Anytime a politician pulls his/her head out of their *** and decides that drilling for oil is a bad idea is a win for the world.
The future is NOT in oil. The country that figures that **** out first will be the next super power. Unfortunately, it won't be the fat lazy Americans.
Anytime a politician pulls his/her head out of their *** and decides that drilling for oil is a bad idea is a win for the world.
The future is NOT in oil. The country that figures that **** out first will be the next super power. Unfortunately, it won't be the fat lazy Americans.
Anytime a politician pulls his/her head out of their *** and decides that drilling for oil is a bad idea is a win for the world.
The future is NOT in oil. The country that figures that **** out first will be the next super power. Unfortunately, it won't be the fat lazy Americans.
I have no doubt that oil is not the future but in the mean time you advocate suspending all oil exploration? The US should rely strictly on other countries to meet our energy needs until a new energy source is discovered and refined for use?
I'm a beleiver in the power of the free market to qucikly make alternative energy more accessible and affordable, and alternative lifestyles less dependent on petroleum manageable, when there is sufficient financial incentive. I suppose a person with little faith in the free market would see this as a problem.
The problem with your free market solutions in this case is that the oil and car companies(in bed with each other) go out and buy every possible alternative source of energy patent and store it away because oil is obviously right now their cash cow. Why introduce new forms of energy into the fray when you know you can make a killing off of oil. Do we really believe they are incapable of making a car that can't get 60 MPG or more? Of course they can, they just don't want to.
The oil industry has said the Deepwater Horizon rig catastrophe was a unique event, the result of an unprecedented series of missteps that are unlikely to be repeated. The recent history of offshore drilling suggests otherwise.
In the months before and after the rig exploded and sank, killing 11 and spilling millions of barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, the industry was hit with several serious spills and alarming near-misses, some of them strikingly similar to what happened aboard the Deepwater Horizon.
A blowout off the coast of Australia left oil flowing into the Timor Sea for weeks. An out-of-control well in the Gulf of Mexico dislodged a 4,000-pound piece of equipment on the deck of the Lorris Bouzigard drilling rig as workers scurried to safety. A gas leak in the North Sea aboard a production platform came within a rogue spark of a Deepwater Horizon-scale disaster off the coast of Norway.
Data from regulators around the world suggest that after years of improvement, the offshore-drilling industry's safety record declined over the past two years....