Jeff7
Lifer
- Jan 4, 2001
- 41,596
- 20
- 81
I'd sooner see them get ethanol out of gasoline.
Or the other pointless crap the EPA was formed for - the little things, like keeping toxic materials out of air and drinking water. Plenty of companies will go with whatever is more profitable, without any care as to the consequences. Workers are getting injured on machines? Oh well, we can get more workers. Local people getting sick because we're dumping our toxic sludge into the nearby stream? I don't know any of them, so I don't need to care.
Down with those darn expensive regulations and their drain on the economy.
Moderation in all things - something we're not good at.
(Yes, the unions are certainly a good example of that.)
:thumbsup:I am going to go with foreign competition caused the steel crash a lot more then the EPA issues.
Unless you want the companies to offer pennies a day in wages and use child labor it's hard to compete as labor strikes in the 50's - 60's caused a lot to do with it's downfall more then the epa as they were on the down slide before the epa was formed.
These strikes let in a lot of foreign competition that the industry was never able to recover from.
Not to mention a lot of the cheaper raw resources were gone by the 60's and it caused increased prices.
Or the other pointless crap the EPA was formed for - the little things, like keeping toxic materials out of air and drinking water. Plenty of companies will go with whatever is more profitable, without any care as to the consequences. Workers are getting injured on machines? Oh well, we can get more workers. Local people getting sick because we're dumping our toxic sludge into the nearby stream? I don't know any of them, so I don't need to care.
Down with those darn expensive regulations and their drain on the economy.
It may continue to make gasoline unpalatable as a fuel source, continuing the push toward......something. The downside of course is, that "something" is not quite known yet. Electric cars? Ok, who's going to pay for the upgrades to our antiquated power grid? (Which is something else entirely. Investing on infrastructure? Naaaah. Just enjoy fat profits until the system starts to fall apart, then leave the company. Problem solved.)Like Unions the EPA started with noble intentions, and fought the good fight.
Now they've won their battles and look to press on, past their mandate and towards destructive ends. Everything is good in moderation, but these radicals don't know when to stop pushing for more.
This is turning out to be a modern war on energy.
Moderation in all things - something we're not good at.
(Yes, the unions are certainly a good example of that.)
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