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For what it is worth, this article is from 2012 and this is the 5th time it has been posted on HN.
Thanks. The article is new to me, though.

Oddly enough, I was pondering exactly this delusion as I fired up my small wood stove this morning. The electric baseboard heaters work quite well, and recent trends suggest that grid-based electric may continue to become less environmentally harmful.

I'm sure electric baseboard heating can be effective... Unfortunately, anyplace I've ever encountered it has suffered from other deficiencies - inadequate or non-existant insulation, single-pane windows, inadequately pitched roofs, and other features eminently unsuitable for a cold-weather climate - that electric heat has become a red flag.
This guy must be a joy at parties
I see the point he's making, and I think his analogy is spot on, but the fact that I already view fireplaces as a toxic menace undermined the emotional effect he was going for.
same, and I would argue that even gas fireplaces should be abolished in homes as they are a waste of space, inefficient, a hazard, and introduce additional points of failure to a house
Really? They are debateably the most efficient way to heat a home up here. Not only is chopping wood great stress reduction, the cracking fire soothes the soul during long winter months. I suppose your view of practicality is different. It regularly drops to -30F here, I love my roaring fires.
True, I guess if you are up nort' and chopping wood then it is a good source of heat. But in suburban areas where it rarely goes below 40F it's kind of weird how common they are in houses. I guess everyone longs for their own cabin in the woods.
Well you're much more intelligent that muppet ol' me then. Because I was like, WTF? We have a fire, we light it, my kids!!!
I grew up in a house heated by wood-burning, so I have zero romantic illusions about fire. Dust everywhere, bronchitis, wild swings in temperature depending on whether the stove was lit. Go to sleep soaked in sweat and wake up with frost on the inside of your windows. And that's when you're doing it right, more-or-less: seasoned wood, clean chimney, adequate draft, good equipment. Many recreational wood-burners don't have the first idea what they're doing. You can tell walking down my street who's burning wet logs in the fireplace. The absolute worst is commercial campsites, though. Pack a thousand people into five acres and then sell them wet, round, un-split logs that look like they were harvested this morning. Campers then proceed to soak it in lighter fluid and make thick, white, choking smoke that blankets the whole place.
For everyone living near nothern DE thinking about the transition to the cozy diesel engine http://www.maschinenmuseum-kiel-wik.de runs their submarine diesel engine every 3rd sunday. Spoiler: Loud gets redefined & not especially cozy.