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Old 06-30-2009, 10:09 AM   #41 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by aceventura3 View Post
It is fair to say there is a payoff, but lets say in my example the homeowner saves $25/month in utility costs it would take 152 months to recoup the $3,800 cost. That is over 12 years.
And the additional costs are rolled into the mortgage over 30 years. By doing so, it is a net gain for the homeowner.
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Old 06-30-2009, 10:22 AM   #42 (permalink)
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I was listening to the radio the other day and I heard that the Republican party is going to start enslaving people. Do you think it is fair that the Republican party is going to do this?
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Old 06-30-2009, 10:42 AM   #43 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by aceventura3 View Post
I am not going to read the bill.
Earlier you complained that we can't trust the democrats "(most of whom have not read the bill)" to be honest about whether or not the bill will harm us economically. Yet you have not read the bill, so how can we trust you to be honest about it either?


Quote:
The broader issue to me is the disproportionate burden this bill will place on low and middle income people.
You have not read the bill, and therefore you do not know that. You only know what some talking heads, most of whom I would wager have also not read the bill, are telling you to believe about the bill.


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Originally Posted by aceventura3 View Post
Of course what I posted was what you consider bullshit. If you did not know, I made up the numbers I used - I did not actually get real estimates.
So far the entirety of your arguments in this thread have amounted to stuff you say you think you heard someone on one of 4 cable news talk show networks say, or stuff that you admit to having made up. How are we to take your side seriously if you cannot bring one actual, hard fact to the table?


Quote:
However, like I stated it is not rocket science. Member of Congress with paid full time staff people could give much more precise impact numbers.
And then as you said earlier, you would not believe them because "they haven't read the bill."

Quote:
My premise is that the bill is going to have a disproportional impact on low and middle income people.
I find it interesting that you can predict the outcome of a piece of legislation which you have not read and about which you have no first hand knowledge. The only other people I know of who make such claims have coins hanging off their shawls and stare into crystal balls all day.

Quote:
Why won't you and Democrats be honest about that? Why?
We are being honest. We just aren't giving you the answer you want to hear - an answer based on your preconceived notions about a subject to which you have admitted knowing nothing factual about.


Quote:
Is it because I am a bullsitter? Even if I am, does that change the reality of this bill?
I won't put it in such crass terms, but you are making impassioned arguments about a topic that you admit you not only don't know about, but have no intention of finding out about. What would you call it?
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Old 06-30-2009, 02:03 PM   #44 (permalink)
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I don't need to read the bill to know that the politicians were remiss in their duties to be able to make a responsible and careful decision. It's not much different than the other bills that have been railroaded through Congress these past few months.

---------- Post added at 05:50 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:48 PM ----------

and if you'd like to spend the better part of time that you should be doing living instead of what you voted people into office for.. you can read the bill here:

Search Results - THOMAS (Library of Congress)

---------- Post added at 06:03 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:50 PM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by dippin View Post
I fail to see how climate change in other planets invalidates man made global warming. No one has ever denied that climate change occurs without human interference. But the fact is that the same science that explains climate change in mars and jupiter through completely "natural" causes is the same that sees a huge increase in greenhouse gases in our atmosphere through our actions as speeding up global warming.
I doesn't, it spouts volumes to me how someone is allowed to have FREE CHOICE to buy a SUV and have shit gas mileage, but I have no choice any longer to buy incandescent bulbs and have to by CFL crap. All the scrimping and saving of CO2 done by the human beings can all be completely offset by 1 volcanic eruption of 1 simple change in the solar cycle. I especially take umbrage to those that tout one should be doing better for the environment and then doesn't do any of their own conservation of living small. Buying carbon offsets is like buying induldences for sins.

as far as the rest of the bill, I'm not all that pleased since the BILLIONS that are collected aren't going to just appear from nowhere. I'm already on the hook for the stimulus package, and now because some hippy thinks it's better this way, I'm on the hook for this crap too.

----------------


Director’s Blog Blog Archive CBO?s First Cost Estimate of Cap-and-Trade Legislation for the 111th Congress

Quote:
CBO’s First Cost Estimate of Cap-and-Trade Legislation for the 111th Congress

