If the Canadians really want to get the oil out of there that bad they can always load up tanker trucks and drive it to their coast. Geographry will play a big role building to their west coast. There's a lot of mountains between the two.
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Originally Posted by Chica Chaser
If you read the history, there are a lot of environmentalist between that tar sands and the coast, including a couple of Indian Tribal lands.
Do any of you read Jarrod Diamond?
http://www.economicsciencecommunity....ollapsing.html
To Diamond, social collapse nearly always springs from an environmental problem. The episodes covered in the book resulted from exhaustion or spoliation of a vital resource – soil, water, plants, animals, trees, fuel. Even where war, ethnic genocide, disease, natural disasters, or shifting trade patterns are clearly evident, he sees these as outgrowths, or symptoms, of some underlying environmental abuse.
History’s failed societies are those that irreparably fouled or over-exploited their natural resources, with deadly final consequences.
Why would any society allow itself to reach that point?
Collapse offers three main explanations – (1) Ignorance – some societies failed to appreciate the environmental consequences of their actions until it was too late to rectify things; (2) Impotence -- some saw the problem coming in time but lacked the knowledge or means to avert disaster, or else chose wrongly among possible solutions; or (3) Intransigence -- some saw the problem coming, were aware of possible solutions, but ignored them and stayed on a path to oblivion anyway....
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In discussing why some societies collapse even while aware of pending doom, Diamond points to two forms of social intransigence, one arising from rational behavior of individuals, the other not. In discussing rational intransigence, he turns to economics, citing three problems:
1. Concentrated gains, dispersed losses. His example:
…until 1971, mining companies in Montana on closing down a mine just left it with its copper, arsenic, and acid leaking out into rivers, because the state of Montana had no law requiring companies to clean up after mine closure. In 1971 the state did pass such a law, but companies discovered they could extract the valuable ore and then just declare bankruptcy before going to the expense of cleaning up. The result has been about $500 million of cleanup costs to be borne by the citizens of Montana….