ttn333
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Tuan
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2019
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- 17
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- 1,051
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- Orange County, CA
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See this line of popular argument quite often and it really doesn't make sense. You are just conflating the reduction of polution and zero polution. They are not the same thing. End result is you are reducing polution with renewables. Its a poor argument to say, 'well, since you can't get 100% reduction so it's not worth it'. When in fact the technology is just going to get better, ie more efficient and lower cost. And we have seen what coal mine pollution is like for rivers and air quality.How big is that battery under the seat? I wonder if they will opt for a bed mounted battery at the cost of bed space instead considering the heavier weight and more power needed in the Gladiator compared to the JL.
Yeah but one really cannot claim that much 'renewable' energy because to be truthful a person really needs to look at the big picture. In other words, where did those 'renewables' come from? Such as wind turbines. What materials are needed in their manufacturer, transport, install, maintenance - it all matters. Where is the electricity from that powers the computers for the engineers to do their designing? What about office spaces, commenting employees, etc... Looking at something at the end point is really a bad idea because depending on variables, a person can make any pile of poo look like a diamond with enough processes down the line. Saying California's energy is not from greenhouse gasses is flat out wrong if you look into the details deep enough. What if, just saying if because I dont know, the energy needed to create said 'renewable' energy devices was significantly worse than the amount of energy it would ever create in its lifetime... Case in point, the Berkley pit in Butte. It's bad, real bad. But if someone way down stream in Noxon did a water sample they might say something like "well now all that billions of dollars worth of water treatment is doing great, theres next to no sign of contamination here", but you see the fallacy in that, and would you want to be drinking that water despite the 'numbers' being just fine? I doubt it. There are also equal problems caused by all these 'renewable' sources that are simply out of sight out of mind. Kinda like diamond mines in Russia, oh and this super large one in Canada. At the end of the day, the only true method to reduce consumption and pollution is to just have/use/do less. Because 250 years from now someone might say something like, "man, I wish those idiots in 2020 realized that 500 billion wind turbines would screw up the worlds wind patterns and now our weather is all sorts of jacked...."
I mean sure, maybe Ca has it right, but without perspective on a larger scale (which nobody truly has a handle on) you don't know what you don't know, and all that 'renewable' energy could be far far worse than the alternative.
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