CBO just released a cost estimate for the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009 (H.R. 2454), which was recently approved by the House Committee on Energy and Commerce. This legislation would make a number of changes in energy and environmental policies largely aimed at reducing emissions of gases that contribute to global warming. The bill would limit (or cap) the quantity of certain greenhouse gases emitted from facilities that generate electricity and from other industrial activities over the 2012-2050 period.
Under the provisions of the bill, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) would establish two separate regulatory initiatives known as cap-and-trade programs—one covering emissions of most types of greenhouse gases and one covering hydrofluorocarbons. Both cap-and-trade programs would set a limit on total emissions for each year and would require regulated entities to hold rights, or allowances, to the emissions permitted under that cap. Some of those allowances would be auctioned by the federal government, and the remainder would be distributed at no charge.
Other major provisions of the legislation would:
  • Provide energy tax credits or energy rebates to certain low-income families to offset the impact of higher energy-related prices from the cap-and-trade programs;
  • Require certain retail electricity suppliers to provide a minimum percentage of their electricity sales with electricity generated by facilities that use qualifying renewable fuels or energy sources;
  • Establish a Carbon Storage Research Corporation to support research and development of technologies related to carbon capture and sequestration;
  • Increase, by $25 billion, the aggregate amount of loans Department of Energy is authorized to make to automobile manufacturers and component suppliers under the existing Advanced Technology Vehicle Manufacturing Loan Program;
  • Establish a Clean Energy Deployment Administration within the Department of Energy, which would be authorized to provide direct loans, loan guarantees, and letters of credit for clean energy projects;
  • Authorize the Department of Transportation to provide individuals with vouchers to acquire new vehicles that achieve greater fuel efficiency than the existing qualifying vehicles owned by the individuals; and
  • Authorize appropriations for various programs.
CBO and the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) estimate that over the 2010-2019 period enacting this legislation would:
  • Increase federal revenues by about $846 billion; and
  • Increase direct spending by about $821 billion.
In total, those changes would reduce budget deficits (or increase future surpluses) by about $24 billion over the 2010-2019 period.
In addition, assuming appropriation of the necessary amounts, CBO estimates that implementing H.R. 2454 would increase discretionary spending by about $50 billion over the 2010-2019 period. Most of that funding would stem from spending auction proceeds from various funds established under this legislation. CBO has done extensive work on issues surrounding climate change as I have mentioned in earlier blogs.
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Old 06-30-2009, 04:05 PM   #45 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by kutulu View Post
And the additional costs are rolled into the mortgage over 30 years. By doing so, it is a net gain for the homeowner.
I love math.

$3800 amortized over 30 years at 6.5%, means the person would pay over $5,000 including the interest. If they save $25 per month in their utility costs, the payoff goes up from 12 years to about 16.6933 years. I read somewhere that the average person lives in a home for about 7 years.

Here is a link to an on-line amortization schedule calculator:

Amortization Schedule Calculator

---------- Post added at 11:45 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:38 PM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by Rekna View Post
I was listening to the radio the other day and I heard that the Republican party is going to start enslaving people. Do you think it is fair that the Republican party is going to do this?
There is no opportunity to do so, the Democrats already got it covered. They already have the plans to manage your life from birth to death. You do get the option of marrying a same sex partner, as long as you can prove you gave equal consideration to those with the government designation of being visually and/or personality challenged.

---------- Post added at 12:05 AM ---------- Previous post was Yesterday at 11:45 PM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by shakran View Post
Earlier you complained that we can't trust the democrats "(most of whom have not read the bill)" to be honest about whether or not the bill will harm us economically. Yet you have not read the bill, so how can we trust you to be honest about it either?
I am a cynic. I am always against something until convinced otherwise.


Quote:
You have not read the bill, and therefore you do not know that. You only know what some talking heads, most of whom I would wager have also not read the bill, are telling you to believe about the bill.
True.

Will the first person who actually reads the bill, please stand-up? Let us know who you are, you deserve special recognition.

Quote:
So far the entirety of your arguments in this thread have amounted to stuff you say you think you heard someone on one of 4 cable news talk show networks say, or stuff that you admit to having made up. How are we to take your side seriously if you cannot bring one actual, hard fact to the table?
Let's not overlook the obvious. This bill will have consequences, there will be winners and losers. An honest discussion begins with an assessment of that fact. If you don't like my analysis, do yours - and let's compare. Are you suggesting low/middle income people will come out ahead?


Quote:
And then as you said earlier, you would not believe them because "they haven't read the bill."
Call your Congress person and ask them if they read the bill before voting on it. I admit to not reading the bill, have you read it? If not what is your real point?



Quote:
I find it interesting that you can predict the outcome of a piece of legislation which you have not read and about which you have no first hand knowledge. The only other people I know of who make such claims have coins hanging off their shawls and stare into crystal balls all day.
What-if's is what I do. I speculated, was honest about it, gave my justifications, and showed my conclusions. If you disagree, o.k., but let's be fair. You have come to a conclusion and have you read the bill either, correct?



Quote:
We are being honest. We just aren't giving you the answer you want to hear - an answer based on your preconceived notions about a subject to which you have admitted knowing nothing factual about.
What do I want to hear? I pretty much do not support the bill, the concept, the stated need for the bill, the way it is being "sold" and there is virtually no possibility that I ever will. The Senate voting "no", would be nice to hear.


