Originally posted by BrilloPad
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Doom above all the Doom - Uberdoom - USA to collapse
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Originally posted by TimberWolf View PostOh, well, there's always plan Be yanked around by the whims of the global economists and live in the hope that we can import energy from kindly countries if needs be. Doomed.
If the bean-counters and politicians say so then who are we to argue?Comment
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Fcck a duck: http://www.conservapedia.com/Atheism
Logic? Why bother with logic?! Gotta love the god squad - always willing to draw a tenuous conclusion from the scantest of evidence..."Experience hath shewn, that even under the best forms of government those entrusted with power have, in time, and by slow operations, perverted it into tyranny. "
Thomas JeffersonComment
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Originally posted by zeitghostRemember the "Dash for Gas"?
Burning gas in electricity generating stations now seems a remarkably good idea, doesn't it?
Brassed Off? We will be...Comment
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Originally posted by NickFitz View PostAlmost as cunning as destroying the coal-mining industry when there are hundreds of years worth of coal under this land, and emission-scrubbing technologies have come on so much in the last twenty years
Brassed Off? We will be..."Jevons made the bold prediction that the end of British ‘progress’ would come within 100 years of 1865. Jevons was right. British coal production peaked in 1910, and by 1965 Britain was no longer a world superpower".I’ve marked on the graph the year 1769, in which James Watt patented his steam engine. While the first practical steam engine was invented in 1698, Watt’s more efficient steam engine really got the Industrial Revolution going. One of its main applications was the pumping of water out of coal mines. The middle graph shows what happened to British coal production from 1769 onwards, and to world coal production one hundred years later as the Revolution spread. In 1800, coal was used to make iron, to make ships, to heat buildings, to power locomotives and other machinery, and of course to power the pumps that enabled still more coal to be scraped up from inside the hills of England and Wales. England was terribly well endowed with coal. When the Revolution started, the amount of carbon sitting in coal under England was roughly the same as the amount sitting in oil under Saudi Arabia. In the thirty years from 1769 to 1800, Britain’s annual coal production doubled. After another thirty years (1830), it had doubled again, and the rate of growth itself increased: the next doubling happened within twenty years (1850), and another doubling within twenty years of that (1870). This coal allowed Britain to turn the globe red. The prosperity that came to England and Wales was reflected in a century of unprecedented population growth, as the third graph in figure 6 shows. Eventually other countries got in on the act too. British coal production peaked in 1910, but meanwhile world coal production continued to double every twenty year.Comment
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Originally posted by zeitghostInteresting that the peak of Welsh coal production was in 1913...
http://www.agor.org.uk/cwm/timeline.asp
Welsh steam coal being superior to the English variety for fuelling ships...
And being rapidly replaced by oil fuel because it's much easier to transfer oil at sea.Comment
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This post is steadily becoming reality now....
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7503109.stm
Key US mortgage lender collapses
One of the largest US mortgage lenders, the California-based
IndyMac Bank, has collapsed amid a growing credit crisisComment
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Originally posted by Bright Spark View Post
What they do with the other two is going to be the fun part of next week.
On the UK front, this should be fun too. BBC: Sharp rise in UK profit warningsHow did this happen? Who's to blame? Well certainly there are those more responsible than others, and they will be held accountable, but again truth be told, if you're looking for the guilty, you need only look into a mirror.
Follow me on Twitter - LinkedIn Profile - The HAB blog - New Blog: Mad Cameron
Xeno points: +5 - Asperger rating: 36 - Paranoid Schizophrenic rating: 44%
"We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to high office" - AesopComment
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Originally posted by HairyArsedBloke View PostWhat they do with the other two is going to be the fun part of next week.
But - IMO - they should be allowed to go to the wall. Why do we now have socialism for the rich and capitalism for the poor?Comment
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