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View Poll Results: IS Joe Biden planning to ban fracking?
Yes - Joe-mentia said he would 15 48.39%
No - Joe-mentia said he would not 2 6.45%
Both - He said both, when it suits him best 12 38.71%
Beats fuck outta me when he thought he said or when 2 6.45%
Voters: 31. You may not vote on this poll


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Old 10-25-2020, 08:48 PM   #31
Tiny
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Why_Yes_I_Do View Post
Disclosure: I have owned 2 Hybrid vehicles. Some things I liked, some not so much. Topic for another time. What I hate is when the batteries die. First, the standard battery is expensive at $400 (beefy glass mat variety). But the main drive batteries are $5K when they die. They are not cleanly recyclable or repairable.
I know people who have armories comparable to yours. They never owned hybrids. In fact, not one of them would ever step foot in a hybrid. You realize this admission will cause you to lose some of your mystique.
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Old 10-25-2020, 10:22 PM   #32
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Code:
 Yes - Joe-mentia said he would                     12  48.00%
  No - Joe-mentia said he would not                  2   8.00%
Both - He said both, when it suits him best         10  40.00%
Beats fuck outta me when he thought he said or when  1   4.00%
pretty close results. poll ends tomorrow.
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Old 10-26-2020, 05:42 AM   #33
Why_Yes_I_Do
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Default Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition

Quote:
Originally Posted by Tiny View Post
I know people who have armories comparable to yours. They never owned hybrids. In fact, not one of them would ever step foot in a hybrid. You realize this admission will cause you to lose some of your mystique.
If it helps, I got rid of them when their drive batteries shot craps and I still always have my 4 wheel drive monster truck in my driving arsenal. One thing I do like about electric drive is the hole-shot torque, especially in the hybrid as it has Fossil Fuel drive on the rear axle and electric on the front. I think Tesla is 4-wheel drive electric, so even more torque-y. Plus the geeky tech in the cockpit is pretty nice typically.

Guess you never heard of Grey Man theory? Nobody expects a far alt-right wing, gun hauling maniac to be driving a Prius. But then, nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition either...
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Old 10-26-2020, 05:49 AM   #34
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Why does there need to be a "poll"?

Anyone who believes otherwise .... can't hear or see!
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Old 10-26-2020, 08:46 AM   #35
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Believe what the idiot says people
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Old 10-26-2020, 06:18 PM   #36
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Are some folks making money from fracking? Sure.
Are there jobs created by fracking. Yep.
But fracking is an environmental disaster.
Frackers inject gobs of nameless chemicals into seams and fissures and underground water formations.
They use untold amounts of fresh water, never mind the recycling claims.
Even redneck scientists from Oklahoma are monitoring the numerous earthquakes caused by fracking.
Yes, there are negative consequences to fracking.
We have fracking because we are finished with the simple-to-get liquid fossil fuels.
Now we're fracking gas and mining tar sands and drilling in shallow waters and sensitive wildlife habitats.
I think fracking should be phased out, and a timeframe of ten years or less should satisfy the polluters who pursue this activity.
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Old 10-26-2020, 08:51 PM   #37
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Originally Posted by Muy Largo View Post
Are some folks making money from fracking? Sure.
Are there jobs created by fracking. Yep.
But fracking is an environmental disaster.
Frackers inject gobs of nameless chemicals into seams and fissures and underground water formations.
They use untold amounts of fresh water, never mind the recycling claims.
Even redneck scientists from Oklahoma are monitoring the numerous earthquakes caused by fracking.
Yes, there are negative consequences to fracking.
We have fracking because we are finished with the simple-to-get liquid fossil fuels.
Now we're fracking gas and mining tar sands and drilling in shallow waters and sensitive wildlife habitats.
I think fracking should be phased out, and a timeframe of ten years or less should satisfy the polluters who pursue this activity.
Perhaps you should take university classes in structural geology, rock mechanics, hydrology, drilling engineering, and chemical engineering. Then move to Sweetwater County, Wyoming or Lea County, New Mexico. You'll find the people there are much more knowledgeable about fracking than you are right now. And virtually all of them, including the landowners who use the water for agriculture and as well as the rest of the people who drink the water, support fracking. Many of them are doubtless scared shitless they're going to lose their jobs and their means of supporting their families if Biden follows through on his promise to ban drilling on federal lands.

The formations fracked are thousands of feet below "underground water formations." There are only two ways the frac fluids can communicate with potable water, if there's a faulty cement job in the wellbore, allowing the fluids to flow up the annulus between the production pipe and the hole to a shallower zone. Or if the frac fluids aren't properly disposed of when they're flowed back from the well. Both are relatively rare.

As to earthquakes, they have nothing to do with fracking. They result from injection of produced water (a byproduct of oil production) into basement fault zones. They haven't been a concern to most people in areas where water injection's occurring. I don't know why they are to you, living in Minnesota. In fact, I don't know why any of your claims are a concern to you.

Your concerns are way, way overstated. I don't know much about environmental damage and damage to human health caused by mining, but would bet the harm from solar per BTU, from mining lithium, nickel and cobalt among other things, is greater than the harm from extracting oil and gas.

