drpepperTX

Champion Author
Texas
Posts:8,950 Points:753,185 Joined:Apr 2011
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Message Posted: Sep 21, 2012 9:12:55 AM
LOL, those are not tomeboy's words, they are a cut and paste regurgitation of Jonathan Fahey of the AP. and tomeboy did not even bother to credit Mr. Fahey, can you say plagiarism? That violates Gas Buddy policy.
Two questions for letemeatcake. One, what's your position on anthropogenic global warming? Two, what's your position on the export of petroleum distillates?
[Edited by: drpepperTX at 9/21/2012 9:16:23 AM EST]
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LetemEatCake

Champion Author
Oklahoma City
Posts:5,596 Points:1,206,355 Joined:Mar 2008
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Message Posted: Sep 21, 2012 12:08:17 AM
There is no doubt that Tomeboy speaks the truth! The solution to the whining of the Coal industry is exports. There is much more profit there than competing with NG in the US. The companies have always had a lousy business model. Too bad the companies bet on their legislators so heavily.
Those who have lost their jobs must have the best vocational re-training possible. Anyone with an A or B Commercial license can get a job in the Oil fields at the drop of a hat.
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drpepperTX

Champion Author
Texas
Posts:8,950 Points:753,185 Joined:Apr 2011
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 9:24:02 AM
Sure tomeboy, all is well, all is well....the coal industry has only lost 25-30% of its work force....ALL IS WELL!
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Tomeboy

Champion Author
Twin Cities
Posts:3,774 Points:560,640 Joined:Apr 2009
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 1:30:43 AM
Coal executives are hardly giving up. Consol Energy, a coal and natural gas producer based in Canonsburg, Pa., and other U.S. coal companies hope to be able to keep mines active by exporting more of the country's huge reserves. Last year U.S. coal exports hit a record 107 million short tons. High grade coal that is used to make steel is in particular demand in developing countries such as China, India and Brazil.
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Tomeboy

Champion Author
Twin Cities
Posts:3,774 Points:560,640 Joined:Apr 2009
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 1:26:46 AM
Now coal is being beaten at its own game. Natural gas has become a cheap and abundant domestic resource, too. And it is more environmentally friendly.
Power plants that burn coal produce more than 90 times as much sulfur dioxide, five times as much nitrogen oxide and twice as much carbon dioxide as those that run on natural gas, according to the Government Accountability Office, the regulatory arm of Congress. Sulfur dioxide causes acid rain; nitrogen oxides cause smog; and carbon dioxide is a so-called greenhouse gas that traps heat in the atmosphere.
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Tomeboy

Champion Author
Twin Cities
Posts:3,774 Points:560,640 Joined:Apr 2009
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 1:25:20 AM
The shift from coal is reverberating across Appalachia, where mining companies are laying off workers and cutting production. Utilities across the country are grappling with how to store growing piles of unused coal. And legal disputes are breaking out as they try to cancel contracts and defer deliveries.
Coal has dominated the U.S. power industry for so long because it's a cheap and abundant domestic resource. The U.S. is the world's second-largest coal producer after China, and it has the world's biggest reserves — enough to last more than 200 years.
Coal has also enjoyed strong political support because of the jobs it provides in mining and transportation. That helped coal thrive even as environmental concerns over mining practices and air quality grew.
Just five years ago, coal was flourishing in the U.S. With electricity demand and the price of natural gas both rising, coal was viewed as essential to keeping power costs under control. Utilities drew up plans to build dozens of coal-fired plants.
But around the same time, a revolution was under way in the natural gas industry. Drillers figured how to tap enormous deposits of previously inaccessible reserves. As supplies grew and the price of natural gas plummeted, the ground shifted under the electric-power industry.
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Tomeboy

