alphieb said:
Coal sources are not as abundant as they used to be, but I guess we still have a lot. It is very difficult and expensive to create gas with it, however we have the ability to farm.
No, I don’t want to gas the coal, silly! We already use coal for electricity, the infrastructure is almost good enough going right to every house, just clean up the coal better and improve the electrical grid like Bush proposed in his energy policy almost immediately after taking office. New cars gas electric hybrids or whatever hydrogen electric hybrids; it doesn‘t matter to me. Electric motors and batteries are getting better all the time. If we had done the good parts of Bush’s energy policy, like fixing the damn electrical grid, we would not have as much of a problem now, but no, they would rather hold up the whole thing on one damn point about drilling oil on the damn ice. Electric can be a long term solution with the ability to upgrade the source of energy using solar, wind, and nuclear power (scream, but it is better than burning food).
Burning food is only a short term solution unless you can genetically engineer a super kudzu fuel source; drop the seed and run. Just kidding!
It would be easier to put solar panels on your roof to supplement power to the electric car than to put a damn hanging garden up there!
People are starving in Africa right this minute and farmland is disappearing in this country just as you want to in essence burn it. My father used to run a still, and he ran a vehicle off coconuts during WWII, and my father got the town leaders drunk down in my grandfathers barn, and the only thing that is new about this story of renewable energy resources is that the farmland is not there because the commute to grandma’s house got easier. My father wouldn’t let me convert my mini-bike to burn our corn when I was a little kid, and the moral reason and the amount of energy you can derive from corn has not changed much since then. If cattle farming isn’t the most inefficient use of biomass for feeding the world, I guarantee that burning food isn’t the best way to run a damn car!
Jesus Christ liberals please tell me you aren’t going to burn some poor kid’s food just to have cheap gas?
Deegan said:
We need to invest in more public transportation, learn to carpool, and just stop driving so much, then supply and demand would obviously lower the price at the pumps.
Then when the price gets lower they would drive more raising the price again.
That only tells me that rationing, instead of the economic penalties, is what we need. Give everyone that works and drives a noncommercial vehicle a specific number of monthly fuel stamps, allocating them based upon the Average Fuel Efficiency, distance to and from work, shopping, and other necessary travel per household, with a small amount for recreation. This is just an off the top of the head suggestion. Listen to them hoot and holler now!