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Comment Re:Best outcome (Score 1) 201

I know all about biodiesel, Ive made my own in the past. its not viable no matter how much I wanted it to be and I wasted a ton of money trying to make it so. I still love the concept, but it still isnt a replacement

To use dino-diesel, I go to a filling station, pull up to the pump, authorize payment with my credit card, pump, and drive off again.

To use biodiesel, I go to a [different] filling station, pull up to the pump, authorize payment with my credit card, pump, and drive off again.

It seems pretty damn viable to me!

Comment Re:Best outcome (Score 1) 201

Its going to be decades before all the gas cars are off the roads, poor people cant afford new cars so they buy used, there isnt much of a used electric market out there right now.

Poor people are always screwed regardless. Helping poor people is therefore not a valid excuse for fucking up the planet more by delaying the spread of alternative fuels.

(Oh, by the way: my alternative fuel vehicle is 16 years old and would cost about $3,000 to buy today. It runs on something called BIODIESEL. Alleged unaffordability of alternative fuel vehicles isn't even a real thing anyway!)

Comment Re:Time for a new date (Score 1) 201

Of course where it gets really interesting is if one of the projects pursuing various forms of hydrocarbon synthesis pays off.

Well shit, when you consider hydrocarbon synthesis (from CO2 or something, I assume) then sure, that solves the problem! If course, it's also irrelevant to the "peak oil" issue since you're not talking about non-renewable fossil fuels anymore. Saying that the "peak oil" is pushed into the future because of synthetic hydrocarbons is like saying it's pushed into the future because of nuclear -- it's evidence that somebody is smart enough to use a superior alternative, not evidence that continued drilling is somehow less harmful.

Maybe we should take your suggestion to its logical conclusion and simply stop drilling for oil entirely. Then "peak oil" will never even happen! Surely you'd agree that that's the best plan of all, since it's your idea.

Comment Re:So what? (Score 1) 201

Makes me wonder... not which side is right, but how they have together gained such a strangle hold on American politics without ever accomplishing much (or not much anymore, anyway).

It's an inherent flaw of our first-past-the-post election system, but gerrymandering, restrictive ballot access laws, and lax campaign finance rules helped.

Comment Scientists don't *NEED* to be trusted! (Score 5, Insightful) 460

The entire goddamn point of science is that you prove the theory using experiment, publish a paper explaining what you did and how you did it, and then anybody else [who is competent] can go read the paper and reproduce similar results for themselves.

The real issue here is the part I put in square brackets as an aside: "anybody [who is competent]." It's true that if you're not competent then you need to trust something. But what you need to trust is not the individual scientists themselves, but rather that competent people will, as a group, follow the process and weed out the disproven theories.

Comment Re:Beyond the law? (Score 2) 354

However, if that device is encrypted and the vendor has no way of decrypting it, it's up to you, the accused to provide the decryption key. By "forgetting" the key, you're placing yourself beyond the law.

Yeah, just like how you're "placing yourself beyond the law" if they get a warrant to search your 100-acre farm and you refuse to tell them where the bodies are buried.

Oh wait, that's not how it works at all!

Comment Re:Not Even True (Score 1) 354

Not to mention, they're called search warrants for a reason: it gives them the right to look for the information, but doesn't require that you actively help them find it. If you were required to tell them where to dig for the bodies -- or what your encryption key is -- then they'd call them "find" warrants instead!

Comment Re:Where to live and how to get to work (Score 1) 907

Provided "a friend's house" or a room that you can afford to sub-let is near work. I've read anecdotal evidence on Slashdot that not all workplaces are in such a location.

If you can't afford to live near work, then that job is unsustainable. If you're that desperate, beg on a street corner until you can afford to take a cheap bus to North Dakota and work in the oil fields.

How is this practical in a thunderstorm or on snow-covered roads?

People at the earlyretirementextreme.com and mrmoneymustache.com forums manage it.

Besides, we're talking about a desperate situation here. "Practical" is not the issue. It's "possible," and that's enough.

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