Sunday, April 8, 2018

Q's Post... Joseph Dorsey House was burnt down in 1993. Border States..Natural Energy Pipelines

>>936517
Border states are VERY key.
Bigger than you can imagine.
The pipeline.
Not R vs D.
CA is special.
Public will learn.
Q


http://www.dictionary.com/browse/border-states


Border States



plural noun
1.
U.S. History. the slave states of Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, andMissouri, which refused to secede from the Union in 1860–61.
2.
the U.S. states touching the Canadian border.
3.
certain countries of central and northern Europe that border on theformer Soviet Union and belonged to the Russian Empire: Finland,Poland (prior to 1940), Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Border_states_(American_Civil_War)


In the context of the American Civil War (1861–65), the border states were slave states that did not declare a secession from the Union and did not join the Confederacy. To their north they bordered free states of the Union and to their south they bordered Confederate slave states. Of the 34 U.S. states in 1861, nineteen were free states and fifteen were slave states. Two slave states never declared a secession or adopted an ordinance: Delaware and Maryland. Four others did not declare secession until after the Battle of Fort Sumter and were briefly considered to be border states: ArkansasNorth CarolinaTennessee, and Virginia—after this, they were less frequently called “border states”. Also included as a border state during the war is West Virginia, which was fhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adolf_Hitlerormed from 50 counties of Virginia and became a new state in the Union in 1863.[1][2]
In the border states there was widespread concern with military coercion of the Confederacy[citation needed]. Many if not a majority were definitely opposed to it. When Abraham Lincoln called for troops to march south to recapture Fort Sumter and other national possessions, southern Unionists were dismayed. Secessionists in Arkansas, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia were successful in getting those states to declare their secession from the U.S. and to join the Confederate States of America.[3]


House of Dorsey-Palmer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorsey-Palmer_House
The Dorsey-Palmer House is a historic home located near HagerstownWashington CountyMarylandUnited States. It was built about 1800, and is a two-story, five-bay fieldstone dwelling with a two-story, four-bay rear wing. The house features a double porch extending across the front elevation and large transoms over entrances on the front.[2]
The Dorsey-Palmer House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.
Why is there No News Articles on the Dorsey Palmer House Fire? Where are the News Articles?
Why Was the House Burned down???????
Questions still Remain Unanswered...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Dorsey_House
Joseph Dorsey House was a historic building in West Brownsville, Pennsylvania. It is designated as a historic residential landmark/farmstead by the Washington County History & Landmarks Foundation.[2]
The namesake Joseph Dorsey, a Maryland native, built the stone house c. 1787 on a large estate of 1,280 acres (5.2 km2).[3][2]
The house no longer stands, having been destroyed by a 1993 fire <important research this now>

Joseph Dorsey House built in 1787 burnt down in 1993.. What was the date of Fire?? 
Bush Sr was president than. Bush Sr comes from Prescott Bush 33rd Free Mason owned by NWO owned by Rothschild. Rothschild banks of the World <research Rothschild>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rothschild_family
Prescott Bush Created Hitler. #Holocaust 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prescott_Bush


Prescott Bush Created Hitler. #Holocaust 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_Brothers_Harriman_%26_Co.

Adolf Hitler Took Away Jewish Peoples Guns by younger Generations. #Holocaust #FemaCamps  #Nazis 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adolf_Hitler


Now Refer back to 16th President Abe Lincoln 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abraham_Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln (February 12, 1809 – April 15, 1865) was an American statesman and lawyer who served as the 16th President of the United States from March 1861 until his assassination in April 1865. Lincoln led the United States through its Civil War—its bloodiest war and perhaps its greatest moral, constitutional, and political crisis.[2][3] In doing so, he preserved the Unionabolished slavery, strengthened the federal government, and modernized the economy.





