Redneck in training said:
1.) I pay more taxes than most people make per year.
2.) You are reading it wrong. My electric bill will be about $300 lower. The system will pay for itself in about 11 years.
3.) You got tax write off for your mortgage and nobody accused you for taking from neighbors or did they?
4.) Oil and gas companies get subsidies from our pockets too and they still stick it to us. Complain about that.
ah, the wild world of government subsidies. Other people are stealing from me, so I must steal from other people. Looters mentality. As long as you are less of a crook than someone you know, you feel righteous.
It's a race to see who can get the most welfare while still complaining about those "deadbeats" (read: other people) who get welfare.
Funny, I never thought of theft as an investment.
Sorry, am I not being civil enough? Thank you for making my taxes higher to offset your welfare. There now you can feel all better.
I do think it is great to see solar getting popular, but not at taxpayer expense. People requiring the addition of welfare credits in order to make the cost feasible just goes to show solar simply isn't yet meant for people who have other power options.
Right now, at rates of $0.13 per kw/ h, solar isn't an investment, it's an alternative, only the welfare check makes it pay off. Besides the green-ness, it isn't yet value added. There is very little, if any, net gain with current technology, as redneck's power output and monetary math reveals.
In other words, unless your per kilowatt costs are far higher, just steal from your neighbors and forget the array. The result is the same, just with slightly more carbon emissions and far less red tape.
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