![]() |
SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
|
![]() |
#1 |
Soaring
|
![]()
BP has a natural egoist interest to number the ammount of oil freed into the environment as low as possible. the compensation they will need to pay depends on it. For the same reason they used those toxic chemicals to "dissolve" the oil on the surface although the toxicv agents most likely do as much damage to the eco-system if not more. Also interesting is that an agent was used that is beign produced by a BP daughter, while another agent said to be less dangerous and cheaper, was ignored until the authorities intervened. the oil flowing under water and on the bottom of the ocean, being moved by deep sea currents, is muczh, much more. the use of the chemicals is a comsetic trick, again with one eye on the compensation payments they will need to make.
Oil business is possibly the most corrupted business in the american economy, beside weapoins and defence. The state's control auhtorities for security can be expected - and are described as by insiders - to be as corrupted by big money as well. I thought that maybe this disaster would be big enough in scale now to make America rethink it's oil obsession. But it seems the pain from this one still is not bad enough. Maybe it needs the whole Atlantic coast being covered with black grease indeed. But something tells me that even that would not be enough to make people change their minds - at least as long as they do not have to eat it. But they will eat it anyhow, invisibly. But as the saying goes: "out of sight, out of mind".
__________________
If you feel nuts, consult an expert. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#2 | |||||||
Silent Hunter
![]() Join Date: May 2008
Location: Storming the beaches!
Posts: 4,254
Downloads: 0
Uploads: 0
|
![]() Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
![]() I think you equate money with corruption, Sky. It's not an unreasonable perspective, but it is incorrect. There are a lot of industries, interest groups, lobbies, and people who are a lot more corrupt than the oil business. You are quick to blame commerce and induistry for the ills of society. Why? I don't ask these questions to insult or belittle you, Sky, I just want to understand what model of society you would like to see. Quote:
![]() ![]() ![]() Highly unlikely, my friend. We're a huge economy. The largest of any single nation on the planet. That economy is made of over 300 million people, over half of which need to get somewhere on a daily basis. No amount of wisdom or environmental consciousness is going to change that. It all boils down to the agenda of the individual, not that of society. If the oil runs out, it will be the market that dictates the change to an alternative fuel source. Not you. Not me. Not anyone. There is no political entity on the planet that can effectively govern the wills of the multitudes. The only thing that politicians can govern is popular sentiment, and even then they only manage to do it in election years. The market is the ultimate judge of all things. Nothing can stand in the way of the Adam Smith's "invisible hand". Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
But unlike you, we have more than a complaint to offer. We have the resources and the capital to actually do something because we earned them through our own efforts. ' America's prosperity is ours. We ship freight, so we need people who ship freight and respect us enough to ship their freight with us. We ship one ton of freight over 400 miles and use only a gallon of gas in the process, and we're a monopoly. Does anybody care? No, because they're too busy bitching about whatever lawyers tell them to bitch about because they're too short-sighted to understand that they've been co-opted by the legal and political industries, which they somehow do not recognize as industries. Sorry for the rant, Sky. I tend to get carried away. Actually, as long as I've got you here, what would you say to another chess match? I've been practicing ![]()
__________________
![]() I stole this sig from Task Force ![]() |
|||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#3 | |||||||||||
Soaring
|
![]() Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
In Brussel, the relation between industry lobbyists and EU members of parliament is said by insiders to be around 50 lobbyists per 1 member of parliament. The relation between industry lobbyists and consumer protection lobbyists is said to be 200:1. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
You do not leanr swimming when jumping into the water the first time - then you would drown. You better learn it before you jump into the deep water. I stop here, because I think discussions between us are pretty much useless. The world continues to run by either your model and will mess up even more, for the same reasons that you propagate, or it will try new ways, and maybe finds a small chance, however unlikely that is, or messes up anyway. I prefer a small chance over no chance. but never forget on thing - it is the thinling of that economy model you propagate, that has broiught us to where we are: a dysfunctional, corrupted gopobal economy with corrutoped elites and impotent politics that are not independant from the economy lobbies that have taken them hostage. Quote:
![]() ![]()
__________________
If you feel nuts, consult an expert. |
|||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#4 |
Fleet Admiral
![]() |
![]() You say sexual perversions like it was a bad thing. I resemble that remark!
