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Fox News Claims Solar Won't Work in America Because It's Not Sunny Like German


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2013 Feb 7, 10:23pm   16,274 views  66 comments

by marcus   ➕follow (6)   💰tip   ignore  

Fox News Claims Solar Won't Work in America Because It's Not Sunny Like Germany.

Silly Fox News. They crack me up.

http://www.slate.com/blogs/future_tense/2013/02/07/fox_news_expert_on_solar_energy_germany_gets_a_lot_more_sun_than_we_do_video.html

Joshi's jaw-dropping response: "They're a smaller country, and they've got lots of sun. Right? They've got a lot more sun than we do." In case that wasn't clear enough for some viewers, Joshi went on: "The problem is it's a cloudy day and it's raining, you're not gonna have it." Sure, California might get sun now and then, Joshi conceded, "but here on the East Coast, it's just not going to work."

Gosh, why hasn't anyone thought of that before? Wouldn't you think that some scientist, somewhere, would have noticed that the East Coast is far less sunny than Central Europe and therefore incapable of producing solar power on the same scale?

#energy

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59   marcus   2013 Feb 16, 9:53am  

Reality says

That's why the NASA Space Shuttles kept flying for 30+ years with onboard main control computer weighing a ton yet having only computational power comparable to the original PC, when each pound of weight cost something like $18k at each Shuttle launch!

Yes, they should have developed an entirely and different new shuttle, although that might have cost something too.

"when each pound of weight cost something like $18k at each Shuttle launch!"

Why do I have a feeling that such a number is just the cost of the launch divided by the weight ? (not the actual cost differential of each additional pound).

I'm done here, but knock yourself out.

60   Reality   2013 Feb 16, 9:53am  

marcus says

Smart people have to make a living too.

It's a fact that many professors in Mathematics and Science at US universities, had the jobs (1960 - ? ) that they did have because of government investment.

First of all, university professors in math and sciences were mushrooming even before the 1960's. Math and science students started to out-number divinity students in the 19th century because of the private sector job offers (industrial revolution underway) started to outbid the previous #1 and #2 employers of college graduates: the Church and the Government. A divinity degree was plenty sufficient for Church and government jobs.

Secondly, to the extent that smart math and science brains were diverted to work on bombs and other weapons, our society is worse off because of it.

Thirdly, it's interesting to note that Albert Einstein developed his entire theory of relativity before becoming a professor . . . and didn't put forth anything new after becoming a university professor.

This was the evidence that I was referring to (that I wasn't going to dig up for), but I was told this directly by a Mathematics professor, and it's easy to verify.

What evidence would that be? that the prof prefer the government giving him a job guarantee? No kidding. I'm sure the banksters also prefer job guarantee from the government. Everyone does. That's why civilizations eventually grinds to a halt: everyone wants to suckle on the big cheese in the sky at someone else' expense.

As for ideology, you're the one that's stretching so hard with assertions that back your ideology.

You don't need to believe in any ideology to follow what I'm writing. All you need to do is assuming that other people are not stupid.

I'm not arguing against free markets or capitalism. I'm only arguing that goverment investment in research and technology is obviously sometimes very successful.

Just like sometimes the soviet bureaucrats could successfully put some food on the store shelves. Do you really think the food got on the shelves because of the soviet bureaucrats or despite of them? Well, the soviet textbooks and schools definitely taught their pupils that food on the shelves would have been impossible without the bureaucrats, and especially the top bureaucrat.

61   Reality   2013 Feb 16, 9:55am  

marcus says

It's a slippery slope. Government backs research in to promising technologies, or subsidizes consumer utilization by early adopters, and the next thing you know were talking fascist takeover of the entire economy.

Government bureaucrats don't have a magic crystal ball to tell them what's a truly promising technology. To the extent that they take resources away from other R&D effort via taxation to fund what they subjectively believe to be promising, they slow down the overall pace of technological advance. Don't forget bureaucrats themselves incurr cost.

62   Reality   2013 Feb 16, 9:58am  

marcus says

Why do I have a feeling that such a number is just the cost of the launch divided by the weight ? (not the actual cost differential of each additional pound).

