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Obama Calls Chavez Gift a 'Nice Gesture'
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| President Obama said Sunday he's not concerned with the politics of shaking hands with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and is more interested in expanding a policy he described during his presidential campaign of extending an open hand to nations hostile to the U.S. Obama received a book from the Venezuelan president on Saturday after greeting him on Friday evening during the weekend Summit of the Americas. Chavez told the Obama administration that he would like to send an ambassador to the U.S. in exchange for an ambassador in Venezuela. The U.S. suspended diplomatic ties last September. U.S. officials responded that they need to see more from Chavez before moving forward but were pleased by the sentiment. Obama did not make note that the book offered by Chavez, "Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent," by Uruguayan journalist Eduardo Galeano, blames foreign interests like the United States for exploiting Latin America for centuries. "It was a nice gesture to give me a book. I am a reader," Obama said during a solo press conference at the end of a the summit held in the Caribbean nation of Trinidad and Tobago |
Re: Obama Calls Chavez Gift a 'Nice Gesture'
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| Originally posted by AsparTAME http://www.foxnews.com/politics/fir...demands-follow/ What do you think: nice gesture or subtle blow to America's face? Do you think we should deal with Chavez, with all he's done to set himself up both as a long term leader of Venezuela and as an open hostile leader to America, or do you think we should continue on the path of not dealing with them. |
Re: Obama Calls Chavez Gift a 'Nice Gesture'
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| Originally posted by AsparTAME What do you think: nice gesture or subtle blow to America's face? Do you think we should deal with Chavez, with all he's done to set himself up both as a long term leader of Venezuela and as an open hostile leader to America, or do you think we should continue on the path of not dealing with them. |
The book is a manifesto of "the rape of the South American continent" in the last 300 years or whatever, and puts most of the blame squarely on America. He probably assumed Obama would love to read such a book.
As for needing Venezuela, unfortunately that's pretty true... but it shouldn't be because we should be allowed to get our own goddamn resources so we wouldn't have to depend on loony dictators. But, you know, we gotta make sure the caribu aren't being encroached upon.
Meh, it's no different than most of the literature put out by African nationalists in the sixties and seventies... and it makes sense given that Dependency Theory was founded in Latin America.
Re: Obama Calls Chavez Gift a 'Nice Gesture'
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| Originally posted by AsparTAME What do you think: nice gesture or subtle blow to America's face? Do you think we should deal with Chavez, with all he's done to set himself up both as a long term leader of Venezuela and as an open hostile leader to America, or do you think we should continue on the path of not dealing with them. |
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| I walk among this people and I keep my eyes open; they do not forgive me that I do not envy their virtues. They bite at me because I say to them: small people need small virtues--and because I find it hard to accept that small people are needed. I am still like the rooster in a strange yard, where the hens also bite at him; but I am not angry with the hens on that account. I am polite to them as to all small annoyances; to be prickly to what is small strikes me as wisdom for hedgehogs. |
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| Originally posted by The17sss As for needing Venezuela, unfortunately that's pretty true... but it shouldn't be because we should be allowed to get our own goddamn resources so we wouldn't have to depend on loony dictators. But, you know, we gotta make sure the caribu aren't being encroached upon. |
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| Originally posted by jerZ07002 As long as we expect to rely on oil, and as long as foreign countries produce more oil than we do, we will need to rely on foreign countries for our energy. since we don't have a vast supply of oil, producing more domestically will mainly result in lowering the price of global oil supply, for a certain period of time, by enough so that americans don't change their behaviors with respect to oil consumption. During that time, we will still rely heavily on foreign producers, and will be delaying the process of fully developing methods that will power us in the future. We need to entirely move away from our current model so that we don't rely on oil to any great extent because as long as we rely on oil we rely on these dictatorships to produce enough oil to satisfy our need for energy. |
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| Originally posted by The17sss It is completely wrong to say that we don't have a vast supply of oil. We do... off the coasts, in the newly discovered oil rich Dakotas, in Montana/Wyoming/Alaska, and in the rediculous amounts of oil shale we have in Colorado. |
I hope Obama does read the book. The Monroe Doctrine has had a lot of unintended consequences in South America. Such as the violation of Nicaragua's sovereignty to fight "communists". The economic rape of Cuba during the Batista regime. The subjigation of Guatemala to keep a "banana republic". The support of the dictator Pinochet. To ignore these travesties to be completely blind to reality. I'm glad Chavez gave him the book.
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| Originally posted by Krypton I hope Obama does read the book. The Monroe Doctrine has had a lot of unintended consequences in South America. Such as the violation of Nicaragua's sovereignty to fight "communists". The economic rape of Cuba during the Batista regime. The subjigation of Guatemala to keep a "banana republic". The support of the dictator Pinochet. To ignore these travesties to be completely blind to reality. I'm glad Chavez gave him the book. |
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| Originally posted by jerZ07002 The energy department estimates that our proven oil reserves amount to about 21 billion barrels (onshore and offshore - as of the beginning of 2008). That's less than 3 years of supply at our current pace of over 7 billion barrels a year. http://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/...ent/pdf/ch3.pdf http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/e...oil-consumption shale is not oil (more specifically, i meant crude oil (petroleum), which i figured we all understand the word "oil" to be interchangeable with petroleum - i should have been more specific). Producing usable oil products with shale requires open pit mining in some of the most expansive untouched wilderness of the US. Producing more usable oil in exchange for destroying (open pit mining is the worst type of natural resource extraction) one of our greatest wilderness areas is not worth the trade-off. The reserves you're taking about in ND and MT is only about 3B barrels. For sake of argument, let's assume that none of that 3B was included in the 21 billion barrel estimate. That's still not a vast supply - 24 Billion barrels. At 7 billion barrels of oil consummed a year, our domestic supply, if it fully supplied our demand, would last for less than 4 years. That is far from vast. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakken_Formation |
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| Earlier this year, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar canceled 77 Utah oil and gas leases that had gone through seven years of studies, negotiations and land-use planning. They were rejected because temporary drilling operations might be "visible" from several national parks more than a mile away: -Some of these parcels are in or near the Green River Formation, an oil-rich region in Colorado, Utah and Wyoming that's been called the "Persia of the West." -This formation has the largest known oil shale deposits in the world, holding from 1.5 trillion to 1.8 trillion barrels of crude. -The Energy Department's Argonne National Laboratory indicates 800 billion of these barrels are recoverable with current technology. Paul Spitler of the Wilderness Society told CNSNews this is just dandy. "There are some landscapes that are simply more important for their scenic, natural, recreational and ecological values than they are for oil and gas development," he said. Most of the locked-up lands are in Western states where there's enough oil shale to satisfy America's needs for the next 200 years. Modern technology can extract these vast resources from the earth with a minimal footprint. Technology for shale-oil extraction is certainly further along than getting energy from switch grass or producing cellulosic ethanol. If we're going to stimulate anything, let's stimulate shale-oil production. |
Well if it was posted in an editorial without a byline, it must be true.

