Stuff that doesn't really fit in either "Examples of" thread....

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
It doesn't matter what the majority wants, it's what the republican extremists and Trump wants, they wield the death threats and primary votes.
I think we may be catching a break. Gym ain’t getting the gavel.

The overthrow caucus has had disproportionate power in the House so far. But I think that Pedobear just knocked over his king. I expect the hard-right faction to hit some bad road, especially if a handful of the R congresspeople make common cause with the Democrats and get Jeffries into the slot.

If that happens, the freedom caucus clown&showgirl performances will no longer be able to derail a lot of legislation that has so far been blocked out of pure partisan spite.

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printer

Well-Known Member
This is the first step, refineries that build the raw materials for other industries to make into stuff. This allows for the near-shoring of things the Chinese make for us.

 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
This is the first step, refineries that build the raw materials for other industries to make into stuff. This allows for the near-shoring of things the Chinese make for us.

It doesn't look good for tar sands oil or the price of specific components like gasoline and diesel which solar and batteries will impact the most over the next decade or two, or the fuel sector in general. NG fueled gas turbines will provide backup and intermittent power to recharge battery banks, but I expect gasoline demand to dry up first as light vehicles convert to EV with improvements to battery technology. Intermediate geothermal can do the same job too and should last if only used intermittently, like say in the winter. It would be more capital intensive than using NG, especially if NG prices are low and expected to remain that way and demand for backup power is low or diminishing over time.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Makes you wonder how there is not a law that could prevent that from happening? That is wrong on so many levels for those parents. Didn't realize RFK jr. was that scummy.
I'm sure RFK is so entrenched he can rationalize anything, he should STFU about things he knows nothing about and that has been actively disproven by good science repeatedly, apparently facts are not enough for him. He will never admit or take responsibility for the harm he has caused by believing and spreading utter bullshit. His family and siblings are appalled at his behavior and covid put a sharp point on it.

His presidential run is causing concern among republicans and cutting into their support far more than Biden's, if Trump is disqualified it might cut into it even more.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
It doesn't look good for tar sands oil or the price of specific components like gasoline and diesel which solar and batteries will impact the most over the next decade or two, or the fuel sector in general. NG fueled gas turbines will provide backup and intermittent power to recharge battery banks, but I expect gasoline demand to dry up first as light vehicles convert to EV with improvements to battery technology. Intermediate geothermal can do the same job too and should last if only used intermittently, like say in the winter. It would be more capital intensive than using NG, especially if NG prices are low and expected to remain that way and demand for backup power is low or diminishing over time.
Except for the fact the Gulf refineries still need it as they are not configured to take only shale oil as it is too light. Oh wait, might as well get it from Venezuela given it is such a beacon of democracy..
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Except for the fact the Gulf refineries still need it as they are not configured to take only shale oil as it is too light. Oh wait, might as well get it from Venezuela given it is such a beacon of democracy..
Them getting Alberta tar sands oil could be an issue with democrats blocking pipelines and with so much shale available one would think they would start reconfiguring they are feed by tanker car from Canada and there is more gas and diesel in shale oil.

Venezuela is a particular case, the government has support from the rural native population (that leans socialist, all tribal people do) who don't notice any privation in the cities. In the cities people see themselves as more European in race and culture and this rural urban divide exists across much of the region. Of course, the current government is a disaster, and millions are fleeing the country and ending up on the US southern border, in the native rural parts of the country life goes on has it has for thousands of years.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Them getting Alberta tar sands oil could be an issue with democrats blocking pipelines and with so much shale available one would think they would start reconfiguring they are feed by tanker car from Canada and there is more gas and diesel in shale oil.

Venezuela is a particular case, the government has support from the rural native population (that leans socialist, all tribal people do) who don't notice any privation in the cities. In the cities people see themselves as more European in race and culture and this rural urban divide exists across much of the region. Of course, the current government is a disaster, and millions are fleeing the country and ending up on the US southern border, in the native rural parts of the country life goes on has it has for thousands of years.
It is not a case of just flipping a few valves.

