Monday, November 3, 2008

Twas the night before Nobama, and all through the house . . .

Never again can we allow this to happen. To have a man so utterly unqualified on experience, policy, judgment, and character to be this close to election. No matter WHAT happens THIS election, expect the media to pay a steep price for what they have done.

Americans can NO LONGER RELY on NBC, CBS, CNN, ABC, CNBC, MSNBC, or most of the newspaper and print media. They FLAT REFUSED to tell you what you needed to know, things that if you had known would have made your decision far easier . . . but they wanted to brainwash you, tell you what to think. But when it comes to padding their wallets, they depend on YOU watching so they can sell advertising.

Expect boycotts of the above mentioned media by half the country, and the advertisers who choose to spend their money influencing elections in an attempt to put scumbags in office.

Yes, I said it. Barack Obama is a scumbag. And no matter WHAT happens in this election, expect ME and many thousands like me to rise up against the media, and form a grass roots network to reach the masses so that this NEVER happens again. Starting Wednesday my CAREER will be making sure a scumbag NEVER gets this close again. Did you hear me? Never.

And let me say one more thing. If you still support Barack Obama, you're an idiot, you deserve the skyrocketing electric bills you will get, the higher taxes, the terror attacks that result from his inaction, and the infringement on your right to bear arms and right to speak freely. You're an idiot, period. And I will be the one laughing at you as the economy collapses and you try and figure out how you will pay your utility bill, and put gas in your car with the paltry government handout he has promised you.

Let's just pray that less than half of America are idiots and go from there. Talk to you guys in a little bit.

GOD BLESS AMERICA!

OBAMA HEADS-STOCK UP ON CANDLES!

I said it before, and I will say it again. If Obama is elected, he has PROMISED that "the price of electricity will necessarily skyrocket." So much for helping the middle class!

-Millions of Americans make their living from the coal and related industries.
-Nearly EVERYONE lights their home with coal.
-Even if Obama DID give the middle class a tax cut, does ANYBODY believe that the tax cut will not be completely absorbed by the "skyrocketing price of electricity?"
-Electricity is useed in the production of EVERYTHING, so if the price of electricity goes up, so does the price of EVERYTHING . . . bread, soft drinks, clothes, appliances, you name it.

At the LAST MINUTE, the very last minute, this coal revelation comes out. But I don't want to hear from any of you that it came out too late for you to hear about it. There have been COUNTLESS revelations about this man in the last 1 1/2 years, and you turned your head the other way. So don't even play that game.

Here, check this out . . . people are ALREADY having trouble paying their utility bills . . . get those candles out, Obama heads!

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122567355463991711.html

UTILITY BILLS GO UNPAID
Utilities are becoming more aggressive about collecting money from delinquent customers, leading to a surge in service shutdowns just as economic woes are pushing up the number of households falling behind on bills.

The utilities say they are under pressure to clean out accounts that are weighing down their books at a time when their stocks are being hammered and earnings growth has slowed.

Meanwhile, the increasing number of homes left without power -- which could rise as economic pain deepens -- is beginning to worry some consumer advocates and regulators.

Getty Images

A Consolidated Edison power plant in New York City. Amid the economic downturn, New Yorkers are having a harder time paying their utility bills on time

In Pennsylvania, PPL Corp. increased shutoffs by 78% in the first three quarters of the year compared with the same period a year earlier. Shutoffs at electric utilities throughout the state increased by 20% in that period. George Lewis, a spokesman for PPL, based in Allentown, Pa., said the utility had been somewhat lax in the past but decided this year to "reverse the trend and prevent people from getting further in debt" by cutting them off sooner. About 3% of the company's residential accounts have been disconnected for delinquency.

In Memphis, Tenn., the city-owned utility that supplies electricity, natural gas and water to residents cut off 38% more people in the first eight months of the year, or 69,743 electric accounts, versus the same period in 2007. The utility raised electricity rates 20% this year, reflecting increased wholesale power costs for energy. Chris Stanley, a spokesman from the company, Memphis Light, Gas & Water, said the number of accounts owing more than $900 that were 90 days or more past due was up 148% to 1,766 accounts as of Oct. 28.

