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barrk
May 18th, 2001, 12:16 PM
Well...........?

kedaman
May 18th, 2001, 12:20 PM
Of course! What i nice idea :p

Pix
May 18th, 2001, 12:38 PM
I think thinking is bad for you so I tend not to think at all :)

billfaceuk
May 18th, 2001, 12:41 PM
I think it's stupid...oh wait I see now...thats pure genius.

chrisjk
May 18th, 2001, 01:05 PM
I'm going to have to be sensible (:o) and ask...what?????

chenko
May 18th, 2001, 01:23 PM
...great idea!!!!! can I join in? :D

Ianpbaker
May 18th, 2001, 01:23 PM
I'm on medication just so I can stop thinking about it :eek:

barrk
May 18th, 2001, 02:28 PM
That's pretty much what I was thinking too! Did you read my mind?:eek:

billfaceuk
May 18th, 2001, 02:39 PM
Originally posted by chrisjk
I'm going to have to be sensible (:o) and ask...what?????
Don't you know anything:confused:

chenko
May 18th, 2001, 02:41 PM
Originally posted by barrk
That's pretty much what I was thinking too! Did you read my mind?:eek:

Any twisted person can read you like an open book :p

barrk
May 18th, 2001, 02:44 PM
I was sure I had closed that book too! Have you been peeking?

chrisjk
May 18th, 2001, 02:46 PM
Katie, something of interest on your energy crisis thingy. Looks like he might help you out (for a change):

British suppliers to benefit from US energy shortage

BY CARL MORTISHED, INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS EDITOR

BRITISH companies plan a spending spree in America after President Bush called for a massive expansion in the supply of energy, including more nuclear power and access by oil companies to environmentally sensitive areas.
The drive by the US President to combat “the most serious energy shortage since the 1970s” will open doors to UK multinationals including the nuclear power companies British Energy and British Nuclear Fuels (BNF). British Petroleum (BP), the leading Alaskan oil producer, is the likely beneficiary of any exploration permits awarded in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

ScottishPower is seeking to build 1,000 megawatts of new power generation in Utah, Oregon and Wyoming. British Energy, Britain’s leading nuclear power supplier, said it hoped to back the construction of nuclear power generators in America as the President called for legislation to streamline nuclear plant licensing and $1.5 billion (£1 billion) in tax subsidies. The Bush Administration wants to double the number of reactors at existing nuclear plants.

UK gas suppliers, such as BG Group, BP and Shell will benefit from the construction of gas-fired power plants. BP is the largest gas supplier in the US with 11 per cent of the market and BG yesterday secured an important foothold when it acquired the entire capacity for 22 years of the Lake Charles liquefied natural gas (LNG) import terminal in Lousiana. Lake Charles is one of only two operating LNG import terminals and BG, which has six LNG transport vessels, hopes to develop a central position trading LNG in the world’s biggest gas market.

BP’s focus in Alaska is not the wildlife refuge but bringing 30 trillion cubic feet of gas lying under Prudhoe Bay to US markets. The Bush energy drive may ease the inevitable row over pipeline construction.

billfaceuk
May 18th, 2001, 02:50 PM
you always have to take it one step to far

barrk
May 18th, 2001, 03:01 PM
As if our environment isn't crap enough we have Bush "helping" us out!:mad:

chenko
May 18th, 2001, 03:03 PM
Originally posted by barrk
I was sure I had closed that book too! Have you been peeking?

:D

Good Dreams
May 18th, 2001, 04:14 PM
Go Bush! ***** the planet! :mad:
As if the US would have biiiiig economic problems in reduce whatever is needed to be reduced (?). :mad:

barrk
May 18th, 2001, 04:17 PM
:mad: :(

scoutt
May 18th, 2001, 07:08 PM
If I start thinking I'll lose what I've got now, can't have that.
[pause]
[pause]
look at the pretty flower.......






see what I mean. :rolleyes: