Phatscotty wrote: PLAYER57832 wrote:Night Strike wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:You start with the assumption that keeping oil prices low is the president's job -- both something he should do and something he can do on his own. I say all those assumptions are wrong.
So why were there so many protests against Bush in the summer of 2008 with the insanely high gas prices then......the same amount that we're currently paying today?
Because people don't LIKE high gas prices and think the president should just magically fix them? Doesn't mean they are correct.
That's how you've missed my point from the start. One does not have to expect the president to magically fix gas prices in order to determine the president hasn't made any positive impacts on gas prices. Then, there might also be the opinion the current president has had a negative impact on gas prices; pipeline refusal, shutting down all gulf wells when the problem is 1 well, promising to bankrupt coal companies, helping the hinges fly off all over the Middle East, completely wasting 10's of billions of dollars on green companies that have also went bust, not to mention the 5 million jobs that were supposed to come with the "energy investment" which is also documented in the video above.
All of that is a "problem" ONLY if you are willing to pretend that there is no future. If you acknowledge that we humans might want to continue our existence into the future, then the current path is what's wrong.
Phatscotty wrote:If we had the 5 million jobs from the green economy, I think we could all agree Obama's policies helped the economy and green dividends would be paying off. It's a shame that in the reality there are no 5 million jobs and energy are around record highs today with no dividends, that we can't all agree his policies did not come close to working and hurt the economy, or at least was neutral (did nothing + interest)
To GET those green jobs means breaking the oil stronghold. You want the jobs first, that will only happen when the oil is actually gone.. unfortunately, by that time, much of the damage to the green economy --- OUR economy, because we all depend, ultimately, on growing things, breathing clean air and drinking clean water. will be irreparable.
Talking about money and profit as if it were primary and the environment as if it were secondary requires ignoring the world around and impacts. Sadly, that seems pretty common.