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Korea as Number One

I have always depart from my Cuban friends in Tampa and Miami on this issue. Get rid of the US sanctions on Cuba. Let US invade them with tourists and US dollars. We can make Cuba as 'American' as we did Puerto Rico within one generation. For Mexico, many Mexicans I know who fled the country out of fear quietly admitted their country abandoned Mexico's history a long time ago when they allowed the criminals to rule so much of the country.

I agree with removing sanctions it would certainly help cuba and get rid of the castro brothers but the cuban exiles are the biggest opposition to this. on puerto rico it's most likely a game of waiting right now they enjoy status quo, as for mexico it has alot of potential but right now as you said we are aware of the issue.
 
I agree with removing sanctions it would certainly help cuba and get rid of the castro brothers but the cuban exiles are the biggest opposition to this.
They are shortsighted and I have told my Cuban friends so.

on puerto rico it's most likely a game of waiting right now they enjoy status quo,...
The 'Ricans have their chance of being an independent country and they voted to stay with US.

...as for mexico it has alot of potential but right now as you said we are aware of the issue.
Mexico is a failed state. Simple as that.
 
But you are. Puerto Rico is our 51st state. Canada is our 52nd. And Mexico is our 53rd. :lol: We just have not made if official. Yet. I know Canadian sees themselves as a member of the Eurosnob crowd, but the reality is that the Eurosnobs looks down on Canada and Australia as they do US.

Ya well, I don't care about that. I don't care about your sore vagina.

I never had any problems with Euros. But I have had some attitude come my way until I tell them I'm Canadian. Then it's all smiles and free beers. Hell, I don't even blame you guys for wearing our flag overseas.

America is Canada's toilet and includes a lot of hot air.

/But but but but.... power lines

Made an id only to post this :lol:

Sorry to leave you out of it. Hope I didn't hurt your feelings. Came here to post this as well ..I..

But your right, I probably won't be staying for long because I actually have the ability to get laid.
 
Ya well, I don't care about that. I don't care about your sore vagina.

I never had any problems with Euros. But I have had some attitude come my way until I tell them I'm Canadian. Then it's all smiles and free beers. Hell, I don't even blame you guys for wearing our flag overseas.

America is Canada's toilet and includes a lot of hot air.
You only think the Eurosnobs considers you their equal. Reality is that they consider everyone in the Western Hemisphere to be their inferiors. In the Canadians' case, it is condescension and tolerance for you guys.

/But but but but.... power lines
You might to take that up with your Eurosnob friend. He was the one who brought it up. :lol:
 
It is? If so, then fire codes should be scrapped, nein? :lol:

Since all our power lines are underground, does it mean that we have scrapped fire code and Beverly Hill and other posh areas in the US are not comply to fire safety?

Of course it was tepid. You evaded the issue altogether. By your arguments and beliefs, mankind would have never progressed beyond the agricultural stage. No one would dare to explore the unknown. Go back and read my post again, if you have the courage.

Mankind progressed because mankind have abandonned failed projects and put scarce resources to better and more promissing undertakings.


Dead issue. Now you know better because I led you to the pond of electricity knowledge and you drank. Good boy.

You asked whether we had electricity in 1890 and now it‘s you who gave me knowledge that we already had electricity after I told you that we indeed had electricity in 1890? That's indeed funny. :)

So now you are making the assumption that the manned space program with reusable vehicles concept is dead?

This is why I laughed at the both of you, you and the Chinese-American with whom you are yanking each other's d1cks via the 'Thank' button, the one that responded about the patent on the steam engine, totally missing the point. :lol:

But I will school you both...

Practically all of Asia bypassed the steam engine and the Industrial Revolution. What I mean is that despite the Chinese discovery of steam pressure and made some gadgets with it, they really did nothing with it. Despite the Chinese who pretty much invented the wheelbarrow, scientists and engineers wondered why they never progressed to the next logical step -- the bicycle. It took the Westerners to fully exploit the steam engine and to create the next logical progression of man and machine. The Westerners paid the price, money and human, to discover principles and the exploit them. Then they exported their discoveries and inventions to everywhere they traveled.