However, you're not alone. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez was on a Sunday show spouting some of your bogus claims along with a couple you hadn't thought of. This is a huge problem with America. Why do politicians in places like Brooklyn feel compelled to tell people in Wyoming what to do? If the locals don't want fracking, then, like residents of the Denver Basin in Colorado, they'll ban it or severely regulate it. This is symptomatic of the left's fight against freedom and liberty. The arrogant *^&T^%'s think they're smarter and wiser than people who actually understand the technology and live in the middle of it. Speaking of which, if people in New York want to pay 60% in taxes and have things like free college and a guaranteed minimum income, more power to them. Let them do it. But don't impose your flim flam on the rest of us.

Btw, I don't think you're an arrogant *^&T^%, just misguided by what you read. I reserve that gibberish for politicians.
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Old 10-26-2020, 10:54 PM   #38
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I think there's more videos of him saying he won't ban fracking than there are of him saying he will ban fracking. You guys are insane.
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Old 10-26-2020, 11:17 PM   #39
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earthquakes appear to be more frequent when there is fracking activity.


seems to suggest that the frack liquid is finding unknown fault lines?
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Old 10-27-2020, 10:14 AM   #40
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I think there's more videos of him saying he won't ban fracking than there are of him saying he will ban fracking. You guys are insane.
No we're not. First, Biden has been clear that he will not issue drilling permits on federal lands and for federal offshore leases. About 22% of U.S. oil production is from federal leases. This alone with time will cause us to become net importers of foreign oil, jack up our trade deficit, cause 4 million people to lose their jobs by 2030 according to the API, and make tens or hundreds of billions spent on pipelines, gas plants and offshore platforms uneconomic.

Second, Biden has been clear that he wants to eliminate the U.S. oil and gas industry. The only question is over what time period. He repeated this in the debate with Trump last week. The reason provided was because "the oil industry pollutes."

Third, many believe Biden will do to fracking and oil and gas in general what Obama did to coal. He didn't outlaw coal mining. He just instituted environmental regulations through executive orders that made burning coal very difficult.
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Old 10-27-2020, 10:18 AM   #41
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earthquakes appear to be more frequent when there is fracking activity.

seems to suggest that the frack liquid is finding unknown fault lines?
No. This is propaganda or a conspiracy theory promoted by environmental radicals. Water is produced as a byproduct of oil. Your typical shale or tight sand well produces a lot of water that must be disposed of. The injected water does in certain geologic settings cause movement along fault planes. I challenge anyone to find an instance where one of these earthquakes induced by water injection caused a death or significant property damage.
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Old 10-27-2020, 10:49 AM   #42
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No. This is propaganda or a conspiracy theory promoted by environmental radicals. Water is produced as a byproduct of oil. Your typical shale or tight sand well produces a lot of water that must be disposed of. The injected water does in certain geologic settings cause movement along fault planes. I challenge anyone to find an instance where one of these earthquakes induced by water injection caused a death or significant property damage.

I don't know. I'm seeing reports of a lot of small earthquakes in Oklahoma where they didn't have one before. they've linked this to fracking activity.
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Old 10-27-2020, 11:56 AM   #43
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I don't know. I'm seeing reports of a lot of small earthquakes in Oklahoma where they didn't have one before. they've linked this to fracking activity.
Yeah, fracking may cause localized, small seismic events. But most earthquakes, 98% in Oklahoma according to the United States Geological Survey, are caused by water injection:

https://www.usgs.gov/faqs/does-frack...ience_products

Most induced earthquakes are not directly caused by hydraulic fracturing (fracking). The recent increase in earthquakes in the central United States is primarily caused by disposal of waste fluids that are a byproduct of oil production.

As to Oklahoma,

https://www.usgs.gov/faqs/oklahoma-h...ience_products

Beginning in 2009, Oklahoma experienced a surge in seismicity. This surge was so large that its rate of magnitude 3 and larger earthquakes exceeded California’s from 2014 through 2017.

While these earthquakes have been induced by oil and gas related process, few of these earthquakes were induced by fracking.
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Old 10-27-2020, 01:46 PM   #44
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Default Thank you for voting

Fracking was just the straw man, the carrier pigeon. The real item under inspection was Joe-mentia a professional politician, who will say one thing with absolute conviction to your face, only to later learn it is not polling well for them and then turn right around with nearly the same passion and say the exact opposite to your face.

In essence; the point of the poll was to determine if Joe Biden was a self-serving and entirely corrupt politician that would lie to your face and then lie about lieing to your face. The results say?: Why_Yes_He_Is by a 27 to 4 margin.
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Old 10-27-2020, 02:25 PM   #45
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I admittedly don't know shit about fracking or the oil industry, so this is a bullshit question. But, why not use up all the oil in the rest of the world as long as available at a reasonable cost (Yeah, we all like sub $2 pump gas, but we could pay somewhat more without hurting) and hold our resources in reserve for future generations as a strategic asset? Not trying to be confrontational, just curious about rationale for usage of a finite resource. Kinda like land, they ain't making it any more.
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