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On Sun, 14 Nov 2004 02:30:47 GMT, "Joel" wrote:
However, when you do turn on a switch you're providing a way for _their_ electricity to get back to _them_ and stop beating it's head against an open switch, so it seems to me that they should pay _you_ for doing them the courtesy of returning their electricity. AH, BUT, how do _they_ know for sure _they_ are getting back the same electrons _they_ sent out? --- They read the meter, which only lets out (with one exception, see below) the electrons they send it when you turn on a switch and turn them loose. --- Do the little suckers have tatoos? --- "Tattoos". No, but they don't have to, since the power company knows that since they were the only ones sending out the electrons, the ones they get back must have been theirs in the first place. (Note the exception below.) --- Maybe I have a generator (such as my $500 combination treadmill/generator. I run damn fast) that's feeding back MY OWN homemade electrons. As soon as I think of a way to identify my personal electrons I'm going to send them a bill. And since my electrons are of higher quality (not to mention organic) I'll charge more for them. --- That's already being done in lots of places, but the buying price for imported electrons is fixed by law (usually) so you don't get to arbitrarily determine how much you charge for your electrons if you want to sell them to the electric company. What you do is to run your electrons through the meter backwards, and then when the electric company reads your meter they'll know where the surplus of electrons (or fuel) at their facility came from and they'll pay you for them and then sell them to someone else. -- John Fields |