Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

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Re: Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

Post by maiforpeace » Wed Jun 27, 2012 5:49 am

Warren Dew wrote:
Drewish wrote:If you're here to learn and aren't making assumptions about the pros and cons of hydrofracking, then why are you making assumptions about other people's views?
If she were here to learn, I'd think she wouldn't have already decided to be against fracking.
I am here to learn. What I have learned in the past is the cast of characters involved in the US fracking business have been dirty rotten scoundrels, so I have good reason to distrust their motives. I am against doing anything to the planet that is as radical as the process of fracking without fully vetting the long term effects first. Did you even bother to watch that short video, and the attached documentation FROM THE INDUSTRY.

I'll be interested to hear this CD Rom 21st Century Guide to Hydraulic Fracturing, Underground Injection, Fracking, Hydrofrac, Marcellus Shale Natural Gas Production Controversy, Environmental and Safety Risks, Water Pollution a publication produced by the U.S. Government, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Department of Energy and U.S. Geological Survey (Nov 16, 2010),

Here's a fun experiment for you Warren. Copy that exact title of the book as written, and paste it into google search and see what the first two hits are. Not suspicious at all to you?
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Re: Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

Post by JimC » Wed Jun 27, 2012 7:48 am

As far as the title goes, it ain't necessarily so...

A property-owning libertarian might object (possibly quite violently) to a government directive which allowed companies to conduct underground operations which polluted his water source...

And, in this case, fair enough!

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Re: Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

Post by Audley Strange » Wed Jun 27, 2012 6:06 pm

I don't understand. Is there a disconnect between libertarianism and the Libertarian Party (which seems oxymoronic to me) in the U.S.

Because to me it seems that libertarianism cannot have a central ideology, I always thought that they were for personal responsibility and freedom from oppressive Governance, am I wrong?
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Re: Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

Post by macdoc » Wed Jun 27, 2012 6:44 pm

You are correct and libby paradise looks like this...no governance, no bothersome rules, neighbors etc. Very Camus

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Re: Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

Post by maiforpeace » Wed Jun 27, 2012 7:34 pm

Audley Strange wrote:I don't understand. Is there a disconnect between libertarianism and the Libertarian Party (which seems oxymoronic to me) in the U.S.

Because to me it seems that libertarianism cannot have a central ideology, I always thought that they were for personal responsibility and freedom from oppressive Governance, am I wrong?
I believe you are correct.

It's hard to say what they stand for when it comes to fracking when two out of the three libertarians (that I know of who has posted on this thread) have responded to little, if any of the substance of my posts. Instead they have responded with ad hominems and and an emotional response to being "labeled" something they never do.(which explains why the response was so emotional)

And, just to point out, only in the title did I say something that was libertarian specific, that wasn't even original but instead was something that I stole from Mark Ruffalo. Otherwise I have referred to "pro frackers" (vs. libertarians) on subject at hand.

As I am guilty of labeling and being insincere then my posts aren't even worth responding to, right?

Good play! 8-)
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Re: Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

Post by Warren Dew » Wed Jun 27, 2012 7:50 pm

Audley Strange wrote:I don't understand. Is there a disconnect between libertarianism and the Libertarian Party (which seems oxymoronic to me) in the U.S.
Not a disconnect perhaps, but the Libertarian party in the U.S. is somewhat extreme: they tend to prefer sticking to their principle and losing to compromising and getting part of what they want.

The basic philosophy is the same, although some in the Libertarian party go beyond libertarianism to objectivism.
Because to me it seems that libertarianism cannot have a central ideology, I always thought that they were for personal responsibility and freedom from oppressive Governance, am I wrong?
Both libertarians and Libertarians are for personal responsibility and freedom from oppressive governance. Some consider freedom to be an ideology, though.

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Re: Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

Post by laklak » Wed Jun 27, 2012 8:19 pm

There is a Libertarian Party, much of their platform makes a great deal of sense. Their economic policies go a bit too far in the laisse faire direction, but I'm generally in agreement with them on everything else. But on these boards "Libertarian" = "mean spirited selfish rich fucker who never worked for his money and wants to exploit poor people". That's when you aren't accused of hating gays and being a closet christian. I've posted this link many times, but I doubt if anyone has actually followed it. It's the Libertarian Party platform. Give it a read, you might be surprised how "liberal" it is, particularly on contentious subjects like abortion, religious freedom, gay rights, drug policy and immigration.

http://www.lp.org/platform
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Re: Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

Post by Audley Strange » Wed Jun 27, 2012 9:15 pm

Thanks all.

