I have seen at least five separate efforts in the past two weeks
by various constituent parts of the global warming industry making
the argument that, now with the election results, they’ve got
Republicans right where they want them.
It’s time to surrender now that you’ve won-sort of
argumentation.
Yesterday’s came from the Washington Post, a we can
all work together
piece, with what was therefore the strange olive branch of a
headline: “A plan for climate change deniers” (gosh, just
how have these people managed to lose despite billions of
dollars and years to try and make their case…?).
It nonetheless raises legitimate points for consideration,
including a reminder that our side has been offering (real)
‘no regrets’ policies for a decade, with no takers. ‘No
regrets’ or ‘let’s do what we all agree on’ isn’t what these people
are about. They are about a particular agenda. One that would not,
in practice reduce global emissions (so it isn’t about emissions)
and would of course not detectably impact the climate,
according to anyone (so it isn’t about the climate). Continually
reinventing the elements of the agenda doesn’t get around these
facts.
And of course we have long argued that wealthier is not just
healthier but cleaner, so the key to a better global environment is
to bring that which drives wealth to the world’s poor. That means
abundant, reliable and (in practice) centrally generated
electricity. Which raises the important aspects, for broader
digestion, of the WaPo item:
First, note how it flatly conflates replacing indoor stoves
in poor countries with cleaner energy sources, there, with
…a national windmill mandate here. (wha?) This
telegraphs the effort’s larger logical woes.
We can all agree that replacing those dirty stoves is a good
thing, bringing real, undeniable health and environmental
benefits.
Among those benefits of this energy proposal is reducing ‘black
soot’, which is also a global warming argument.
A windmill mandate is an energy proposal offered in the name of
‘global warming’.
Therefore we all agree on a national windmill mandate.
Again, with syllogistic powers such as that, how they ever lost
the science and policy battles is tough to comprehend…
Second, insist the public supports all sorts of binge debt
spending (when not told of the increased energy and other transport
costs, reduced safety, and so on. Salvation or
catastrophe…which’ll it be?). They support “requiring
utilities to produce…” without translating that into the reality
of “requiring that you pay more for…” It is amazing the impact on
public responses one can obtain simply by explaining how the cost
of that activity you say you support requiring is borne by you, not
by those who you support bearing the requirement.
These slightly (but not very) different overtures all reaffirm
that, when facing this particular, adaptable if epically inept
opponent, which shows no signs of giving up the ghost of promoting
an energy scarcity agenda, now of all times there is no need to
deviate from the tried, true and demonstrable realities so fatal to
this agenda that terrific effort is underway to obscure their
relevance:
it’s the spending, stupid, and it’s the debt,
stupid.
The two not only go hand in hand, but are inherent in
climatically meaningless temporary job schemes politically
directing borrowed and private capital, which harm the individual
and the economy in several and in some cases lasting ways.
There are reasons these stunts fail when they are tried through
the front door. The same reasons apply when they are disguised.
They’re not free ice cream, they are all pain no gain. Which
explains the sleights of hand required.
Sean| 11.15.10 @ 6:11PM
Watch out for the Newts' and Pawlentys'
Don Carlson| 11.16.10 @ 6:06AM
The climate-change idiots are nonetheless sincere, and when Mr. Horner carries on his not-to-be-imitated, high hat sarcasm, he neither persuades them nor entertains the choir. The left acts and speaks in bad faith always. They are addicted to it and cannot help themselves. They will not stop until they have buried the rest of us or been shamed into silence. Mocking their illness serves no purpose. Concerning so-called climate change, most Americans are not thoroughy convinced one way or the other. What they need is information---not Olbermann-like rants and condescension.