Capt Worley PE
Run silent, run deep
Picked up a copy of this book, $20 Per Gallon: How the Inevitable Rise in the Price of Gasoline Will Change Our Lives for the Better, http://www.amazon.com/20-Gallon-Inevitable-Gasoline-Change/dp/B005HKMWXQ/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1321364044&sr=8-1 the other day.
There were some interesting tidbits of info there, and great examples of misusing statistics and not telling the entire truth to further your agenda. But look at the chapter titles in the above link, reflecting what will happen as gas prices rise. It sounds like a leftist agenda.
A few things I took away were, how incredibly expensive the leftist agenda really is. Also, the author seems to miss the point, or completely ignore it, that as oil prices rise, it becomes financially viable to extract and refine the more difficult to obtain reserves. The oil sands in Canada were a non-starter when gas was less that two bucks a gallon. He also seems to assume natural gas prices are directly related to oil prices.
I did notice that UPS was lauded for trying alternative fuels/propulsion just in case, but Walamrt 'didn't know which way to turn' when it was looking at alternatives to SuperCenters.
Now, I say this is a leftist leaning book, but it does hit the left's talking points. I don't believe either side is really serious about energy independence. Both sides just chat up their typical talking points while allowing the big oil corps (and, make no mistake, Uncle Sugar) rake in the dough.
Interesting book, though. There are plenty of things in there to make you go hmmm....
There were some interesting tidbits of info there, and great examples of misusing statistics and not telling the entire truth to further your agenda. But look at the chapter titles in the above link, reflecting what will happen as gas prices rise. It sounds like a leftist agenda.
A few things I took away were, how incredibly expensive the leftist agenda really is. Also, the author seems to miss the point, or completely ignore it, that as oil prices rise, it becomes financially viable to extract and refine the more difficult to obtain reserves. The oil sands in Canada were a non-starter when gas was less that two bucks a gallon. He also seems to assume natural gas prices are directly related to oil prices.
I did notice that UPS was lauded for trying alternative fuels/propulsion just in case, but Walamrt 'didn't know which way to turn' when it was looking at alternatives to SuperCenters.
Now, I say this is a leftist leaning book, but it does hit the left's talking points. I don't believe either side is really serious about energy independence. Both sides just chat up their typical talking points while allowing the big oil corps (and, make no mistake, Uncle Sugar) rake in the dough.
Interesting book, though. There are plenty of things in there to make you go hmmm....