The recipients of these inventions and devices also paid their own prices in incorporating them into their own societies. Some sooner than others. Some faster than others. Some could not at all. Some it is/was obvious that they never will be able to. Give the disassembled bicycle to some aboriginal people anywhere and they will use it for something else. But the point is that for sophisticated peoples like the Chinese, the Japanese, or the Koreans, their societies have had their own successes that they do not need to experience the pains of discoveries and development of the steam engine, the internal combustion engine, the printing press, and many more, in order to progress.

Which lead us back to the Space Shuttle. Calling it a 'failure' is being spectacularly shortsighted and ignorant. Whatever man does, we prefer to do it while we are 'there', meaning, was it necessary for a human being to be in the cockpit when the aircraft broke Mach? No, it was not necessary. But we want to anyway and we did it anyway. Same for the Moon program. How many have gone back to the Moon since then? None. But no one is calling the Apollo program a 'failure'. Why? Because the Chinese wanted to go there next and if the Chinese wanted to go, calling the Apollo program a 'failure' would mean criticizing the Chinese and that would be unthinkable for the anti-US crowd. :lol:

Manned reusable space vehicles are inevitable. Manned anything is part of our human nature and someone must take the first risk, financial and human, to explore that unknown. If not US, then it would have been the Russians or the Chinese. But since it was US and not the Chinese, then the venture MUST be opined as a 'failure' to appease one's own hypocrisy.

Manned reusable space vehicles are already being readied for the next generation of humanity with the Boeing X-37. The lessons learned from the Space Shuttle program are far more valuable and insightful than yours and the Chinese boys' simple minds can see. The US took the lead and we will keep that lead until your great grandchildrens' lifetimes.

wall_of_text_by_gaminggenius-d2xta5s.jpg



Are you that fracking helpless with the search engine and keywords...???

Overhead line versus buried cable

Err, we were talking about utility lines withing cities (you know, city planing was the start) and residential areas not about transmissions lines outside the city stretching miles without houses. Stop being an dishonest clown!

But hey, we Americans have never expected intellectual honesty from Eurosnobs in the first place.

Fair minded people will see who is dishonest in this debate.

:lol:...You have your criteria and I have mine.

Yeah, like during the last Olympics when the whole world including the IOC counted the gold medals, the US counted the total when they saw they were losing in the medal count. A bronce medal suddenly became the equivalent of a gold medal. What a bunch of sore losers. :)
 
Götterdämmerung;3043980 said:
Since all our power lines are underground, does it mean that we have scrapped fire code and Beverly Hill and other posh areas in the US are not comply to fire safety?
You missed the point, did you? Yes, you did . My quip was that safety codes often violate aesthetic sensibilities. So since you asserted that aesthetics matters so much may be we should do away with safety codes.

Götterdämmerung;3043980 said:
Mankind progressed because mankind have abandonned failed projects and put scarce resources to better and more promissing undertakings.
Your problem is that you have failed -- spectacularly -- to prove that the Space Shuttle program is a 'failure'. You did it by saying no one else followed the design. Funny that you are too chickensh1t to call the Apollo moon program a 'failure' because no one else returned to the moon since then. But now that the Chinese is talking about going to the Moon...Hmmm...No wonder you are so silent about this 'failure'...:lol:

European Scientists Make a Case for a Return to the Moon - Yahoo! News
The authors of the paper come from a number of European academic institutions. They include Ian Crawford, of Birkbeck College in London and colleagues from the Open University, the Natural History Museum, King's College, and the University of Edinburgh in the U.K., Radboud University and Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy in the Netherlands, and the Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie and the Institute of Planetary Research in Germany, and the Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris in France.
So how does it feel to receive such a spectacular wedgie from an American?

Götterdämmerung;3043980 said:
You asked whether we had electricity in 1890 and now it‘s you who gave me knowledge that we already had electricity after I told you that we indeed had electricity in 1890? That's indeed funny. :)

Err, we were talking about utility lines withing cities (you know, city planing was the start) and residential areas not about transmissions lines outside the city stretching miles without houses. Stop being an dishonest clown!

