Peon Quotables

Wisdom never kicks at the iron walls it can't bring down. —Olive Schreiner Hazelden.org

Each man with a new idea is a crank until the idea succeeds. --Mark Twain source: Hazelden.org

We do not live an equal life, but one of contrasts and patchwork; now a little joy, then a sorrow, now a sin, then a generous or brave action. --Ralph Waldo Emerson

Not the power to remember, but the power to forget is a necessary condition for our existence. --Sholem Asch

Showing posts with label Alternative Energy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alternative Energy. Show all posts

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Video: AP Interview With President Obama On Foreign Relations And The Economy


President Obama will be traveling to Russia over the weekend with a primary goal of getting talks started on a new START Treaty (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty).

AP: Why are you meeting with Putin? Answer: 'Prime Minster Putin still has a lot of sway in Russia...'

Questions are also posed to the President with respect to Iran and North Korea.


AP asks the President to address the concerns of Americans who are concerned that this will be a 'jobless recovery'. One thing the President rightly mentions is that for many Americans, jobs have 'well-paying jobs' have been moving out of the country for quite some time, and he wants to that change looking to new energy jobs as the answer.


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Thursday, January 8, 2009

From Change.gov: American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan

Dramatic action (Update: Photos)

"The time has come to build a 21st century economy in which hard work and responsibility are once again rewarded," President-elect Obama said in a speech this morning, making the case for urgent action on an American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan.

The plan will save or create 3 million jobs by doubling the production of alternative energy; weatherizing 75% of federal buildings and two million American homes; computerizing America’s medical records; updating thousands of schools, community colleges, and public universities; expanding broadband; and investing in science, research, and technology.

You can read President-elect Obama's remarks below and view pictures of the event below. We'll have video soon.


Remarks of President-Elect Barack Obama
As Prepared for Delivery
American Recovery and Reinvestment
Thursday, January 8, 2009

Throughout America’s history, there have been some years that simply rolled into the next without much notice or fanfare. Then there are the years that come along once in a generation – the kind that mark a clean break from a troubled past, and set a new course for our nation.

This is one of those years.

We start 2009 in the midst of a crisis unlike any we have seen in our lifetime – a crisis that has only deepened over the last few weeks. Nearly two million jobs have now been lost, and on Friday we are likely to learn that we lost more jobs last year than at any time since World War II. Just in the past year, another 2.8 million Americans who want and need full-time work have had to settle for part-time jobs. Manufacturing has hit a twenty-eight year low. Many businesses cannot borrow or make payroll. Many families cannot pay their bills or their mortgage. Many workers are watching their life savings disappear. And many, many Americans are both anxious and uncertain of what the future will hold.

I don’t believe it’s too late to change course, but it will be if we don’t take dramatic action as soon as possible. If nothing is done, this recession could linger for years. The unemployment rate could reach double digits. Our economy could fall $1 trillion short of its full capacity, which translates into more than $12,000 in lost income for a family of four. We could lose a generation of potential and promise, as more young Americans are forced to forgo dreams of college or the chance to train for the jobs of the future. And our nation could lose the competitive edge that has served as a foundation for our strength and standing in the world.

In short, a bad situation could become dramatically worse.

This crisis did not happen solely by some accident of history or normal turn of the business cycle, and we won’t get out of it by simply waiting for a better day to come, or relying on the worn-out dogmas of the past. We arrived at this point due to an era of profound irresponsibility that stretched from corporate boardrooms to the halls of power in Washington, DC. For years, too many Wall Street executives made imprudent and dangerous decisions, seeking profits with too little regard for risk, too little regulatory scrutiny, and too little accountability. Banks made loans without concern for whether borrowers could repay them, and some borrowers took advantage of cheap credit to take on debt they couldn’t afford. Politicians spent taxpayer money without wisdom or discipline, and too often focused on scoring political points instead of the problems they were sent here to solve. The result has been a devastating loss of trust and confidence in our economy, our financial markets, and our government.

