Choices 📍

Why I Want to Move to Pennsylvania

I really like the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and it’s culture. Reminds me a lot of the New York of yesteryear. Yet, unlike New York State, where the urban culture of New York City, with its nanny-state laws and regulations, seems to have such a grip over the State, Pennsylvania seems to be a lot more wild and free. Public servants tend to be friendlier their, the public land seems to be more better maintained and open for more varied uses, and the state seems to be more open to the ideas and beliefs of rural folk like myself.

US 6 and PA 155

I like a lot of things about Pennsylvania. It has vast tracts of public land in the North-Western portion of the commonwealth, and a healthy base of agriculture in other regions. A lot of state is very rural, and the Capitol of the state is far less metropolitan then New York. While Philadelphia may be a metropolitan center of commonwealth, other areas like Pittsburgh and Scranton are far more working class and connected with the farm land around it.

…even the small things in Pennsylvania are nice.

There is minimal state gun control statues, no need to get a pistol permit and pay money to have every handgun in one’s house listed on a statewide registry. You want a gun in Pennsylvania, you pay money, and it’s yours.The right to farm is strongly upheld, and their isn’t a culture that wants to go after all hunting, fishing, ATVs, snowmobiles, wood boilers, burn barrels, coal furnaces, or natural gas drilling. Rural folk in Pennsylvania do what they need to do, without being looked down at and controlled by the urban folk.

Farm Fields Above the Canyon

I could see some day moving to Pennsylvania, owning some land out in the sticks. Doing a little hobby farming, raising some cattle and chickens and other animals, have being bonfires and burning whatever I want. Owning lots of guns, having a big pickup truck, a quad, and all of other toys of the good rural life. Taxes are lower in Pennsylvania. A culture that isn’t so controlling of everything.

PA 155 Frame 3

The Freedom of Pennsylvania. A state I really like.

What policy choices does the US face on Chinese clean energy investment? | Brookings

What policy choices does the US face on Chinese clean energy investment? | Brookings

The discussion covers how the U.S. approach compares to that of allies and partners, and whether Washington should recalibrate accordingly. The group examines feasibility concerns around the Ford-CATL licensing model as a template for managing Chinese technology partnerships and considers whether the current chaotic patchwork of investment screening rules, tariffs, and tax credit restrictions might actually give the United States unexpected leverage. Participants also explore what incentive structures and policy options are available to policymakers, and how Chinese firms themselves are thinking about strategies to enter the U.S. market

I’m not so set on X … 🦤

When I say I am considering various options, be it for housing or other choices in life, people often assume that because I’m considering option “X”, I have already decided option “X” it ill be.

The thing is when I’m undecided, I am undecided. If I dwell on an idea for a longer period of time, then I’m more like to choose that option, because I find that option more interesting and worthwhile. Often my earliest notions end up being the best option that I choose to go with, but that is not necessarily true. I like to take my time, evaluate all the facts and think carefully what I value most, even if it’s different from what you think is important.