Quote:
I won't put it in such crass terms, but you are making impassioned arguments about a topic that you admit you not only don't know about, but have no intention of finding out about. What would you call it?
I said I was not going to read the bill, not that I was not going to become informed on its contents. There are many things put in writing, that I have not read but that I have an opinion about. Sometimes I just wait for the movie to come out.
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Last edited by aceventura3; 06-30-2009 at 05:05 PM..
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Old 07-01-2009, 01:36 AM   #46 (permalink)
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Quote:
The Cap and Tax Fiction

Democrats off-loading economics to pass climate change bill.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has put cap-and-trade legislation on a forced march through the House, and the bill may get a full vote as early as Friday. It looks as if the Democrats will have to destroy the discipline of economics to get it done.

Despite House Energy and Commerce Chairman Henry Waxman's many payoffs to Members, rural and Blue Dog Democrats remain wary of voting for a bill that will impose crushing costs on their home-district businesses and consumers. The leadership's solution to this problem is to simply claim the bill defies the laws of economics.

Their gambit got a boost this week, when the Congressional Budget Office did an analysis of what has come to be known as the Waxman-Markey bill. According to the CBO, the climate legislation would cost the average household only $175 a year by 2020. Edward Markey, Mr. Waxman's co-author, instantly set to crowing that the cost of upending the entire energy economy would be no more than a postage stamp a day for the average household. Amazing. A closer look at the CBO analysis finds that it contains so many caveats as to render it useless.

For starters, the CBO estimate is a one-year snapshot of taxes that will extend to infinity. Under a cap-and-trade system, government sets a cap on the total amount of carbon that can be emitted nationally; companies then buy or sell permits to emit CO2. The cap gets cranked down over time to reduce total carbon emissions.

To get support for his bill, Mr. Waxman was forced to water down the cap in early years to please rural Democrats, and then severely ratchet it up in later years to please liberal Democrats. The CBO's analysis looks solely at the year 2020, before most of the tough restrictions kick in. As the cap is tightened and companies are stripped of initial opportunities to "offset" their emissions, the price of permits will skyrocket beyond the CBO estimate of $28 per ton of carbon. The corporate costs of buying these expensive permits will be passed to consumers.

The biggest doozy in the CBO analysis was its extraordinary decision to look only at the day-to-day costs of operating a trading program, rather than the wider consequences energy restriction would have on the economy. The CBO acknowledges this in a footnote: "The resource cost does not indicate the potential decrease in gross domestic product (GDP) that could result from the cap."

The hit to GDP is the real threat in this bill. The whole point of cap and trade is to hike the price of electricity and gas so that Americans will use less. These higher prices will show up not just in electricity bills or at the gas station but in every manufactured good, from food to cars. Consumers will cut back on spending, which in turn will cut back on production, which results in fewer jobs created or higher unemployment. Some companies will instead move their operations overseas, with the same result.

When the Heritage Foundation did its analysis of Waxman-Markey, it broadly compared the economy with and without the carbon tax. Under this more comprehensive scenario, it found Waxman-Markey would cost the economy $161 billion in 2020, which is $1,870 for a family of four. As the bill's restrictions kick in, that number rises to $6,800 for a family of four by 2035.

Note also that the CBO analysis is an average for the country as a whole. It doesn't take into account the fact that certain regions and populations will be more severely hit than others -- manufacturing states more than service states; coal producing states more than states that rely on hydro or natural gas. Low-income Americans, who devote more of their disposable income to energy, have more to lose than high-income families.

Even as Democrats have promised that this cap-and-trade legislation won't pinch wallets, behind the scenes they've acknowledged the energy price tsunami that is coming. During the brief few days in which the bill was debated in the House Energy Committee, Republicans offered three amendments: one to suspend the program if gas hit $5 a gallon; one to suspend the program if electricity prices rose 10% over 2009; and one to suspend the program if unemployment rates hit 15%. Democrats defeated all of them.


The reality is that cost estimates for climate legislation are as unreliable as the models predicting climate change. What comes out of the computer is a function of what politicians type in. A better indicator might be what other countries are already experiencing. Britain's Taxpayer Alliance estimates the average family there is paying nearly $1,300 a year in green taxes for carbon-cutting programs in effect only a few years.

Americans should know that those Members who vote for this climate bill are voting for what is likely to be the biggest tax in American history. Even Democrats can't repeal that reality.

This is but one example of what I've been finding while researching and reading up on the impact of this legislation.

Ok someone tell me again how this is going to be good for the economy and good for the USA? Tell me again how this is going to positively impact the lower/middle income group and the elderly on a fixed income? Passing this legislation now is fucking nuts. Democrats have had control of all three Legislative branches for not even 6 months and already they've lost their collective fucking minds. This is insanity in action. Hopefully the Senate will see this for what's it's worth and kill it before it goes any further.
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Last edited by scout; 07-01-2009 at 01:51 AM..
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Old 07-01-2009, 06:51 AM   #47 (permalink)
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Ok someone tell me again how this is going to be good for the economy and good for the USA?
They can not do it. At best they will ignore your post, but most likely expect an attack on your source or some other ad hominem response.
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Old 07-01-2009, 07:23 AM   #48 (permalink)
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Old 07-01-2009, 07:29 AM   #49 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by aceventura3 View Post
They can not do it. At best they will ignore your post, but most likely expect an attack on your source or some other ad hominem response.
Ignore his post as much as you've ignored post number 8 on this very thread?

