Comment Re:How secure (Score 1) 491
the one way to make sure a currency is usable in daily trade is for it to be accepted as tax payment by local government.
huhhuh you said 'tax payment' - sorry, no cigar because no government will be in the transaction chain even in a monitoring capacity, much less an enforcement capacity.
Comment Re:Nothing to see here (Score 1) 435
A friggin Felony? Let me remind you that there are laws already in place against damaging federal property, interfering with performance of duties, there's even laws against ramming Coast Guard ships, believe it or not. So when they say that we need an additional draconian layer of legal protection against some hypothetical mob of journalists that are vandalizing oil booms and running their boats into the poor defenseless BP and Coast Guard ships who are just trying to help if we would get out of their way. Forget about the stupid 65 feet and whether or not you can get a picture from 66 feet.. if they can do this without anyone calling them on it, then tomorrow there will be a little noticed press release where the directive is adjusted to 1 mile or whatever they want, citing the previously legal directive as 'precedent'. Hasn't anybody learned anything from the Patriot Act and the gigantic national security apparatus built on a single event almost a decade ago?
Comment Re:So.. (Score 1) 274
Comment Re:Reasonable idea (Score 1) 503
I find it interesting to see some of the uncompromising attitudes, "I want my cheap unlimited power, gosh darnit this is America!"
Oil is now $100 barrel, it now takes $900 to purchase 1 oz of gold, our military can no longer protect the petro-dollar - we are at the cusp of a radically different reality where we must pay market price for energy with a devaluing currency - something tells me that running our air conditioning for our 5 bedroom McMansions will soon be the least of our problems.