This seems like a reflexive but ill-informed response to any attempt to wean us off the consumption of oil.
The problem with this is that the "first PC" of energy is not out yet. Plug and play electric cars still burn oil (because electricity comes from somewhere) hydrogen energy is not at a level to be commercially exploited.
The benefit of electric/hydrogen cars is that they shift the burden of power generation to the grid, which can be generated more efficiently at a central location, can be generated by heavier fuel oils which we'd produce anyway as a product of the refining process(40% of our petroleum consumption is in gasoline), or ideally, by renewable or nuclear energy. Also, electric cars give us the flexibility of shifting power sources depending on cost/availability/unforseen consequences, rather than tying us to one resource as gasoline currently does.
Ethanol still requires oil to process/harvest corn/vegetable matter
I'm not buying ethanol as the answer to our problems, but do you really think that because the process uses SOME oil, as opposed to just burning it, that it's not a viable method of reducing oil consumption? I mean, if it took more than a gallon of oil to produce a gallon of ethanol, wouldn't we just burn the oil instead?:icon_wink
nuclear energy has not been accepted in this country by the same people arguing for clean energy (a whole other argument about double standards), and
Well, revisit the issue and refuse to accept the status quo. The issue was decided in the 70's when the main benefit to nuclear power was it's cost.
Since it's become a national security issue and not just a matter of cheap electricity, the issue ought to be revisited. Get the greens, the anti-global warming folks, and the Islamophobes together and trample the Nuclear-phobes. (That'd be a great protestor riot).
So we are left with the oil dependancy, and we are still having to import most of it.
Actually, if you take away energy generation and some proportion of automobile usage, that's anywhere from a third to half of our current petroleum consumption. That would make domestic drilling much more realistic a solution to our problems.