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"Researchers have already cast much darkness on the subject, and if they continue their investigations, we shall soon know nothing at all about it."
-Mark Twain
I rarely debate politics. It's not my cup of tea. I prefer to let my vote speak for me (talking about politics - bores me to tears, mostly).
I wasn't really questioning the idea of a pipeline in/through ANWR. However, I find it ridiculous that Palin claims it's "Gods will" to do so.
-bd
This isn't original, I got it off the web.
As a military member residing in Alaska with a child old enough to enter kindergarten in most states and a wife whom has worked in education for the state of Alaska, Sarah Palin is not the candidate you wish to support if education is high on your list of priorities. Schools in her state (specifically the Fairbanks area, interior Alaska) are not in accordance with the "No Child Left Behind” Act of 2001 signed into law by President Bush. They lack Special Education teachers and tutors for special needs students and students behind the learning curve on the suggested curriculum. Alaska does not fund its schools using state taxes. Rather, it uses federal income tax to fund its schools. Alaska schools refuse to become Title I schools. Title I schools are those schools required under the “No Child Left Behind” Act of 2001 to provide supplemental instruction to students that are special needs or falling behind in their curriculum. The state of Alaska, under Governor Palin, has cut the aforementioned programs that the federal money was intended to provide for by labeling these students other than special needs in the areas stated and not classifying as Title I. In doing so the State of Alaska, under Governor Palin, deceptively has accepted federal money for services not rendered, while continuing the permanent dividend fund. She is quite a reformer indeed. This is quite a disturbing revelation considered she has mothered a special needs child.
I prefer Aunt Bessie's.
Generally a nature reserve is left pretty much untouched. Is it proposed that the pipeline be buried out of view or it going to be one of those cheap jobs that blight the scenery and rust and leak like anything?
Why can't the pipe go around the nature reserve if it is one of the above ground jobs?
Beneficiaries? Exxon etc.,I doubt it would make petrol cheaper.
Cogito cogito ergo cogito sum
[QUOTE=Biggles;2958631]Okay, first some perspective, and leaving aside the pipeline for a moment:
All of the United Kingdom (if Google is to be trusted) comprises just under 60 million acres.
Alaska comes in at seven times that size - 420 million acres.
ANWR is 19 million acres, or about one-third the size of the entire United Kingdom.
All of which begs a wee, tiny question - are there any pipelines anywhere in the UK that are regarded as the blight of, what...Olde Blighty?
Would anyone here seriously posit this vast track of land has been or will be blighted by (in the case of drilling in ANWR) the use of three thousand acres?
Pipelines are homely, yes.
Convince me, in light of the above information, of the overwhelming weight of opinion relative to looks.
If it bothers you, give it a coat of paint, ffs.
If we drilled for oil in ANWR, I could drop you anywhere in the preserve and you would likely not even find the pipeline for six months.
See above.
So?
What about the 700,000 jobs to build and run the operation?
How could gasoline not be at least slightly cheaper?
Not to mention the positive effect of providing our own oil, rather than supporting Wahabbist Saudi church-schools by purchasing from the mid-east?
Need I go on?![]()
Last edited by j2k4; 09-04-2008 at 10:17 PM.
"Researchers have already cast much darkness on the subject, and if they continue their investigations, we shall soon know nothing at all about it."
-Mark Twain
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