kennynah wrote:actually...i say to make you happy one....
same effect as this kinda lips...
Yah, but at least good for a few seconds' dreaming.

kennynah wrote:actually...i say to make you happy one....
same effect as this kinda lips...
British Columbia has shown that it's politically possible, too. On July 1, it added a small tax on gasoline designed to account for the costs of carbon dioxide emissions. The revenue will be returned in reduced income and business taxes. To ease the initial sting, the government sent each citizen a check for $100 at the end of June -- a move that will help lower-income people who are struggling with higher energy prices. Taxing energy, and returning the money to people in other ways, "is pretty much an economist's dream," says Ian Perry, senior fellow at Resources for the Future, a Washington think tank.
Ideally energy should be priced not just at today’s
market levels, but also taking into account the likelihood of a future carbonconstrained
world, be it due to scarcer supplies of fossil fuels or a post-Kyoto
regime to restrain carbon emissions. This will provide the right incentives to
avoid over-consumption and to economise on the use of energy.
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