Democrat virtue signaling = bad energy policy and inflation

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
I care so much about saving fuel, I cut back to only one day of work a week. 27 mile round trip, 33 mpg on the Camry. About 50 on the Prius.

I do drive back and forth between the riverhouse and sandhill at least once a day. 1.5 miles front porch to front porch.
I have a Honda Fit. Rated at 28/35. I generally get 50 plus by not hurrying. Volvo Diesels pass me. A bonus of desert living.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
Still. It seems like this administrations solution is don’t drive so much or buy an EV which is charged by power plants using coal to keep up with demands. Doesn’t seem like much of a plan.
you got a better one?
get the supply train straightened out and try to stop the war in Ukraine...and that's what the administration is doing.
don't drive so much...there's no way to deal with putin at the moment, short of risking a full scale nuclear exchange...you think you don't like high gas prices? how about no gas for a couple of years, and world wide starvation level hunger, among the poor to begin with, but spreading rapidly to everyone. nuclear winter will fuck up food production for decades, prices will skyrocket, inflation now will be a fond memory then...
so deal with some inconvenience for a year or two. the rest of the world has been paying a lot more than us for gas for years, and their societies haven't crashed and burned.
and seriously, quit blaming the administration for shit it can do nothing about. Biden tried to warn people for months that putin wasn't to be trusted, and no one would listen...the economy not only recovered all the loses due to the pandemic, it is better than it was before, highest gdp in years, lowest unemployment in years, people have more money in the bank than they have in a long time, and the poverty rate is the lowest its been in over a decade...
but people still have to find fault...why? Biden didn't start the war in Ukraine. Biden didn't bitch slap the Iranians so they quit producing oil, keeping the prices artificially high so that oil stock holders in this country and russia both earned record profits while the average person ate it...
i don't understand what you want? superman to come kick the russian's asses and then supply us with limitless free energy?
putin's ass will get kicked soon enough, i think, and there's this big yellow thing in the sky that will provide more power than we could ever use, if the oil industry would quit influencing politicians to put it off.
 
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Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
I have a Honda Fit. Rated at 28/35. I generally get 50 plus by not hurrying. Volvo Diesels pass me. A bonus of desert living.
i have a 1998 gmc 1500, gets about 16 mpg...so i drive my girlfriends cruze which gets about 25 in town and about 40 on the highway...
of course i also have my piaggio, which gets about 150 if you drive it under 40...so i get about 100 mpg, going around 55-60
2021 150.jpg
but it sucks when it's cold or rainy :|
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Still. It seems like this administrations solution is don’t drive so much or buy an EV which is charged by power plants using coal to keep up with demands. Doesn’t seem like much of a plan.
Republican plan: Turn clocks back fifty years. (recycled the 2016 party platform for 2020, such a great plan it was, lulz)

Democratic Plan: Adapt to changes in circumstances.

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Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Lest we forget:


GOP operatives charged with funneling $25,000 from Russian citizen to Trump campaign in 2016


(CNN)The Justice Department on Monday charged two prominent Republican operatives who allegedly helped a Russian citizen illegally donate $25,000 to the Trump campaign in 2016.
Jesse Benton, 43, and Doug Wead, 75, were charged in a six-count indictment and made their first appearance in DC District Court. They're accused of conspiring to violate campaign finance laws, making an illegal foreign contribution and helping submit false records to the Federal Election Commission. Information about their defense attorneys wasn't immediately available.
Prosecutors said Benton and Wead funneled $25,000 from the unnamed Russian donor to the Trump Victory Committee, a joint fundraising venture between then-candidate Donald Trump's campaign and the Republican National Committee. The Russian then attended a September 2016 fundraiser in Philadelphia, where he met Trump and took photos with the future President.
 

cawolves

Well-Known Member
Congrats, we are at a 40 year high for gas prices. Skies the limit when your leader has severe dementia.
 

mooray

Well-Known Member
It's a good reality check and a reminder of people mixed with capitalism and what we have rights to. Basically, all we have a right to...is complaining.
 

mooray

Well-Known Member
Lol, okay boomer. Wake up and smell the coffee. Economy is in the toilet, inflation is super high and everything costs much more. "The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command."
Maybe look at the dow compared to when trump was in office.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Lol, okay boomer. Wake up and smell the coffee. Economy is in the toilet, inflation is super high and everything costs much more. "The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command."
lulz

Your OP has been soundly trashed and the false assumptions contained in it were clearly shown to be so.

And you forgot! lol

You remind me of the time when I volunteered to assist teachers for special needs school. While working with the kids, one of them got frustrated and called the teacher stupid. I had to hold back my laughter then.

For you I don't.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Lest we forget, this from 2018

The Corruption of the Republican Party
The GOP is best understood as an insurgency that carried the seeds of its own corruption from the start.


Why has the Republican Party become so thoroughly corrupt? The reason is historical—it goes back many decades—and, in a way, philosophical. The party is best understood as an insurgency that carried the seeds of its own corruption from the start.