Fair minded people will see who is dishonest in this debate.
Buddy, you got pwned. You argued that just because some German cities have buried power lines, somehow that made it oh-so-important a factor that Germany is sooooo much better than the US. The Germans are sooooo sophisticated that they placed sooooo much emphasis on aesthetics over utility.

I clued you in on the problems with buried power lines. You now learned that there are serious structural and financial issues with the method. Buried power lines have greater capacitance leading to higher loss. That is the physics I was talking about.

Electric power transmission - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Long underground cables have significant capacitance, which may reduce their ability to provide useful power to loads.

In 1882, generation was with direct current (DC), which could not easily be increased in voltage for long-distance transmission. Different classes of loads (for example, lighting, fixed motors, and traction/railway systems) required different voltages, and so used different generators and circuits
Buried power lines are limited by geography and topography, meaning they could not go OVER obstacles, limiting their deployment due to higher cost, which at the time of electricity availability, everyone wanted it as soon as possible. So just because they are out of sight, that does not mean they are out of minds, especially when there are problems and taken with the greater cost to troubleshoot and repairs. That is why they are not popular. No matter how much of a snob you want to be over this issue, it does not make you correct in using it to justify your belief that somehow this is a component of sophistication. That is why overhead power lines are preferred the world over. But I guess part of a Eurosnob's mentality is that rarity confirms their own delusions of sophistication.
 
...


Sure, and we can use the US in the same vein for China. Look how far behind is China to the US. Our Space Shuttle is retired due to work and old age, China got anything similar? No? Then China CANNOT make something like the Space Shuttle.

Indeed utter bullShit!

US Space Shuttle is a failure of design and operation instead of success.

Experts in various fields, financially and scientifically, for instance, already addressed this issue long time back.

Just some excerpts:
...

1. The Shuttle killed more people than any other space vehicle in history.

The explosion of the Challenger killed seven people, six astronauts and one Teacher in Space participant, during the launch of its 10th mission in 1986. The explosion of the Columbia killed seven more during re-entry of its 28th mission in 2003.

Let me spell it out for you: out of five Shuttles–Columbia, Challenger, Discovery, Atlantis, and Endeavor—two met a disastrous and fiery fate. That’s a 40% vehicular failure rate (updated) and a flight failure rate of 1.5%. This would have grounded any other vehicle permanently.
To compare, the Apollo I mission resulted in the death three astronauts during a launch pad test. The Mercury and Gemini missions had no fatalities.

The Chinese space program has currently had no fatalities.
…

2. It was extremely expensive
…

f the space shuttle program is terminated after 2010, then it will have a total lifetime cost of about $173 billion, Pielke reported.

…

Given that flight rate, this will result in a total program cost per flight of $1.3 billion, Pielke explained. Of further interest is the average cost per flight from 2004-2010: It is $1.3 billion. The average cost per flight from the middle of 2005 through 2010, assuming 22 flights, is about $1.0 billion, he said.

Nature followed up in 2011:

The US Congress and NASA spent more than US$192 billion (in 2010 dollars) on the shuttle from 1971 to 2010 (see ‘A costly enterprise’)…. During the operational years from 1982 to 2010, the average cost per launch was about $1.2 billion. Over the life of the programme, this increases to about $1.5 billion per launch
…

3. It never went very high.

…

The Shuttle had an operational altitude of only 120 to 600 miles. However, the Shuttle’s trip to the International Space Station (ISS) was only a 200-250 mile journey… approximately the distance between NYC and Boston.

…
 

4. It never worked according to parameters.

…

5. It’s going to be replaced by something much better.

5 Horrifying Facts You Didn't Know About the Space Shuttle - Forbes


Also see:

A Magnificent Failure: Space Shuttle Program Soared in Orbit, Costs | TheLedger.com

...

The most important thing to realize about the space shuttle program is that it is objectively a failure.

How to Avoid Repeating the Debacle That Was the Space Shuttle | Space Flight | DISCOVER Magazine

You ill-educated are completely brainwashed by the 1%.

Back to the Topic.

There is no question that S Korea is a number one given such an existence of "Korean".