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| Originally posted by The17sss From the Shale, approximately 800 billion barrles of crude can be extracted. http://www.ibdeditorials.com/IBDArt...323305469830589 |


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Originally posted by jerZ07002 |
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| Originally posted by Lebezniatnikov Well if it was posted in an editorial without a byline, it must be true. |
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| Originally posted by Q5echo thats what the Canadians do b/c no one gives a damn about the tundra from which they recover it. you don't have to strip mine the Sierra Nevadas to recover ours. we can heat it in situ and recover almost half of that 800 billion with current technology. |
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| Originally posted by The17sss The person writing the editorial didn't make up the facts based on 7 years of research. Read again: "The Energy Department's Argonne National Laboratory indicates 800 billion of these barrels are recoverable with current technology". .... recoverable from the Shale, Jerz... from the shale. Are you ignoring that because it's inconvenient? |
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| Originally posted by AsparTAME I'd like to hear you expound more on the negative side effects of the Monroe Doctrine. |
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| Originally posted by Krypton Here is a good start my friend. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CIA_ac...in_the_Americas |
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| Originally posted by jerZ07002 seriously bro, take a geology class. Shale is a rock. The rock has to be extracted from the earth, which means mining the rock. Then, a certain compound in the rock is processed to create a synthetic "oil equivalent," not crude oil. This is basic geology you learn in a freshman college course. In this case, they don't just drill a hole with petroleum shooting out of the hole. |
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| Originally posted by The17sss Are you serious? I never took geology in college man. I don't assume you took too many geology classes or had any oil extraction training in law school either. What I do know is that a 7 year study by those with no political agenda who do know and understand oil, shale, geology, etc. have concluded that there are approximately 1.2 trillion barrels worth of oil in that shale, and 800 billion of that they say can be extracted as crude with current technology. |
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| Originally posted by The17sss Are you serious? I never took geology in college man. I don't assume you took too many geology classes or had any oil extraction training in law school either. What I do know is that a 7 year study by those with no political agenda who do know and understand oil, shale, geology, etc. have concluded that there are approximately 1.2 trillion barrels worth of oil in that shale, and 800 billion of that they say can be extracted as crude with current technology. |


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| Originally posted by jerZ07002 GET IT?? Since i don't think you do get it, read this: http://ostseis.anl.gov/guide/oilshale/index.cfm |
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| Originally posted by The17sss I just read the shale link. So what if there aren't any derricks and different methods are used to extract it... it can still be used in the same way as conventional oil. My truck loves synthetic oil. If the oil extracted from shale can be used similarly to crude, that's good news. |
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| Originally posted by The17sss p.s.- I took some psychology classes in college... doesn't make me a psychologist. |
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