Saturday, October 11, 2008

Living green

Instead of making a big old footprint the way Algore and the Hollywood left do, Greenpa has an upfront list on the right hand side of his blog on how to live green.

1) Off the grid. 31 years. Solar electricity
2) Limited power- house electricity has 4 golf cart batteries.
3) Composting toilet. Outside. (eew, you do that indoors!?)
4) No road to house. You gotta walk.
5) No running water in house. Water pumped by wind.
6) Showers solar heated; outdoors.
7) Heat with wood. One stove in house-..
8) Cook with wood 8 months, propane in summer
9) Most of our fuelwood now is from trees we planted
10) No refrigerator. 31 years. You don't need one either.
11) Big garden.
12) Eat locally when possible, not obsessive about it.
13) No pesticide use ever, gardens or crops; not even organic (ok, except a little in the outhouse and the greenhouse...)
14) Earth sheltered solar greenhouse (aren't they all solar??)
15) Shut up about it. Nobody likes preaching.
16. These are our choices- yours are yours.

I respect a guy who walks his talk.

I don't respect the regulators and legislators who think we all should be living like Greenpa (rest assured they won't be). For instance, S.B. 221 and H.B. 562 in Ohio.

The Senate bill creates an Advanced Energy Standard (AES)--a minimum of 25 percent of electricity sold by Ohio's investor owned utilities must come from renewable (wind, solar, biomass, fuel cell, hydro), clean coal and advanced nuclear sources by 2025. Right off the bat you know the feds under the greenies and global warming alarmists will shut down the coal and nuclear industries, so that leaves it to your imagination on how we're going to light, heat, cool or cook in Ohio. Folks, in a good year we might get 37% sunshine, and we can't even put up a clothes line in Upper Arlington. Our sunshine is underground in coal where the good Lord stored it for later use.

The amended substitute House Bill 562 signed into law on June 24 provides for definitions and classifications of wind farms. I haven't seen any in Ohio, but they are ugly as sin on the prairies of Illinois. Ohio doesn't have prairies, it has Appalachia. We are part of the Pittsburgh Coal Bed with 34 billion short tons of coal. Both presidential candidates are mouthing platitudes about clean coal, but the alarmists will shut that down as soon as either one gets to the White House.

How do you site a wind farm? First you commission someone or something to do it through an initiative (that's a difficult word to spell and understand). Legislators do that too through, you guessed it, using our tax money. They have public meetings using the help of public institutions like universities which are also paid by us. Interestingly enough, the public always agrees with them and the project moves ahead. Right now they are looking at the western basin of Lake Erie as a "demonstration site." This will be sold to Ohioans as "economic development" even though we are a very rich coal state and much of our economy depends on coal.



There goes the neighborhood, and tourism, and shipping and fishing.

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