It is number one in many fields:

#1 in fleeing during Korea War. In fact US troops were hampered by SK dysfunctional army. Otherwise, US troops would have performed much better.

#1 in warship being sunk by N Korea and no noise was made.

#1 in soldiers being killed by N Korea and swallowed the fallen teeth.

#1 in declaring Jesus is Korean.

…

What a sh!tty #1!
 
Indeed utter bullShit!

US Space Shuttle is a failure of design and operation instead of success.

Experts in various fields, financially and scientifically, for instance, already addressed this issue long time back.
You mean experts in various fields that conveniently agree with your already made up mind.

Just some excerpts:
Yes, let us see...

5 Horrifying Facts You Didn't Know About the Space Shuttle - Forbes
The explosion of the Challenger killed seven people, six astronauts and one Teacher in Space participant, during the launch of its 10th mission in 1986. The explosion of the Columbia killed seven more during re-entry of its 28th mission in 2003.

Let me spell it out for you: out of five Shuttles–Columbia, Challenger, Discovery, Atlantis, and Endeavor—two met a disastrous and fiery fate. That’s a 40% vehicular failure rate (updated) and a flight failure rate of 1.5%. This would have grounded any other vehicle permanently.
Perhaps this 'expert' should look at the total missions instead of playing fast and loose with statistics...

NASA - Mission Information
List of space shuttle missions - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Total 135 1330d 18h 9m 44s 21,158

What else...

5 Horrifying Facts You Didn't Know About the Space Shuttle - Forbes
The Chinese space program has currently had no fatalities.
:lol: Now this is laughable from a Forbes writer and so eagerly pounced upon by the Chinese crowd. Given the quite amateur status and inexperience of the Chinese space program, is this a valid comparison? The Chinese is building on knowledge and established technology learned from foreigners. I dare say there is not one thing in reusable vehicle technology that the Chinese have contributed or probably will be.

You ill-educated are completely brainwashed by the 1%.
And you have been brainwashed by the Chinese 1%. Do US a favor and renounce your US citizenship and leave.

Back to the Topic.

There is no question that S Korea is a number one given such an existence of "Korean".

It is number one in many fields:

#1 in fleeing during Korea War. In fact US troops were hampered by SK dysfunctional army. Otherwise, US troops would have performed much better.

#1 in warship being sunk by N Korea and no noise was made.

#1 in soldiers being killed by N Korea and swallowed the fallen teeth.

#1 in declaring Jesus is Korean.

…

What a sh!tty #1!
And how many number 1s can we find for China to make it the sh1tty country that you so afraid to live in?
 
.... Do US a favor and renounce your US citizenship and leave.


...

Had US behaved like what you said, US would have been a sh!thole like Vietnam, or perhaps even worse. LOL!

If any US citizen has to renounce US citizenship by criticizing one or more events/projects in USA, many of our great citizens and presidents have to renounce their citizenship! :lol:


Examples?

Joseph Stiglitz recently wrote that US government is Of the 1%, by the 1%, for the 1% | Society | Vanity Fair

President Jefferson said:
I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around [the banks] will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs.

Thomas Jefferson, (Attributed)
3rd president of US (1743 - 1826)
Quote Details: Thomas Jefferson: I believe that banking... - The Quotations Page

Tell you fool, the world doesn’t work your foolish way!

:lol:
 
Had US behaved like what you said, US would have been a sh!thole like Vietnam, or perhaps even worse. LOL!

If any US citizen has to renounce US citizenship by criticizing one or more events/projects in USA, many of our great citizens and presidents have to renounce their citizenship! :lol:
As if YOU are satisfied with doing only that.

The difference between you and I is that unlike you and the other Chinese-Americans on this forum, no matter how much I criticize the US, and as a veteran I can certainly do that better than all of you combined, I still believe the US is the superior no matter how imperfect we are. I criticize to improve my country while all of you hide behind the freedom of speech to criticize to destroy, to replace the US with China. You magnify our flaws while doing your best to hide China's or whitewash them. What have 'Motherland China' done for the Chinese-Americans here? Not a damn thing while the US endowed you with freedoms and rights China does not believe to be legitimate unless the state grants them. If anything happens to any of you overseas, the first thing any of you would do is cry out: 'Am an American.' And hustle for the nearest US Embassy for help and protection. So while the US, imperfect as we are, have done much for YOU and your immigrant parents, YOU would be willing to answer China's bid to service based upon racial ties you imagine you feel.

