www.csmonitor.commatthewk wrote:I wish I could get real news and not have to always have work so hard so determine the truth.
www.news.bbc.co.uk
English is the mother tongue of both, too.

Take care,
PK
Moderators: Bill_Abner, ScoopBrady
www.csmonitor.commatthewk wrote:I wish I could get real news and not have to always have work so hard so determine the truth.
The BBC link isn't workingpk500 wrote:www.csmonitor.commatthewk wrote:I wish I could get real news and not have to always have work so hard so determine the truth.
www.news.bbc.co.uk
English is the mother tongue of both, too.
Take care,
PK
Rob,RobVarak wrote:Jack,
I'm no fan of Limbaugh and listen only rarely, but to be fair he has absolutely crushed President Bush on a number of issues.
That's a great book Doug. I really enjoyed it. Shocking stuff.dougb wrote:Rob,RobVarak wrote:Jack,
I'm no fan of Limbaugh and listen only rarely, but to be fair he has absolutely crushed President Bush on a number of issues.
Have you picked up Nixonland? I'm about one quarter the way through it and it's a terrific book. I've just been getting through the parts on the rioting in the cities leading up to the 1968 Democratic Convention.![]()
Best wishes,
Doug
Thanks for the heads up about this book. I will surely check it out.dougb wrote:Rob,RobVarak wrote:Jack,
I'm no fan of Limbaugh and listen only rarely, but to be fair he has absolutely crushed President Bush on a number of issues.
Have you picked up Nixonland? I'm about one quarter the way through it and it's a terrific book. I've just been getting through the parts on the rioting in the cities leading up to the 1968 Democratic Convention.![]()
Best wishes,
Doug
Just shows how helpless the general public are after we put someone in the White House. I am also amazed and pissed off at how little the Democratic majority has been able to accomplish. Find me one politician in Washington that cares about any of "us".Slumberland wrote:For a historically unpopular president he is good at getting everything he wants.
Just the announcement should bring the price of oil down a bit. If they actually begin to dril, then prices will fall a little further, or at least stabilize.JackB1 wrote:In his speech, Bush is saying that "the American public need relief from high gas prices", but how is this supposed to help? We won't see one drop of oil for 5-10 years from these sites and it will only provide a few years worth of oil.
How is this risking the environment? If you're that worried about the environment you should be living in a cave (but you can't burn wood) with a deer hide for clothing.JackB1 wrote:Is all the cost involved really worth risking our environment and delaying the inevitable (finding alternative fuel sources)? Why aren't we looking into the record profits that the oil companies and making, while the rest of us go broke? I really don't see this as "the answer" that Bush is making it out to be. Experts are saying that we won't see any substantial price drops from beginning offshore drilling.
I also was amused how Bush never used the word "drilling". He calls it "exploration"It's also ironic that his Dad signed the bill in 1990 banning offshore drilling. Only in America would we think that the best way to solve a problem is to do more of the same thing that caused it in the first place.
In this case I don't feel helpless. He's finally doing something I WANT to be done.JackB1 wrote:Just shows how helpless the general public are after we put someone in the White House.
maybe the announcement will cause a temporary minor decrease, but nothing that will have any significance. Even if we see some oil from these drilling sites in 3 years, what do we do until then? How about some more immediate relief?matthewk wrote:
Just the announcement should bring the price of oil down a bit. If they actually begin to dril, then prices will fall a little further, or at least stabilize.
The 5-10 years before we see any oil from this is a lie from what I hear. The oil companies have said it's moe like 2-3 years.
If you consider 100 years to be a few. I have to find the link, but I've heard that we have access to more domestic oil than is in Saudi Arabia.
Oil spills cause MAJOR environmental damage and were the reason this activity was banned in the first place. Drilling itself doesn't affect searching for alternate fuels, but it shifts the focus from where it should be. It's just a short term "band-aid" and not a long term solution. And nobody seems to know the real reason behind our high fuels costs. Demand hasn't increased in the past 6 months, but price certainly has.matthewk wrote:JackB1 wrote:
How is this risking the environment? If you're that worried about the environment you should be living in a cave (but you can't burn wood) with a deer hide for clothing.
Why does drilling have to delay finding alternatives fuels? The oil companies will do what they do, and that is drill for oil. They are not the ones who should be responsible for making wind, nuclear, or battery power any more useful to us. Why can't we do both until we have found a realistic replacement for oil?
The record profits thing has been discussed recently, aqnd I'm not going to go there again.
It's exploration because they don't know exatly where to drill yet. Once they find out where they need to be it goes from exploration to drilling.
The problem is high fuel costs. Drilling for oil didn't cause our current problem, NOT drilling for it did. How is that doing more of the same to solve the problem?I think you are twisting "climate change" in with this whole thing without actually mentioning it.
Great point Matt,it shouldn't. I am all for alternatives,but that ain't going to happen overnight.matthewk wrote:
Why does drilling have to delay finding alternatives fuels? The oil companies will do what they do, and that is drill for oil. They are not the ones who should be responsible for making wind, nuclear, or battery power any more useful to us. Why can't we do both until we have found a realistic replacement for oil?
The booming economies in China and India are sucking massive amounts of oil, which causes the price to rise. Federal gasoline taxes cause the price to rise. The way to lower that price is to increase supply and cut the taxes.JackB1 wrote:maybe the announcement will cause a temporary minor decrease, but nothing that will have any significance. Even if we see some oil from these drilling sites in 3 years, what do we do until then? How about some more immediate relief?matthewk wrote:
Just the announcement should bring the price of oil down a bit. If they actually begin to dril, then prices will fall a little further, or at least stabilize.
The 5-10 years before we see any oil from this is a lie from what I hear. The oil companies have said it's moe like 2-3 years.
If you consider 100 years to be a few. I have to find the link, but I've heard that we have access to more domestic oil than is in Saudi Arabia.
In April of this year, she sent a letter to President Bush.Pelosi urged President Bush to stop suspend deliveries to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. She also has called on Bush and congressional Republicans to work with Democrats to pass legislation to crack down on gasoline price gouging, hold OPEC accountable for price fixing and end tax breaks for oil companies and invest the savings in renewable energy.With skyrocketing gas prices, it is clear that the American people can no longer afford the Republican Rubber Stamp Congress and its failure to stand up to Republican big oil and gas company cronies. Americans this week are paying $2.91 a gallon on average for regular gasoline – 33 cents higher than last month, and double the price than when President Bush first came to office.
“With record gas prices, record CEO pay packages, and record oil company profits, Speaker Hastert and the Majority Congress continue to give the American people empty rhetoric rather than join Democrats who are working to lower gas prices now.
“Democrats have a commonsense plan to help bring down skyrocketing gas prices by cracking down on price gouging, rolling back the billions of dollars in taxpayer subsidies, tax breaks and royalty relief given to big oil and gas companies, and increasing production of alternative fuels.”