General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: If Democratic candidates ran on progressive ideas on a consistent basis... [View all]MADem
(135,425 posts)"We" may be moving away from coal, but KY isn't--not for a long-ass while.
Not sure why you're sounding the death knell for KY coal quite yet. There are still plenty of markets for what they provide--not the least being China. Coal still provides a third of that nice clean electricity that we here in USA enjoy.
Just because you don't see puffs of black smoke coming out of those outlets and sockets, doesn't mean that the source of that warm electric heat and that bright light coming from that nearby lamp isn't a product of that dirty, nasty coal. If it's not coal, it's nuclear power. Or natural gas. Or oil. Very little of our nation's electricity is generated by solar or wind, yet, and it's going to be a long, lazy curve before we see any steep changes on that score.
I am (strongly, FWIW) in favor of moving away from coal for purely environmental reasons. However, I'm not so naive as to think that people from Kentucky will cheerily slit their own throats, give up their paychecks, settle down happily to pay higher electric bills, be taxed up the yingyang as industry deserts the state, all for a feeling of vague "progressivism." These folks are like most people--they like job security and an affordable life. They aren't going to trade "their" coal for any other energy source, unless they are producing it at home and can provide it at competitive rates. They're not going to pay more to feel virtuous. They just aren't.