tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10856048.post3549464194246147953..comments2024-03-12T12:23:10.033-04:00Comments on Secular Perspectives: The Challenge of Confronting Visionary Futures Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10856048.post-69778419257791418122012-10-31T12:30:01.738-04:002012-10-31T12:30:01.738-04:00Excellent posting. What comes through it that we h...Excellent posting. What comes through it that we humanists need to get more political, on as non-partisan basis as possible. We need to work with like-minded people pf all religious persuasions on solar and wind energy, conservation, recycling, fuel efficiency, overpopulation, resource conservation, and related issues. We can't get bogged down in endless debates over deities.Edd.Doerrhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02823666641589127370noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10856048.post-25726113649502515872012-10-29T18:17:33.524-04:002012-10-29T18:17:33.524-04:00As usual you have a superb post. This one is exce...As usual you have a superb post. This one is exceptionally so. If we focused on the cultural and institutional elements of solar power we would be like Germany at a point where we would have be near full grid parity. At that point fossil fuel plants will have to accept their role as legacy plants required to fill in baseload requirements for an interim period. The utilities obviously don't want that role. If we had an informed democracy they would have no choice in the matter. As it is they have the full rights of "people" and the funding to push back against sane shared action.Don Whartonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11874733311091724239noreply@blogger.com