Yeah I take it back... the Clintoons sold some of it to the Chinese for campaign contributions.
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Yeah I take it back... the Clintoons sold some of it to the Chinese for campaign contributions.
Small change really compared to the early 80's when over 2 billion dollars was wasted on building a supercollider in Texas. The project was eventually abandoned at a cost of over 2.2 billion dollars. All you got for the money was a large circular hole in the ground.
Tut
And yet another one is on the skids .
Amonix, Inc. a manufacturer of solar panels that received $5.9 million from the bucket list , will cut two-thirds of its workforce, about 200 employees, only seven months after opening a factory in Nevada.
If we were going to "Invest" in green energy the payout should only be in the form of a prize for demonstrated success. We could model it after Ansari X Prize which awarded a private firm $10 million if they are the 1st to successfully launch a reusable manned space craft twice in one week. The Tier One project won it with SpaceShipOne.
In other words ;show us some results before the government invests . What a concept ! Government spending that rewards results .
Hello again, tom:
Hmmmm... I LIKE the concept... I even suggested it in relation to the Bush tax cuts... You guys kept saying raising taxes on the job creators ISN'T a good idea... So, I suggested that we give them a tax credit AFTER they created a few jobs...
All I heard was silence...
excon
I only offered that up as an alternative to subsidizing business. However ,I'd prefer none.
The only tax idea I'm in favor of is flat or tiered rates with many fewer deductions ,credits etc.
Reagan flattened the tax rates ,and in his 3rd year of his Presidency ,during a recovery period ,the growth was at 6% +.
Now you know the President talks out of both sides of his mouth about energy . He and his cronies have done everything they can to impede the tremendous growth of the natural gas industrty .Yet in the SOTU address ,he brazenly took credit for the success of the industry.
It's too bad he doesn't take a more active role in reducing the impediments to business like calling off the EPA dogs .He is on the wrong course .
It's bad for the country. Forcing the cost of traditional energy sources up through government manipulations will not create that market for alternatives he desires.
Hello again, tom:
I don't know... Of course, YOU personally wouldn't throw your trash into the air, as you've said here many times... But, it looks like you'd be OK if industry did it. Somehow, I knew that.
Don't you think smoke stack scrubbers are a GOOD thing?
excon
I have read through all this and I am just amazed at how our government can't seem to get it right. Nor can others that have already posted. The edison lightbulb was a failure. It lost out to the one created by Tesla. Another thing is that when bringing in new technology there has to be standards. And with the standards can come government intervention in the form of investment. Later after things are already going then there may be changes. Look at it this way. If we didn't have roads then there wouldn't be any cars. Roads set the standards for the sizes of loads that could be carried and the routes that could be taken when traveling.
Electric cars are no different. There needs to be a standard set for the infrastructure for the industry to advance. When building or rebuilding roads there are ways to make it more friendly to the electric car. One such possibility would be solar powered magnets placed beneath the roadway. Another would be simaler to the technology currently being used for charging batteries without a hardwire connection. Electric motors operate in a nuetral zone. When power and comsumption are equal then you can begin to charge the battery. By the very virtue of driving down the highway you could have a car running at a steady speed charging the battery as it goes thereby increasing the range beyond where it is today to possibly infinite. It can be done. Its just a matter of directing things in such a way as to funnel the technology to a given outcome.
Dad this is a false premise, cars were a natural extension of the development of engines, and once we had engines we developed a means whereby they could be used to haul loads and propel the vehicles we had already invented. Roads had already existed for eons, even if they were only tracks and wheel ruts.
Another false premise, the vehicle needs to conform to the available inferstructure, not the other way around. We already have magnetic levitation but it is too expensive to use for personal transport. We can use existing technology to charge batteries, a small motor is sufficient to charge a battery and extend the range of an electric vehicle since most journeys are not long distance. It doesn't need elaborate inferstructure. What needs to change is our thinking, at the moment we have an idea that our vehicle must be all purpose, whereas we could have have electric vehicles for our everyday short trips and hire more suitable vehicles for the occasional long trips. Many people own vehicles that might be used for their designed purpose only once a yearQuote:
Electric cars are no different. There needs to be a standard set for the infrastructure for the industry to advance. When building or rebuilding roads there are ways to make it more friendly to the electric car. One such possibility would be solar powered magnets placed beneath the roadway. Another would be simaler to the technology currently being used for charging batteries without a hardwire connection. Electric motors operate in a nuetral zone. When power and comsumption are equal then you can begin to charge the battery. By the very virtue of driving down the highway you could have a car running at a steady speed charging the battery as it goes thereby increasing the range beyond where it is today to possibly infinite. It can be done. Its just a matter of directing things in such a way as to funnel the technology to a given outcome.