__________________
abusus non tollit usum - A right should NOT be withheld from people on the basis that some tend to abuse that right. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#5 | |||||||||||||||
Silent Hunter
![]() Join Date: May 2008
Location: Storming the beaches!
Posts: 4,254
Downloads: 0
Uploads: 0
|
![]() Quote:
Quote:
(B) You cannot prove that egoism does mostly bad things within the context of private industry. An economy worth $17 trillion that provides comfortable liveleyhoods for over one-hundered million people says you're wrong. Quote:
Quote:
I've been trying to tell you this for what, two years now? Quote:
C'mon Sky, I may not be as smart as you, but I'm not retarded. I'm just as aware of how dangerous centralized authority is as you are. And yet, you seem to hold on to some misguided belief that the state can "set things right". Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
What you have is a list of grievances for which you are willing to blame other people and a vague notion that everyone else should do everything "better' because you wish it. You might as well build a car with a wind-powered engine. Quote:
I have complete confidence in the ability of private industry and consumers to create and sustain a sustainable fuel economy. That's all they've ever done, so why would anyone expect anything different? Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
![]()
__________________
![]() I stole this sig from Task Force ![]() |
|||||||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#6 | |||||||||||||||||
Soaring
|
![]() Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
You criticice the "state" a lot. but you are completely ignorrant to the massive role of your beloved "egoism" and your unregulated market economy in turning the state into what it is today: an entity so much interwoven with the economy that it can no longer act independantly from it. Often it is that where the economy and the banks are moving, politicians must follow. rules and trails get marked along the way - not by leadership of an independant policy, but the desires of economy. This dependance has done a lot of damage to our communities. Quote:
Quote:
Our conflict also is about materialism versus non-materialistic ethics, of course. Quote:
I also remind of the Halliburton and big oil controversy over Iraq, and the pipeline projects that mujst be seen in connection with Afghanistan (although in case of the latter it was not the only reason, obviously). Quote:
Quote:
Maybe we need a world dicatorship by computers, like in that old movie, "Colossus". I also remind of that long essay of mine some months ago, where I summarised how we do destroy ourselves even for absolutely reasonable reasons. http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=159065 tbc Quote:
Quote:
Becasue the problem is that when their is more resources thn are needed, nobody thinks of saving and storiung reserves, and to maintain the current population size nevertheless, but everybody immediately thinks of expansion. Sooner or later expansion leads to more population than the former sufficient ressource level could supply. And without need, the culture that before lived in wealth, now lives in poverty and pain. Many such cultures died by - starvation. This is the most important lesson we need to learn: that we must find ways to reduce and than to caop global population levels, and that we need to cap consummation of natural resources as well, at a level where we do not take more than nature can resupplky, or than we give back. Currently, we take all that we can get, leaving a desert behind us. We are about to extinct ourselves, and I do not mean that just metaphorically. Quote:
there will be oil for another 150-300 yars, estimations say. But that does noit mean it will be affordable over all that time anymore. It won't. and by general trend, the price will not rise by speculations only, but because it'S availability on the market drops indeed. Quote:
No matter what kind of ore you dig for - it si limited in quantity, and digginf for it leaves traces, that sometimes, and more and more often, feeds back on man. May it be from intoxication of drinling water or falling of the natural ground water level with the accoridng effects for angruclture and natural habitats, may it be from social distortions caused by working conditions (from blood diamonds and precious ores needed by Western high tech industry fueling tyrannies and civil wars in Africa), may it be from financial debts increasing due to the costs for producing these materials. Everything isn loinked with everything else, nothing is for free, and every qaction of cours causes reactions and consequences - sometimes within our perception range, sometimes outside (and then tending to do even more damage becase since we are not aware of it, we do not adress it). Quote:
Quote:
[quote] What? The world doesn't use anything even remotely close to my model. The concepts of free trade and limited government are alien to any major state in the world. Quote:
I am on the leave now, for one, two or three days, not sure about, I visit friends, and my train is leaving in two hours, so chess will need to wait, and i think our discussion has come to the to-be-expected fruitless end anyway, so do not wonder that I am away for the time being. Time also is the reason why I do not run a correction reading (sometimes i do thta with longer pieces ![]()
__________________
If you feel nuts, consult an expert. Last edited by Skybird; 05-28-10 at 04:58 AM. |
|||||||||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
|