In one fell swoop you fix social security (you don't) medicare (you
don't) and the homeless problem ( you don't ) but there are plenty that
would believe that if it came from on top...
On 4/10/20 6:20 AM, ch...@wbmfg.com wrote:
Ahhh, yes, the rise of the master race!
*From:* Adam Moffett
*Sent:* Friday, April 10, 2020 7:05 AM
*To:* af@af.afmug.com
*Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] Utility bills
It has occurred to me that allowing things to take shape naturally and
allowing 1-2 million people with underlying conditions to die might be
the better course for the country economically. That might include my
wife and children who have asthma, so no.
On 4/10/2020 8:20 AM, justsumname . wrote:
Pretty safe assumption that 'most people' are not the least bit aware
of many things.
And therefore not prepared for much of anything.
The virus isn't so bad, it's the people reacting to it.
On Thu, Apr 9, 2020 at 11:21 PM Adam Moffett <dmmoff...@gmail.com> wrote:
My own utility bills won't be different. Kids are home schooled
so we
kept the heat up at 66 all day anyway. It drops to 60 when people
should be in bed under their blankets. I've spent more on home
improvement. Lowes and Home Depot both deliver by the way, and my
weekends are not taken up by kids birthday parties, soccer games,
etc.
So I've been catching up on house projects. Meanwhile I've spent
next to
nothing on luxuries, restaurants, or entertainment. My personal
financials before and after are probably a wash. .....though perhaps
I'm atypical.
Here's one prediction: https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/steo/report/
About 2/3 of the way down: ""The economic slowdown and stay-at-home
orders are likely to affect U.S. electricity consumption over the
next
few months. EIA expects the largest impact will occur in the
commercial
sector where forecast retail sales of electricity fall by 4.7% in
2020
due to the closure of many businesses. Similarly, EIA expects retail
sales of electricity to the industrial sector will fall by 4.2%
in 2020
as many factories cut back production. Forecast U.S. sales of
electricity to the residential sector fall by 0.8% in 2020, as
reduced
power usage resulting from milder winter and summer weather is
offset by
increased household electricity consumption as much of the
population
stays at home.""
On 4/9/2020 4:28 PM, Nate Burke wrote:
> I wonder how many people don't realize that by staying home all
day,
> their utility usage is going to be way up. I'm surprised I
haven't
> heard more about that being covered. Keeping the house warmer all
> day, and the TV on all costs $$$. It's not free, like the
Internet.
>
> I'm also curious how much total energy usage has changed. They
say
> pollution is down because driving is down. I think most heavy
> manufacturing is still up and running. The office buildings can't
> change their HVAC programs because there are still a couple
people in
> the buildings working, especially if they're all remoteing into
their
> office desktop machines. And daytime residential usage should be
> dramatically up. Or is energy consumption based on the person,
and is
> directly tied to where that person is at?
>
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