13th Amendment to Free Slaves
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thirteenth_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution
The Thirteenth Amendment (Amendment XIII) to the United States Constitution abolished slavery and involuntary servitude, except as punishment for a crime. In Congress, it was passed by the Senate on April 8, 1864, and by the House on January 31, 1865. The amendment was ratified by the required number of states on December 6, 1865. On December 18, 1865, Secretary of State William H. Seward proclaimed its adoption. It was the first of the three Reconstruction Amendments adopted following the American Civil War.


Bloggers Notes: Democrats Were Pissed off at Freedom of Slavery Created Ku Klux Klan. Refer to Link Below


Refer back to KKK first formed in Pulaski Tennessee on December 24, 1865
Notes from Wikipedia:
Six Confederate veterans from Pulaski, Tennessee created the original Ku Klux Klan on December 24, 1865, during the Reconstruction of the South after the Civil War.[48][49] The name was formed by combining the Greek kyklos (κύκλοςcircle) with clan.[50] The group was known for a short time as the "Kuklux Clan". The Ku Klux Klan was one of a number of secret, oath-bound organizations using violence, which included the Southern Cross in New Orleans (1865) and the Knights of the White Camelia (1867) in Louisiana.[51]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ku_Klux_Klan


Why Did Joseph Dorsey House burn down in 1993? What was the Date of the Fire? What Secrets did the Dorsey house hold? What type of Evidence? What proof to Why was it Burned?

https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/business/article/2001276096/ngumi-pipeline-has-made-me-a-pauper-q-a
On Friday, KPC chairman John Ngumi was re-appointed the Kenya Pipeline Company Chair for another three years scoring a major feat for a company with a high turn-over of top management. In this interview with Sunday Standard's Nzau Musau, Ngumi talks of his controversial three-year stint at the helm. You have been at the helm of the KPC Board for 3 years now. How was it and what did you achieve? ALSO READ: CS Munyes wants Kenya Pipeline to complete key projects on time It’s been an incredible ride!! Nothing in private sector prepares one for the unique experience of being involved at Board level in a company like KPC, with a multiplicity of intensely interested stakeholders.
Read more at: https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/business/article/2001276096/ngumi-pipeline-has-made-me-a-pauper-q-a
https://www.euromoney.com/article/b17mgvv9s5jcl2/european-bankers-eye-mampa-window
Some of the shiniest optimists in M&A are those concentrating on Europe, even though it lags a few paces behind the US cycle of prolonged economic growth, full equity valuations and rising rates. In Europe, executives of companies with repaired balance sheets are basking in economic stability and revived growth, as well as plentiful available financing at historically low interest rates, all of which boosts confidence.

