A Swedish friend writes to inform us [with links in Danish] of
“some
remarkable statements from the Danish government.
The Danish Climate Minister Connie
Hedergård [of the] ‘conservative party’ compares the break
down of the US capitalism with the fall of Soviet Union.
The Danish foreign minister and Party Chairman of conservative
party
says that conservative party is a mix of socialism and
liberalism.”
Knowing that Europe’s social democracies are faring equally
poorly — and that some, notably Spain, Germany and the UK
actually led the global recession — this simply proves that old
habits die hard, such as the Euro-instinct of blaming the
U.S. for everything [this instinct being a constant sore spot to
those many U.S.-admiring Europeans, such as my Danish wife
and in-laws].
But let us not ask too much of dear Connie. You may remember
her. She’s the lady with a colorful history. For example, she
obstinately refused to
apologize or even correct the record when caught dragging
other poseur pols to a “galloping glacier” whose gallops she
falsely blamed on global warming.
More pompously,
she “claim[ed] that she and her ilk ‘are getting a bit impatient,
not on our own behalf but on behalf of the planet.’ The
condemnations of the US included ‘unusually blunt language’ about
how the rest of the world are waiting for the US to act, and that
it is the US resistance to adopting a particular approach to
addressing emissions that jeopardizes the climate. Not China,
India, Mexico, and 155 countries representing the vast majority
of emissions seeing theirs skyrocket; certainly not the EU.”
One might think that such insight is mighty tough talk from
Europe’s biggest Kyoto violator, whose sole emission reductions
all seem to have come from deciding one year to import
electricity instead of producing it, despite a massive suite of
taxes designed to price discretionary energy (and automobility)
out of the reach of most.
That’s not exactly what their neighbors to the south would call a
Wirtschaftwunder. Hmm, given Europe’s absurd bluster, maybe they
would call it that, given some EU nations are now
calling Eastern Europe’s economic collapse “early
action” toward Kyoto compliance.
Yes. We have many things to learn from our European superiors on
this issue. For example, why didn’t we just call the
Fannie/Freddie - inspired financial meltdown our stab at being
green, and put a happy face on things? It would, at the same
time, have accurately presented the truth about the phrase,
“green jobs”, which is to say, making jobs disappear.
james23| 2.18.09 @ 1:18PM
"the Danish Minister of Climate...."
'enuf said. Euroweenie fools.