Showing posts with label T. Boone Pickens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label T. Boone Pickens. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Bloomberg Guzzles the Pickens Kool-Aid

Michael Bloomberg might be a good businessman, but when it comes to common sense ideas, he may be one of the more tone-deaf politicians in history. Along with many others, he's now jumping on board with the T. Boone Pickens windmill idea and has taken the ball and run with it to an absurd extreme.
Forget Chicago. New York would claim title as the genuine "Windy City" under a dramatic proposal by Mayor Bloomberg yesterday to develop wind turbines atop the Big Apple's bridges and skyscrapers.

But that's not all. The mayor also tossed out the possibility of building wind farms way out in the Atlantic Ocean, miles from shore, that he said could generate roughly twice the energy of similar land-based facilities and supply 10 percent of the city's electricity needs within a decade.

"I think it would be a thing of beauty if, when Lady Liberty looks out on the horizon, she not only welcomes new immigrants but lights their way with a torch powered by an ocean wind farm," the mayor said in the closing speech of the National Clean Energy Summit.

Bloomberg has been warning for months that Washington has its head in the sand when it comes to energy and that the nation needs a multipronged approach - everything from nuclear to geothermal initiatives - to reduce its dependence on foreign oil.

"Perhaps companies will want to put wind farms atop our bridges and skyscrapers," he said.
How ridiculous. Can you just imagine seeing the Brooklyn Bridge with wind turbines on top of it? Showing how naive he is, does he really think a wind farm by the Statue of Liberty is going to fly? For crying out loud, the Capewinds project in Massachusetts can't even build turbines 30 miles out in Nantucket Sound and he thinks people are going to jump on the idea of a wind farm off Manhattan?

Good grief.
Bloomberg's proposal was in line with the philosophy of the summit's first speaker of the day, Texas oilman T. Boone Pickens.

"We are getting very close to a disaster," declared Pickens, who is spending millions to convince the nation's leaders to harness wind power.

Pickens, who had lunch with the mayor, said the United States shells out $700 billion a year on imported oil, a massive transfer of wealth to countries that are often hostile to America.
OK, I'm getting tired of this canard that we're transferring $700 billion a year to exporting countries. It's not as if we're handing over $700 billion and getting nothing in return (like, say, doling out billions in welfare payments). We're getting a commodity in return for that money. It's called oil. Now, if you folks are all of a sudden unhappy with that, well, we have a solution: Drill here, drill now.

Naturally, with these grandiose cockamamie plans, Bloomberg attracts such intellectual titans as the Dim Bulb From Searchlight.
At a later news conference, the mayor conceded windmills on skyscrapers is "relatively unlikely," although "I think we've got to be careful in not automatically saying things can't work."

Senate Major Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), who sponsored the summit, said he's taken with Bloomberg's novel idea.

"I . . . may steal it from you," he said.
It wouldn't be the first idea you stole, Dingy.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Four Years Later, Media Still Obsessing Over 'Swift Boat Attacks' on John Kerry

T. Boone Pickens has been all over the media of late with his plan for Big Wind and he's making the political rounds, today meeting with the Future President of Earth.

So instead of discussing what occured in his meeting with Obama, what does Reuters reporter Jeff Mason chronicle?

Why, the dreaded "Swift Boat attacks" four years ago on the hapless Jehn Kerry.

Get. Over. It. Already.
White House hopeful Barack Obama talked energy policy on Sunday with T. Boone Pickens, a billionaire oil investor who funded the "Swift Boat" attacks on Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry in 2004.

Pickens, a lifelong Republican, has endorsed neither his party's candidate, Arizona Sen. John McCain, nor Democrat Obama in the Nov. 4 election and wants to make energy a top campaign issue.

He has advocated a plan to cut U.S. oil use by converting cars to run on natural gas.

Pickens funded efforts in 2004 by a group called Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, which sought to discredit Kerry's military service in Vietnam. The Massachusetts senator's initially tepid response to the attacks was partially credited for his loss to President George W. Bush.

Obama brushed off Pickens' past at the start of a meeting that the Texas energy tycoon requested on Sunday.

"You know, he's got a lot longer track record than that," the Illinois senator told reporters when asked how it felt to meet with someone who tore down his Democratic predecessor in 2004.

"He's a legendary entrepreneur, and, you know, one of the things that I think we have to unify the country around is having an intelligent energy policy," Obama said.
Give Obama credit where it's due. Even he's mature enough to move past this pathetic media obsession. Would be nice if Reuters could move on.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

T. Boone Pickens Responds to Lurch

Lurch was talking smack the other day and put up a cool million of Mama T's cash.

Now T. Boone Pickens responds and has a couple of very simple requirements.
So glad to hear from you regarding the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth political ad campaign, and an offer I made public at an American Spectator dinner in Washington, D.C. last week. I am intrigued by your letter, and am certainly open to your challenge.

My concern at the Spectator Dinner was, and continues to be, that you and other political figures were and are maligning the Swift Boat Veterans, and I want to prevent this important part of American history from being unfairly portrayed.

In order to disprove the accuracy of the Swift Boat ads, I will ultimately need you to provide the following:

1) The journal you maintained during your service in Vietnam.
2) Your military record, specifically your service records for the years
1971-1978, and copies of all movies and tapes made during your
service.

When you have done so, if you can then prove anything in the ads was materially untrue, I will gladly award $1 million. As you know, I have been a long and proud supporter of the American military and veterans' causes. I now challenge you to make this commitment: If you cannot prove anything in the Swift Boat ads to be untrue, that you will make a $1 million gift to the charity I am choosing -- the Medal of Honor Foundation.
Man up, Lurch. Shows us the records.