Just to throw in my two cents - I'm NOT "one of the guys" who elected him.
Tesla ,Edison... did either of them get government funding during their research phase ? I don't believe so.
That's what I thought too ,although I believe Tesla was largely financed by those dreaded investment bankers.
My point was that the discovery was not based on some government theorician's image of what energy of the future would be . The government did not begin the infrastructure work until it was a proven.
At the moment we are only looking at one side of the equation. Science and technology for a profit doesn't represent the total of human knowledge. It hasn't and I certainly hope it doesn't in the future.
Governments of all persuasions make 'knowledge investments' that don't have tangible outcomes other than just knowing.
The Hubble Space Telescope is an example of government investment that private industry would not have any any reason to pursue. There are no economic benefits in knowing the universe is so may billion miles across.
The Reagan administration (to their credit) was prepared to spend up to 4 billion dollars to build a supercollider just so scientists could smash atoms together hoping to find out why particles have mass. No real economic, social or military advantage there. There was of course a political advantage and this is probably why the project fell down in the end. Over 2 billion dollars wasted and not one atom smashed. No doubt there were a lot of Democrats 'up in arms' over the whole thing.
Sure millions of dollars have been lost in green technologies. But we need to keep in mind this is what governments of all persuasions have done. It doesn't make it right, but it is what they do.
Tut
Governments give incentives for research, If you don't like this vote for someoneelse. I know all this green research is ridiculous at the moment, pursuing a pipe dream, but this is what politicians do. If we knew the answers we wouldn't need to do research. Perhaps the investment will lead somewhere
Tut, I think we've all agreed that funding of research - responsibly spent I would add, not squandered on shrimp on a treadmill - is reasonable.
The government betting my taxpayer dollars on risky "investments" to force an agenda, benefit cronies and determine winners and losers in the market is another story altogether.
Hi speech,
What is regarded as responsible and irresponsible is hard to determine. It can also depend on your political perspective.
Reagan pushing hard for a scientific project was an example of forcing an agenda.
Deciding to transfer the project to Texas? Well, you can look at the history to determine who was to benefit.
Winners and losers in the Market place? We don't live in a perfect freemarket economy. Government intervention in some form will always determine winners and losers to some extent. Trying to influence the marketplace to go green doesn't represent the marketplace in total.
The supercollider was a pipe-dream. By that I mean it is possible to build one and in fact it was eventually built in Europe. It was a pipe-dream because it was never going to be built by just one country at the time.
Billions of taxpayer dollars were invested in a project that had political strings attached and therefore was doomed from the start.
I don't really see that this is another story altogether.
Tut
Texas has the space.
Perhaps there should be an international effort to tilt at windmills . Spain's efforts are failures ;T Boone polluting the Texas landscape with windmills is a no go.
Finding the elusive Higgs boson particle (if there is such a thing) is closer to reality than Obama's perpetual motion machine.
It also had the right political connections at the time.
I don't know much about Spain.Tell me what's happening in Spain.
Both are turning out very expensive for no result. If you had a choice which one to terminate your decision would be largely political. Would it not?
All I am saying is that both parties do exactly the same thing when they are in power. It seems to be universal in politics.
Tut
I will not be put in the position to defend the Repubics when they do the indefensible.
BTW ;the political connection back then was Texas Democrat Speaker of the House Jim Wright. The Democrats also controlled both houses of Congress throughout Reagan's terms .
The whole project was mired in mismanagement and cost over-runs. In that regard it is very similar to the Obama green initiative. The Project on Government Oversight concluded that it would continue to be mired in mismanagement and ever increasing costs.
The US had to make a choice about where it's research money went. We opted to fund the ISS . I think it was the right move.
I am not disagreeing with you for the sake of disagreement.
Reagan was a driving force behind the idea and I think he was on the right track. I think it was a good idea then and I still think it is a good idea. I also think it was unfortunate the way it ended. It was also unfortunate that it turned out to be a very expensive lesson.
George Bush snr was the incoming president so there was some speculation at the time it was a political decision to relocate.But I am happy to go along with what you are saying.
Yes, apparently the cost blew out to something incredible like 12-14 billion dollars.
It was the Clinton administration that eventually put the project out of its misery. No choice really. Yes, the ISS was the right move.
Tut
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