Ethanol and the law of unintended consequences

  • Thread starter calderhome@yahoo.com
  • Start date
"HarryNadds" <hoofhearted07@yahoo.com> wrote
> Why not tap into the mass quantities of methane gas and hot air from
> the democrat party??


Nadds is fixated on the Democratic party because he knows the
RepubliKKKant party is hiding in the darkest corner available, hardly
breathing, trying to be as small as a rat.
 
"chemist" <tom-bolger@ntlworld.com> wrote
> NINCOMPOOP


One day the "chemist" will graduate from public school. However it will
never get a degree in chemistry.

It's far too stupid for that.
 
"Bawana" <mrbawana2u@yahoo.com> wrote
> Nobody celebrates failure like a lib-turd demonkrap.
> the demonkrap motto:


RepubliKKKan failure that is.
 
"Harold Burton" <hal.i.burton@hotmail.com> wrote
> Good job at self-appraisal.


As AmeriKKKa sinks deep into Bush Recession 2.
 
<calderhome@yahoo.com> wrote
> A new study from three agricultural economists at Iowa State
> University with insider information on the latest biofuel technology
> says ethanol made from cellulose will likely NEVER be affordable


LIAR.

The model they developed implies that fluctuations in market pricing for oil
and other liquid fuels makes
development of switchgrass based biofules economically impractical - using
current fermentation methods of production.

You aren't even capable of comprehending your own reference.

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"James" <kingkongg@iglou.com> wrote
> rex lies again.


James lies again.
 
"Harold Burton" <hal.i.burton@hotmail.com> wrote
> Nope, doesn't prove it, try again.


Then look at the other 4 references provides. **** Sucker.
 
"Harold Burton" <hal.i.burton@hotmail.com> wrote
> Hehehehe. You seem to specialize in being wrong.


References were provided. You failed to read them.

Keeping yourself ignorant is the hallmark of a KKKonservative

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"Bill Miller" <bmiller1@vwestdu.com> wrote
> If either one of the three liberals running for Potus win, you can
> expect the UN well be calling the shots for what we can grow in the US.
> The canidates all want to sign on to LOST ( The Law of The Sea
> Treaty ). There is hidden away in the treaty in fine print that there
> can be repercussions for any nation that pollutes the UNs oceans.
> Everyone knows corn is one of the worse crops you can plant for damage
> to the seas. We should start drilling for gas and oil off our coasts
> before the UN takes over the floor of all the worlds oceans.


Not only the Law of the Sea, but the world court as well.

No matter. AmeriKKKa had it's chance, and failed.

And now we will continue to crush the life out of the failed AmeriKKKan
state.
 
"Ouroboros_Rex" <its@casual.com> wrote
> Oh no, the UN! They want to take over the world, with their
> can't-get-anything-done assemblage of powerless ambassadors kept down by
> the USA! RUN!!!!


AmeriKKKan KKKonservatives are pathetic cowards aren't they.

Maybe a black helicopter should be sent to buzz around Miller's house, so
he will **** his pants again.
 
"HarryNadds" <hoofhearted07@yahoo.com> wrote
> Please list the accomplishments of the "hate USA first" UN.


By the way, when is the U.S. going to accept and become a party to the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights?



"The UN was not created to take humanity to heaven but to save it from
hell."
-Former United Nations Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold.

-------------------------------
A short list of UNITED NATIONS ACCOMPLISHMENTS
-------------------------------

1. Deploying more than 35 peace-keeping missions. There are presently 16
active peace-keeping forces in operation.

2. Credited with negotiating 172 peaceful settlements that have ended
regional conflicts

3. The UN has enabled people in over 45 countries to participate in free and
fair elections

4. Development - The system's annual disbursements, including loans and
grants, amount to more than $10 billion.

5. UNICEF spends more than $800 million a year, primarily on immunization,
health care, nutrition and basic education in 138 countries.

6. UN Human Rights Commission has focused world attention on cases of
torture, disappearance, and arbitrary detention and has generated
international pressure.

7. UN Conference eon Environment and Development held in Rio de Janeiro in
1992, resulted in treaties on bio-diversity and climate change.

8. Has helped minimize the threat of a nuclear war by inspecting nuclear
reactors in 90.

9. Over 300 international treaties, on topics as varied as human rights
conventions to agreements on the use of outer space and seabed.

10. The International Court of Justice has helped settle international
disputes involving territorial issues, diplomatic relations, hostage-taking,
and economic rights.

11. The UN was a major factor in bringing about the downfall of the
apartheid system.

12. More than 30 million refugees fleeing war, famine or persecution have
received aid from the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.

13. Aiding Palestinian Refugees with free schooling, essential health care,
relief assistance and key social services virtually without interruption.
There are 2.9 million refugees in the Middle East served by UNRWA.

14. Alleviating Chronic Hunger and Rural Poverty in Developing Countries,
providing credit that has benefited over 230 million people in nearly 100
developing countries.

15. The Africa Project Development Facility has helped entrepreneurs in 25
countries to find financing for new enterprises. The Facility has completed
130 projects which represent investments of $233 million and the creation of
13,000 new jobs, saving some $131 million in foreign exchange annually.

