I'm touchy about energy.
It has nothing to do with peak oil.
Or the war.
Or the environment.
Leander and I recently moved into an old Boston brownstone with an antique electrical system. It's rather quaint, really--especially when the air conditioner and fridge go on at the same time when more than two lights are on. I don't think I'll ever again take for granted the ability to do something other than sit in the dark at 10 P.M.
Actually, it hasn't been that bad. We are slowly learning to turn off lights when we leave a room, and I've learned more than I ever thought I would know about the power usage of appliances. The experience has made me appreciate just how easy it is to be power hungry and not know it.
But it had the side-effect of making me slightly irritable when I hear whining about energy.
Irritable was exactly how I felt when I read about the Republican position on the energy bill that was passed in the House this weekend.
I'm not an unbiased source. Having now seen them in person, I think that the windmills all over Silicon Valley are beautiful, and the Republican Party is not on my Top 10 Favorite Organizations list, but the point here isn't the energy bill. For all I know, it could be terrible. I haven't read it.
What bugs me is all of the whining about how the tax payers can't afford to let go of the tax breaks for oil companies.
1. That argument makes no sense. If oil companies are getting tax breaks, that means that someone else is footing their share of the bill for government programs and the war. Gas companies may turn around and make consumers pay their taxes, but there is always the option of driving less. Not paying taxes isn't really an option.
2. People are perfectly capable of being responsible for their energy consumption. If two geeks can survive in an apartment with 15 amps, we sure as hell don't need the Republican Party deciding how much we can afford to pay for gas.
(See, it has nothing to do with politics. It has everything to do with being a stingy, independent Yankee.)
If the price of gas is painful, there are ways for individuals to cut the cost of travel that have nothing to do with the price of crude in Qatar:
- Telecommute.
- Use Peapod rather than driving to the grocery store.
- Plan errands ahead of time to minimize trips.
- Take the bus/train/subway part of the way or all of the way to work.
- Car pool.
- Move closer to work.
- Take advantage of local tourist traps rather than driving to see far away ones.
- Turn down the air conditioner while driving.
- Use Gas Price Watch.
- Buy gas during the week rather than on weekends when it's usually more expensive.
Those 10 options took me 10 minutes to think of, and I'm sure there are many more.
Sure, watching Gas Price Watch is easier than picking up and moving, but I can't help rolling my eyes at rhetoric that makes the government take the responsibility for the choices of responsible adults.