@macdoc. I don't think that's what you're saying is any fairer than saying that having believing in socialism is to send intellectuals to death camps or gulags, to execute the rich and to force everyone to work in poorly made tractor factories. I do have some sympathy for the idea of voluntary rather enforced society but then I also have sympathy for the idea of a social safety net, does that mean I eat babies and am the worlds greatest hero at the same time?

I'm beginning to see something here that I'll address later.

@Mai. Can I ask why you decided to add the Ruffallo quote? How pertinent was it to your post to do so?

@Warren Dew. Yes I think you have it. Like those who mistake Capitalism for Plutocrats or Socialism for Stalinists, Republican party with Christian fundamenalists, I think that people are conflating libertarianism with Objectivists.

@LakLak. Thanks I read through that. It doesn't seem that unreasonable to me and again I think you are right about the assumption between the "rationalist" boards and the stereotype, probably because it has been so expertly played by our own serpentine gadfly Seth.

Okay so Johnny Ambivalence has something to say because I'm worried your country is going to tear itself apart and the rest of us will suffer for it. I think you all (as a society that is divided in so many ways) need to calm the fuck down with your rhetoric. You have mad cunts with guns who will take it seriously no matter what political persuasion they are of and they do and will kill people because they are mad cunts. However at this fever pitch of nervous reactionary rhetoric you are engaged in against each other you'll all start lashing out and I can see that escalating to a very ugly point.

It seems to me that you are all fighting for different social policies but you all (mostly) seem to agree that your federal government is fucked and that they are the problem with the U.S. You all know this and yet you are allowing those who would own you to get away with it while you fight each other over phantom menaces. Can't you work to get rid of them and give each state an autonomous Central Government (or not dependent on what that state provides). Is it not the United part of the States that is holding you all back?
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Re: Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

Post by macdoc » Wed Jun 27, 2012 9:41 pm

Didn;t you ever wonder why there are no libby societies??.....there is a problem when their concepts are taken to a logical conclusion just as there is with "workers paradise"

I'm a pragmatist but also strongly in favour of the protection of individuals from predators and for that you need a state mechanism not a gun.

I think the Nordic nations - reviled as socialists by Yank right wing strike a pretty good balance.
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Re: Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

Post by maiforpeace » Thu Jun 28, 2012 8:43 am

Audley Strange wrote: @Mai. Can I ask why you decided to add the Ruffallo quote? How pertinent was it to your post to do so?
It's not a Ruffalo quote, he just used it to characterize fracking. Libertarians strive for the least amount of government oversight and interference. Since the US fracking industry is exempt from the same regulations that all other industries must comply with, it's a Libertarian's wet dream. Libertarians use the expression too, so it's not meant to be derogatory.

Libertarian's wet dream
OCTOBER 2, 2010 8:53 AM
Author: susie
And speaking of Tennessee: Firefighters watched a house burn down without doing anything to help because the homeowners didn’t pay their fire protection fee.
Gold, Silver & Guns: The Ultimate Libertarian Wet Dream in Utah
From Eric Dondero:

Republican State Rep. explains the new bill to legalize gold and silver as legal tender in Utah surrounded by weaponry in a SLC area gun shop.
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Re: Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

Post by FBM » Thu Jun 28, 2012 9:41 am

laklak wrote:There is a Libertarian Party, much of their platform makes a great deal of sense. Their economic policies go a bit too far in the laisse faire direction, but I'm generally in agreement with them on everything else. But on these boards "Libertarian" = "mean spirited selfish rich fucker who never worked for his money and wants to exploit poor people". That's when you aren't accused of hating gays and being a closet christian. I've posted this link many times, but I doubt if anyone has actually followed it. It's the Libertarian Party platform. Give it a read, you might be surprised how "liberal" it is, particularly on contentious subjects like abortion, religious freedom, gay rights, drug policy and immigration.

http://www.lp.org/platform
For the record, there isn't much in the Libertarian framework that I disagree with. I feel pretty much what you describe about some of their excessively dog-eat-dog economic policies. It's just an offspring of the ill-fated Social Darwinism craze. Seems a lot of people aren't keeping up with how completely that little experiment failed. But there are quite a few other Libertarian ideals that I'm very comfortable with.
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Re: Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

Post by maiforpeace » Thu Jun 28, 2012 2:55 pm

There was a workshop on fracking by the California Department of Conservation last night at a nearby town. Unfortunately I only got in on the last half or so of the meeting, but I did learn some more about fracking, including another reason why I shouldn't trust the industry.