Now, the very fact that this crisis is largely of our own making means that it is not beyond our ability to solve. Our problems are rooted in past mistakes, not our capacity for future greatness. It will take time, perhaps many years, but we can rebuild that lost trust and confidence. We can restore opportunity and prosperity. We should never forget that our workers are still more productive than any on Earth. Our universities are still the envy of the world. We are still home to the most brilliant minds, the most creative entrepreneurs, and the most advanced technology and innovation that history has ever known. And we are still the nation that has overcome great fears and improbable odds. If we act with the urgency and seriousness that this moment requires, I know that we can do it again.

That is why I have moved quickly to work with my economic team and leaders of both parties on an American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan that will immediately jumpstart job creation and long-term growth.

It’s a plan that represents not just new policy, but a whole new approach to meeting our most urgent challenges. For if we hope to end this crisis, we must end the culture of anything goes that helped create it – and this change must begin in Washington. It is time to trade old habits for a new spirit of responsibility. It is time to finally change the ways of Washington so that we can set a new and better course for America.

There is no doubt that the cost of this plan will be considerable. It will certainly add to the budget deficit in the short-term. But equally certain are the consequences of doing too little or nothing at all, for that will lead to an even greater deficit of jobs, incomes, and confidence in our economy. It is true that we cannot depend on government alone to create jobs or long-term growth, but at this particular moment, only government can provide the short-term boost necessary to lift us from a recession this deep and severe. Only government can break the vicious cycles that are crippling our economy – where a lack of spending leads to lost jobs which leads to even less spending; where an inability to lend and borrow stops growth and leads to even less credit.

That is why we need to act boldly and act now to reverse these cycles. That’s why we need to put money in the pockets of the American people, create new jobs, and invest in our future. That’s why we need to re-start the flow of credit and restore the rules of the road that will ensure a crisis like this never happens again.

That work begins with this plan – a plan I am confident will save or create at least three million jobs over the next few years. It is not just another public works program. It’s a plan that recognizes both the paradox and the promise of this moment – the fact that there are millions of Americans trying to find work, even as, all around the country, there is so much work to be done. That’s why we’ll invest in priorities like energy and education; health care and a new infrastructure that are necessary to keep us strong and competitive in the 21st century. That’s why the overwhelming majority of the jobs created will be in the private sector, while our plan will save the public sector jobs of teachers, cops, firefighters and others who provide vital services.

To finally spark the creation of a clean energy economy, we will double the production of alternative energy in the next three years. We will modernize more than 75% of federal buildings and improve the energy efficiency of two million American homes, saving consumers and taxpayers billions on our energy bills. In the process, we will put Americans to work in new jobs that pay well and can’t be outsourced – jobs building solar panels and wind turbines; constructing fuel-efficient cars and buildings; and developing the new energy technologies that will lead to even more jobs, more savings, and a cleaner, safer planet in the bargain.

To improve the quality of our health care while lowering its cost, we will make the immediate investments necessary to ensure that within five years, all of America’s medical records are computerized. This will cut waste, eliminate red tape, and reduce the need to repeat expensive medical tests. But it just won’t save billions of dollars and thousands of jobs – it will save lives by reducing the deadly but preventable medical errors that pervade our health care system.

To give our children the chance to live out their dreams in a world that’s never been more competitive, we will equip tens of thousands of schools, community colleges, and public universities with 21st century classrooms, labs, and libraries. We’ll provide new computers, new technology, and new training for teachers so that students in Chicago and Boston can compete with kids in Beijing for the high-tech, high-wage jobs of the future.

To build an economy that can lead this future, we will begin to rebuild America. Yes, we’ll put people to work repairing crumbling roads, bridges, and schools by eliminating the backlog of well-planned, worthy and needed infrastructure projects. But we’ll also do more to retrofit America for a global economy. That means updating the way we get our electricity by starting to build a new smart grid that will save us money, protect our power sources from blackout or attack, and deliver clean, alternative forms of energy to every corner of our nation. It means expanding broadband lines across America, so that a small business in a rural town can connect and compete with their counterparts anywhere in the world. And it means investing in the science, research, and technology that will lead to new medical breakthroughs, new discoveries, and entire new industries.

