Welcome to the Hardcore Husky Forums. Folks who are well-known in Cyberland and not that dumb.
We need a general tweet of the day thread
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Truthfully, Aasif Mandvi was the best Daily Show correspondent ever.
Colbert was good way back when.
Oliver? Mostly "meh." -
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When she had Christopher Rufo on all she did was talk over him. That’s the sign of a person that knows they’re over matched.
Guy is a Senior Fellow at the Manhattan Institute. The left said she “schooled” him. This is where their reality is at. A dummy like Joy Reid got over on an intellectual superior by talking over him. -
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Like we say Randi, go catch a train to Fuckoffville.hardhat said: -
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A prime example of how the Left and the MSM have damaged people’s minds.Sledog said: -
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You can look at Europe, or even Texas last winter and see the economic devastation that cheap, green renewables will cost us. Coal keeps the lights on for the Glasgow climate conference. So, in the UK electricity prices average $.275 (27.5 cents) a kilowatt hour. In the US, Washington is at 10.24 cents and Oregon 11.19 cents. So, basically, we can just about triple our electricity rates for Oregon and Washington to catch up to the UK which is just a few years ahead of us on the nude green eel. Cal at 22.45 cents is not even half way there. So when chinslee or lockdown Kate Brown say they care about the private sector economy and the economic pressures on their state middle class. They are lying. As if we didn't know.



https://www.zerohedge.com/commodities/coal-keeps-lights-cop26-low-wind-strikes-again
Coal Keeps Lights On At COP26 As Low Wind Strikes Again
BY TYLER DURDEN
THURSDAY, NOV 04, 2021 - 02:00 AM
By John Constable of NetZeroWatch
The UK’s failing renewable strategy is a national embarrassment. Critically low wind power, for nearly the whole of yesterday, resulted in extremely high prices, with the two remaining coal units at Drax offering to saving the day at £4,000/MWh, nearly 100 times the wholesale price normal before the current crisis started, with many other fossil fuel generators also riding to the rescue at staggering prices.
Indeed, yesterday, 3 November, saw a new record for the total daily cost of balancing the GB electricity grid. The previous record of £38 million, twenty times the current daily average, was smashed by a margin of £6 million, with the new record standing at £44.7m.
The causes are easy to identify from the Balancing Mechanism Reporting Service’s own chart of the Transmission System fuel mix. Wind power, the dark blue bars, was extremely low for most of the day, with a minimum of only 1 GW, under 5% of its capacity.
Minimum wind generation coincided neatly with peak demand, and as a result system prices reached stunning levels, with a maximum of just over £4,000 a megawatt hour, nearly 100 times the wholesale price normal before the current crisis started...
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