Thanks in part to new House Energy and Commerce Committee
Chairman Fred
Upton, 100-watt incandescent light bulbs will no longer be sold
in the U.S. after Jan. 1, 2012, with a ban of 75-, 60- and 40-watt
bulbs to follow in the subsequent years. But in Europe this process
began already , and has now inspired a bit of innovative business
marketing, as Reuters reported recently:
Siegfried Rotthaeuser and his brother-in-law have come up with a
legal way of importing and distributing 75 and 100 watt light bulbs
— by producing them in China, importing them as “small heating
devices” and selling them as “heatballs….”
Rotthaeuser studied EU legislation and realised that because the
inefficient old bulbs produce more warmth than light — he
calculated heat makes up 95 percent of their output, and light just
5 percent — they could be sold legally as heaters.
On their website, the two engineers describe the heatballs as
“action art” and as “resistance against legislation which is
implemented without recourse to democratic and parliamentary
processes.”
But alas, Rotthaeuser’s heatballs sold out and
customs has
seized his resupply shipment of them. He wrote to a local
public official:
The public authorities were informed about the protest action,
but nevertheless had the District Governement of Cologne has on the
grounds of product safety ordered that 40,000 Heatballs be witheld
by the customs in Cologne Bonn.
This behaviour is a clear act of censorship. The measures that
the admininstration have taken lack all legal basis. There has been
no written comment from the District Government. Only verbal
statements have been available. One has to conclude that there are
no plans for legal clarification. The District Government has had
samples of the goods for more than 6 weeks (see attached receipt).
But the decision on whether to clear or further withhold the goods
is still missing.
The debacle of this president’s administration is both a cause
and a symptom of the decline of American values. Unless Congress
impeaches him, that decline will go on unchecked. An eminent jurist
surveys the damage and assesses the chances for the recovery of our
culture.
The American Christmas, like the songs that celebrate it,
makes room for everybody under the rainbow. Is that why so
many people seem to be hostile to it?