Finally, this recovery and reinvestment plan will provide immediate relief to states, workers, and families who are bearing the brunt of this recession. To get people spending again, 95% of working families will receive a $1,000 tax cut – the first stage of a middle-class tax cut that I promised during the campaign and will include in our next budget. To help Americans who have lost their jobs and can’t find new ones, we’ll continue the bipartisan extensions of unemployment insurance and health care coverage to help them through this crisis. Government at every level will have to tighten its belt, but we’ll help struggling states avoid harmful budget cuts, as long as they take responsibility and use the money to maintain essential services like police, fire, education, and health care.

I understand that some might be skeptical of this plan. Our government has already spent a good deal of money, but we haven’t yet seen that translate into more jobs or higher incomes or renewed confidence in our economy. That’s why the American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan won’t just throw money at our problems – we’ll invest in what works. The true test of the policies we’ll pursue won’t be whether they’re Democratic or Republican ideas, but whether they create jobs, grow our economy, and put the American Dream within reach of the American people.

Instead of politicians doling out money behind a veil of secrecy, decisions about where we invest will be made transparently, and informed by independent experts wherever possible. Every American will be able to hold Washington accountable for these decisions by going online to see how and where their tax dollars are being spent. And as I announced yesterday, we will launch an unprecedented effort to eliminate unwise and unnecessary spending that has never been more unaffordable for our nation and our children’s future than it is right now.

We have to make tough choices and smart investments today so that as the economy recovers, the deficit starts to come down. We cannot have a solid recovery if our people and our businesses don’t have confidence that we’re getting our fiscal house in order. That’s why our goal is not to create a slew of new government programs, but a foundation for long-term economic growth.

That also means an economic recovery plan that is free from earmarks and pet projects. I understand that every member of Congress has ideas on how to spend money. Many of these projects are worthy, and benefit local communities. But this emergency legislation must not be the vehicle for those aspirations. This must be a time when leaders in both parties put the urgent needs of our nation above our own narrow interests.

Now, this recovery plan alone will not solve all the problems that led us into this crisis. We must also work with the same sense of urgency to stabilize and repair the financial system we all depend on. That means using our full arsenal of tools to get credit flowing again to families and business, while restoring confidence in our markets. It means launching a sweeping effort to address the foreclosure crisis so that we can keep responsible families in their homes. It means preventing the catastrophic failure of financial institutions whose collapse could endanger the entire economy, but only with maximum protections for taxpayers and a clear understanding that government support for any company is an extraordinary action that must come with significant restrictions on the firms that receive support. And it means reforming a weak and outdated regulatory system so that we can better withstand financial shocks and better protect consumers, investors, and businesses from the reckless greed and risk-taking that must never endanger our prosperity again.

No longer can we allow Wall Street wrongdoers to slip through regulatory cracks. No longer can we allow special interests to put their thumbs on the economic scales. No longer can we allow the unscrupulous lending and borrowing that leads only to destructive cycles of bubble and bust.

It is time to set a new course for this economy, and that change must begin now. We should have an open and honest discussion about this recovery plan in the days ahead, but I urge Congress to move as quickly as possible on behalf of the American people. For every day we wait or point fingers or drag our feet, more Americans will lose their jobs. More families will lose their savings. More dreams will be deferred and denied. And our nation will sink deeper into a crisis that, at some point, we may not be able to reverse.

That is not the country I know, and it is not a future I will accept as President of the United States. A world that depends on the strength of our economy is now watching and waiting for America to lead once more. And that is what we will do.

It will not come easy or happen overnight, and it is altogether likely that things may get worse before they get better. But that is all the more reason for Congress to act without delay. I know the scale of this plan is unprecedented, but so is the severity of our situation. We have already tried the wait-and-see approach to our problems, and it is the same approach that helped lead us to this day of reckoning.

That is why the time has come to build a 21st century economy in which hard work and responsibility are once again rewarded. That’s why I’m asking Congress to work with me and my team day and night, on weekends if necessary, to get the plan passed in the next few weeks. That’s why I’m calling on all Americans – Democrats and Republicans – to put good ideas ahead of the old ideological battles; a sense of common purpose above the same narrow partisanship; and insist that the first question each of us asks isn’t “What’s good for me?” but “What’s good for the country my children will inherit?”