Champion Author
Twin Cities
Posts:3,774 Points:560,640 Joined:Apr 2009
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 1:22:17 AM
The fuel that powered the U.S. from the industrial revolution into the iPhone era is being pushed aside as utilities switch to cleaner and cheaper alternatives.
The share of U.S. electricity that comes from coal is forecast to fall below 40% for the year, its lowest level since World War II. Four years ago, it was 50%. By the end of this decade, it is likely to be near 30%.
"The peak has passed," says Jone-Lin Wang, head of Global Power for the energy research firm IHS CERA.
Utilities are aggressively ditching coal in favor of natural gas, which has become cheaper as supplies grow. Natural gas has other advantages over coal: It produces far fewer emissions of toxic chemicals and gases that contribute to climate change, key attributes as tougher environmental rules go into effect.
Natural gas will be used to produce 30% of the country's electricity this year, up from 20% in 2008. Nuclear accounts for 20%. Hydroelectric, wind, solar and other renewables make up the rest.
[Edited by: Tomeboy at 9/20/2012 1:23:22 AM EST]
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TustinDad

Champion Author
Orange County
Posts:4,299 Points:908,540 Joined:Feb 2008
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 1:15:23 AM
Tomeboy wrote: "With natural gas priced below $3 per million British thermal units, down from about $8 in 2008, many gas-fueled plants can make electricity for about two cents a kilowatt hour, less than half what it costs to run many coal units."
Tea Party fanatics: Ya'll hear that? It is the market forces (supply/demand of LNG) that does this. Who would have thought that would happen when we drilled?
[Edited by: TustinDad at 9/20/2012 1:16:11 AM EST]
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Tomeboy

Champion Author
Twin Cities
Posts:3,774 Points:560,640 Joined:Apr 2009
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 1:14:12 AM
Natural-gas plants set market prices in Texas, and their costs are so low that they can often sell power for less than what it costs to run a coal plant. One reason costs are higher is because of coal-handling expenses and the higher number of employees it takes to run a coal plant compared with a gas-fired plant.
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Tomeboy

Champion Author
Twin Cities
Posts:3,774 Points:560,640 Joined:Apr 2009
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 1:10:49 AM
Coal has been losing ground to natural gas ever since a boost in shale-gas production sent the price of natural gas tumbling four years ago. But now the natural-gas price advantage is beginning to affect the coal units that seemed most protected from the shift. Many of these plants have the latest environmental upgrades and are often close to coal deposits.
The reason: With natural gas priced below $3 per million British thermal units, down from about $8 in 2008, many gas-fueled plants can make electricity for about two cents a kilowatt hour, less than half what it costs to run many coal units.
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Tomeboy

Champion Author
Twin Cities
Posts:3,774 Points:560,640 Joined:Apr 2009
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 1:07:29 AM
Actual Energy Costs Are Driving Us Towards a Natural Gas Nation
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TustinDad

Champion Author
Orange County
Posts:4,299 Points:908,540 Joined:Feb 2008
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:57:09 AM
granitestater wrote: "This is Obama's idea of a success story. Cutting 'dirty' coal production. Now those mineworkers can take up basket weaving."
But he stopped 100,000 autoworkers from having to take up basket weaving. Doesn't that count for something?
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TustinDad

Champion Author
Orange County
Posts:4,299 Points:908,540 Joined:Feb 2008
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:34:47 AM
RENEGADEGAS wrote: "The greenie weenies have caused yet another catastrophe in America. I dont want to hear another peep out of them about BP, or any other oil accidents. They have caused more harm, higher utilities and loss of jobs to America than all of that combined."
It would be very interesting to see the numbers that you have to back that up. But, my promise to you is that I will not hold my breath waiting for them.
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Cellsite

Champion Author
Appleton
Posts:1,231 Points:287,885 Joined:Jun 2012
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:33:55 AM
To TustinDad. Too funny.
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boatmen

Champion Author
New York
Posts:3,085 Points:622,805 Joined:Jan 2011
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:28:49 AM
slow with multiply articles
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crreed1

Champion Author
West Virginia
Posts:1,990 Points:2,527,310 Joined:May 2005
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:25:57 AM
ok
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boatmen

