Subj : Re: COVID Redux To : Gregory Deyss From : Jeff Thiele Date : Wed Oct 12 2022 09:20:08 On 12 Oct 2022, Gregory Deyss said the following... GD> JT> GD> JT> So you would accept tyranny if it meant cheap groceries? Yo GD> JT> GD> JT> an end to our Constitutional democracy if it meant cheap ga GD> JT> GD> Tweets are not tyranny, what was that you said to me about being GD> JT> GD> sensitive? Well. umm. TDS perhaps? GD> JT> Coups are tyranny, though. GD> Coup sure did exist with Trump but not in the way that you think. I see. There is overwhelming credible evidence that Trump attempted a coup. GD> Curious would you still refer a "coup as tyranny" when there is tons of GD> data to suggest and to support the clear indication of a coup that was GD> and continuously developing against Trump? If there were credible evidence, yes. "Tons of data to suggest," not so much. There is no credible evidence that a coup was attempted against Trump. GD> I think you just stepped in it, forget about (pandora's box) you just GD> entered the Pandora fields. That's meaningless drivel in place of credible evidence. GD> JT> GD> JT> Never forget that Trump tried very hard to stay in power de GD> JT> GD> JT> will of the people choosing someone else. GD> "People choosing some else" sounds noble and just, but I think that is GD> just a fasade or a "mask" if you will, under the mask there has been a GD> entire cast of players and characters - all vile and disgusting a GD> careful analysis will show that there is a infestation of democrats who GD> thirsting for power. Everything the democrats have pulled against Trump GD> and suggest that what I am saying here is word salad, but don't be GD> shocked "when" and not "if" I am right. Then knock it off with the word salad and present some credible evidence. GD> JT> GD> Yeah I know he did, and I also know that the man worked free of GD> JT> GD> he worked many many hours more then Biden. GD> JT> So free labor = one free election? What are you even talking about? GD> What am I talking about? Are you aware that President Trump did not GD> collect a salary of anykind when he was serving as President. I am. That does not entitle him to one free coup, though. GD> JT> GD> How to do you want wager then Biden is in bed by 9:00 pm GD> JT> What does that even matter? You are consistently going off on meaning GD> JT> personal attacks against Biden when you cannot defend your position. GD> I have defended my position and I will continue to do with additional GD> vigor that will be realized, you won't have to wonder about it. More pompous drivel in place of actual evidence. GD> JT> GD> JT> GD> Which reminds me GM (not that I would drive a GM) but GD> JT> GD> JT> GD> they are going to stop making combustion engines 2035. GD> JT> GD> JT> GD> Where are we going to get the electricity, solar or is GD> JT> GD> JT> GD> Hydro-electric perhaps. IDK. I know it won't be coal o GD> JT> GD> JT> All of these technologies are improving as we speak. Some o GD> JT> GD> JT> still be coal, but not as much as now. GD> JT> GD> Well lets us hope that the R&D is not from China. GD> JT> It might very well be. The longer conservatives resist the inevitable GD> JT> the farther behind the US gets in dominating these technologies. GD> What democratic initiatives have been brought to make sure that the U.S. GD> is not only competitive within this field, but also has the right stuff GD> to dominate this new needed technology? Well, for example, Biden's Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (also known as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill) "will stand up 60 new DOE programs, including 16 demonstration and 32 deployment programs, and expands funding for 12 existing Research, Development, Demonstration, and Deployment (RDD&D) programs." (https://www.energy.gov/bil/bipartisan-infrastructure-law-homepage) GD> Something that should be considered. GD> https://tinyurl.com/bddfbv5j This article neglects to point out that fossil-fuel-powered, non-hybrid vehicles (the vast majority that are out there now) can also be disabled if the engine is damaged. GD> JT> There are different kinds GD> JT> of oil, one of which has the formal name "Sweet Crude." The US doesn' GD> JT> have much of it, and the Arabian peninsula has quite a lot. Different GD> JT> kinds of oil are refined to make different things, and "Sweet Crude" GD> JT> used to make gasoline. So while we may produce more barrels of oil th GD> JT> we use, not all barrels of oil are equal. GD> West Texas Intermediate is actively trading Sweet Crude on the NYMEX. In the quantities that the US needs? GD> JT> An interesting side-note is that when different types of oil are GD> JT> transferred through pipelines, they are separated by devices called GD> JT> "squealers" because of the sound they make as they travel down the GD> JT> pipeline. GD> Are you suggesting that sweet crude can not travel through these GD> pipelines.. I am asking intentionally with out being facetious. Nope. I'm saying that there are different types of oil travelling through the pipelines. The "squealers" solve two problems: they keep different types of oil from intermixing in the pipelines and they alert pipeline workers to when a change in oil type is coming down the pipeline. I just thought that was interesting. Jeff. --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A46 2020/08/26 (Raspberry Pi/32) * Origin: Cold War Computing BBS (1:387/26) .