Now, let's look at this "if we push for more environmental regulations, our economy will suffer" argument in its historical context.

It has been the argument of choice, for example, for GM, Ford and others as they prevented congress from enacting fuel efficiency legislation. Meanwhile, Europe and Japan were much more aggressive in this. Tell me, again, which car companies are failing and one of the main reasons for that?

As far as the assertion that the CBO did not look at any potential GDP reduction while looking at the costs, it is also true that they did not look at the costs of the gas emissions themselves.

Because, as its been said at least twice in this thread (talk about ignoring posts), these gases are not only related to global warming and have real health consequences, all that come with a price. Health issues, reduced agricultural crops, altered sea alkalinity, etc.

On top of that, there is the very real reduction in GDP that comes from global warming itself. Most recent MIT studies show an increase in temperatures of 9 degrees by the end of the century, and sea levels are estimated to increase by 80 to 130 centimeters in one century.

Of course, I know all about the "OMG, its global warming is a HUGE conspiracy" crowd. But I would love to get any sort of real evidence from them, either disproving global warming or proving the conspiracy. Saying "jeez, there is that one time Science rejected our open letter written by a theologian in a southern baptist seminar" is really no proof of anything other than Science is not about to let quacks use it for political purposes.


Finally, for all the doom and gloom, cap and trade is only a federal level extension of something several states have adopted. And cap and trade systems have been implemented with regards to other gases, such as nitrous oxides and sulfuric dioxide. And in the case of cap and trade in those gases, they were far more successful than anticipated, at a fraction of the cost critics estimated.

Green house gases have real negative consequences, that go beyond global warming (go read on how low level ozone is formed and how it impacts health and crops). Being able to produce it with impunity is basically free riding and infringing on other people's health and property rights. A market for those gases is certainly the most "free market" way to control them.

Of course, given how often you've completely ignored other posts here, Im sure soon you will post yet another column by former Bush aides on how 700 scientists disagree with global warming.
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Old 07-01-2009, 07:39 AM   #50 (permalink)
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Yeah, actually, I did read it.

There are parts I like, and parts I don't.

I'm pleased to see that electrical generation units, as the bill calls them (EGU's, otherwise known as power plants) are going to be required to recapture a large percentage of their carbon emissions. I'm not only thinking of my wallet next year, but of my health when I'm 70.

I'm equally pleased to see that there will be a push toward making utilities figure out how to use renewable energy sources to generate their power. This is, however, going to require some citizen involvement, else the utilities might just try to raise rates without actually making any changes to their power generation strategy. It's going to put them between a rock and a hard place, really, because they either have to build new plants which run on renewable energy, a cost which would be passed on to consumers, or they have to raise rates to cover the energy credits, which would also be passed on.

That said, we've been frolicking with cheap energy for more than 2 centuries. The bill is going to come due at some point, and the longer we wait, the more that bill is going to cost. Those who advocate leaving things as they are are advocating a strategy of "wait until the coal or oil runs out, and then panic while the country is plunged into darkness until someone brings online technologies that we should have been investing in years ago." That's not really the sort of long term energy plan that I think is particularly intelligent. We have to switch some time, and the longer we wait the more it's going to cost us, so we might as well start now, while we still have a little time to move at a rational pace rather than having to fast-track it.


I'm not terribly thrilled about the biofuel requirements for vehicles. I think ethanol is a giant scam that cannot work unless we intend to tear down every building in the country, plant all of the land with corn, and then find a landmass that's half the size of the country and plant it with corn too. Burning our food is not the future for energy, no matter how much the corn farmers want you to believe it is so they can sell more corn.


As far as the "zomg they're gonna make us spend tons of money to retrofit our houses," well, that's just a bunch of fearmongering from the talking heads.

The actual program will work somewhat like efficiency incentive programs work now. As it stands now, if you replace your windows or your water heater with something that meets certain energy efficiency standards, you can get a rebate from the government. This program will work very similarly.

Under the program, you can get a free energy audit of your house. The audit will give you a list of things to do to achieve a 10 percent energy use reduction, and to achieve a 20 percent energy use reduction. If you follow the 10% prescription, you get $1,000. Follow the 20%, you get $2,000. And if the 20% reduction recommendations that you followed actually achieve a 20% energy use reduction, they'll give you an extra grand. Further, you get $1,000 for every 5% reduction you pull off beyond the 20%, up to half of the cost of retrofitting the building.

After doing all that, if you decide to take steps to reduce your water use as well through more efficient appliances (like showers and toilets) you will get up to $1,200 to help you with that.

