Archive for June 28th, 2010

The Shortage Industry

http://hardware.slashdot.org/story/10/06/11/2323227/ITER-Fusion-Reactor-Enters-Existential-Crisis

I have talked a lot about fusion energy. The environmentalists are trying to prevent it. They want everything planned by Mommy Professor. They do NOT want any technological solutions to any shortage.

The opponents are described as environmentalist anti-nuclear. But they are in fact the group I discussed at the end of my 1976 book. They are the education-welfare establishment which wants the Kyoto world Mommy Professor dreams of, where there is a shortage of everything and bureaucrats make the choices.

Fusion is nuclear, but that is all it has in common with atomic power plants. Fission puts out radioactivity, fusion does not. We have no idea what any of the problems will be with fusion generation because there is none yet.

None of this has anything to do with the opposition to it. Every single socialist I know of became an environmentalist the day the USSR closed down. The USSR was, after all, just what I said, “A place where there was a shortage of everything and bureaucrats made the choices.”

It is interesting that Chernobyl occurred in Mommy Professor’s Heaven.

Nobody else would put it that way. And that is the problem.

Just as the real aims of anti-whites are never discussed, the real motives of Mommy Professor are ignored.

It is interesting to me that the big push on fusion energy is happening in Europe. Europe is the place where they usually are the first to pee on themselves when Mommy Professor says something is politically incorrect. Yet France uses nuclear power to an extent that, if copied in the US, would about get rid of our oil shortage.

But this is a crisis coming to a head that only we understand. So far this fusion project has hit $20 billion.

We now have a twenty billion dollar investment facing the environmental industry which represents trillions they hope to control from the shortage industry.

And shortage IS an industry. It is called environmentalism, but it represents millions of people who want to control things and distribute things the way they once wanted to do under socialism. The power companies backed down on nuclear power because theirs was a tiny power compared to the shortage industry.

The shortage industry is no more interested in the environment than it was in working people when it called itself socialism. Millions of people are already employed in it and it wants hundreds of millions.

All of the big companies the shortage industry gets its money from and claims to oppose are, combined, small compared to the education-welfare, environmentalist establishment. But we still debate with them as if they were Idealists against Big Money.

My first book discussed this, but the world view was weeded out as conservatives learned to use only the arguments that didn’t make their liberal heroes look like what they were. Just like today our side weeds out the Mantra.

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