Seditious and traitorous -- the lot of you.

Examples?

Joseph Stiglitz recently wrote that US government is Of the 1%, by the 1%, for the 1% | Society | Vanity Fair

President Jefferson said:


Tell you fool, the world doesn’t work your foolish way!

:lol:
Have you signed up for 'The Party' yet? The Chinese Communist Party is about 5% of the population. How many of them have the 'red machine'? And you fret about the American 1%? Perhaps you would be more comfortable in China with the .001% with those 'red machines' who runs the country. But then again, may be this is the reason why you are in the US instead of China. Hypocrite. Do US a favor: Renounce your US citizenship and leave.
 
You missed the point, did you? Yes, you did . My quip was that safety codes often violate aesthetic sensibilities. So since you asserted that aesthetics matters so much may be we should do away with safety codes.

You fail to tell us how we violated safety codes by laying all our urban power lines underground. Somehow we manage to have one of the highest safety codes in the wolrd without compromising on esthetic. Indeed, sohisticated we are. :)

Your problem is that you have failed -- spectacularly -- to prove that the Space Shuttle program is a 'failure'. You did it by saying no one else followed the design. Funny that you are too chickensh1t to call the Apollo moon program a 'failure' because no one else returned to the moon since then. But now that the Chinese is talking about going to the Moon...Hmmm...No wonder you are so silent about this 'failure'...:lol:


European Scientists Make a Case for a Return to the Moon - Yahoo! News

So how does it feel to receive such a spectacular wedgie from an American?

The rocket design such as Apollo is still in use today, no? Why are you comparing apples with watermellon? You fail again!


Buddy, you got pwned. You argued that just because some German cities have buried power lines, somehow that made it oh-so-important a factor that Germany is sooooo much better than the US. The Germans are sooooo sophisticated that they placed sooooo much emphasis on aesthetics over utility.

I clued you in on the problems with buried power lines. You now learned that there are serious structural and financial issues with the method. Buried power lines have greater capacitance leading to higher loss. That is the physics I was talking about.

Electric power transmission - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I got pwnd just because you claim so? Now that's funny. Fact is, our citiy planning and our sense of beauty is just superior to the US. There is no city in the US that can rival any of Europe's capitals and big cities in beauty and vibrancy. :)

Again, you are talking about transmission lines outside the city, which is also exactly the same here in Europa as in the US, namely overground. But dishonest as you are, you try to mix city planning with unrelated topics just to make a point. Remember, we are talking about power lines within the city where the power doesn't have to be transported over dozens of miles.

Buried power lines are limited by geography and topography, meaning they could not go OVER obstacles, limiting their deployment due to higher cost, which at the time of electricity availability, everyone wanted it as soon as possible. So just because they are out of sight, that does not mean they are out of minds, especially when there are problems and taken with the greater cost to troubleshoot and repairs. That is why they are not popular. No matter how much of a snob you want to be over this issue, it does not make you correct in using it to justify your belief that somehow this is a component of sophistication. That is why overhead power lines are preferred the world over. But I guess part of a Eurosnob's mentality is that rarity confirms their own delusions of sophistication.

Thus showing you the sophistication of European city plannings and enginerring because we managed to overcome all the obstacles, geographic and topographical issues, make our streets look clean and stylish and still have less power outage than the US. :)

BTW, we also waste less energy than the average US American without lowering our living standard.

You see, we have beautiful cities, use less energy, have better social security, less crime. It seems everything speaks for our sophistication, right? :D
 
As if YOU are satisfied with doing only that.

