facet of our daily lives. The fact that our supply is dwindling while our demand increases is a cause for very serious concern because of how ubiquitous it's use is.
True, if you mean laissez farie capitialism. Not true, if you mean the type of regulated welfare state capitalism we have in the U. S.Capitalism is mostly cruel and unfair.
These regulations ensure that what you get when you get a vaccination or prescription that as much attention has been paid to the safety of the product as possible.And that is fine, but the regulatory nature expands into every possible scenario 100% of the time when producing medicines and vaccines and has a burdensome testing/licensing phase so you cannot have your cake and eat it too.
Oh? How much oil is actually there and what form is it in?Completely false. Ca, Fl, Pa, and many midwest locales have are very oil rich, but only a handfull of those lands are accessible to oil producers.
The provable need is that our domestic oil supply is shrinking as is the world oil supply; oil is a finite resource. Regulations that encourage it's wiser use help prolong the supply both domestically and internationally and ensure we can try to be as independent as we can with oil.What is the provable need. In other words everything is arbitrary out of D.C. because nobody knows for sure how much available oil exists and neither is the value of unaccessible oil known.
That's for you to provide since you are making the resource management argument. Again, you want protectionism but don't provide the analysis to prove it's actually necessary....thus an emotional argument.Oh? How much oil is actually there and what form is it in?
Considering no two models concur you'll need to provide more proof than a proclamation. All you are doing here is rewording the same argument without any factual evidence as to the shrinkage, or extent thereof.The provable need is that our domestic oil supply is shrinking as is the world oil supply; oil is a finite resource. Regulations that encourage it's wiser use help prolong the supply both domestically and internationally and ensure we can try to be as independent as we can with oil.
http://www.lookoutmtn.com/Documents/Sources_of_United_States_Oil_Supply.pdfThat's for you to provide since you are making the resource management argument. Again, you want protectionism but don't provide the analysis to prove it's actually necessary....thus an emotional argument.
We may not be able to pin down an exact rate, but we do know our oil supply is decreasing and it isnt being replaced anytime soon.Considering no two models concur you'll need to provide more proof than a proclamation. All you are doing here is rewording the same argument without any factual evidence as to the shrinkage, or extent thereof.
Good, analysis. Now, again we have divergent reports but yes if these models are correct you have a point. Now, for the tricky part, is there widespread agreement that this report is correct? Probably not, considering as well that drilling and other extraction technologies are constantly increasing the availability of newer sources.http://www.lookoutmtn.com/Documents/Sources_of_United_States_Oil_Supply.pdf
We currently have about 30 billion barrels of oil left in the wells we know of today and about 70 billion estimated to be undiscovered in North America (A lot of which is in Canada, just for funsies)
We consume, on average, about 20 million barrels of oil per day
EIA - Petroleum Basic Data
That means if we went cold-turkey on imports and ONLY stuck to our own reserves, we'd have enough oil for about a year and a half before we went dry. That's assuming we dont export a single drop (Which, as the price goes up, you know is going to happen).
The top 15 oil-producing countries have about 54 years of oil reserves left
Oil reserves (most recent) by country
There is also a theory gaining ground that petroleum is a biotic, considering "once dead" wells seem to be finding new life, I don't necessarily believe it to be factual but again. There is no widespread agreement. Challenge two, mathmatically justify the set minimums on fuel efficiency compared to known consumption and justify why we also don't allow for the best electric option, nuclear, to be in wider use. Doesn't seem so pressing after that n'est pas?This is a serious problem because of how widespread our use of petroleum is in our modern society.
We may not be able to pin down an exact rate, but we do know our oil supply is decreasing and it isnt being replaced anytime soon.
Again even if these numbers are off by a factor of ten or more, it still boils down to "we dont have much left"Good, analysis. Now, again we have divergent reports but yes if these models are correct you have a point. Now, for the tricky part, is there widespread agreement that this report is correct? Probably not, considering as well that drilling and other extraction technologies are constantly increasing the availability of newer sources.
I'd have to see sources on it.There is also a theory gaining ground that petroleum is a biotic, considering "once dead" wells seem to be finding new life, I don't necessarily believe it to be factual but again.
The targets set are a feasible and realistic goal to reduce the fuel consumption of vehicles the average American drives and thereby reduce our demand for fuel.Challenge two, mathmatically justify the set minimums on fuel efficiency compared to known consumption
I dont agree with using nuclear, but I do think alternative energy is a pressing need at the momentand justify why we also don't allow for the best electric option, nuclear, to be in wider use. Doesn't seem so pressing after that n'est pas?
Its not my opinion, with the vaccines it was seen there was a need that superseded the testing process beyond the most basic level so they were rushed to availability ahead of schedule. With auto standards, there was seen to be a need to reduce fuel consumption and ease gas prices so targets were set that are easily attainable by US manufacturers with regard to fuel efficiency.
But, does that justify draconian standards that are not of provable need? I'll even be generous and give a 15% margin of error. I say no.Again even if these numbers are off by a factor of ten or more, it still boils down to "we dont have much left"
Was looking for sources that didn't include commentary or bias. I'll have to point you in the direction of the theories. Start with biotic theory and as well abiotic theory.I'd have to see sources on it.
I disagree.The targets set are a feasible and realistic goal to reduce the fuel consumption of vehicles the average American drives and thereby reduce our demand for fuel.
I dont agree with using nuclear, but I do think alternative energy is a pressing need at the moment
How on earth are our current standards draconian? As I have said before, the entire rest of the world seems to be able to meet them, why are we so far behind?But, does that justify draconian standards that are not of provable need? I'll even be generous and give a 15% margin of error. I say no.
