Red, stop shilling your shit and contribute to the debate. If you think you've got the right answer go ahead and implement it.
I think I'm 80% to the right answer. I don't think measuring coin value against electrical usage is (in general) a good idea. It was however the first proposed way to create stable currency. I did not create that concept. Another guy did with EnCoin. I just attempted to research and document what simple mechanisms could make the concept work.
Currently I like the idea of "shadow-fiat" coins pegged to the value of their base fiat currencies. These would be anonymous trading currencies with medium term predictable values. They could be used in contracts (like rental leases or installment plans) where you wouldn't currently use a volatile currency like bitcoin.
They aren't intended to serve as a replacement for bitcoin, but as a complement to bitcoin. Think of it as a place to keep your anonymous speculation gains. If bitcoin is rising, hold bitcoins. If bitcoin is falling, hold shadow-fiat until it starts to recover again. If you need to pay rent in 5 days, hold shadow-fiat just-in-case.
However, I haven't worked out the math of pegging to a fiat currency without using a trusted oracle (like Mt Gox) that sees both sides of the transaction.
My current chain of thought is to "introduce risk" through a para-mutual gambling incentive. The mining equivalent would be to put your existing coins at risk against receiving a share of the new coins created. However, it needs to be done in a way that doesn't tend toward price oscillation.
I don't expect that pegging a coin to fiat will be popular. But I keep watching these threads to see if anyone has a better idea. Really, I watch to see if anyone is discussing math that will work.