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  • Plentiful Coal - Not Peak Oil - Is Greatest Global Warming Threat [View article]
    Hey Jeff St. John,

    I sure was happy to read all the comments. How about you? I bet you enjoyed reading them. We are tired with all the distortions.

    Your entire article was an incorrect negative attack, based on out and out lies. Unfortunately, there are too many people like you, with no positive answers, just negativism. Like you're trying to make our country fail. I'd suggest you give up writing, take up another profession. Maybe coal miner or something like that.
    Dec 19 22:29 pm |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • Where Will Oil Go from Here? Goldman Says $45, Iran Says $100 [View article]
    Dear Ishortyou,

    I hate to tell you, if we couldn't use oil/diesel for transportation and had to wait for "new age green technologies" you'd starve or freeze to death in the process.

    famos, for the last word.
    Dec 15 09:50 am |Rating: 0 -1 |Link to Comment
  • World Oil Supplies Declining Faster Than Expected - IEA [View article]
    Hi Paul,

    Don't shoot yourself just yet, there's still coal (I mean light) at the end of the tunnel.

    It sure makes me happy to read all these positive comments. I agree.
    It's reassuring to see people thinking about "over population," food shortages that can be addressed by making fertilizers made from nat. gas, all good approaches to the problem. And the greatest solution of all, using the U.S. largest coal reserves in the world to make very clean and very competitive diesel fuel. Of course, CTL (diesel) will take a very hard adjustment and conversion for our country to make, i.e. driving to our corner gas station and using the diesel pump in lieu of the gasoline pump.

    famos
    Oct 29 13:32 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • From Subprime to Meltdown: Is Peak Oil Responsible?  [View article]
    Dear CLH,

    I like and agree with most of your comments, i.e.. "Debt and not Peak Oil was responsible for the Meltdown". But, ....

    I wish/hope you'd be a little more optimistic about young people (The Me First Generation). I agree with you that the people that were around in the 30's (meaning they grew up in the 40's & 50's) were not prone to over-borrow and were more inclined to save then the current middle aged and young people but I believe they are going to learn, albeit the hard way. I've always said, "Practicability always win's out in the end." Examples of what need's to be learned, as follows"

    Loving parent's taking the time and responsibility for their children and teaching them discipline and respect before they enter school.

    Parents living within their means, not being sheep and taking on unpayable debt, e.g. the ostentatious house (and not a home), the big, gas guzzling, needless pickups (toys) & van's, the regular expensive restaurant eat-outs because they don't know how to cook a meal.

    High Schools where every kid (is over-weight) requires a car and school parking lot's (and budget cost's) are as big as shopping mall's.

    Business where banks push credit cards onto kid's and any unqualified borrower (who have yet to learn responsibility) and CEO's who have no shame from stealing obscene so called compensation.

    I'm sorry CLH, it appears that I'm even less optimistic than you. Our "values" really need to change.

    Sorry,

    Famos
    Oct 20 11:10 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • From Subprime to Meltdown: Is Peak Oil Responsible?  [View article]
    I enjoyed reading all the previous comments and pretty much agree with most of what's been said, but.....

    How come no one talks about "over population" anymore? It was an issue in the sixties. Are there less people today?

    Or "values"? Like paying our debts, living within our means, saving, etc.

    When existing light crude oil gets too expensive to make gasoline to burn, we will be forced to use the only resource that we have, that can satisfy the transportation gap. Coal (made in the USA to diesel (made in the USA).

    Famos



    Oct 19 11:16 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
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