Each kind of crude yields a different array of refined products. Light crude oil is primarily used to create fuels such as gasoline, diesel and aviation fuels. Heavy crude oil provides feedstock for plastics, petrochemicals, other fuels and road surfacing. Heavy oil can also be refined into transportation fuels. Since the cost of crude oil is a refinery’s largest input cost, processing cheaper heavy crude into higher-value refined products usually improves a refinery’s profit margins.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
It is not a case of just flipping a few valves.

Each kind of crude yields a different array of refined products. Light crude oil is primarily used to create fuels such as gasoline, diesel and aviation fuels. Heavy crude oil provides feedstock for plastics, petrochemicals, other fuels and road surfacing. Heavy oil can also be refined into transportation fuels. Since the cost of crude oil is a refinery’s largest input cost, processing cheaper heavy crude into higher-value refined products usually improves a refinery’s profit margins.
They are getting tar sands oil at a considerable discount and transport costs must be high with tanker cars. We will need oil for quite some time to come, but more of it will be made into petrochemicals than are used for fuel, except for jet aircraft and military uses. I think tar sands and offshore production will be the first to go, the more expensive it is to produce the faster it won't be used.

A lot depends on the American elections and future government policy, if the democrats win a hattrick and Joe is elected the green energy revolution is likely to accelerate in North America. We await the batteries to make it happen and all indicators are we won't have to wait long because a deluge of production is about to happen with a variety of types, the factories are being built now all-over North America and globally. Not just for EVs either, but for grid and home storage markets and should exceed projections, just like solar.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
You mean she is actually being useful? It is a longer article but this is the gist of it.

Democrats eye rare procedural move to defeat Tuberville military holds
Senate Democrats are working with Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-Ariz.) and a handful of Republicans on a rarely used procedural tactic to defeat Sen. Tommy Tuberville’s (R-Ala.) blockade of more than 360 military promotions, a stalemate that has consumed the Senate for months.

Democrats are looking at using a standing order resolution to move a block of more than 300 nonpolitical military nominees who have been stalled for months because of Tuberville’s holds to protest the Department of Defense’s (DOD) abortion policies.

The resolution would allow the Senate to move military promotions in a group through the end of 2024, providing exceptions for officers nominated to a position on the Joint Chiefs of Staff or to lead a Combatant Command.

Sources familiar with internal deliberations said the standing order resolution would likely get introduced next week unless Tuberville drops his holds.

It will first move through the Senate Rules Committee.

“It’s not a rules change, it’s a standing order resolution because no one wants to fool around with the rules,” explained a Democratic senator who requested anonymity to discuss the sensitive topic.

The senator emphasized the resolution would be “limited to military nominations.”

Sinema came up with the idea and started working with colleagues in both parties on it in early September.

It would need strong bipartisan support and at least 60 votes to overcome an expected filibuster. Democrats now control 51 seats and Republicans control 49.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
The last line is a concern.
Bankers sound alarm on more inflation, new financial crisis at Hong Kong summit
As more than 300 banking and investment executives gathered in Hong Kong to discuss “living with complexity” in the financial world, they ended up trading trepidations about an uncertain future.
“My biggest fear is there’s one more geopolitical escalation and there’s a market event,” Christian Sewing, chief executive officer of Deutsche Bank, said Tuesday at the Global Financial Leaders’ Investment Summit in Hong Kong.

The event was one of the first gatherings of financial executives since the start of the Israel-Hamas war last month, and executives weren’t shy about sharing concerns of renewed inflation or another crisis.
Markets are “under-discounting” how long high interest rates will last in the U.S. and Europe in the fight to bring inflation back down, Bridgewater Associates Co-Chief Investment Officer Bob Prince said.

