Frederick Bott
2 min readJun 27, 2022

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Absolutely Peter, there are many arguments against nuclear, the development time of it is out of the question also from an economic point of view, to support a development of seven years or more, reasonable economic stability is needed, currency crashing as it is now, it is almost impossible to try to budget for anything long term. Anyone making themselves responsible for something like that has to be expecting to exit long before the "shit hits the fan", it seems to me.

True also I guess there might be a reduction in vehicle numbers, but any mechanism that helps folk put some solar in place is good, I think, there seems to me to be a tipping point towards 100% solar which will be realised quite suddenly, the more solar is implemented, by whatever means, the sooner that tipping point is likely to be.

My writing in Medium is mostly on this topic, it seems to me there will, and has to be some fundamental changes will occur to economy as a result of us inevitably going solar.

It comes from understanding that solar is the only actual source of energy, that it is pushed to us, rather than any need to extract it, and it adds to the capital of Earth.

The difference that makes to economy, and environment is profound, since the current input of our economy is all product from extraction, it propagates through all things with the result that every promise to pay is a promise to extract, nothing is ever given for free, only witheld if satisfactory exchange is not received.

When we go fully solar, we will have to issue money reflecting its product added to the economy, to satisfy the ideals of Austrian economics, and since the energy is pushed to us, in return for no labor (After creaation of the interface / panels), and is endless, limitlessly scaleable using funds generated directly from it, the money reflecting it has to be issued for free to all people.

I think we are much closer to that now than many people realise, and there are a few who do realise, who really don't want it to be known, but it is inevitable, like trying to hold back a waterfall, it seems to me.

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Frederick Bott
Frederick Bott

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