They flipped back and forth prior to the 2000 election.I would just like to say that I still suffer from the crippling handicap where I keep thinking red is for Democrats, and blue for Republicans. I don't know why I learned it that way, but it always makes looking at the result maps very difficult.
--Patrick
Probably, because up here in Soviet Canuckistan, and in not-as-Great Britain, red is for the Liberals, blue is for the Conservatives.I would just like to say that I still suffer from the crippling handicap where I keep thinking red is for Democrats, and blue for Republicans. I don't know why I learned it that way, but it always makes looking at the result maps very difficult.
--Patrick
Would you rather continue to buy oil from states that murder homosexuals for the crime of... being homosexual? Among other charming habits I hardly imagine I have to elaborate on. The Keystone pipeline benefits both of our countries, and rightly spits at OPEC in the process. Besides, at the moment, much of the oil we ship comes through pipelines in Canada, then gets on a rail system, crosses the border, and is put into another pipeline: an expensive (and more dangerous) method than just leaving it in one contiguous pipeline.Keystone pipeline is a bad, bad idea that benefits nobody in the US. It should not be allowed. Obamacare is not only working, but popular if called the ACA. It's just that stupid people say, "I like that ACA but Obamacare is bankrupting the country!"
No, it goes to the refineries you guys have on the Gulf. Then you sell it domestically as that, or ship it off if that's more profitable. In "interesting" times, you'll be glad to have that nice safe NATO source. You guys already get more oil from Canada than anywhere else outside your country (your domestic production is also considerable). And everything that Chad said too.The pipeline was NEVER going to bring oil to the US. It was always slated for China and other points. We'd get no benefit other than about 30 jobs and an environmental nightmare.
This is patently untrue.The pipeline was NEVER going to bring oil to the US. It was always slated for China and other points.
I might've remembered that, but I couldn't find my chart.Ross Perot was green, incidentally.
[citation needed]Pretty much. When Democrats had control of both executive and legislative, they didn't get a damn thing done because unlike Republicans, Democrats can't agree on anything.
Wait, I thought that was all politicians.Not enough votes to override a veto or stop a filibuster. The GOP is just fapping to the sound of it's own voice again.
Thanks to talk radio, cable news, and the internet, the GOP tends to make more of the mess.Wait, I thought that was all politicians.
So... this guy is usually pretty well-referenced. What say people?
I don't know anything about him. I would point out, though, that the way the bill was written, the bennies are doled out years before the bill comes due.So... this guy is usually pretty well-referenced. What say people?
Most liberals dislike it because it doesn't do what they wanted it to do- allow for a national program people could join run by the national government. This was opposed by health insurance companies because they feared (rightly) people would want the healthcare the government would offer at a much cheaper rate since it would have numbers to support it. President Obama made it sound like that was what he wanted to do during his campaign, but it turned out he never really wanted that as a program and quickly lost footing negotiating with Republicans because he started at a position of weakness by stating what he actually wanted with the program right off the bat. Thus, the watered down legislation we got.Some of my most liberal friends in healthcare are against the bill. Since I want to go into medicine, I can only hope since I wasn't there before the ACA, I have nothing to compare it to. I hope. That being said, the US healthcare system has been screwed up for a long ass time. Something had to be done.
Risk vs Reward, man. Risk vs Reward.That pipeline is sorely needed. Without it we are over relying on trains and trucks to transport oil which is innefficient, bad for the environment, and, if that wasn't enough, really dangerous.
I'm really not sure if Poe's Law is in effect here.That pipeline is sorely needed. Without it we are over relying on trains and trucks to transport oil which is innefficient, bad for the environment, and, if that wasn't enough, really dangerous.
Basically this. A train spill can usually be cleaned up, but a burst pipe generally ruins an area beyond repair and the company involved will usually get a slap on the wrist for it. So the actual results of doing the pipeline are...
Umm... no. There are valves every so often (every mile? Half mile? If somebody knows, please say) that shut the flow as soon as a leak (or catastrophic failure, a "burst" as you say) is detected. Sure the volume between two valves will spill out, but that's it. Unlike with a trian, where it's not like 1 car goes off the rails.A train spill can usually be cleaned up, but a burst pipe generally ruins an area beyond repair and the company involved will usually get a slap on the wrist for it.
Did you not read that article Krisken posted? Even if they COULD successfully clean up the mess, would you want to live on the site of a former oil spill and risk cancer and god knows what? Would you even want to live close to it? That town is completely fucked.Umm... no. There are valves every so often (every mile? Half mile? If somebody knows, please say) that shut the flow as soon as a leak (or catastrophic failure, a "burst" as you say) is detected. Sure the volume between two valves will spill out, but that's it. Unlike with a trian, where it's not like 1 car goes off the rails.
And where do you get that the entire area is ruined beyond repair? This sounds like a lot of hyperbole and FUD.
It's a shit ton when it's in your backyard. Of course, if it isn't going through your yard, of course you won't care or can easily brush it off.Didn't we just go through this? 3.1 million gallons does indeed sound like a lot but it's not, and the way they account for it most of those "spills" don't contaminate anything.
I made a whole post about it in some oil sands thread or something months ago.
"...before you sound foolish" indeed.