More than any program or policy, it is this spirit that will enable us to confront this challenge with the same spirit that has led previous generations to face down war, depression, and fear itself. And if we do – if we are able to summon that spirit again; if are able to look out for one another, and listen to one another, and do our part for our nation and for posterity, then I have no doubt that years from now, we will look back on 2009 as one of those years that marked another new and hopeful beginning for the United States of America. Thank you, God Bless You, and may God Bless America.

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Thursday, December 4, 2008

High Speed Rail - What do you think?


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Thursday, September 4, 2008

Investing in Change: Barack Obama on Small Business, Energy, Jobs, Healthcare and Taxes

Road Blog: Barack at the Siemans Hydro Plant in York PA

by Obama Road Blog, Thursday, September 04, 2008 at 05:07 PM

Today Barack stopped by York, Pennsylvania to take a tour of the Siemans Hydro Power plant. He was joined by Senator Bob Casey and York Mayor John Brennan for a walk-through of the factory.

CEO and President E. Mark Garner and Executive Vice President Frank Daley led of the group through the loud, industrial space while describing how the Hydro turbines are made and used to generate energy.

After the tour, Barack spoke to a group of roughly sixty workers in the parking lot.

Touring plants like this is one of my favorite things as a candidate. You get to learn about the people who are making the things that make people's lives better. Nothing beats it.

Brad Kunkel, an HVAC installer of 23 years who had recently become a small business owner, expressed concern about being able to continue his new business in these tough economic times. Here is what Barack had to say:

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Sunday, August 10, 2008

Opinionatin' Peon: Friedman Talks Toilets, Bicycles and the Arab Oil Embargo of 1973


Op-Ed Columnist

Flush With Energy

By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
Published: August 9, 2008

Copenhagen

The Arctic Hotel in Ilulissat, Greenland, is a charming little place on the West Coast, but no one would ever confuse it for a Four Seasons — maybe a One Seasons. But when my wife and I walked back to our room after dinner the other night and turned down our dim hallway, the hall light went on. It was triggered by an energy-saving motion detector. Our toilet even had two different flushing powers depending on — how do I say this delicately — what exactly you’re flushing. A two-gear toilet! I’ve never found any of this at an American hotel. Oh, if only we could be as energy efficient as Greenland!

A day later, I flew back to Denmark. After appointments here in Copenhagen, I was riding in a car back to my hotel at the 6 p.m. rush hour. And boy, you knew it was rush hour because 50 percent of the traffic in every intersection was bicycles. That is roughly the percentage of Danes who use two-wheelers to go to and from work or school every day here. If I lived in a city that had dedicated bike lanes everywhere, including one to the airport, I’d go to work that way, too. It means less traffic, less pollution and less obesity.

What was most impressive about this day, though, was that it was raining. No matter. The Danes simply donned rain jackets and pants for biking. If only we could be as energy smart as Denmark!

Unlike America, Denmark, which was so badly hammered by the 1973 Arab oil embargo that it banned all Sunday driving for a while, responded to that crisis in such a sustained, focused and systematic way that today it is energy independent. (And it didn’t happen by Danish politicians making their people stupid by telling them the solution was simply more offshore drilling.) read more here

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Thursday, August 7, 2008

Hoosier Peon Obama Watch: The Day in Pictures - Obama and Bayh in Elkhart, IN and surprise visit to Shoops in Portage, IN

The Day in Pictures - Senator Barack Obama spends the day in the 'Hoosier' Heartland with Senator Evan Bayh.

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Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Hoosier Peon: 1600 Hoosiers came out to hear what Barack Obama had to say in Elkhart, Indiana

The Hoosier State hosts Barack Obama in Elkhart, Indiana on Wednesday, August 06, 2008

Road Blog: Barack in Elkhart, IN

by Obama Road BlogWednesday, August 06, 2008 at 01:19 PM

Barack rolled into Elkhart, Indiana today on the latest leg of his bus tour. Folks jammed into the Concord High School gymnasium (home of the Minutemen) to attend a town hall focused on energy issues. An estimated 1,600 people from all over the region were eager to talk with Barack about the topics that are grabbing today’s headlines – from rising energy costs to the development of alternative fuels and energy sources.

Barack had a question for the folks of Elkhart: “Are you better off than you were four or eight years ago?” People in the crowd paused to think. “Eight years ago gas was $1.50. Do you remember that?” People in the crowd shook their heads, recalling a seemingly distant memory. “You don’t!” Barack exclaimed, cracking a smile.