Champion Author
New York
Posts:3,085 Points:622,805 Joined:Jan 2011
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:25:17 AM
It has to be figured on moving away from coal would decrease demand there by reducing work force. Down sizing, outsourcing, or as Romney would say we are having an outstanding year closed down 2 more company's and moved production to china increasing our corporate profits
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12766

Champion Author
New York
Posts:2,448 Points:1,484,390 Joined:Oct 2008
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:21:17 AM
OK
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RENEGADEGAS

Champion Author
Missouri
Posts:14,918 Points:1,592,200 Joined:Jul 2008
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:20:31 AM
The greenie weenies have caused yet another catastrophe in America. I dont want to hear another peep out of them about BP, or any other oil accidents. They have caused more harm, higher utilities and loss of jobs to America than all of that combined.
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OGW

Champion Author
London
Posts:5,329 Points:1,532,975 Joined:Sep 2005
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:20:26 AM
Coal mining has killed too many workers. Close them all.
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Gassed01

Champion Author
Toronto
Posts:6,359 Points:1,803,765 Joined:Jan 2006
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:19:39 AM
Sell the coal to the Chinese. Or trade it for crap that comes back in container ships to Walmart stores.
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granitestater

Champion Author
New Hampshire
Posts:8,829 Points:1,431,725 Joined:Oct 2008
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:19:15 AM
This is Obama's idea of a success story. Cutting 'dirty' coal production. Now those mineworkers can take up basket weaving.
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cheapertvs

Champion Author
Richmond
Posts:10,290 Points:2,742,695 Joined:Jan 2004
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:19:06 AM
We could use those jobs in Virginia.
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Hi1

Champion Author
Ontario
Posts:4,860 Points:1,725,585 Joined:Jun 2007
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:18:56 AM
That is to bad for the workers.
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10k

Champion Author
North Carolina
Posts:21,262 Points:2,254,995 Joined:May 2006
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:18:35 AM
y'all sheeple just keep voting for your saviour, nobama the magnificent, and you will be in nobama's bread line, begging for food and heat..
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mfeldstein

Champion Author
Ottawa
Posts:8,176 Points:1,931,455 Joined:Feb 2007
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:18:19 AM
Good for the environment. Bad for jobs where they're very much needed.
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bvrbill

Champion Author
Eugene
Posts:3,223 Points:519,600 Joined:Jul 2011
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:17:22 AM
Use Nat Gas here. Export coal.
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arb0526

Champion Author
Greensboro
Posts:1,981 Points:411,595 Joined:Mar 2011
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:15:43 AM
the UK developed a method to use coal cleanly to power its plants that produce electricity from underground coal mines without removal.
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TustinDad

Champion Author
Orange County
Posts:4,299 Points:908,540 Joined:Feb 2008
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:14:12 AM
Cellsite wrote: "TustinDad, you'll think different when it costs $500 a month to heat your house with natural gas. Gasoline used to be abundant and cheap too."
That will never happen. It's warm around here and the gas bill is around $12. If you think your bill is getting too high, just move. Stay out of California, we don't want you, but Arizona will welcome you!
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CDMAuto

Champion Author
Connecticut
Posts:3,798 Points:754,890 Joined:Apr 2011
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:13:57 AM
Bad News
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bridgerunner

Champion Author
Virginia
Posts:4,792 Points:1,007,810 Joined:Jul 2009
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:13:02 AM
It WILL not get any better!
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rahcat

Champion Author
Grand Rapids
Posts:2,473 Points:663,925 Joined:Jan 2010
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:10:49 AM
Thank you Presidink Obama and the EPA.
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starfighter08

Champion Author
Illinois
Posts:1,327 Points:350,005 Joined:Sep 2008
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:10:46 AM
BHO declared war on the coal industry and pledged to shutdown every coal fired plant in the country. They don't care how it effects the average US family. If rising energy costs bankrupt people, it's just too bad. Tough sh*t for them.
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yakstar

Champion Author
Montreal
Posts:2,420 Points:480,520 Joined:Jan 2012
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:10:20 AM
coal is a very inexpensive, clean fuel! Not!
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Redcarn

