:clap:
But seriously, it is a rare opportunity when you leave me an opening to pick on, such as a word choice like that one, LOL.
One of the problems has been a lack of consistency (not constantly, LOL) in the energy policy of this country, (or lack of an energy policy) partly due to conflicting goals of different groups and corporations who's political control comes and goes, with each election cycle. And most do not want an energy policy, or even want to hear about one, until there is crisis. Once the crisis seems to be abated, people go back to screaming for free trade (meaning no energy policy).
Pondering back from today to the early 70's. With a mind likely needing a good defrag

. The majority of the power plants were changed from oil to coal (coal was abundant and we had our own), then to natural gas (which was at around the same time deregulated, companies merged the consumer got screwed), supplies ran low and/or became too costly, then changed back to coal again (some oil). Many (most) are now coal with scrubbers (acid rain, save the trees, though they finally figured out most fo the trouble was from an imported beetle). If memory serves me correctly, most of the changes (direction reversals) were Green initiatives with energy independence as the kicker. The whole while Atomic energy had a strong anti lobby. Much of the energy production changed directions and retrofitted multiple times in a twenty year period, knee jerk planning and implementation rarely works out well and in my experience wastes resources.
The economic stimulus package strikes me as a likely candidate for the knee jerk response of the decade and like Buffet says, every action has an equal (and often unexpected) reaction. Like the other guy said, encouraging people to new debt is likely doomed to failure and like I always say, throwing money at a problem rarely produces the desired effects.
The Germans answer to the fuel problem, was to produce tiny cars, double the price of fuel through taxes, the result is/was a whole lot of people died (no matter that the tests said that they were safe). The elephant in the room is, about half of the cars on the road (around here) are as large or larger than an XJ. Germans are a pragmatic people, they tend to go with what works, when it takes them hours to cut the neighbors kid out of his car one morning, they pay attention.
They encouraged diesel auto's for around a decade, because they were fuel efficient, even gave tax breaks. Now diesels are taxed extra, as most metropolitan areas are covered in soot. New diesels have soot filters, the older models have to be retrofitted, large portions of many metropolitan areas are closed to diesels.
IMO most of the knee jerk plans implemented are doomed to failure, because somebody forgot the six "P`s, prior planning prevents pisspoor performance.