State Considers Regulating Fracking, Officials Come to Salinas
The 2005 Energy Bill exempted mostly water-based fracking fluids—generally considered by the industry to be proprietary—from disclosure to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The exception, though, is diesel.

It took a Congressional probe to reveal millions of gallons of diesel fuel had been injected into wells across the country from 2005 to 2009, including 26,466 gallons in California, without appropriate EPA permits.
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Re: Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

Post by Seth » Thu Jun 28, 2012 3:26 pm

maiforpeace wrote:Since I started this thread I have been doing a bit of study on the subject of fracking. I just watched Gasland and am reeling from what I have learned so far. I keep on telling myself, "Why should I care? I don't have kids. I live in an area where I guarantee no one would allow the industry to frack here".
"Gasland" is eco-wanker alarmist propaganda.
Do you pro-frackers honestly believe that pumping 596 different chemicals (many of which that are KNOWN carcinogens, in addition to some surfectants and lubricants) mixed with 1 to 7 million gallons of water, under enough pressure to essentially create a small earthquake that pulverizes solid bedrock 5000 ft underground is not going to have any negative effects?
Ooooh..."earthquakes!" Gives one visions of San Francisco in 1906...buildings collapsing, fires, mass destuction...

Utter horseshit. Where injection of fluids underground has been identified as the culprit in "earthquakes," they are virtually all tiny, harmless tremors that do no damage to homes on the surface.

And since the chemicals are being injected 5000 or more feet underground, as long as the cementing of the well is done properly, which is the goal of gas companies so that they can sell it, the chemicals are not a problem, and when the fracking fluid is extracted and properly disposed of it's still not a problem.

Are there "negative effects" from oil and gas drilling? Of course there are. But the question is whether or not the need for domestically produced energy outweighs the negative impacts. If you want to heat your house and have electricity, it's necessary to drill gas wells because the EPA has made it functionally impossible to build a new coal-fired powerplant in the US.

So, you can freeze in the dark, or you can put up with the short-term, temporary negative effects of gas well drilling and fracking, and the long term minor negative effects of having well heads in your area in return for cheap electricity and heating fuel. Take your pick because there's no such thing as a free lunch.

The environmental whackos who made "Gasland" don't give a flying fuck about energy needs, they are brainless Luddites who would have us living in wattle-and-daub huts and grubbing in the ground with sharpened sticks for nourishment, so who cares what they have to say?

We don't even know what all of those chemicals are yet, since the "cocktail" is considered "proprietary" and therefore is not required by law to be disclosed.


This is a valid concern, and Colorado just passed a law requiring fracking companies to reveal the chemical constituents of fracking fluid, although not necessarily their proportions, so that proper analysis and oversight of both leaks/contamination and remediation/disposal can be done by state officials. This particular aspect is one of the only areas were we have agreement, and states are beginning to demand disclosure in the interests of proper monitoring of oil and gas extraction and protection against aquifer contamination as well as identification of culprits who may be operating ILLEGALLY by contaminating water sources.
Do you know how many wells there already are, and at what alarming rate they are being drilled at?
Many, and not nearly fast enough. We need to exploit ALL of our available oil and gas reserves and reduce our dependence on foreign oil sources as a matter of national security and economic common sense.
Do you know that only half of the "cocktail" of chemicals and water pumped in is actually reclaimed for purification?
Did you know that the other half remains 5000 or more feet underground and is utterly harmless to shallow aquifers?
And, for the purification that occurs, there are little, if any measures in place should there flooding in areas where the percolation ponds exist?