You are not required to do any of this, but if you do, you'll get some cash to help you out.

Not quite as scary as Hannity would have you believe, is it?
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Old 07-01-2009, 07:46 AM   #51 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by dippin View Post
Ignore his post as much as you've ignored post number 8 on this very thread?
Perhaps you should re-read what followed post #8. what part of it do you think I ignored?

Quote:
Now, let's look at this "if we push for more environmental regulations, our economy will suffer" argument in its historical context.
Straw man argument. Being against this legislation does not mean one is against all environmental regulations. Also, an honest discussion involves an objective look at trade offs and making informed decisions. In some cases environment regulation is clearly well worth the price. In the case of this legislation we will spend billions, hurt our economy and standards of living to, assuming there is an impact, lowering the average global temperature by a hypothetical .1 degree F. No honest objective case has been presented to justify this legislation, all they have done is use fear, by saying we will destroy the planet unless we do what they want, gee - that is a bad way to make decisions!

---------- Post added at 03:46 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:41 PM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by shakran View Post
Yeah, actually, I did read it.
All 1,200 pages?
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Old 07-01-2009, 07:47 AM   #52 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by shakran View Post
Under the program, you can get a free energy audit of your house. The audit will give you a list of things to do to achieve a 10 percent energy use reduction, and to achieve a 20 percent energy use reduction. If you follow the 10% prescription, you get $1,000. Follow the 20%, you get $2,000. And if the 20% reduction recommendations that you followed actually achieve a 20% energy use reduction, they'll give you an extra grand. Further, you get $1,000 for every 5% reduction you pull off beyond the 20%, up to half of the cost of retrofitting the building.

After doing all that, if you decide to take steps to reduce your water use as well through more efficient appliances (like showers and toilets) you will get up to $1,200 to help you with that.

You are not required to do any of this, but if you do, you'll get some cash to help you out.

Not quite as scary as Hannity would have you believe, is it?
No it's still scary, that money isn't free, it has to come from somewhere.

I live in a building built in the 50's, and many of the Northeast homes are older. Costs and possibility to retrofit are next to impossible for some of us.

I don't like the idea "$25 billion, the aggregate amount of loans Department of Energy is authorized to make to automobile manufacturers and component suppliers" is something that should be shouldered by the taxpayers. The industry should support their own R&D.
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Old 07-01-2009, 07:56 AM   #53 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aceventura3 View Post

All 1,200 pages?
I go to all the trouble to explain the bill and that's the best you can come up with for a response?

Most of those pages are repetitive definitions of terms. The meat of the bill is much smaller.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq View Post
No it's still scary, that money isn't free, it has to come from somewhere.
Well, gee, yeah, surprise surprise, infrastructure improvements cost money. Ever since Reagan there's been an attitude that everything government does has to be free or it's an unfair burden on the people. Guess what. If you want to live in the first world, you have to pay for it. No one bitched that the railroads cost too much money back when they were linking the country with them. No one's arguing that the interstate bridge collapse in Minnesota was a good thing because it proves that the gubmint isn't spending our hard-earned money on stupid shit like the country's infrastructure. It's time this nation wake the hell up and face reality. The standard of living we want costs money. If you don't want to spend that kind of money, move to Haiti or Zimbabwe. Much lower tax burden there, though I don't think you'd care for the living conditions.

Quote:
I live in a building built in the 50's, and many of the Northeast homes are older. Costs and possibility to retrofit are next to impossible for some of us.
So then don't retrofit it. Problem solved.


Quote:
I don't like the idea "$25 billion, the aggregate amount of loans Department of Energy is authorized to make to automobile manufacturers and component suppliers" is something that should be shouldered by the taxpayers. The industry should support their own R&D.
And if they do, they'll pass the cost on to consumers, and people in here will still call it a tax. What's the difference. Also note that it is a loan, not a gift, so claiming that they aren't supporting their own R&D is false.

Last edited by shakran; 07-01-2009 at 08:00 AM.. Reason: helps if I close the quote tag properly
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Old 07-01-2009, 08:13 AM   #54 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aceventura3 View Post
Perhaps you should re-read what followed post #8. what part of it do you think I ignored?



Straw man argument. Being against this legislation does not mean one is against all environmental regulations. Also, an honest discussion involves an objective look at trade offs and making informed decisions. In some cases environment regulation is clearly well worth the price. In the case of this legislation we will spend billions, hurt our economy and standards of living to, assuming there is an impact, lowering the average global temperature by a hypothetical .1 degree F. No honest objective case has been presented to justify this legislation, all they have done is use fear, by saying we will destroy the planet unless we do what they want, gee - that is a bad way to make decisions!