That was the going rate for commercial cargo lift into space (NASA's actual cost might have been even higher). Every pound that they could shave off that dead weight door stopper of a computer, they could have sold for income . . . but they never did.

63   Reality   2013 Feb 16, 10:05am  

marcus says

Another whacko right wing authoritarian extremist.

That's a funny accusation. You are the one advocating authoritarianism for R&D resources.

64   marcus   2013 Feb 16, 10:13am  

Reality says

Government bureaucrats don't have a magic crystal ball to tell them what's a truly promising technology.

MAybe promising was the wrong word.

I'll get get concise and summarize my point.

There is a gap (in time and investment and scaling up to production and use), between when a desirable technology becomes more than just theoretically possible, and when it is in full scale usage.

Sometimes, maybe even usually, this investment and scaling up will be done by private entities, looking to profit later. (this is true regardless of whether the original research was funded mostly by the government and universities or not).

But other times, for fairly obvious reasons, such as defense, having government expedite the process is very beneficial.

In the case of alternative energy sources, I consider government investment sensible because we have somewhat cheap sources now (not cheap enough), that is fossil fuels, with very powerful interests behind them, that prevents "the market" from doing now, what it would eventually have to do.

Governments need to help expedite the development of alternatives, because, for example, the "profit motive" doesn't help us avoid the consequences of peak oil. In fact, if oil were to get scarce, before good alternatives existed, I'm guessing that there are those who would cash in on this big time.

65   thomaswong.1986   2013 Feb 16, 10:28am  

Marcus.. you want Govt researched cheap source of renewable energy...

its called Nuclear... but im sure you keep wanting some other nonsense...

66   Reality   2013 Feb 16, 10:38am  

marcus says

There is a gap (in time and investment and scaling up to production and use), between when a technology becomes more than just theoretically possible, and when it is in full scale usage.

Sometimes, maybe even usually, this investment and scaling up will be done by private entities, looking to profit later.

Agree with you on "usually." The market place is excellent at anticipating future profit and making present investment accordingly.

marcus says

But other times, for fairly obvious reasons, such as defense, having government expedite the process is very beneficial.

Agree in one aspect: the private sector would not likely have found the murderous incentive to develop the atomic bomb or the ICBM. The question is what kind of "very beneficial" is the government stepping in and making these weapons?

Heck, if not for the US continuing after Germans gave up, and eventually successfully developing the atomic bomb, the soviets probably wouldn't be able to develop it without copying from the US, hence nobody else has it either (copying from the US or from the soviets, i.e. indirectly copying form the US).

marcus says

In the case of alternative energy sources, I consider government investment sensible because we have somewhat cheap sources now (not cheap enough), that is fossil fuels, with very powerful interests behind them, that prevents "the market" from doing now, what it would eventually have to do.

Governments need to help expedite the development of alternatives, because, for example, the "profit motive" doesn't help us avoid the consequences of peak oil. In fact, if oil were to get scarce, before good alternatives existed, I'm guessing that there are those who would cash in on this big time.

1. There is no peak oil. That theory is an oil/gas industry propaganda to make their products more valuable. They have been doing that since the 1870's, yes 1870's, not just 1970's. WWII was started based on the theory that the world was running out of oil.

2. Government involvement is highly inadvisable if you care for alternative energy. Do not think government politicians and bureaucrats are robots doing your biddings. They have their own self-interest. Since you already know the powerful influence that the big oil companies wield, if you were a big oil executive, how would you like to treat alternative energy development? Controlling it and diverting it to dead-end pursuits. That's exactly the government "help" for alternative energy has done: ask yourself, why a president with strong oil industry background would promote mandatory ethanol fuel? Why all the nuclear power plants are still using very dangerous Uranium process instead of the much safer Thorium process? When government gets to fund research, as soon as the research shows good results like the Thorium liquid fuel reactor did 4 decades ago, the government can shut it down! The government takes the brains and resources away from private sector, so there's none left to do the research. That's how the big-oil prevents the rise of any meaningful alternative fuel solution . . . by getting the government involved in it!

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