Lie. Such facilities are closely regulated by the EPA against water quality violations. They are permitted and licensed by state governments and are required to have mitigation and protection plans. You're relying on information that is no longer valid for your argument. In the past, frac pits were simply buried and they did not have mandatory liners. Today, pits must have liners, the frac fluid must be recycled or properly disposed of, and the pit liners must be removed and disposed of and all contaminated soil remediated.
But hey, the industry has copped to 6% leakage which was voluntary, and it sounds good and honest so here you go folks, here's a pig in a poke. We promise that the benefits realized will far outweigh the cons. What they failed to add at the end of that last sentence was FOR THE INDUSTRY.
How, exactly, do you think it's beneficial to the "industry" if it's not beneficial to consumers. "The industry" sells oil and gas to meet the needs of consumers for gasoline, oil products, heating fuel, transportation fuel and electrical production. How the fuck do you expect all those demands to be met without oil and gas exploration and extraction?
So I wasn't the least bit surprised to learn the politics behind fracking in the US. As others have already mentioned, fracking has been around for a while. Until 2005 the policy has been simply to buy off the people who who have suffered any ill effect to keep silent, including the many employees who have come in contact and been injured by these dangerous and toxic chemicals. So the companies that engage in fracking already have a history of being exploitive and secretive, not to mention their extremely powerful lobby.
Yes, that WAS true, although there is still little or no evidence that fracking actually caused any problems. Companies paid compensation in many cases even though it was never proven that they were actually responsible for the alleged harms. In the past, abandoned frac pits were (and in some cases still are) a problem, but that particular problem has been largely resolved by state and federal regulation.
Then with the energy policy acts of 2005, the gas industry was exempted from complying to any environmental regulations when it comes to fracking. This was, unsurprisingly pushed through by Cheney, with his newly formed task force of industry leaders that met ONCE over fracking. Oh, and the company that started fracking and sells this wonderful technology of fracking to the gas industry? Halliburton.
You forget that the states have the power to regulate fracking environmental impacts, and have done so. Things have changed since 2005 as well, and the situation continues to improve.

But the essential question remains. Without fracking, most of the oil and gas we can produce domestically would not exist, or would be much more expensive and would require MORE WELL BORES, so do you want to freeze in the dark or have heat, air-conditioning, electricity, vehicle fuel and all the things that are part of the energy economy?

Fracking, combined with multiple-bore directional drilling has MINIMIZED the long-term surface impacts by concentrating surface drilling and well-head production equipment in one small area that covers square miles of underground resources. The alternative is what you see in West Texas, where there's a pumpjack every 10 acres or less from the highway to the horizon. That's the technology that's needed to extract oil (and gas well heads likewise) from "tight" formations because the flow to the well is very slow. With directional drilling having as many as two dozen individual bores from a single drill pad, and fracking, much greater quantities of oil and gas can be economically extracted to MEET THE ENERGY NEEDS OF THE NATION.
Essentially, at least here in the US, there are no real, solid and comprehensive studies on the short and long term effects of fracking outside of the industry. There weren't any before 2005, and there still aren't. Without any of the regulations in place THAT EVERY OTHER INDUSTRY MUST COMPLY TO, they can just frack away and it's up to us poor fools to figure out whether or not it's dangerous.
Horseshit propaganda.
They show up at your door, offer you a bunch of money to own a part of your property rights to something that doesn't have a obviously apparent value to you (the ground underneath your property thousands of feet down) and tell you whatever they want to because there's no studies to back up the cons of fracking. The industry has already voluntarily copped to 6% leakage of this "supposedly" properly disposed of toxic waste. Well, that must mean they are honest and ethical since it was voluntary.
Nobody's required to sell mineral rights if they own them, but if the landowner does own them, they have every right to lease them out if someone wants to pay them for the minerals. It's up to the landowner to do his homework though, and if he doesn't, and he doesn't require stringent environmental protection contract provisions in the contract, it's on his head.

The real problem is in the West where the mineral estate was severed and retained by the government, something that never should have happened, and so the surface owner MUST allow drilling, although the law requires the gas company to be reasonable, although that term is rather vague and flexible. But, if you bought property without the mineral estate, that's a risk you accepted and you paid less for your land than you would have otherwise, so there's that.

Yes, the prime culprit in most of the cases of environmental damage is the FEDERAL GOVERNMENT which owns the mineral rights but fails to set stringent environmental standards for extraction.

That's clearly a political matter, but again one must balance the need for energy with the "six percent" failure rate. Shall we shut down domestic energy production entirely because six percent of the time something goes wrong? Or should we try not to have accidents (and they are accidents) and provide compensation when landowners are damaged by such accidents and let the other 94 percent of production remain reasonably economical and possible?
THE PLAN - to sell the public the same bill of goods that the tobacco industry did years ago, and was hugely successful with. They are even using the same exact PR company that came up with the idea. That the science behind the long term effects of fracking is sound and that the negative effects are nominal, back by almost 100 years of fracking experience. The discrediting of the anti-frackers, as emotional and hysterical.
Well, that's because they ARE emotional and hysterical, and they are being used for propaganda purposes.