Rookie Author
Indianapolis
Posts:25 Points:232,120 Joined:Apr 2006
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:09:53 AM
The Global Warming drummers did this.
[Edited by: Redcarn at 9/20/2012 12:11:25 AM EST]
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RoadKing95

Champion Author
San Jose
Posts:20,564 Points:3,604,215 Joined:May 2003
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:09:50 AM
Cellsite ... Lay off the tea. Tustindad speaks truth
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OGW

Champion Author
London
Posts:5,329 Points:1,532,975 Joined:Sep 2005
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:09:29 AM
It is rough on those people working in the coal mines but coal mines should have been closed years ago and thousands of lives would have been saved.
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NoGas714

All-Star Author
Indiana
Posts:740 Points:752,000 Joined:May 2005
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:09:17 AM
A campaign promise that he followed through on. Awesome!
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gocatgo

Champion Author
South Carolina
Posts:15,658 Points:2,530,555 Joined:Apr 2006
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:08:01 AM
Like America will never sell another ship load of coal overseas, right.
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N5EXY

Champion Author
Austin
Posts:5,497 Points:1,511,355 Joined:Jul 2004
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:07:42 AM
What's a phone booth, radiorumor? Anything like a BFO?
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1fulltank

Champion Author
Buffalo
Posts:7,908 Points:1,545,285 Joined:Nov 2008
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:07:23 AM
The mines and the coal will still be there if ever the need arises.
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Cellsite

Champion Author
Appleton
Posts:1,231 Points:287,885 Joined:Jun 2012
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:06:35 AM
TustinDad, you'll think different when it costs $500 a month to heat your house with natural gas. Gasoline used to be abundant and cheap too.
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pepinoNC

Champion Author
Raleigh
Posts:2,159 Points:659,765 Joined:May 2011
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:04:57 AM
The end of dirty coal,time to move on to natural gas.
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TustinDad

Champion Author
Orange County
Posts:4,299 Points:908,540 Joined:Feb 2008
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:03:35 AM
ExplorerWA wrote: "An more to come as approximately 200 coal fired electric generating plants are shut down. Can someone supply me a list of replacement plants? Looks like brownouts and blackouts for days and months are coming but at least we will have a cleaner environment. "
Find the list yourself! But think of this for a moment, please. The utility companies are in business to make money. Do you really think they will shut down plants without securing needed energy production? LNG plants are cheaper to operate than old coal plants. We are not going to have electricity shortage because of closed coal plants.
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radiorumor

Champion Author
Texas
Posts:2,817 Points:754,835 Joined:Feb 2011
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:02:21 AM
Times change, it’s even hard to find a phone booth now
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BAMBAM197105

All-Star Author
Pennsylvania
Posts:592 Points:104,835 Joined:Sep 2012
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:02:05 AM
OK
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shores4now

Champion Author
Kentucky
Posts:2,411 Points:524,775 Joined:Jul 2009
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:01:02 AM
Ok
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TustinDad

Champion Author
Orange County
Posts:4,299 Points:908,540 Joined:Feb 2008
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Message Posted: Sep 20, 2012 12:00:47 AM
Cellsite wrote: "Coal. Abundant. Cheap. American. American jobs. Provides cheap electricity. O'Bummer. Tree-hugging greenies. Unemployment. Black-outs."
Natural Gas. Abundant. Cheap. American. American jobs. Provides cheap electricity. Tea Party fanatics. Can't read. Can't comprehend. Create mess.
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jrsva

Champion Author
Virginia
Posts:9,857 Points:1,613,225 Joined:Jan 2006
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Message Posted: Sep 19, 2012 11:59:46 PM
It is tough for the miners but strip mining is destroying southern West Virginia. Go to Google Earth and look at it. Mountaintop removal / valley fill mining is a disaster. We have got to reduce our use of coal and mine what we do use in a responsible manner.
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joeschmo12

Champion Author
New York
Posts:1,021 Points:307,215 Joined:Mar 2012
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Message Posted: Sep 19, 2012 11:59:30 PM
Terrible
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