I'm pretty sure coal is a lot cleaner burning than it used to be. And they use natural gas on days with inversions when the EPA says no to coal. Would you really want your tuition to go up enough to avoid the coal?
I'm not suggesting we burn down the smoke stack. We could save money for the school by keeping our buildings a little cooler. That could even lower tuition.
And this is why I blog, because I can't think of these things on the spot. But the main problem with coal isn't how clean it burns, but how it is dug out of the ground. Often they level mountains to get the stuff, and that has long-lasting consequences.
One old black man defeats the KKK with kindness and humor. They burned down his church, burned a cross in his yard, and mercilessly taunted him. He always responded in kindness, and turned their hearts to him. We should use this as a blueprint to respond to those who hate us.
Paul makes fun of the Nobel, chastises Reps and Dems from not criticizing their own parties, and encourages dissent: I'm a fan of both Ron Paul and Noam Chomsky, who seem to be on opposite sides of the spectrum. But they are both anti-war, anti-interventionist, and honest thinkers.
"Thomas Paine came to America from Great Britain in 1774 when he was 37 years old. He burned with righteous indignation at the cruel tyranny of kings. Half a million copies of "Common Sense," his plainspoken call for rebellion, flooded this fledgling nation of three million people. His rhetoric so moved and persuaded George Washington that he read Paine's words to the troops at Valley Forge. After America won its independence, Paine found himself in another fight, the French Revolution, and wrote another best-seller, "The Rights of Man." But he got into trouble in France and was thrown into prison, narrowly avoiding execution. He returned to America in 1802, a prophet without honor in the nation he helped to create." Watch this video .
I'm pretty sure coal is a lot cleaner burning than it used to be. And they use natural gas on days with inversions when the EPA says no to coal. Would you really want your tuition to go up enough to avoid the coal?
ReplyDeleteAnnie, I'm glad you play devil's advocate.
ReplyDeleteI'm not suggesting we burn down the smoke stack. We could save money for the school by keeping our buildings a little cooler. That could even lower tuition.
Agreed...the buildings are way too warm. Someone in charge must hate sweaters.
ReplyDeleteAnd this is why I blog, because I can't think of these things on the spot. But the main problem with coal isn't how clean it burns, but how it is dug out of the ground. Often they level mountains to get the stuff, and that has long-lasting consequences.
ReplyDeleteHave you heard of mountain top removal? It is ruthless to the environment.
ReplyDelete