Yes, and I said that constant was indicative of a reduction, which was hotly debated.
A constant percentage rate of increase is not a reduction. Neither is it indicative of a reduction. It is an increase.
There was no hot debate about this, there was simply page after page of people trying to get such obvious truths through to you and of you steadfastly refusing to see the point.
So which is it? I'm just trying to nail down the goal posts.
An increase is an increase. A reduction is not an increase. An increase is not a reduction. A reduction is a reduction.
That's my position. Yours is apparently different
This is an outright lie. I have never made such claims and maintained for some 15 pages something is being done and continues to be done as indicated by the constant rate of increase.
You still fail to comprehend that
what is being done is not equivalent to
what you have advocated.
I don't understand why this falsehood is being perpetuated in face of obvious statements like the one above. It's completely and utterly absurd.
I refer you to your post 3199
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=7418225#post7418225
"Don't forget this is a relatively new area of science. There's so much more to learn it would be foolish and irresponsible to to make any judgement calls now."
And therefore
nothing should be done now or soon, if ever.
That's just the easiest example to find.
And there would be no industry.
There would be an industry. The
first use of natural gas from the North Sea in the UK was in replacing town gas in the existing gas system. The industry existed
before gas-burning generators were built - in fact they were only built
because the infrastructure was already there.
Once again you sound off on something you're totally ignorant about.
It was the cheapest and cleanest source at the time and it was used. So what?
It led to an inefficient use of a now-depleted resource simply in search of short-term (in a modern capitalism sense) profit boost for the by-then-privatised energy industry. If a strategic view had been taken, meaning one that looks beyond this year's bonuses and dividends, the total benefit of that resource would have been greater.
So that, which is what I've been saying. If anyone but you is finding my presentation confusing I'd appreciate them telling me, but it seems clear to me.
And (to misquote Mae West) cleanliness had nothing to do with it.
There go the goal posts again. Please maintain a position for more than 1 post.
In modern capitalism, medium-term is one to two years. In a rational sense medium-term is 20-40 years.
Not when it's a fact and not fantasy.
Your argument for it being a fact is predicated on it being a fact. That is indeed begging the question.
Fantasy would be saying they aren't related because you envision a time when that's possible.
They are vaguely related now, but it's not a simple relationship.
Incorrect. There's no recession if the economy remains strong. It was weakened by the rising price of fuel and the US savings and loan fiasco.
Fuel prices were not rising in the 80's. The 80's fuel crisis was oil dipping below $8 a barrel at which point US oil extraction became uneconomic (it was heart-breaking to see all those nodding donkeys getting put down). I did work for BP and Shell during the 80's and there were many long faces and empty desks. Entire floors were moth-balled. People only got a spring back in their step when Chernobyl went "pop".
The S&L scam was a minor issue, part-and-parcel of property-price inflation, and on top of that was the junk-bond frenzy. The global economy was strong in 1980 but the New Dawn of Thatcher/Reaganism broke it over the next decade. There's no economy strong enough that sustained idiocy can't ruin it. Look at it now, kow-towing to (of all places) China.
It hasn't in the 100 years since, and that's with the technological benefits it brought with it. It's a safe assumption nothing would have if nothing has since.
With the internal combustion engine and cheap oil there was no
need to develop alternatives. Without them there would have been. Electric (and steam) cars were invented in the same period as petrol-driven cars but they weren't developed because they couldn't compete. Take that competition out of the equation and they would have been.
In a primitive sense sure. The wheel, the horse, the ship, the car and the plane all facilitated the growth of larger and finally world economies.
Your point being?
This economy will seem primitive in the future.
No, they are how they should be and are changing. I suggest you look at the proposals in the pipeline for continued reduction in the dependence of fossil fuels. You're only kidding yourself if you think there's nothing going on right now.
Which of these proposals would you advocate for? And when do you think they should be implemented - now, or when the time is right?
You should also note that proposals, whether or not they're in a pipeline yet, are not actions. I'm well aware that there are things going on now, many of them the result of the "billions wasted" on "carbon projects" you brought up a while back.
Indeed, historically Loser is defined as foolishly trying to restrict and inflate the price of energy at the cost of destabilizing the economy, see also Game of fools
So you wouldn't advocate any proposal that increased the cost of energy, since you're convinced that would destabilise the global (I assume, not just Canada's) economy. Peak Oil must keep you awake at night.
Historically, the price of energy has destabilised economies and brought down societies because of depletion, and those societies have hurtled over the cliff despite warnings. Many messengers have been shot in the process.