.https://www.worldpoliticsreview.com/articles/24399/a-model-for-nato-s-future-already-exists-in-northeast-asia
Click on the Link Read The Article. It's Mandatory to learn on the Q's Post. 
https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2018-03-20-op-ed-the-coming-renewable-energy-transition/
One has to put it in the starkest terms: large numbers of people working in our fossil fuel-based energy sector are going to lose their jobs and it will happen in the near term. By DIRK DE VOS.
Last week, the National Union of Metalworkers SA (Numsa) teamed up with a shady and unknown entity, TransformSA, to launch an interdict preventing the signing of the outstanding Independent Power Producers (IPPs) power purchase agreements (PPAs). The National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) chimed in that they opposed Eskom being the guaranteed off-taker of privately owned power generators that lock-in the profits of the qualifying IPPs.
Both unions, correctly, suspect that increasing amounts of renewable energy in the system will impact on the jobs of their members either in coal mining or in Eskom itself. The unions do not say that they are against renewables but rather that they are opposed to the creeping privatisation of the energy sector and that IPPs are some sort of Trojan Horse for just this.
Actually, it is far too late to talk about halting privatisation. Since 2006, Eskom has taken on enormous amounts of debt, about half a trillion at present, and needs to take on a lot more. One could say that debtholders from the private sector are already calling the shots. The reconstitution of the Eskom board, the appointment of its new CEO, the firing of the corrupt former CEO, Matshela Koko, interim CEO, the acting CEO Sean Maritz and Gupta-linked former CFO were very significantly about satisfying the minimum requirements of these “investors” on governance and operational matters.
Going forward, Eskom has no choice but to embark on wide-scale job retrenchments if it is to have any chance of survival. Moreover, many generators and the collieries that service them will have to be closed in the next decade.
Prices for new solar PV generated electricity in other sunny countries such as Mexico are now just 24c/kWh, well below Eskom’s own existing generating costs and almost as low as just Eskom’s current coal costs measured on a per kWh basis. It is simply impossible to avoid the transition to renewables – purely on a cost basis.
The rather unusual nature of the South African electricity supply system is rooted in the history of Eskom being created to support the mining sector and then using its excess power to expand into the country’s cities, towns and even its rural areas and become a vertically integrated monopoly and one of the largest electricity utilities in the world. So far, nearly all independent power is provided via privately owned and operated IPPs. As such, IPPs have also come to be seen as threats to the public ownership of the electricity system and opposed on that basis.
The truth is that there is nothing inherent in renewables that means that they have to be privately owned and, likewise, large coal-fired power stations don’t have to be publicly owned. South Africa’s choices are a unique set of circumstances compared to the range of options used elsewhere.
However, it is worth exploring the debate about whether technology choices are in fact value neutral on a political economy basis. It is one of the more interesting philosophical questions right now. In the US, following a never-ending series of shootings, there are increasingly pressing calls to limit access to firearms. The response from the guns lobby comes down to this: “Guns don’t kill people, people do.” The argument is that a technology (in that case, a firearm) is value-neutral but the people that use them are not. There are the same arguments about smartphones and other technologies.
Philosophers such as David Morrow argue differently. He argues that technologies are necessarily value-neutral because they change the costs of certain options. The cost-benefit analysis changes and that has an impact on society as a whole.
Consider the land debate in South Africa and the difficulty of introducing new black farmers into the sector. Morrow looked at an example provided by the technology theorist, Langdon Winner: the effect of the introduction of tomato-harvesting machines.
Unsurprisingly, these machines mainly benefit larger farmers who could afford them and who were able to use them to harvest many more tomatoes than before. The increased supply of tomatoes in the market reduced the market price of tomatoes to all farmers but the increase in production by larger farms using the machine more than offset the reduction in tomato prices. There were, however, significant losses to small farmers who had to harvest more tomatoes, with their limited technology resources, to achieve the same income they had before.
According to Morrow, new technologies introduce two types of problems.
First, a collective action problem. This describes scenarios in which individuals can choose to co-operate with their fellow citizens or defect. It is an individual decision. At what point does the individual benefit provided by defecting to a new technology outweigh the individual benefits of co-operation? An example of this might be high income individuals whose electricity consumption cross-subsidises poor customers defecting from the grid in favour of rooftop solar.
The second problem identified by Morrow is the delayed gratification problem or the choices between short-term and long-term rewards. Lowering the costs of instant gratification, as consumer focused technologies often do, makes it more difficult to prioritise long-term rewards. On a collective basis, social capital is eroded if society is not giving enough attention to the long term.