The increased number of shutoffs has attracted the attention of some regulators. Dian Grueneich, a member of the California Public Utilities Commission who has responsibility for low-income programs, has begun asking utilities to furnish information on shutoff criteria. She wants commission staff to "take a look and make sure it is being applied fairly."

One bright spot is that many utilities will have more money to distribute next year to poor customers through the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program. Congress boosted the program's funds for the current fiscal year by 78% to $5.1 billion. Many utilities are trying to get the word out that people should apply because eligibility rules have been expanded, allowing people with higher incomes to qualify.

State regulators say they have noticed that power shutoffs have moved up the economic chain. "We're seeing an uptick in middle-class people who have never been in this situation before," said Eric Hartsfield, director of the customer-service division of the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities.

New Jersey's biggest utility company, Public Service Enterprise Group Inc., said it saw a 10% increase compared with the year earlier in uncollectible natural-gas accounts, and slightly less on the electric side, in the third quarter. "We've been diligent in our shutoff activities," said PSEG Chief Executive Ralph Izzo.

Rising delinquencies are occurring across the country. In New York, the amount of money utilities are owed on accounts at least 60 days past due jumped 22%, to $611.3 million in September compared with a year earlier, according to regulators.

Michigan has experienced a nearly 39% increase in electricity disconnections this year compared with last, according to statistics filed voluntarily by utilities with state regulators.

The rise comes as utilities are finding it more difficult to fund their operations.

Northeast Utilities, which owns electric and gas utilities in New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Connecticut, is carrying about $15 million of unpaid bills currently, up from about $11 million this time last year and about $8 million in 2006. "We're putting more resources into collecting on accounts now," said Chief Financial Officer David McHale.

In the third quarter, PECO Corp., a Philadelphia utility, racked up an additional $37 million of bad-debt expenses from unpaid bills compared with the third quarter of 2007, bringing its total unpaid balance to $56 million.

The company has put in place a new service-termination strategy this year that for the first time assesses credit risk, and pulls together other information used as a basis for decisions. "We ask how old, how big and how risky" an account is when prioritizing disconnections, said Denis O'Brien, president of PECO, a unit of Chicago-based Exelon Corp.

The number of shutoffs could rise further, as new technologies such as digital meters make it easier for utilities to cut off late-paying customers.

Digital meters allow power companies to do things remotely that previously required sending out work crews. For example, utilities can take meter readings wirelessly and switch a customer's power off or on without having to send a crew to a house. They also can use a "service limiter" feature to cut power flows to a trickle until customers pay up. Utilities are installing millions of these meters across the U.S.

Southern California Edison, a unit of Edison International of Rosemead, Calif., currently disconnects late-paying customers owing as little as $30, but that could drop lower in the future. That usually would be a money-losing proposition, because it requires a crew to be sent out to disconnect service manually. But the company is in the process of installing 5.3 million digital meters, at a cost of $1.63 billion, which will allow remote, wireless shutoffs, making it economical to take action even for tiny amounts owed. In a recent filing with regulators it said it could adopt "rigid enforcement" of payment rules in the future for those owing less than $30. It hypothesized it could cut off an additional 129,000 people a year.

Lynda Ziegler, senior vice president of customer service at SoCal Edison, said the utility doesn't have enough wireless meters to support a policy change yet. She added that notification requirements mean it still could take nearly three months to sever a delinquent account. But she said the utility may seek authority from the Public Utilities Commission in the future to act more quickly or to convert certain customers to prepaid service because "one of the struggles people have is catching up when they get behind."

The ease with which utilities can use digital meters to cut off service has alarmed some consumer advocates. "Just because you can do it doesn't mean you should do it," said Irwin Popowsky, head of the Office of Consumer Advocate in Pennsylvania. "From my perspective, they're creating a reason to not have smart meters."