We’re going to redo the master bath at my house. I’ve told my wife that I wanna get a mirror that doubles as a computer touch screen so that we can check our calendar and email in the morning.
She laughed.
Who’s laughing now?
We’re going to redo the master bath at my house. I’ve told my wife that I wanna get a mirror that doubles as a computer touch screen so that we can check our calendar and email in the morning.
She laughed.
Who’s laughing now?
We’ve heard about it since we known about it. The idea that somehow, someway, the world is gonna run oughta oil.
And when we do, well, the end of the world as we know it will commence. The illustration to the right just shows a tip of the hysteria that folks are spreading.
End of oil? Beginning of anarchy.
And so they demand that we do something about it.
And we did.
China is reporting that the nation is experiencing localized brown outs. Cities are without electric power.
Why?
Because power plants don’t have coal to make electricity.
Why?
No one is mining coal. No money in it.
Why?
The Chinese government mandates coal below market rates.
Econ 101.
I don’t get the feeling that this will go over very well at all. For a long time, heck, since the first day of the explosion, the prevailing thought has been that the oil companies sacrificed safety for money. That it’s been greed that caused the oil spill and if not for said greed, we never would have had to live through this nightmare.
We may have to rethink this logic.
Can you imagine the Leftist environmental wack-a-doos hanging a golden frame embossed picture of John D. Rockefeller on the wall behind their Greenpeace CEO?
Right.
Rockefeller is their arch enemy. He’s the God Father of the American Oil Company. And there could be nothing more evil.
However, as The Coyote points out in his recent article in Forbes:
Between 1870 and 1900, John D. Rockefeller’s Standard Oil company came to dominate the oil refining business, at one point controlling 90% of US capacity. Long before the proliferation of the automobile created a market for gasoline, the main use for petroleum in the 19th century was to make kerosene, which was an illuminant for lamps. Due in large part to Standard Oil, over these decades the price of kerosene dropped from 30 cents to 6 cents a gallon, while production increased astronomically and the quality of the product steadily improved.
Through Rockefeller’s work, kerosene became both cheaper and safer to use than whale oil, and quickly began to replace it in the marketplace. By 1890 the American whaling fleet had already dropped from a peak of 735 ships to just 200, and was still falling, in large part due to low cost kerosene produced by Rockefeller’s Standard Oil.
In the last half of the 19th century, whales were facing extinction. They were hunted in large part because their oil was the best, most affordable illuminant available to growing western nations.
Through Rockefeller’s work, kerosene became both cheaper and safer to use than whale oil, and quickly began to replace it in the marketplace. By 1890 the American whaling fleet had already dropped from a peak of 735 ships to just 200, and was still falling, in large part due to low cost kerosene produced by Rockefeller’s Standard Oil.
How ironic is it that only because of, not inspite of, big oil can these Leftists heartily shout:
Save the whales!
Asses.
To be sure, the amount of oil spilled into the Gulf is immense. To say that the well leaked is a disservice; it veritably gushed. Gushed to the tune of 62,000 barrels a day slowing to 53,000 a day as the oil in the reservoir diminished the internal pressure.
That is a lot of oil. A whole HELL of a lot of oil.
And we covered it. Boy did we cover it.
Posted in Energy, Politics: National
Tagged BP, Environment, Gulf Oil Spill, New Orleans
I resonate with getting and keeping things safe; I do.
But I wonder if everyone does.
RALEIGH — About 85 people held hands on a footbridge over Lake Johnson on Saturday afternoon to lament the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and to urge the transition to cleaner forms of energy.
What does that even mean? This “transition to cleaner forms of energy.”
Who decides what “cleaner” means, and how do you measure it?
And then, who measures the damage done by transitioning OFF of oil? Who’s gonna be in charge of that?
The spill in the gulf is a catastrophe; it’s horrible.
But it doesn’t mean oil is over.