JungleMan1
Golden Member
- Nov 3, 2002
- 1,321
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You can't lump all conservatives into one category, and you can't assume that everyone who disagrees with unfair energy policies is a conservative. I refer to myself as a libertarian-conservative, for what it's worth, and I disagree with many conservatives on many issues (though I disagree with liberals on many more)
As for evolution, I am Christian (by my own accord, certainly not because of my family) but I am not hardcore on either the creation nor evolution side of it. As far as evolution or any science goes, as any science teacher will tell you, science is constantly changing (what we believed to be irrefutably true 100 years ago is false today) and thus evolution, along with ANY scientific theory, should be taught as something we currently understand based on current scientific data. NOT as a factual explanation for how and why the world was created. Mandatory indoctrination of kids with a lack of religion is just as bad as indoctrinating them with religion. Kids need to learn about religion (not just Christianity) AND science but should not be told by teachers that either one is irrefutable fact.
President Bush can make all the noise he wants, but it's ultimately up to private industry and the scientific community to do something about it. In the 1890s there was a lot of noise about how oil would run out in 10 years, which obviously never happened. I feel that the private industry is making enough progress in this field that in 20 years the internal combustion engine will be obsolete. There is no need for the government to spend more taxpayer money on what is essentially private industry, nor is there a need to worry about a source that we are already well on our way to finding a replacement for. So yep, I say, keep on burning and drilling (in Alaska) for oil with minimal government intervention, because progress is being made on finding a replacement in the meantime. (You can already purchase E85 cars, trucks, and fuel)
Just my two cents
As for evolution, I am Christian (by my own accord, certainly not because of my family) but I am not hardcore on either the creation nor evolution side of it. As far as evolution or any science goes, as any science teacher will tell you, science is constantly changing (what we believed to be irrefutably true 100 years ago is false today) and thus evolution, along with ANY scientific theory, should be taught as something we currently understand based on current scientific data. NOT as a factual explanation for how and why the world was created. Mandatory indoctrination of kids with a lack of religion is just as bad as indoctrinating them with religion. Kids need to learn about religion (not just Christianity) AND science but should not be told by teachers that either one is irrefutable fact.
President Bush can make all the noise he wants, but it's ultimately up to private industry and the scientific community to do something about it. In the 1890s there was a lot of noise about how oil would run out in 10 years, which obviously never happened. I feel that the private industry is making enough progress in this field that in 20 years the internal combustion engine will be obsolete. There is no need for the government to spend more taxpayer money on what is essentially private industry, nor is there a need to worry about a source that we are already well on our way to finding a replacement for. So yep, I say, keep on burning and drilling (in Alaska) for oil with minimal government intervention, because progress is being made on finding a replacement in the meantime. (You can already purchase E85 cars, trucks, and fuel)
Just my two cents