George Berkeley, a local, asked a question about energy manufacturing and how it relates to our flagging economy. Here is a video of their exchange:



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Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Peon Humor: Paris Hilton speaks about campaign add, while solving the energy crisis at the same time

See more funny videos at Funny or Die
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Monday, August 4, 2008

Energetic Peon: Barack Obama's 'New Energy for America' Plan

New Energy for America
by Christopher HassMonday, August 04, 2008 at 11:52 AM
This morning in Michigan, Senator Obama announced a comprehensive New Energy for America plan designed to address the current energy crisis and move America towards a 21st century energy economy. Some of the proposals put forth today include:

* Providing short‐term relief to American families facing pain at the pump
* Helping create five million new jobs by strategically investing $150 billion over the next ten years to catalyze private efforts to build a clean energy future.
* Within 10 years, saving more oil than we currently import from the Middle East and Venezuela combined.
* Putting 1 million Plug‐In Hybrid cars – cars that can get up to 150 miles per gallon – on the road by 2015, cars that we will work to make sure are built here in America.
* Ensuring 10 percent of our electricity comes from renewable sources by 2012, and 25 percent by 2025.
* Implementing an economy‐wide cap‐and‐trade program to reduce greenhouse gas emissions 80 percent by 2050.

You can read the full New Energy for America plan below:




Read this document on Scribd: Barack Obama's New Energy Plan For America
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Energetic Peon: Obama calls for 'clean energy' nation. Can you dig it?


Obama calls for 'clean energy' nation



Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) on Monday called reducing the nation’s energy consumption “the great test of our time” and proposed billions of dollars in subsidies for business and consumers to encourage a “clean energy “ future.

“We can do this,” he vowed in Michigan, the nation’s car capital, promising to spend $150 billion over 10 years on the effort.

The plans include a $7,000 tax credit to drivers who buy advanced-technology vehicles and $4 billion in direct assistance to Detroit automakers to help them build hybrid vehicles in the U.S.

“I ask you to join me, in November and in the years to come, to ensure that we will not only control our own energy, but once again control our own destiny and forge a new and better future for the country that we love,” he said at Michigan State University in Lansing.

The three main components of Obama’s plan are: read more here Digg!

Peon Update; New Obama TV Ad - for your information with 'Peon' comment

NEW OBAMA TELEVISION AD



If you've read my previous posts, then you know I don't care for 'Campaign Ads'. I suggest reading the plan, looking for nonpartisan critiques of the plan, in order to make an informed decision. Read, read, read. Just my take.

Peace and Love,

PD Digg!

Peon Wakup Call: Hello? America? On energy, we better do it FIRST before we get left behind in the global marketplace. 'Peon' Commentary included.

Barack in Lansing, MI: "We must end the age of oil in our time."

by Christopher Hass, Monday, August 04, 2008 at 11:24 AM

Senator Obama just concluded a major speech in Lansing, Michigan where he addressed our current energy crisis and described our addiction to foreign oil as "central" to all of the major challenges facing us today.

Without a doubt, this addiction is one of the most dangerous and urgent threats this nation has ever faced - from the gas prices that are wiping out your paychecks and straining businesses to the jobs that are disappearing from this state; from the instability and terror bred in the Middle East to the rising oceans and record drought and spreading famine that could engulf our planet.

In response to these challenges, Obama announced his New Energy for America plan, which includes an immediate energy rebate to Americans struggling with high gas prices, the creation of five million new green jobs, and the elimination of our dependence on Middle Eastern oil in ten years.

In his speech, Senator Obama outlined a number of short terms goals to lower gas prices and help working families struggling to make ends meet, but he also emphasized that:

We simply cannot pretend, as Senator McCain does, that we can drill our way out of this problem. We need a much bolder and much bigger set of solutions. We have to make a serious, nationwide commitment to developing new sources of energy and we have to do it right away.

Read the full remarks, as prepared for delivery . . .