The difference between you and I is that unlike you and the other Chinese-Americans on this forum, no matter how much I criticize the US, and as a veteran I can certainly do that better than all of you combined, I still believe the US is the superior no matter how imperfect we are. I criticize to improve my country while all of you hide behind the freedom of speech to criticize to destroy, to replace the US with China. You magnify our flaws while doing your best to hide China's or whitewash them. What have 'Motherland China' done for the Chinese-Americans here? Not a damn thing while the US endowed you with freedoms and rights China does not believe to be legitimate unless the state grants them. If anything happens to any of you overseas, the first thing any of you would do is cry out: 'Am an American.' And hustle for the nearest US Embassy for help and protection. So while the US, imperfect as we are, have done much for YOU and your immigrant parents, YOU would be willing to answer China's bid to service based upon racial ties you imagine you feel.

Seditious and traitorous -- the lot of you.


Have you signed up for 'The Party' yet? The Chinese Communist Party is about 5% of the population. How many of them have the 'red machine'? And you fret about the American 1%? Perhaps you would be more comfortable in China with the .001% with those 'red machines' who runs the country. But then again, may be this is the reason why you are in the US instead of China. Hypocrite. Do US a favor: Renounce your US citizenship and leave.

As I said, the world doesn’t work your foolish way!

Do you know what is Nature that criticizes US space shuttle program?

Do you know who is J. Stiglitz that call US government of the 1%, by the 1%, and for the 1%?

Further, do you know who is Jefferson?

According to your Vietnamese type of fe@king logic, all those people/entities are “seditious and traitorous”. So you, the fool, to tell them to renounce their US citizenship and leave. :lol:

And YOU the FOOL tell J. Stiglitz China is 0.001%, 1000 better than US 1%. :flame:

The biggest difference between you and those educated is EDUCATION. Now, make sure USA is not your Vietnam. Don’t attempt to hijack USA to serve your purpose of releasing your personal hatred. In fact, you are the treacherously traitorous and YOU should do our 99% a favor by renouncing your US citizenship and leaving the country.
 
Götterdämmerung;3051066 said:
You fail to tell us how we violated safety codes by laying all our urban power lines underground. Somehow we manage to have one of the highest safety codes in the wolrd without compromising on esthetic. Indeed, sohisticated we are. :)
That is your opinion.

Götterdämmerung;3051066 said:
The rocket design such as Apollo is still in use today, no? Why are you comparing apples with watermellon? You fail again!
Indeed comparing a pioneering reusable space vehicle against the established expendable one-way use method is like comparing an orange against the watermelon.

Show me a credible argument against reusable vehicles. Do we discard a car once we arrived at the destination? Heck, do we discard a bicycle? Anytime you make something reusable, you are going to incur much higher cost because it must be much more physically robust to withstand repeated usage. But why is it that we persists in making so many things in life, especially tools, reusable? Back in WW II, the US wisely withdrew experienced combat pilots to stateside after X missions so they could impart their knowledge for the next generation of combat pilots. What they knew were institutionalized to this day. The Japanese, and to lesser extent the Germans, did not. The result was that eventually the odds caught up with their best combat pilots and the Japanese had to resorted to suicide pilots. Ask the Japanese how much easier and less expensive it was to train one-way pilots and manufacture one-way 'fighter' aircrafts.

So yes, comparing the Space Shuttle, a pioneering vehicle and program against the established method of one-time use throw-away vehicle is very much like comparing the orange against the watermelon. Here is your problem:

- Show us a credible argument on why it WOULD BE impractical to have a reusable space vehicle. Not technical feasibility because we know that it is technically feasible. But why would it be impractical.

- Show us a credible argument that in the future, ALL space vehicles WILL BE one-way expendable. Eurosnobs believes they know everything about anything so it should be easy for you to divine the future, right?

Circular 'logic' is what I call 'self insured and self assured logic' because its goal is to convince the believer that he can never be wrong. That is what I see here: The Space Shuttle, the first of the reusable type, is the only one of its kind because it is too expensive and it is too expensive because it is the only one of its kind.