I don’t mean the kind of corruption that regularly sends lowlifes like Rod Blagojevich, the Democratic former governor of Illinois, to prison. Those abuses are nonpartisan and always with us. So is vote theft of the kind we’ve just seen in North Carolina—after all, the alleged fraudster employed by the Republican candidate for Congress hired himself out to Democrats in 2010.

And I don’t just mean that the Republican Party is led by the boss of a kleptocratic family business who presides over a scandal-ridden administration, that many of his closest advisers are facing prison time, that Donald Trump himself might have to stay in office just to avoid prosecution, that he could be exposed by the special counsel and the incoming House majority as the most corrupt president in American history. Richard Nixon’s administration was also riddled with criminality—but in 1973, the Republican Party of Hugh Scott, the Senate minority leader, and John Rhodes, the House minority leader, was still a normal organization. It played by the rules.

The corruption I mean has less to do with individual perfidy than institutional depravity. It isn’t an occasional failure to uphold norms, but a consistent repudiation of them. It isn’t about dirty money so much as the pursuit and abuse of power—power as an end in itself, justifying almost any means. Political corruption usually trails financial scandals in its wake—the foam is scummy with self-dealing—but it’s far more dangerous than graft. There are legal remedies for Duncan Hunter, a representative from California, who will stand trial next year for using campaign funds to pay for family luxuries.* But there’s no obvious remedy for what the state legislatures of Wisconsin and Michigan, following the example of North Carolina in 2016, are now doing.

Republican majorities are rushing to pass laws that strip away the legitimate powers of newly elected Democratic governors while defeated or outgoing Republican incumbents are still around to sign the bills. Even if the courts overturn some of these power grabs, as they have in North Carolina, Republicans will remain securely entrenched in the legislative majority through their own hyper-gerrymandering—in Wisconsin last month, 54 percent of the total votes cast for major-party candidates gave Democrats just 36 of 99 assembly seats—so they will go on passing laws to thwart election results. Nothing can stop these abuses short of an electoral landslide. In Wisconsin, a purple state, that means close to 60 percent of the total vote.
 

Bagginski

Well-Known Member
Still. It seems like this administrations solution is don’t drive so much or buy an EV which is charged by power plants using coal to keep up with demands. Doesn’t seem like much of a plan.
…*maybe* things are not as they seem to you: I remember it used to be (more?) common to hear heaps of abuse directed at software designers, engineers, programmers, etc…from people who knew *nothing* about any of those things…that usually began with “I don’t know anything about programming…” - followed by “*BUT* IIII can’t see AANNYY reason WHYYY [insert pages of fantasy, ignorance and bullshit] haven’t been [poofed into existence already]“, and that followed by MORE scorn, contempt, and abuse because yaddayaddayadda (“I’m the customer so I’m ALWAYS RIGHT! You work FOR ME, so do like I tell you, dammit!…..”). Privileged, entitled, slave owners-in-wanting….

It wasn’t (isn’t) their fault for being ignorant, but their behavior, their stupidity, their sense of entitlement, refusal to learn, and utter lack of character *IS* their fault, so fuck’em. And that kinda describes where I am with hearing from propaganda-soaked cheese-brains who at least *pretend* to take Trump, Putin, Graham, Hawley, Jones, Rubio, Bannon - any of the treasonous thieves - seriously.

TL;DR = blow it out your ass

Perfect: the prophetic significance of random scenes from bad movies.

You should consider getting a real job, maybe cutting back on the weed. Turning off talk-radio would prolly help, too.
 
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cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
…*maybe* things are not as they seem to you: I remember it used to be (more?) common to hear heaps of abuse directed at software designers, engineers, programmers, etc…from people who knew *nothing* about any of those things…that usually began with “I don’t know anything about programming…” - followed by “*BUT* IIII can’t see AANNYY reason WHYYY [insert pages of fantasy, ignorance and bullshit] haven’t been [poofed into existence already]“, and that followed by MORE scorn, contempt, and abuse because yaddayaddayadda (“I’m the customer so I’m ALWAYS RIGHT! You work FOR ME, so do like I tell you, dammit!…..”). Privileged, entitled, slave owners-in-wanting….

It wasn’t (isn’t) their fault for being ignorant, but their behavior, their stupidity, their sense of entitlement, refusal to learn, and utter lack of character *IS* their fault, so fuck’em. And that kinda describes where I am with hearing from propaganda-soaked cheese-brains who at least *pretend* to take Trump, Putin, Graham, Hawley, Jones, Rubio, Bannon - any of the treasonous thieves - seriously.

TL;DR = blow it out your ass


Perfect: the prophetic significance of random scenes from bad movies.

You should consider getting a real job, maybe cutting back on the weed. Turning off talk-radio would prolly help, too.
Cruz, Boebert, Greene and whoever else hails from TX
Nothing personal @BudmanTX but your legislators are crap.
 
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