Citadel founder Ken Griffin warned world leaders are already risking renewed inflation as deglobalization sentiment takes hold.
Griffin said investors have “got to be watching and investing here in China,” calling deglobalization a “giant wild card.”
Peace and globalization have largely benefited economies, and “we don’t know what a world looks like that involves deglobalization,” Griffin added.
Unknowns include “how much that increases inflation systemically.”

Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon also called attention to the ballooning national debt in the United States.
“We absolutely have to worry about what’s happening with deficits in the U.S.,” Solomon said.
Ultimately, however, unforeseen forces often cause the biggest disruptions, said Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman, noting “nobody in this room predicted COVID.”

The event, hosted by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority for the second year in a row, is part of the city’s efforts to move beyond years of protests, pandemic lockdowns and shrinking international investment.
“Hong Kong is back in business,” Hong Kong Chief Executive John Lee said Tuesday, adding, “the world today is more complex and challenging than ever.”

The rise of shadow banking, the practice of money managers and other nonbanks lending money to companies and consumers, is “a real cause of concern,” UBS Group Chairman Colm Kelleher said.

Roughly half of global financial assets are now in “the shadow sector,” Kelleher estimated. “The next crisis, when it happens, will be in that sector. It’ll be a fiduciary crisis.”
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
The last line is a concern.
Bankers sound alarm on more inflation, new financial crisis at Hong Kong summit
As more than 300 banking and investment executives gathered in Hong Kong to discuss “living with complexity” in the financial world, they ended up trading trepidations about an uncertain future.
“My biggest fear is there’s one more geopolitical escalation and there’s a market event,” Christian Sewing, chief executive officer of Deutsche Bank, said Tuesday at the Global Financial Leaders’ Investment Summit in Hong Kong.

The event was one of the first gatherings of financial executives since the start of the Israel-Hamas war last month, and executives weren’t shy about sharing concerns of renewed inflation or another crisis.
Markets are “under-discounting” how long high interest rates will last in the U.S. and Europe in the fight to bring inflation back down, Bridgewater Associates Co-Chief Investment Officer Bob Prince said.

Citadel founder Ken Griffin warned world leaders are already risking renewed inflation as deglobalization sentiment takes hold.
Griffin said investors have “got to be watching and investing here in China,” calling deglobalization a “giant wild card.”
Peace and globalization have largely benefited economies, and “we don’t know what a world looks like that involves deglobalization,” Griffin added.
Unknowns include “how much that increases inflation systemically.”

Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon also called attention to the ballooning national debt in the United States.
“We absolutely have to worry about what’s happening with deficits in the U.S.,” Solomon said.
Ultimately, however, unforeseen forces often cause the biggest disruptions, said Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman, noting “nobody in this room predicted COVID.”

The event, hosted by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority for the second year in a row, is part of the city’s efforts to move beyond years of protests, pandemic lockdowns and shrinking international investment.
“Hong Kong is back in business,” Hong Kong Chief Executive John Lee said Tuesday, adding, “the world today is more complex and challenging than ever.”

The rise of shadow banking, the practice of money managers and other nonbanks lending money to companies and consumers, is “a real cause of concern,” UBS Group Chairman Colm Kelleher said.

Roughly half of global financial assets are now in “the shadow sector,” Kelleher estimated. “The next crisis, when it happens, will be in that sector. It’ll be a fiduciary crisis.”
Why we don't want the Tories deregulating banks or Pepe to put the country on crypto. The financial system in China is dire because of authoritarian mismanagement and with the loss of Hong Kong independence the banking sector there too has been corrupted. As for the shadow sector most of it is run from the UK, the city of London and its special status under the law with many overseas tax haven partners and even some local ones like the Channel Islands.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Sinn Fein.
Religion in alignment with their stated prosocial goals is ok, they are not using the movement to promote religion, but to motivate the movement, like black churches do. Moms for liberty who are actually fascist book burners are not, as are Christian dominionists and many southern Baptist fascists.
 
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