---------- Post added at 03:46 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:41 PM ----------



All 1,200 pages?
talk about ignoring arguments... It is really hard to discuss this issue if someone is not willing to discuss:
past experiences with cap and trade in the US (like the one to reduce acid rain)
effects of global warming
other effects of greenhouse gases. Like how increase in low level ozone may reduce soybean yelds by up to 20% by 2030...
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Old 07-01-2009, 08:14 AM   #55 (permalink)
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with re: to the

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Originally Posted by shakran View Post
So then don't retrofit it. Problem solved.

And if they do, they'll pass the cost on to consumers, and people in here will still call it a tax. What's the difference. Also note that it is a loan, not a gift, so claiming that they aren't supporting their own R&D is false.
No it's not false. Since they should have been doing such things for years, lobbying against raising of the CAFE standards is money they could have used to put in this direction. As far is it being a true loan, I don't know, it sounds free since I don't know the details and stipulations of the return payments, ie interest free means you and I shoulder it.

My small business doesn't get such generous loans. Now, few banks are willing to loan them money if they were to get them off the street, well isn't that the point of issuing stock to raise funds and capital for such types of projects? Or is it just to churn and burn money and profiteer?

I will suffer from not retrofitting since we burn #6 oil about 2-3 trucks a day across 1600 apartments. Our fuel bills went from $2M to $14M in about 5 years.

Electricity we just locked in pricing but "transport" costs well those fluctuate and aren't regulated. So we still get fucked since that's not even something you can use for comparative costs.
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Old 07-01-2009, 10:07 AM   #56 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by shakran View Post
I go to all the trouble to explain the bill and that's the best you can come up with for a response?
No. I work like most great artists. Basically you start with a little tease and then gradually lead to a mind numbing climax, followed by a satisfying denouement. And also, like great artists we sometimes fail, so if after an opening we get "...that the best you can come up with...", you go back to the drawing board.

I think there were 1,500 pages in the bill.

---------- Post added at 06:07 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:05 PM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by dippin View Post
talk about ignoring arguments... It is really hard to discuss this issue if someone is not willing to discuss:
past experiences with cap and trade in the US (like the one to reduce acid rain)
effects of global warming
other effects of greenhouse gases. Like how increase in low level ozone may reduce soybean yelds by up to 20% by 2030...
I am simply not going to play the game of - if you don't support this legislation, you don't give a shit about the environment.

If you acknowledge that, I will move forward with you.
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Old 07-01-2009, 10:10 AM   #57 (permalink)
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I am simply not going to play the game of - if you don't support this legislation, you don't give a shit about the environment.

If you acknowledge that, I will move forward with you.
I hate that part of the game. It's annoying at best.

Since there are many greenies that talk the talk but don't walk the walk, and still criticize those that don't support the green bills even when the non-supporters live much greener by default.
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Old 07-01-2009, 10:20 AM   #58 (permalink)
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I hate that part of the game. It's annoying at best.

Since there are many greenies that talk the talk but don't walk the walk, and still criticize those that don't support the green bills even when the non-supporters live much greener by default.
So, true.
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Old 07-01-2009, 10:42 AM   #59 (permalink)
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No it's not false. Since they should have been doing such things for years, lobbying against raising of the CAFE standards is money they could have used to put in this direction.
You'll get no argument from me there. Believe me I do not view the automakers as anything close to innocent in this situation. I agree that they should have been putting their lobbying money into making more efficient cars from the get-go, but to stop them from lobbying, we have to stop treating corporations as persons, with the right to free speech and the right to petition the government, and that's a whole other argument that's well outside the scope of this thread. (Though one that would be good to chew on some day).

But, whatever they did with their money before, now they need to do the R&D with it, and provided the government is giving them a loan instead of free money, I'm fine with the government helping to hurry the process up.

Quote:
As far is it being a true loan, I don't know, it sounds free since I don't know the details and stipulations of the return payments, ie interest free means you and I shoulder it.
Only the theoretical lost interest. We don't shoulder the principal. At worst we shoulder the cost of inflation.

Quote:
My small business doesn't get such generous loans.
And I do have a problem with that, especially when you're talking about small business like Tesla, who are already doing research into alternative energy sources for vehicles. But again, that discussion is starting to get outside of the scope of this thread.

Quote:
Now, few banks are willing to loan them money if they were to get them off the street, well isn't that the point of issuing stock to raise funds and capital for such types of projects? Or is it just to churn and burn money and profiteer?
You and I both know the answer to that. A corporation exists to make as much money as possible. But it isn't the fault of the current administration that for the last 30 years government has been rabidly cutting back on regulations on corporation's money making procedures.

Quote:
I will suffer from not retrofitting since we burn #6 oil about 2-3 trucks a day across 1600 apartments. Our fuel bills went from $2M to $14M in about 5 years.
So that $12M increase has happened already, before this bill was even discussed in session. Fuel prices are increasing, and they will continue to increase as the supply dwindles (whether it dwindles because of actual supply shortfalls or because the oil cartels are screwing with us really doesn't matter to your bank account). Why not see this bill as a way to embrace reduced demand for that oil. After all, even if you personally don't retrofit your apartments, if they get people in, say, the upper midwest, where heating energy use in the winter is extremely high, to use less oil, that would lower the demand and therefore the price to you.


