by Carlhole » Thu 21 May 2009, 15:45:55
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', 'I') also object to the stupidity of the dems raising taxes during a recession.
You don't answer the question. If peak oil is about to change everything unrecognizably, how is any minor tax policy consideration enacted today of any significance.
The current thinking is that Peak Oil's economic consequences will trounce any mere political/fiscal management scheme. Or don't you think that Peak oil is any sort of real threat?
Why do you avoid the question?
Look, Economist Jeff Rubin, a well-known MSM commentator with 20 years at CIBC has just quit his job and written a peak oil book,
Why Your World Is About to Get a Whole Lot Smaller$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')conomist Jeff Rubin to embark on international book tour
TORONTO, March 27 /CNW/ - Today Jeff Rubin, chief economist of CIBC World
Markets, announced his resignation from CIBC after more than 20 years of
service to focus on his new book. Random House Canada, along with Random House
in the US and Virgin Books in the UK, will publish Why Your World Is About to
Get a Whole Lot Smaller, in May. The book explores the ways in which oil
scarcity will lead to the end of globalization.
Said Jeff Rubin: "Though the book grew out of my experience as an
economist on Bay Street, this is not a book about financial markets. It's a
book about the way the world is about to change. We've all got our eyes right
now on the global financial meltdown, but I believe that oil scarcity will
change the global economy even more profoundly and in the process change all
of our lives - from where we work to where we live to what we eat. I believe
it's important to deliver this book's message in as many places and to as many
people as possible, and I'm looking forward to working closely over the next
few months with Random House in Canada, the US and the UK and with my other
international publishers to spread the word."
Why in the hell is tax policy important when there is a growing mainstream recognition that oil scarcity is about to completely upturn the global economy?
Or, don't you think Peak Oil is much of an economic consideration compared to tax policy?