Added: 3 years ago
From: bdecker3
Views: 6,841
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:
see all

All Comments (22)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • Can someone say "THREESOME!" fuck yeah, daddy likes. Two hot chicks talking about stuff all, when all I want to do is wave my cock in their faces!

  • @skaz21 LOL LOL LOL LOL!!!!

  • "Five years from now, let's not look back and kick ourselves for not allowing the safe, the secure, the ethical developments that should be allowed to take place today." That would be the electric car, Sarah. It was killed by your friends in the petroleum industry and by now-taxpayer-owned General Motors. (For a great documentary explaining the rise and fall of California's electric car initiative, check out "Who Killed the Electric Car".)

  • @Seasass the electric car is not an electric car at all. It is powered by coal, albeit indirectly.

  • @pete5668 Hmm, it's a bit of an overstatement to say it's "not electric at all" - it runs on a battery and does not directly belch hydrocarbon emissions into the air. It would be just as disingenuous to say that coal comes indirectly from solar energy. As for the "indirect" effects, you are correct that coal is responsible for the majority (57%) of electricity generated in the U.S., but clearly there are other sources, and we should be working toward increasing the use of cleaner alternatives.

  • @Seasass I agree that we should be working toward increasing the use of cleaner alternative fuels, but no alternative fuel can generate the BTU's required to do the heavy lifting that oil does, so we need to keep drilling for oil, the environmentalist wackos be damned. Yes the car runs on a battery but the battery is charged by coal, so it is a coal car. The electric car is not a product of the free market, but a product of Government Motors. No one will buy it as much as a gas-powered car.

  • @pete5668 1) What should we do when the energy required to extract oil exceeds the energy it provides? (I suppose you could legitimately say, "that's the NEXT generation's problem, not mine!") 2) People who tried the earlier electric models LOVED them and only gave them up because the car companies insisted on repossessing and destroying them 3) Government Motors, eh? Well, maybe if the free market had worked better, those companies wouldn't have needed their sorry asses bailed out.

  • Palin/Perry 2012!

  • Republicans can't rule the country in peaceful times. How could they? Without being able to use words like war and terror as excuse for everything from drilling for oil to illegal wiretapping, they would be lost; it can't be done.

  • I'm hearing what she's saying.

    We need energy, and why not get it at home?!?!

    Seems like a lot of haters here...

  • @beggarz We certainly don't need to drill though. Perhaps in the short term, like 10 years MAX, yes; but only as a temporary aid until we retrofit the country with the infrastructuer it needs for "green energy". We have SO much open unused land, where solar/wind plants, etc. could be placed, not the destroy the environment, give people eye soars, or get in the way at all. Nuclear energy is also good imo.

  • wow these two found a common language together. what a combo. it is like watching dumb and dumber, I second that..

  • You can smell the money through the makeup.  Lovely!!! :)

  • palin has giant ears,, wow never noticed before, yuk. to bad she can't listen but only speaks garbage

  • @viperset obama's ears are bigger.

  • Who is dumber? Palin or Bartimoro? This is like watching dumb and dumber.

  • Sarah Palin who says she is a regulator of Oil and Gas LMFAO

    Sarah Palin is so stupid its scary. She trumps Maria, but not by much

  • Sarah is really on top of energy issue. She didn't have time to prepare for every national issue as the gotcha questions were fired at her. But she can balance a budget, AK is one of the few states in the black. Hussein spends like Paris Hilton and has tripled the deficit in three months

  • Palin 2012!

  • Eh, no mention of NUCLEAR POWER? She sounds more like an ambassador from Alaska's chamber of commerce than someone willing to look at ALL alternatives our nation requires.

  • We need to see more of this interview on YouTube. The CNBC feed cannot be embedded.

Loading...
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more