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Originally Posted by aceventura3 View Post
No. I work like most great artists. Basically you start with a little tease and then gradually lead to a mind numbing climax, followed by a satisfying denouement.
Do I need a cigarette for this?

Quote:
I am simply not going to play the game of - if you don't support this legislation, you don't give a shit about the environment.

If you acknowledge that, I will move forward with you.
That isn't the game I'm playing either. I'm saying if you don't support this bill, give us a better reason than "Crap, it'll cost money to upgrade our infrastructure," because the country's infrastructure has been neglected for over 3 decades, and it's high time we start modernizing it if we want to stay in the first world.
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Old 07-01-2009, 11:08 AM   #60 (permalink)
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I hate that part of the game. It's annoying at best.

Since there are many greenies that talk the talk but don't walk the walk, and still criticize those that don't support the green bills even when the non-supporters live much greener by default.
Where did I imply, in any post of mine, that you are not "green" enough?

I am sorry, but this is a silly way of trying to sidestep the issue.

First of all, because if you do live "much greener" then the costs of this bill to you will be negligible.

Second, because in all these posts about 700 scientists this and that, you seem to do everything to avoid discussing the meat of the issue.

There are two questions here, and I've yet to see you tackle each head on:

Is reducing emissions a worthy goal?

I answer it with an unequivocal yes, because not only does the science support the idea that there is global warming, that human action has had a significant impact on it, and that it has serious consequences for mankind, but because those gases also have several other negative side effects, which you still have not acknowledged, which means that there is a social interest in reducing their emissions. Otherwise, we are talking about a private activity with socialized costs, costs that we have every day in health and food expenditures.

Is cap and trade the best way to deal with this?

To me, it is the best "free market" alternative. Other than that, we have two options which were preferred in the past: hard limits, which I don't particularly like because there is no additional incentive once you are under them; and "suggestions" in the form of available subsidies, which I don't like because it is basically a give away without a corresponding obligation. Our experience with cap and trade in the case of acid rain gases has been a great success, so I dont see how it can't work elsewhere.


Yet every other post is some former Bush aide column pointing to vast conspiracies and misleading "scientists."
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Old 07-01-2009, 11:36 AM   #61 (permalink)
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one decent thing about this legislation is that once middle and lower income families see an over 1,000 dollars a year increase in their energy bill, democrats will lose power. That downside to even that is that once this program is started, stopping it will not be an option. congratulations environmentalists, you've take great gains in scaling back the prosperity of millions of Americans.

:clap:
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Old 07-01-2009, 01:09 PM   #62 (permalink)
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Where did I imply, in any post of mine, that you are not "green" enough?

I am sorry, but this is a silly way of trying to sidestep the issue.

First of all, because if you do live "much greener" then the costs of this bill to you will be negligible.

Second, because in all these posts about 700 scientists this and that, you seem to do everything to avoid discussing the meat of the issue.

There are two questions here, and I've yet to see you tackle each head on:

Is reducing emissions a worthy goal?

I answer it with an unequivocal yes, because not only does the science support the idea that there is global warming, that human action has had a significant impact on it, and that it has serious consequences for mankind, but because those gases also have several other negative side effects, which you still have not acknowledged, which means that there is a social interest in reducing their emissions. Otherwise, we are talking about a private activity with socialized costs, costs that we have every day in health and food expenditures.

Is cap and trade the best way to deal with this?

To me, it is the best "free market" alternative. Other than that, we have two options which were preferred in the past: hard limits, which I don't particularly like because there is no additional incentive once you are under them; and "suggestions" in the form of available subsidies, which I don't like because it is basically a give away without a corresponding obligation. Our experience with cap and trade in the case of acid rain gases has been a great success, so I dont see how it can't work elsewhere.


Yet every other post is some former Bush aide column pointing to vast conspiracies and misleading "scientists."
It isn't an accusation directed at you, but if you feel that, like mom said, maybe you have something to be guilty about.

Personally, I don't give a shit about the environment 50 years from now since I have no legacy to have stake in the matter. I do it because it means LESS out of my pocket now. Use less energy means it costs me less each month. use less gas, means it costs me less each month.

The way that I read this bill is that eventually my electricity will cost more, just like my gasoline did when they started putting ethanol into it. The idea that it was going to cost less and be less impact on the environment was a bill of goods sold to the American public.

Sorry you may believe that trading for this and that works for you. If it's bad, then outright stop doing it. Saying a company, group, or individual can purchase their way out if it...and they do, doesn't mean that they really have the convictions or intended results. Myself I state that Mr. Gore since he's the Captain of the Greenie movement in my book, doesn't seem to walk the talk, but just buys his way out of having to reduce his consumption or impact. Sorry, hypocrite in my book.
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Old 07-01-2009, 01:32 PM   #63 (permalink)
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It isn't an accusation directed at you, but if you feel that, like mom said, maybe you have something to be guilty about.

