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Tinkerntom wrote:
Since you mention the Interstate Highway system, They were originally established as federal defense corridors during the cold war. They are designed such that the feds could close them down and block them off, and be used solely for federal purposes. I don't know if they could get away with that now that a lot of us have got use to using them, but that was the original plan, as confirmed by a retired federal emergency preparedness planner. So I am sure that to use them as you suggest, is certainly in the sights of someone. But then the right of driving our car on the interstate is not assured in the Constitution. Matter of fact I don't recall Connie saying anything about cars or driving at all. Must have been an oversight. Interstate commerce is a Constitutional right. The federal highway system is part and parcel to interstate commerce. Our right to utilize roads comes in large part from our being taxed, through fuel and vehicle taxes, to pay for highway construction and maintenance. The US Department of Transportation's Federal Highway Administration has an exhaustive history of highways; See: http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/infrastructure/history.htm Of course that gets me to rivermans big word of "conserve". Maybe the best way to conserve would be to just confiscate all the "unconstitutional" cars and let us walk again. That would probably solve the whole oil crisis, and at the same time solve the "fat nation" problem. I think you could be on to something riverman, unless that is not exactly what you had in mind. I suspect the latter! Conserve is good. Alternative fuel sourse is good. Again do you have any practical "black and white" suggestions. To do all this while we have reserves to carry us through transition is wise, But who says we are wise. Usually we wait until the situation is critical, and then think that if we throw enough money at it we can fix anything. Maybe when the price of oil gets high enough, we will be able to develope oil shale, or coal. I'm extremely suspicious of "alternative" fuels, especially hydrogen. Hydrogen burns clean, but the production of hydrogen from natural gas and coal can generate considerable greenhouse carbon dioxide. Interestingly, the largest US reserves of natural gas and coal are in Texas and Wyoming. So the real question comes down to how much are you willing to pay for a gallon of gas, in order to keep driving. Maybe the feds won't have to close the highway, they will be the only ones that can afford the gas to drive their nuke waste trucks on the highway that runs through Sherwood Forest! But then conservation and the environment will not be the hot issue, but how we have enough fire wood to cook our beans and stay warm, without cutting down the whole forest! The real question must be asked by everyone of himself. How much of the earth's resources does it take to make and run and stock each one of our homes, and cars and places of work? Think of all the drilling and mining and manufacturing and energy required to do all of that. Then, look at all your neighbor has, and his neighbor... We have dug ourselves into a karmic and spiritual and environmental debt that is impossible to reconcile. But, the reconciliation begins with the development of an environmental consciousness, and continues into an expansion of that consciousness. -- Burn the land and boil the sea You can't take the sky from me - From "Ballad of Serenity" by Joss Whedon |
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