Let's say, arguendo, that six percent of all wells drilled do actually, provably cause irreparable harm to the owner's property. The solution is not to shut down fracking or drilling, the solution is to strengthen regulations to make it very expensive for gas companies to make mistakes. They should be required to either completely remediate any surface contamination, regardless of the cost (something that's already required in many areas), provide damage compensation to the landowner, provide, if necessary, a permanent, at-their-expense water system that provides uncontaminated water to everyone affected by their negligence, or simply buy out the landowner so he can move somewhere else.
you connect to what's going really going on here and what I've learned so far, you should be at minimum concerned - admittedly I am hot under the collar about being raped again by Cheney. By feeding the public a few bones, like admitting to some leakage, describing detailed science and processes that have not been vetted that sound good and scientific, that the anti-frackers don't know what they are talking about (well yet anyway), the industry paints themselves as ethical, honest and patriotic even, since they are promoting energy independence. They are even countering terrorism! (some of the arguements made by pro fracking legislators.
Meh. Environmental alarmism fomented by environmental alarmist propaganda.
So let me ask you pro-frackers, in the US. If you already haven't sold the fracking rights to a company for your property, would you if you were approached by them? Even given the admitted 6% leakage?
They aren't "fracking rights," they are drilling and extraction rights. Fracking is just one of the processes that takes place to free-up the gas trapped in the gas layer so it flows at greater rates, which in turn requires less surface disturbance and impact through many-hole directional drilling. And me, I'd sell the mineral rights in a heartbeat because it can take marginal agricultural land and provide a permanent, substantial income to the surface owner, which allows the property to remain rural rather than having it subdivided and having houses put on it, which causes environmental impacts that far outstrip the six percent risk of groundwater contamination or minor, remediable surface contamination. I'd happily look at a gas well head for several thousand dollars a month in return. On the other hand, I'd make sure that if they did fuck up while drilling, they would be required to remediate, mitigate and compensate for any and all damages, surface or otherwise.

Better yet, why don't you put your money where your mouth is and and put some more money in your pocket for your retirement and your heirs, who will probably need a lot of money to pay their medical bills, and make an offer to sell the right to frack under your property ...I know at least one of you lives in a state that is on a fracking frenzy (Colorado), I'm sure they would be delighted.
I sold the whole ranch, and the new owners can drill and frack to their heart's content.
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Re: Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

Post by Seth » Thu Jun 28, 2012 3:32 pm

maiforpeace wrote:There was a workshop on fracking by the California Department of Conservation last night at a nearby town. Unfortunately I only got in on the last half or so of the meeting, but I did learn some more about fracking, including another reason why I shouldn't trust the industry.

State Considers Regulating Fracking, Officials Come to Salinas
The 2005 Energy Bill exempted mostly water-based fracking fluids—generally considered by the industry to be proprietary—from disclosure to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The exception, though, is diesel.

It took a Congressional probe to reveal millions of gallons of diesel fuel had been injected into wells across the country from 2005 to 2009, including 26,466 gallons in California, without appropriate EPA permits.
So what? It's thousands of feet underground, sealed in the gas layer, and it's mixed with oil and gas (also hydrocarbons) in the gas/oil layer and will eventually be pumped out either as aromatics in gas production or as a "contaminant" in the oil. Eventually in either case it makes its way in the pipeline to the gas or oil refining facilities and is either recovered or disposed of properly. That they didn't have a permit is merely incidental and a bureaucratic violation, not an environmental catastrophe like you're suggesting.

There has been exactly ONE proven case of aquifer contamination by sub-surface frac fluid injection in all this time in Wyoming, out of all the hundreds of thousands of bore holes drilled.

Not much of a problem, really, once you give the hysterical environmental whaco propagandists a Xanex and calm them down a bit.
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Re: Fracking - A Libertarian's Wet Dream

Post by maiforpeace » Thu Jun 28, 2012 4:46 pm

Thank you Seth, I thought you had forsaken me. I was getting hungry for something to chew on. :biggrin:

I've got a big day today, but I have a few questions already and will get back to your responses here. Have a good one! :cheers:
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