Gain may be temporary and uncertain; but ever while you live, expense is constant and certain: and it is easier to build two chimneys than to keep one in fuel.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
You need to be in the position where it is the cost of the fuel that actually matters and not the cost of building the rocket in the first place.
Sometimes the best gain is to lose.
Fuel prices are at the center of our lives. They affect our ability to travel, stay warm, and feed ourselves.
Companies, cities, and potentially even individuals could have a small refinery to make their own fuel.
Once you get that two-way energy thing going, everyone benefits hugely.
We've gone from thinking the fuels that powered our growth were inexpensive, inexhaustible and benign to understanding they are exhaustible, expensive and toxic. Once you frame the problem that way, people will look at solutions differently.
Fuel conservation is a necessity, and I have to be the first person to set the example.
We as a nation have no choice but to conserve fuel to the best of our abilities or be prepared for harsh measures like steep price increase, if the need so arises.
To gain what is worth having, it may be necessary to lose everything else.
However, it may occur that we will find ourselves using a variety of fuel sources to give us the energy we need support our lifestyles and boost our economy.
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