In a 2014 essay, Bloomberg Energy founder Michael Liebreich discussed the nature of the coming energy transition. In it he looks at what it might look like beyond the tired old debates between those wanting to keep the status quo as it is and proponents of climate change. He also goes beyond the more nuanced, second-level discussions about the benefits of clean energy, improved air quality, locally based jobs, technological breakthroughs, economic resilience, public health, geopolitical issues and global military spending, exposure to commodity prices and so on.
There is, Liebreich suggests, a third level that looks at the very social structures in which we live. Fossil-fuel based energy is not value-neutral, it lends itself to scale and centralisation; both physical centralisation of huge oil, gas and coal-fields, massive power stations, universal grids, pipelines, refineries and the like, but also political and economic centralisation.
Liebreich sketches out a fossil fuel systems diagram in which one of the causal loops would see the fossil fuel industry gorging on subsidies and externalising substantial costs onto others, generating profits used substantially in lobbying, physical protection, community compensation and bribery.
These, in turn, secure political access and entrenched economic advantage. He sees these characteristics being as much a part of the old energy system as any pipeline or power station.
Against that, clean energy is inherently more local, more distributed, more accountable. Whether one finds wind farms a blight on the landscape or otherwise, they force us to talk about the trade-offs needed to generate electricity which few confront when discussing, say, the open-cast coal mines and polluting power stations in far-away Mpumalanga of the Waterberg and their impacts on the health of people who work and live there.
As transportation becomes electrified, cities will become more livable as we shift to electric vehicles, public transport, walking and cycling, shared ownership and other, cleaner options. As the energy system goes clean, Leibreich argues, so it will become more local, more accountable, more human in scale and more socially inclusive.
By socially inclusive, Liebreich means representative of other races (than one’s own), sexual orientation and particularly women. At present, he says that the energy sector is probably the most socially conservative industry in the world. He correctly points out that women are disproportionately disadvantaged by energy poverty, bearing the extra workload and health impacts of cooking with traditional biomass.
Access to modern energy is essential for women to enjoy basic healthcare, particularly during childbirth, and for girls to have time to study. Also correctly, getting more women into the sector is not merely about fairness but about effectiveness. Women form a huge part of the market. A growing body of research shows that companies with diverse management teams outperform those that do not.
For the outlines of what a future energy system might look like, Liebreich points to other sectors that have thrown off centralised, state-dominated models and become less macho – such as telecoms, media and the airline industry. New clean technologies and distributed generation ought to introduce a democratisation of social as well as electrical power.
At the same time, the world is entering into what is now described as the fourth industrial revolution driven by emerging technologies in Artificial Intelligence, nanotechnology, robotics, 3D printing and other advancements which will have enormous impacts on the way industry manufactures almost anything.
Yet what do we see happening in South Africa? In a recent survey measuring 114 countries’ readiness for the coming energy transition, South Africa comes in at 113, beating only Zimbabwe. This is in a country that has a significant comparative advantage to other countries that are not as blessed with our climate. Falling renewable energy prices elsewhere certainly means that South Africa begins to lose the advantages it would otherwise have against countries that have chosen to embrace the energy transition.
For its part, Numsa appears to sort-of understand the basics of the energy transition and the need for a just transition to renewables. They take the view that renewables should be brought under public and community control, requiring a reinvention of regulatory bodies and the establishing of mechanisms for meaningful public involvement and democratic decision-making.
However, they also want to overthrow the “… capitalist mode of production produces and reproduces human misery, disease, underdevelopment, joblessness, poverty and inequality all the time” and oppose the capitalist capture of renewable energy in favour of a socially owned and democratic alternative.
The truth is that renewables as a technology and the energy transition don’t favour socialist centralised planning – it does the opposite. This means that the government and the energy sector workers’ unions cannot spend any more time discussing their ideological preferences. That is pure self-indulgence.
One has to put it in the starkest terms: large numbers of people working in our fossil fuel-based energy sector are going to lose their jobs and it will happen in the near term.
The mismanagement and over-staffing of Eskom is the immediate cause but the march of renewables makes it inevitable in any event. Not stating this clearly enough is a dereliction of duty to those who will become unemployed and their dependents.
Question Why Did Rex Tilleron Visit Kenya?
Question Why Did Rex Tillerson have a Secret Meeting with Mark Zuckerberg leaving their phones at the Doors?
Question is Rex Tillerson still the CEO of Exxon Mobil local oil refinery in Texas?

Exxon Mobil - Corporate Headquarters

  •  



No comments:

Post a Comment