Belz...
Fiend God
And no perpetual motion machines have ever been built either.
I'd say our respective rhetorical devices cancel each other precisely.
I'm flabbergasted at how you're so optimistic that science will find a way to solve the problems that fusion poses which are several orders of magnitude more difficult than molten salt thorium reactors?
I think they'll solve both, if you care to know. The reason why I'm optimistic is that the people who are damned experts on the matter, not laymen, are optimistic. I tend to trust people who know what they're talking about.
And yet my car uses the same sealed lead acid battery they were using a hundred years ago.
What does that have to do with anything? They also use wheels, a technology thousands of years old!
Fusion seems to have the same problem it has always had. Containing and controlling 150 million degrees of heat. There's not a material on Earth that can do that.
Haven't I already answered this one? The way to achieve fusion coincidently means that your million-degree plasma never gets even near the material.
In contrast, the physics of bombarding thorium until it transforms into protactinium and U233 which will fissile is ENTIRELY known.
I'm really baffled by any argument that treats two solutions or problems as mutually-exclusive when they're not. How about we do both? And don't tell me that we put more money in one than on the other: how about we do both?
I've read lots of article which say fusion is around the corner. I've been reading them my entire life.
Well, maybe avoid sensationalist articles.
I want to die knowing we have saved the planet from CO2.
Sorry to break it to you, kid: we won't.