So by your argument, compare to the orange, we should not eat the watermelon because it is too heavy, it require a dangerous tool -- the knife -- to open because its rind is too thick, it is too messy, and it has too many seeds. :lol:

Götterdämmerung;3051066 said:
I got pwnd just because you claim so? Now that's funny. Fact is, our citiy planning and our sense of beauty is just superior to the US. There is no city in the US that can rival any of Europe's capitals and big cities in beauty and vibrancy. :)

Again, you are talking about transmission lines outside the city, which is also exactly the same here in Europa as in the US, namely overground. But dishonest as you are, you try to mix city planning with unrelated topics just to make a point. Remember, we are talking about power lines within the city where the power doesn't have to be transported over dozens of miles.



Thus showing you the sophistication of European city plannings and enginerring because we managed to overcome all the obstacles, geographic and topographical issues, make our streets look clean and stylish and still have less power outage than the US. :)

BTW, we also waste less energy than the average US American without lowering our living standard.

You see, we have beautiful cities, use less energy, have better social security, less crime. It seems everything speaks for our sophistication, right? :D
Uh huh...

If Power Lines Fall, Why Don't They Go Underground? : NPR
Other industrialized countries have more of their neighborhood power distribution underground. David Lindsay, an expert at the Electric Power Research Institute, says places like Western Europe have an edge because they rebuilt their cities after the war.

"A lot of the infrastructure there is much younger than it is here,"
Lindsay says. "Infrastructure in general here dates to before World War II, and it was just added on and added on and added on."

American cities could upgrade by putting wires underground, but that's an expensive proposition.

"The general rule of thumb we use is a factor of 10. Installation costs, construction cost is a factor of 10 difference between overhead and underground," Lindsay says.
There are two methods for buried power lines: tunnel and earth.

Tunnel buried power lines are sometimes inside tunnels that are as large as a human being is tall. Earth buried is when the power lines are simply insulated and buried in close proximity to each other into the ground. Insulation gets thicker with higher voltages and that incur cost. Tunnel buried power lines must be insulated to the same degree as well. Not so with overhead power lines that can be bare copper.

What kind of insulation? How about pressurized oil?

High-voltage cable - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For higher voltages the oil may be kept under pressure to prevent formation of voids that would allow partial discharges within the cable insulation.
There are many methods but all of them costs far more than overhead power lines.

So when Europe began to rebuild after WW II, crude and rude explanation as it is, the reality is that the bombs pretty much dug up the neccessary underground infrastructures for the Europeans to do as they see fit when it comes to how to run electricity to their homes with the unexpected consequence of giving Eurosnobs like yourself a convenient crutch to make yourself feel better over the Americans. It is not so possible for the US except for new housing developments, like in my neighborhood. The Japanese have their overhead power lines and bombs dug up their grounds as well. For the Australians, no bombs did the hard work for their lands and they have overhead power lines.

In the cities and towns, buried power lines are distribution, not transmission lines which are overhead and spans over the continent. If a distribution line run along a road, it cost more to duct those distribution lines so they do not creep due to road vibrations. There cannot be anything over the paths because access to the lines must be available no matter how infrequent it may be so the land must be purchased or somehow secured. Buried power lines, regardless which method, must be highly overengineered (cost) in order to withstand powerful and persistent physical forces that comes with civilization in the form of cities and towns with their roads. It also cost more to replace and/or upgrade buried power lines because of growth. These costs, may be up to 50 times depending on earth composition, are always passed on to the consumers one way or another.

In the US state Florida, the potential for flooding from the swamp and the sea is very real, given the varying water tables, so it make sense to have overhead power lines where even though they are at greater risk with hurricanes, repairs after such is far less expensive and less time consuming than it would be compare to a tunnel flooded with sea water. What about areas that have both water and frost tables? I guess Germany is fortunate enough to have been spared the conflict to allow the luxury of aesthetics with buried power lines with the unintened consequence of giving Eurosnobs a way to feel superior to the Americans.

Bottom line is this...Your arguments are stale and are not taken seriously by engineers worldwide who have experience at building and maintaining both overhead and buried power lines. Most chose the latter. But if you must feel that it is important to mislead a few gullible people on an anonymous Internet forum to the superiority of the Europeans with buried power lines the best example of civilized Europe...Be my guest and have a nut. :lol:
 
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