16. Promoting Women's Rights
 
"James" <kingkongg@iglou.com> wrote
> The LOST treaty is a major thing and no one knows much about it but
> restrictions on this country may cause a bit of fury. Congress doesn't do
> any homework any more on **** treaties like this. Hell they don't do much
> of anything anyway unless it's political.


Certainly not the Rubber stamping Pedo RepubliKKKan congress.

You still hanging out in Airport bathrooms looking for little boys to
Blow? James?
 
"HarryNadds" <hoofhearted07@yahoo.com> wrote
> Adding ethanol to gasoline lowers fuel efficiency.


Adding methol-lead to gasoline increases fuel efficiency, but then creates

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like yourself as a result of lead poisoning.
 
In article <yjWJj.50336$612.46840@read1.cgocable.net>,
"V-for-Vendicar" <Justice@ExecuteTheBushTraitor.com> wrote:

> "Poetic Justice" <@http://Poetic-Justice.Talk-n-Dog.com> wrote
> > America has food, Arabs have our money to buy food, the Poor nations are
> > having to bite the bullet and starve their poor.... Maybe you Liberals
> > should mention it to Al Gore.



> AmeriKKKa doens't even feed itself anymore as it imports more food than it
> exports.




Another moonbot with delusions.

Snicker.
 

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>>
>> AmeriKKKans have decided that it is more important to fuel their cars
>> than
>> to eat.


"Harold Burton" <hal.i.burton@hotmail.com> wrote
> We're doing both, and quite well.


Ya, so well, that AmeriKKKa lost a quarter of a million jobs last quarter

And your only 9.45 trillion in debt, with the U.S. dollar growing more
and more worthless by the day.



Ahahahahahahahahahah

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"Poetic Justice" <@http://Poetic-Justice.Talk-n-Dog.com> wrote
> America has food, Arabs have our money to buy food, the Poor nations are
> having to bite the bullet and starve their poor.... Maybe you Liberals
> should mention it to Al Gore.


AmeriKKKa doens't even feed itself anymore as it imports more food than it
exports.

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In article <IVaKj.50451$612.46976@read1.cgocable.net>,
"V-for-Vendicar" <Justice@ExecuteTheBushTraitor.com> wrote:


> MMMMMMMMOOOOOOOOOORRRRRRRRRRRROOOOOOOOONNNNNNNNN



More self-assessment by a stupid Canuck (sorry for the redundancy).


Snicker.
 
"Harold Burton" <hal.i.burton@hotmail.com> wrote
> As your postings prove.


NASA finds evidence of widespread Antarctic melting
Last Updated: Wednesday, May 16, 2007 | 10:04 AM ET

Rising temperatures two years ago led to widespread melting of snow cover in
west Antarctica, according to scientists examining the impact of global
warming on the icy continent.

The melting of snow cover in regions in January 2005 was the most
significant Antarctic melting seen since satellites began observing the
continent three decades ago, NASA said Tuesday.

NASA's QuikScat satellite detected extensive areas of snowmelt, shown in
yellow and red, in west Antarctica in January 2005.
(NASA/JPL) It was also the first major melting detected using NASA's
QuikScat satellite, which can measure both accumulated snowfall and
temperatures in various regions.

The team of scientists found evidence of melting in regions not normally
affected: up to 900 kilometres inland from the open ocean, farther than 85
degrees south (within 500 kilometres of the South Pole) and higher than
2,000 metres above sea level.

QuikScat found maximum air temperatures at the time of melting were
unusually high, reaching more than 5 C in one of the areas. These maximum
temperatures remained above the melting point for approximately a week.

The researchers were led by Son Nghiem of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
and Konrad Steffen, the director of the Co-operative Institute for Research
in Environmental Sciences at the University of Colorado. They published
their results in a book, Dynamic Planet.

"Antarctica has shown little to no warming in the recent past, with the
exception of the Antarctic Peninsula, but now large regions are showing the
first signs of the impacts of warming as interpreted by this satellite
analysis," said Steffen in a statement.

"Increases in snowmelt, such as this in 2005, definitely could have an
impact on larger-scale melting of Antarctica's ice sheets if they were
severe or sustained over time."

The 2005 melt was extensive enough to create a layer of ice when the water
refroze, but was not long enough for the water to flow to the sea. Steffen
said if enough water from melted snow is created, it could slip through the
cracks of the continent's ice sheets and potentially affect their movement.

The Antarctic ice mass is the Earth's largest freshwater reserve, and
changes in its condition can have an impact on sea levels, ocean salinity
and water currents.

"We need to know what's coming in and going out of the ice sheets," said
Ngheim.

"QuikScat data, combined with data from NASA's IceSat and Gravity Recovery
and Climate Experiment satellites, along with aircraft and ground
measurements, all contribute to more accurate estimates of how the polar ice
sheets are changing."
 

>> AmeriKKKa doens't even feed itself anymore as it imports more food than
>> it
>> exports.



"Harold Burton" <hal.i.burton@hotmail.com> wrote
> Another moonbot with delusions.


And it's called Harold Burton.

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In article <EFdLj.50826$612.35098@read1.cgocable.net>,
"V-for-Vendicar" <Justice@ExecuteTheBushTraitor.com> wrote:

> "Harold Burton" <hal.i.burton@hotmail.com> wrote
> > ...that didn't prove what you claimed.

>
> Actually it didn't.



Ayup.


Snicker.
 
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