---------------------------------------


OK, here's how I see it. We will have to get a 'lil bit' uncomfortable to get where we need to go. The future of good-paying jobs for Americans is in energy. We need to get off the stick and support it, demand it, require it. If we don't, another country is going to do it first. This is our future, and I am only speaking to the issue of jobs for Americans.

Watch the video from Lansing:




Here's another reason to elect a President who will partner with business and actually lead us in a new direction with respect to these goals. We need to get off our dependence on oil in the middle East, and from foreign leaders like
Venezuela's Extremist President, Hugo Rafael Chávez. We need to get off the stick and elect a President who will facilitate these changes without putting 'politics' into every single solitary issue of great importance in our country and our world.

I know the amazing things that have occurred in this country and not through reading any books. My parents were born and lived through 'The Depression', World War II, the Korean War, Vietnam, and came into the middle-class through the years of a thriving steel industry. If that generation could do what they did, we can do this.

When Barack Obama says 'We are the ones we've been waiting for.", I believe he is saying that we have the power to make change. We have the power to think through these issues and make informed decisions. We have the power to say 'Hey this ain't workin', let's do something else." Our power is in our vote. Our power is in our voices, and strongest when our voices unite.

When Barack Obama says "Yes we can.", I believe that he is trying to bring our minds into the light of possibility. For many of us the possibility of the American dream has been overshadowed by loss, tragedy, endless struggle, and roadblocks, while at the same time, we turn on our televisions to see the affluence and prosperity that everyone else on earth seems to be enjoying. It's not true of course that everyone is affluent, but it is another unintentional, yet insidious way of lowering one's self worth and esteem. It has not been true that in America, anyone can succeed if they work hard and try. Many can and have. Many work very hard each and everyday and see little from their toil. Often the messages are "You are not trying hard enough!"

Even still, we are so fortunate. Even still, we are grateful for our our country, and are well aware of the advantages we have in this great nation. We just want to do better, and to have more opportunities. I believe that those opportunities will be in changing the way we think first of all, and changing what we want. Capitalism is not bad in and of itself, but when coupled with extreme greed, and no checks and balances, no partnering with the American people, if Capitalism were naked, it would be a 'Girl's Gone Wild' Video.

We can take it back. We have this opportunity to take back our country. I believe that Barack Obama is the person who can lead us in a new and better direction. I hope that you will join us, if you have not already done so. He is not 'The One', nor is he 'The Messiah', or any of the things that the other side may say. There is no 'koolaid' drinking in the campaign. If you really know Democrats, then you must know that we rarely agree on everything, we cannot keep our big mouths shut about it, and that our disagreements in the past have often been part of the reason we have not been able to win elections, so the 'koolaid' drinking thing has got no legs at all.

I'm done. Nap time.

Peace and Love,

PD

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Sunday, August 3, 2008

Alternative Energy Peon: Obama says he may compromise on drilling to get Comprehensive Energy Legislation passed if he is elected.

THE HUFFINGTON POST


Obama Shifts, says he may back limited offshore drilling (if a compromise is needed to get a comprehensive energy bill passed)

Mike Glover, August 1, 2008 10:57 PM EST

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama said Friday he would be willing to support limited additional offshore oil drilling if that's what it takes to enact a comprehensive policy to foster fuel-efficient autos and develop alternate energy sources.

Shifting from his previous opposition to expanded offshore drilling, the Illinois senator told a Florida newspaper he could get behind a compromise with Republicans and oil companies to prevent gridlock over energy.

Republican rival John McCain, who earlier dropped his opposition to offshore drilling, has been criticizing Obama on the stump and in broadcast ads for clinging to his opposition as gasoline prices topped $4 a gallon. Polls indicate these attacks have helped McCain gain ground on Obama.

"My interest is in making sure we've got the kind of comprehensive energy policy that can bring down gas prices," Obama said in an interview with The Palm Beach Post.

"If, in order to get that passed, we have to compromise in terms of a careful, well thought-out drilling strategy that was carefully circumscribed to avoid significant environmental damage _ I don't want to be so rigid that we can't get something done." read more here

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Peon Blog Spot: Very interesting blog to check out - One Shared Planet


One Shared Planet - Displays videos on Global Warming, Environmental Issues and Alternative Energy in a very unique way, along other news and information Digg!

The (new) West Wing

Peon News & Blog Faves