| Oh yes, the usual idiotic bullshit -- "if it wasn't those liberals with those environmental protection laws we would all be millionaires and have our own ponies." Let me just tell you some of the more obvious ways you are wrong: "Interesting Fact: The United States has more oil and natural gas than any other country in the entire world, including Saudi Arabia. These are the official findings of the United States Senate, page 23: http://j.mp/3HIfQi This is simply wrong. And the very document you reference proves it wrong. If you see table 5 of the document you provided, the US is well below Saudi Arabia and many other countries in oil and natural gas. It has about 1/10 of the oil reserves of saudi arabia and about 1/6 of the natural gas of Russia. Even if you add oil and natural gas up, the US is not first -- saudi arabia and Russia both have more oil and nat gas than the US. Now if you think the regulations are the problem, just look at Russia. Russia is notorious for having a corrupt government where environmental and other regulations are broken all the time. It also has about three times as much oil and about 6 times as much nat gas as the US. It is also less than half of the populations of the US. So, by your logic, Russia should be much richer than the US, because it has more mineral wealth and does not have the regulations that prevent its exploitation. But that is obviously not the case. The living standard of Russia is still much lower than the US. What might have made you confused is that if you add up coal the US does become first. But of course coal has not made any country rich after the mid 20th century. It is too expensive to transport for export and it is dirt cheap because it is dirty, causes global warming and disease, and nobody wants to use it unless they have no other choice. Good luck basing our economy on coal. The thing about Nevada may be right (I do not have time to check) but in global economic terms gold production is simply not a big deal. Of course you face the more fundamental problem that you think somehow producing raw materials will get us out of a global recession. The problem with global recessions is that demand for everything tanks and that includes raw materials. The so called "voracious appetite" of China is only voracious because they use it to feed the voracious appetite of America for consumer goods. If Americans keep getting poorer that appetite of China will no longer be voracious and raw materials prices will keep falling. Raw materials only drive economies when they are relatively small economies that can hitch themselves on larger consumer spending economies that are booming. Thus, for example, Russia was able to improve their economy by selling raw materials to booming US, Europe and China. But a major economy like the US simply cannot rely on raw materials or it will quickly become a minor economy. |
"Reserves of Fossil Fuels Plus Technically Recoverable Undiscovered Oil and Natural Gas:" ---
Russia: 293.7 ---
Saudi Arabia Estimated Undiscovered Oil and Gas: 231.3 ---
United States Undiscovered Oil and Gas: 351.5 ---
351.5 > 293.7 > 231.3
Regardless, I'm putting my life where my mouth is. I started my own oil and natural gas exploration and production company in Denver.
I've also spun off a second company, a mineral royalties company, that is focused on the acquisition and divestiture of North American mineral rights in producing open-pit mines.
And finally, I've started a third US natural resources company, SonicFrac, to develop a solid-state fracturing device for optimizing the production of US Shale gas wells.
I also invest every last penny that I take home back into US mineral rights, US oil and gas prospects, and US minining royalties.
I own stock in dozens of publicly traded oil, gas, mining, and resource development companies.
Natural resources are the first thing I think about when I wakeup in the morning, and the last thing I think about when I go to bed at night.
I'm 26.
Perhaps I'm irrationally optimistic about US resource wealth...
I don't believe that I am.
But, you _need_ to be irrationally passionate about what you do. Whatever it is.
If you're running a consumer internet company, and are not irrationally passionate about its future, I doubt you could persevere through the trials and tribulations of being an entrepreneur.
I am a US natural resources entrepreneur. And I am zealous about what I do. You should be, too.