What do you do when you flip the light switch and nothing happens? You call the electric company and complain. But what do you do if the electric company tells you, "We have run out of electricity"?
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Raging Inflation
Nicholas von Hoffman: Our paychecks are disintegrating as we drive them to the bank. Forget hope and change: why aren't the candidates talking about inflation?
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The 2008 Student Loan Blues
Nicholas von Hoffman: Some 200,000 college students won't qualify for loans in September, and millions more will pay higher interest rates. Can they count on Obama to help them out?
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The Bear Stearns Conspiracy
Nicholas von Hoffman: Americans know all the details of the John Edwards affair. But they remain in the dark about a scandal that affects the livelihoods of millions. Who orchestrated the fall of Bear Stearns?
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The Politics of Pandering
Nicholas von Hoffman: Until they come up with real solutions to our current economic crisis, Obama and McCain should stop trying to buy votes with fuel rebates.
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A Devil's Dictionary of Politics
Nicholas von Hoffman: With millions of first time-voters expected to go to the polls in November, never has an insane political system been more in need of explanation. You won't find much help here.
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Obama's Challenge to America's Parents
Nicholas von Hoffman: He has taken black parents to task for failing to inspire their children; it's a message that needs to be addressed to white America as well.
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How Wall Street Wrecked Your Retirement
Nicholas von Hoffman: The architects of America's disfunctional financial system allowed Wall Street gamble with our retirement savings--and now they appear to have lost it.
The service interruptions that have resulted from this range from the laughable to the lamentable. In the laughable category is this South African newspaper report:
South African cricket captain Graeme Smith said on Thursday that he hoped the Western Province Cricket Association had made arrangements to ensure that...power cuts did not affect the second one-day international against the West Indies at Newlands on Friday. "I got back from cricket training last night and couldn't get into my house," he laughed. "I only had a garage clicker, not a front door key, so I had to go to my neighbour until the power came back on." Smith said he now kept a front door key in his car.
On the not-so-funny side is the following from the Cape Argus:
Staff at Donaldson Filtration Solution, a factory in Epping Industria that manufactures filters for heavy duty vehicles, are having to start work at 6am and say this is "slowly taking its toll."... The management at Donaldson Filtration had to ask staff to start work at least two hours early because Eskom [the electric company] scheduled power cuts for the area from 2pm to 4pm.
Food rotting in refrigerators, stalled commuter trains, inert computers, lifeless traffic lights--the list of inconveniences and crippled necessities is endless. No TV! The time, five years and running, estimated to remedy the situation will seem almost an eternity to South Africans having to suffer through the shortage.
It takes years to gin up major increases in generator capacity. You cannot order them up in January and have them in place in November. This should serve as a warning to Americans, who are better at objecting to the building of electric utility plants than they are at coming up with the means to generate power that they approve of and will allow to be constructed.
Oil- and gas-fired plants are out of consideration, for price and pollution reasons. But so is nuclear power. And if you try to put up a wind farm, you will be fortunate if one, two or three special-interest groups do not go to court to stop you. One project has been opposed because people do not want to look at it. The case of Teddy Kennedy and the windmills off Martha's Vineyard is too well-known to need description.
With the coming of plug-in electric cars, electricity can and will replace much gasoline usage, but only if there is power in the receptacle the automobile is plugged into. That is not going to happen if we wait around for the invention of miraculous technologies while disdaining the ones at hand. The miracles are decades away; the demand for juice is not.
We can either get working on this or we can prepare ourselves for being cold, dark, immobilized, isolated, poorer, uncomfortable and very tired from the extra work we will have to do when our electrically powered machines can't perform. Let's get cracking.
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