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Electric Power

Millions the world over are dependent on electric power for daily living. When there is a disruption to the flow of electricity it causes undue hardship and in many cases loss of life. Our dependency on electricity has evolved much since Tesla and Edison. Today though many are being held hostage by electric conglomerates that produce, supply, and control the electric current that supplies the electric power in homes, factories, stores, schools, and many other businesses. They have control over so many factors of our daily lives. And to think it all started back at the turn of the 20th century when JP Morgan and Edison formed the first electric company. From that original company it morphed into the electric conglomerates we have today. All for profit entities. Capitalism at its finest. Pun intended.

The development of newer energy technologies has caused a ripple effect around the world. Solor, Wind, Hydro all have come a long way since the first real energy crisis in the 1970's. But like the Tucker automobile back in the late 1940's the energy conglomerates like Big Oil suppressed the viability of that innovative auto and later the alternate energy sources. Consequently, the public for the most part is again being held hostage whenever a blackout occurs. We have taken it for granted today that electric power will somehow will always be available. We pay our ever-increasing electric bill every month without ever thinking that any disruption will be short lived. How wrong we are.

In Florida within this past month October 2024 the southeast of the US came under attack by two powerful hurricanes. Catastrophic devastation and great loss of life left an enduring mark of the wrath of nature. The scientific community has been warning governments that due to humanities dependency on fossil fuels has set in motion the atmospheric conditions conducive in producing more powerful tropical storms and hurricanes. Yet governments especially here in the US have failed to like that Boy Scout motto "Be prepared" in safeguarding the citizens and the infrastructure including our electric grid.

There is a way to prevent electrical outages nationwide regardless of storms an EMP attack or other catastrophes. That is unless we blow ourselves up. Yet all our government seems to be doing is exporting taxpayers' funds supporting needless wars and other nations internal affairs that have no bearing on the lives and livelihoods of the American citizen The political will to secure Americas safety by implementing the technologies readily available to ensure that our electric power will always be available has never been a major priority. It is time we make sure that we will never be victim of loss of electric power when we do have the resources
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Northwest · M
Don't know what this was translated from, but it makes it even more difficult to figure out what you're trying to.

Millions of people depend on electricity? You think.

During a storm like Helene, "local" power generation is not going to survive.
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@Northwest Whateber else you may disagree or agree with, Twttimlinnet is right about the dependency on electricity, world-wide, not only in the USA to which he refers.

Many countries use strong regulatory regimes to ensure the electricity companies do their work properly. Or they keep the whole industry State-owned so it is easier to supervise and is not affected by all sorts of home-grown or foreign spivs, sovereign wealth funds and the like.

Many also have very robust distribution systems so when a part does fail the disruption is confined to as few customers as possible, and the breakdown repaired as soon as possible. The biggest hazard is usually storms.

Nevertheless things can break; and sometimes do. Nothing humanly-made can be 100% perfect or 100% efficient; and the more complex the system, the greater the risk of breakdown. (More to go wrong!)

It's then that the dependency on something we can all so easily take for granted, becomes starkly obvious.
Northwest · M
@ArishMell
is right about the dependency on electricity, world-wide, not only in the USA to which he refers.

I was not arguing this is an incorrect statement. I was saying that is not a point of contention.

Saying that millions are dependent on electricity for daily living, would be like saying that millions of people are dependent on air for daily living.

This post was 3 weeks before the elections, and at the time we had a couple of candidates: one pushing a green energy agenda, and renewable energy, the other promised to defund it.
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kodiac · 22-25, M
Don't all these alternative sources generate electricity?
Gibbon · 70-79, M
It only takes one good hail storm to destroy a city feeding solar array. It's already happened.
HobNoblin · 36-40, M
I live off grid

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