SpheresOfBalance wrote:Then why make the point that customers won't pay, as neither will the suppliers. ...
Because its the customers you've got to convince, at least it is if you want change as according to you the owners are monsters who won't, unless that is they can make a profit.
OK then, with this stalemate, which are the more responsible ones, for cleaning up their method of production? Which are the more capable to do so? And that is what I'm talking about. It's about what's right. I see that once CEO's and other such people of, way over inflated paychecks, are reduced to a more fair level, then, and only then, shall it be that the people should join in. In the US, I forgot what the stats were exactly, but the amount of profit the Oil companies made was unbelievably through the roof. In today's environment, there is no call for this, disparity. I see these people as vampires sucking the last bit of life from a dying carcass, as I've seen no real signs of their investing it into newer technologies.
I think you live in a moralising dream world.
How are you going to reduce these pay-checks?
How are you going to reduce the profits made when they are based upon what people will pay for Oil? Especially since China and India will buy the lot if possible.
They are investing in newer technologies, they're just not the ones you'd like I guess. So solar, shale gas and they'll be looking to hydrates in the near future. Over here nuclear is an obvious choice.
OK, So do you see yourself as a mindless hunk of facts running around? I don't think so, but anything so as to argue, huh? 
Nope, as I don't understand being well-educated as just knowing a hunk of facts. Its more knowing some, how to find others and putting them together for a coherent purpose.
We've talked about this before, remember? And I was the one that brought up most of that. I bet I used less energy than you did these last few years. My thermostat has been set at 60° F for the last 3 years, through winters that have reached as low as -10° F WCF.
Bully for you. What I asked you was what are you doing politically to change things?
If this is true, then why the argument filled with apathy: 'why do anything at all, we're all going to die anyway?' Do you just argue for it's sake?
That's just how you hear it. My argument is, what can we do that will make an actual change and wailing about vampires and 'them' isn't it as its about the industrial revolution, technology and energy consumption, things that barring actual catastrophe won't be going away anytime soon. Its about trying to think clearly about very complex issues.
Trust me when I say that if I can ever afford it, I'm buying the most efficient solar panels for my home. To run my home and charge my electric car.
Its things like this, as whilst this might benefit you - and I'm not knocking that -solar panels are environmentally energy and resource intensive to make and sustain and we can't all have them, not enough silver for a start, and electric cars are just a joke as the batteries are again environmentally energy and resource intensive to make and sustain, not enough rare minerals for all. You want to be off grid and save oil? Get an old diesel car, find your local fast-food joint and buy their used frying oil and run your car on that. At least it'll be making a more efficient use of the oil. You might even be able to rig a motor up to an electric dynamo and produce power that way. Much cheaper than petrol and paying the power company I suspect.
You can speak of none of this, as if it's universally true, you have merely seen instance, and projected, as if all circumstance is equal. This is a falsehood, your generalization. And you do speak with animosity, before you know that it's required, which is a problem. 'With knowledge, comes great responsibility' and this can be a problem for some.
With knowledge might come a great responsibility to act but it depends what that 'knowledge' is. As many evils have been visited through messianic good intentions.
You've still not answered about what you are actually doing politically to address the issues you raise? Thats what I meant about those with great ideals.
I did not speak with animosity, I just spoke the truth that Americans pay less for oil than any other 'western' nation as a proportion of their incomes and consume more of it.
Wrong, my generation did not request this construct, they were unfortunately born into it, those greedy initiators created it and through nepotism and buddy sucking, it still remains in their friends/families hands. And any particular generation of these rich could make things right, as they have the power to do so, whereas the little people, are told they need things through the media's demographic advertizing, brainwashing, even subliminal suggestion. You do know that psychologists are employed by advertizing firms, right? No, make no mistake, the people at the top (rich) are responsible, as they are usually more educated, yet they, lie cheat, and steal to ensure their empire never crumbles. Obviously you see yourself as one of them, to plead their case, so adamantly. Conflict of interest? Case in point! But unless you own something much bigger than, lets say, this magazine, you are actually one of the little people, relatively speaking of course. But I guess you have hopes of owning a much bigger empire, owning more people, huh?
We have a cultural difference as you confuse America with the rest of the world. Your experience is of the power and resource companies as always being privately owned whereas mine is of them being nationalised companies. As such I have the experience of a different situation where the customer and public could have influenced the direction of technology and still think it may well be possible once again as whilst, sadly, our last conservative govt was influenced by yours and sold it all off to crush the unions and make a tidy individual profit to boot, ironically enough this was one of the sources of the 'boom' in finance, its becoming clearer to many that this was a mistake and is actually costing us more in the pocket than it used to.