From what I can find thus far, there doesnt seem to be much weight to the theory. Abiotic generation of petroleum seems poorly supported and more wishful thinking than anything elseWas looking for sources that didn't include commentary or bias. I'll have to point you in the direction of the theories. Start with biotic theory and as well abiotic theory.
On what grounds?I disagree.
You're kidding right? The rest of the world doesn't matter when discussing domestic policy as they do not have limited government built in to their constitutions, that's the first point. Second, physics, a heavier vehicle requires more power which requires fuel, Detroit can eventually adapt but think about all the polution controls on vehicles that have questionable value and how often they fail, as well they sap power by restricting natural flow throughout. The third point is there is no agreed upon demonstrable need for a truck to get 30mpg.How on earth are our current standards draconian? As I have said before, the entire rest of the world seems to be able to meet them, why are we so far behind?
Again, I don't necessarily subscribe to the theory either but put it out there to demonstrate that there is no absolute science behind vehicle regulations.....they just get passed.From what I can find thus far, there doesnt seem to be much weight to the theory. Abiotic generation of petroleum seems poorly supported and more wishful thinking than anything else
http://static.scribd.com/docs/j79lhbgbjbqrb.pdf
That the reasoning behind passing these regs aren't based in solid reasoning, but an arbitrary number that is ever increasing and ridiculous time tables for implementation.On what grounds?
What is reasonably possible DOES have an impact. If the rest of the world can create fuel efficient cars that are also safe and reliable, we can too and there's no excuse around that.You're kidding right? The rest of the world doesn't matter when discussing domestic policy as they do not have limited government built in to their constitutions, that's the first point.
A further question is why do you NEED such vehicles?Second, physics, a heavier vehicle requires more power which requires fuel, Detroit can eventually adapt but think about all the polution controls on vehicles that have questionable value and how often they fail, as well they sap power by restricting natural flow throughout. The third point is there is no agreed upon demonstrable need for a truck to get 30mpg.
So, because there's one SERIOUSLY shaky theory out there that conflicts with established science all of a sudden nobody knows what they're talking about?Again, I don't necessarily subscribe to the theory either but put it out there to demonstrate that there is no absolute science behind vehicle regulations.....they just get passed.
Again, even if the numbers arent precise, we KNOW oil is a finite resource that WILL run out and planning for that is prudent.That the reasoning behind passing these regs aren't based in solid reasoning, but an arbitrary number that is ever increasing and ridiculous time tables for implementation.
You're kidding right? The rest of the world doesn't matter when discussing domestic policy as they do not have limited government built in to their constitutions, that's the first point. Second, physics, a heavier vehicle requires more power which requires fuel, Detroit can eventually adapt but think about all the polution controls on vehicles that have questionable value and how often they fail, as well they sap power by restricting natural flow throughout. The third point is there is no agreed upon demonstrable need for a truck to get 30mpg.
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Improper time frame, incorrect expansion of powers not granted to the federal, economically punitive, forces increases in cost to consumer and tends to harm quality overall, does not solve the problem. Yes, that could be considered draconian and nothing else you have provided made your case.That doesn't make them "draconian." 30mpg isn't a breakpoint for anything.
I agree with your sentiment, but we have to be practical. The current structure for punishment of private enterprise is...notoriously lax and the legislation required to correct that will be fought tooth and nail by the relevant industries.Hoplite, were you going to answer my point about how the situation would be under capitalism and not corporatism?
Improper time frame, incorrect expansion of powers not granted to the federal, economically punitive, forces increases in cost to consumer and tends to harm quality overall, does not solve the problem. Yes, that could be considered draconian and nothing else you have provided made your case.
I don't think you get how things work. It is not up to me to provide that an improper law is unnecessary or improper, it is the onus of those who desire to prove that it is.You haven't provided any evidence that the timeframe was "improper," or that the "expansion" of powers is "incorrect," nor that the measures are "punitive." Nor that quality has gone down. And the "problem" is not one that can be solved by a single measure, but you knew that. You could literally ban all internal combustion engines in any kind of vehicle and we'd still eventually run out of oil.
Everything you just mentioned is entirely subjective. "Could be considered" is practically a codeword for "my opinion is irrational." Speed limits "could be considered" draconian.
I agree with your sentiment, but we have to be practical. The current structure for punishment of private enterprise is...notoriously lax and the legislation required to correct that will be fought tooth and nail by the relevant industries.
Corporatism is Capitalism taken to it's logical conclusion. If you truly let markets run themselves, they will eventually start bleeding over into the government to further their own interests.But until things are fixed, you cannot call that aspect capitalism. It is corporatism, doing what it does by helping companies at the expense of individuals.
Big capitalists have been in bed with government from the beginning. The rules, regs and red tape supposedly put in place to protect people end up stifling small business and suffocating individual initiative and free enterprise. They don't cramp the style of the big CEOs, bankers and super-rich lawyers who can afford to rig the system in their own favor. The Republicans are sometimes called the Party of the Rich, but it's no accident that this is even more true of the Democrats. The Democratic Party is the party of Wall Street, big business, and billionaires even more than the Republicans ever have been. If most of the super-rich really opposed a highly regulated economy then the Libertarian Party would rank first among billionaires and on Wall Street, but that's never been the case.Corporatism is Capitalism taken to it's logical conclusion. If you truly let markets run themselves, they will eventually start bleeding over into the government to further their own interests.
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