ttystikk

Well-Known Member
There are a lot of libtard accusations about trump you believe without question, and none regarding HRC/BS. Do you still have your head in the sand about Uranium?
So we openly and officially sold a country that has 10000 nukes more uranium.
http://www.newsweek.com/hillary-clinton-uranium-conspiracy-theory-distraction-trump-russia-694525

Excerpts;
“For this conspiracy theory to be true, she would have to twist the arms of all these other eight Cabinet secretaries, which is completely absurd and completely implausible,” said Max Bergmann, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress who specializes in U.S.-Russia relations and who worked at the State Department under both Clinton and her successor, John Kerry.

The claim that Clinton received big money for the Clinton Foundation from those tied to the Tenex–Uranium One deal is also tenuous. PolitiFact reviewed that claim, which was floated in a book by an editor at the far-right media outlet Breitbart, and found that almost all the money came from Frank Giustra, who sold his stake in Uranium One before Clinton became secretary of state.

Bergmann said the claim “just doesn’t make any sense. It’s just frankly a vehicle for distraction.”

According to the experts, even if Clinton had somehow managed to tilt the CFIUS decision in favor of Russian buyers, it wouldn’t matter: The mine isn’t very important.

The Russian-owned company does not have a license to export the uranium, and the actual mining process is not sensitive at all.

“It’s just a mine,” Lewis said. “There’s no technology that’s special. There’s no shortage of uranium around the world.”

Lewis said that even if he were asked to review the sale today, his security assessment would not change.

“We might refuse it to be bloody minded because we wouldn’t want to engage in any economic action, but it’s not a national security issue,” he said. “The uranium, it’s harmless.”

With all the real shit going on, this is a silly ass distraction. Chromium is a more strategically important material and we buy most of our supplies from the Russians. Is that a conspiracy theory, too? o_O
 

Chezus

Well-Known Member
The U.S. produces very little uranium—about 2 million pounds in 2015, a year nuclear power plants imported 57 million pounds of the element. The vast majority of the uranium comes from Kazakhstan and Australia.

According to the experts, even if Clinton had somehow managed to tilt the CFIUS decision in favor of Russian buyers, it wouldn’t matter: The mine isn’t very important.

The Russian-owned company does not have a license to export the uranium, and the actual mining process is not sensitive at all.

“It’s just a mine,” Lewis said. “There’s no technology that’s special. There’s no shortage of uranium around the world.”
 

bundee1

Well-Known Member
The U.S. produces very little uranium—about 2 million pounds in 2015, a year nuclear power plants imported 57 million pounds of the element. The vast majority of the uranium comes from Kazakhstan and Australia.

According to the experts, even if Clinton had somehow managed to tilt the CFIUS decision in favor of Russian buyers, it wouldn’t matter: The mine isn’t very important.

The Russian-owned company does not have a license to export the uranium, and the actual mining process is not sensitive at all.

“It’s just a mine,” Lewis said. “There’s no technology that’s special. There’s no shortage of uranium around the world.”
I'm saying its non news as well. They already have enough to destroy us who cares if we did sell them uranium openly and under full review of 8 government agencies
 

Chezus

Well-Known Member
I'm saying its non news as well. They already have enough to destroy us who cares if we did sell them uranium openly and under full review of 8 government agencies
We buy all the nuclear material from their disassembled bombs.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
Democrats actually need to win races for that.

To win races, maybe they should consider appealing to the needs of the majority of the voters instead of their donors.

Naive childish one.
i'm pretty sure that's what they did when they appointed SC judges who stood up for the voting rights act, among other things.

i don't think the voting rights act was designed to protect donors retard.
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
i'm pretty sure that's what they did when they appointed SC judges who stood up for the voting rights act, among other things.

i don't think the voting rights act was designed to protect donors retard.
So why does the Democratic Party protect them so much?
 

SneekyNinja

Well-Known Member
No fly's, mosquitoes, fireflys, butterflies. There are insects but I would say they are at 10 percent or less than what I seen 50 years ago.
Google "Windshield Effect", some populations are down by up to 80% and it's not just here, it's been reported across most of Europe too.

Its anecdotal but I can't remember the last time I ate a bug riding with my visor up and I don't need to clean bugs off it nearly as much as say 10 years ago.

Scary stuff indeed.
 

PetFlora

Well-Known Member
We're currently EXPORTING almost 900,000 barrels of oil a day.
August 13, 2017

U.S. crude oil output is now closing in on 9.5 million b/d, the highest levels in two years and almost double what we were producing a decade ago. But, while our demand has basically been flat, oil is a global commodity and imports have long been ingrained in our own market, so we still import about 35-50% of the oil that we use. Imports though have been falling, yet probably not as much as some energy security advocates want. Overall, China has surpassed the U.S. this year to become the world's largest crude importer, soaring to 9.2 million b/d in March.

Especially since we export so much oil now (as I document here), the need to import lots of oil might be confusing to some. Yet, the need to import amid very high output is a matter of logistics, where pipelines, contracts, varying refinery configurations, costs, and numerous other considerations come into play: "Why importing and exporting oil makes sense." Trade is a foundational principle of our economy, and oil is the world's most traded commodity, interestingly above coffee (here).

Ultimately, these complex and dynamic realities of the oil import and export markets help keep our prices lower. And low cost energy is drastically underrated: consumer spending is 75% of U.S. GDP, so cheaper energy enables more discretionary spending and thus economic growth.
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
August 13, 2017

U.S. crude oil output is now closing in on 9.5 million b/d, the highest levels in two years and almost double what we were producing a decade ago. But, while our demand has basically been flat, oil is a global commodity and imports have long been ingrained in our own market, so we still import about 35-50% of the oil that we use. Imports though have been falling, yet probably not as much as some energy security advocates want. Overall, China has surpassed the U.S. this year to become the world's largest crude importer, soaring to 9.2 million b/d in March.

Especially since we export so much oil now (as I document here), the need to import lots of oil might be confusing to some. Yet, the need to import amid very high output is a matter of logistics, where pipelines, contracts, varying refinery configurations, costs, and numerous other considerations come into play: "Why importing and exporting oil makes sense." Trade is a foundational principle of our economy, and oil is the world's most traded commodity, interestingly above coffee (here).

Ultimately, these complex and dynamic realities of the oil import and export markets help keep our prices lower. And low cost energy is drastically underrated: consumer spending is 75% of U.S. GDP, so cheaper energy enables more discretionary spending and thus economic growth.
Right. NET oil exports are 900,000bbl/day.
 
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