I didn't see this make the news anywhere in the US, or maybe I missed it.
We can't have bad news about wind power generation floating around in the media can we? If a similar situation presented itself during drilling or fracking we all know it would be covered and smothered on every "news" channel.
http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-northern-ireland-30667411
At least no one got hurt.
Tags:
@ craig
I 'm sure you don't mean me.
@ Ragnar Repo
So you do care after all.
Well you have me there.
Though I did question my usage, I failed to look up the definition for myself.
Nice to see that someone else is interested in accuracy.
While inexcusable, it was never my intention to mislead; I just failed to exercise due diligence.
I'm retired, but I spent most of my life working for corps, not owning or managing. For the most part, except for a couple of short-lived ventures, my financial interest was a paycheck. I do, however, support responsible industry in a moral sense.
Can I assume that your question is not one of neighborly curiosity?
What do you do for a living?
Please allow comments to your response. It's becoming difficult to keep the replies straight.
@ Ragnars Repo
I appreciate the civil tone, but I fear we have ventured far afield of this thread.
I will point out, though, that windmills use wind; they don't create it.
@ Thomas Lilli
I share your libertarian (with a lower-case L) POV, but I don’t think we can afford to be idealistic in the days of mega-corps. It’s just not realistic to imagine that an individual or even private group could offer significant deterrence to this sort of behavior. If that were so, considering all the efforts currently taking place through protest, civil disobedience, media exposure, etc., combined with govt. programs such as EPA and the Superfund, the US would be spotless.
This is not to deny the laziness, ignorance, and corruption inevitable in any powerful, not-for-profit group. Absent the imperative for quality or quantity, justifying and preserving ones job becomes the priority. I don’t subscribe to the ‘absolute power corrupts absolutely’ theory; I believe that power attracts the corruptible. I think that the ‘power corrupts’ theory is a salve for the voter when his candidate’s real motives become public.
The founders created what was then a robust system of checks and balances, but that has since been shot full by corp. cronyism. To think that a set of 2+ century old doctrines is sufficient in the present day is what I consider to be naïve.
Members of any organization (e.g. GMS) are subject to the rules made by the governing body, however it is selected. It is therefore inevitable that an individual will be required, at some point, to forego total freedom of choice. This is done either because the man has deemed the rewards of cooperating to be worth the loss of that freedom, or, as in our case, he is born into it.
It failed because vibrations from an earthquake weakened it's structure. The earthquake was caused by fracking.
Chuckle
In reality there are problems associated with all forms of energy creation. We have to weigh the cost verses the return (amount of energy produced). Right now the returns far outweigh the costs in the production of fossil fuel. The costs aren't worth messing with alternatives such as wind right now.
I don't think we should allow wind w/i 2 miles of any school.
Wow!
I know that O&G is powerful, but I didn't realize that they could control the wind!
The wind turbines are doomed!
But seriously, I don't think we should allow our children within 2 miles of any school.
My comment was a joke that you missed.
© 2024 Created by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher). Powered by
h2 | h2 | h2 |
---|---|---|
AboutWhat makes this site so great? Well, I think it's the fact that, quite frankly, we all have a lot at stake in this thing they call shale. But beyond that, this site is made up of individuals who have worked hard for that little yard we call home. Or, that farm on which blood, sweat and tears have fallen. [ Read More ] |
Links |
Copyright © 2017 GoMarcellusShale.com