Or maybe he fucking quoted me before saying that.

Quote:
Personally, I don't give a shit about the environment 50 years from now since I have no legacy to have stake in the matter. I do it because it means LESS out of my pocket now. Use less energy means it costs me less each month. use less gas, means it costs me less each month.
Great for you, but it isn't really sound policy, it isn't really debatable (I mean, Im certainly not going to dedicate more than one sentence to "things you care about"), and it says literally nothing about the current existing costs of pollution.
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Old 07-01-2009, 01:54 PM   #64 (permalink)
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actually it is a sound policy dippin. If you don't want to spend more for something you don't.

You don't want to pollute more, you don't.

Saying, "well, if you want to pollute, you just have to pay more if you do." Sorry in my book that's not sound policy to achieving goals.

It's really simple common sense.



See, it's not much different than the banking crisis, the banks wouldn't be in the problem they are in if they didn't do the things that they did. Not much different with pollution, you don't want to pollute? Then don't do the things that pollute.
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Old 07-01-2009, 01:59 PM   #65 (permalink)
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I'm not sure I get what you're saying there Cyn. Are you suggesting that heavy industry and power generation facilities don't want to pollute, and will therefore stop polluting all by themselves? Because I can guarantee you that the vast majority of them don't give a shit about polluting. They want to pollute. It's the rest of us that want them to stop.
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Old 07-01-2009, 02:09 PM   #66 (permalink)
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shakran, we could have had a much larger and safer infrastructure of cleaner nuclear power in the same league and realm of France's power grid. Too many NIMBYs in the 70s and 80s.

You want other industries to stop polluting you stop buying their products. This is the same for power generation as solar and wind isn't feasible for most of the population on the planet.

How much pollution is GM doing these days? Not very much in comparison to their past. Apple and Dell? How about their products? Oh they don't pollute much in the US, but look at where they are getting their stuff from and how it's put together and assembled. Yes, lots of pollution. Same goes for the hybrid vehicles, since the battery materials are shipped to and from all over the globe until the come to rest in the vehicle, and see we don't know what we're going to do with those batteries just yet when it comes time to dispose of them.

But you know these shiny little gadgets.. yeah LOTS of fucking pollution associated with them. No matter how many little stickers are on the side saying things like "arsenic free glass" "mercury free display"... the industry that makes the chips, boards, and circuitry still is a top polluter.
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Old 07-01-2009, 02:24 PM   #67 (permalink)
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The recent comments made me think of this video.

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Old 07-01-2009, 03:09 PM   #68 (permalink)
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shakran, we could have had a much larger and safer infrastructure of cleaner nuclear power in the same league and realm of France's power grid. Too many NIMBYs in the 70s and 80s.
And we're still having a problem figuring out what to do with the waste of the plants we do have. We shouldn't make more waste until we can get rid of the stuff we already made. Once you tell me how to do that (and preferably in ways that do not require coming up with symbols for danger that theoretical future civilizations tens of thousands of years in the future can interpret so THEY don't die from it ( An Alert Unlike Any Other - Los Angeles Times ) and without having to design buildings to meet a code that requires they last a million years ( EPA Expected to Issue Million-Year-Long Regulation : NPR ) then I'm all for nuclear power. But to charge full speed ahead without knowing the solutions to these significant problems is foolhardy.


As to your other points, those industries that aren't polluting as much anymore are either doing it because they had to in order to comply with regulations, or because it is a side-effect of new manufacturing processes designed to economize. They certainly didn't do it out of a sense of stewardship to the planet.
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Old 07-01-2009, 08:18 PM   #69 (permalink)
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And we're still having a problem figuring out what to do with the waste of the plants we do have. We shouldn't make more waste until we can get rid of the stuff we already made. Once you tell me how to do that (and preferably in ways that do not require coming up with symbols for danger that theoretical future civilizations tens of thousands of years in the future can interpret so THEY don't die from it ( An Alert Unlike Any Other - Los Angeles Times ) and without having to design buildings to meet a code that requires they last a million years ( EPA Expected to Issue Million-Year-Long Regulation : NPR ) then I'm all for nuclear power. But to charge full speed ahead without knowing the solutions to these significant problems is foolhardy.

As to your other points, those industries that aren't polluting as much anymore are either doing it because they had to in order to comply with regulations, or because it is a side-effect of new manufacturing processes designed to economize. They certainly didn't do it out of a sense of stewardship to the planet.
The tuna fishermen didn't change their habits because they wanted to kill less dolphins, they did it because they couldn't sell any tuna to people who wanted a dolphin free tuna purchase.

People aren't riding bikes just because they want a cleaner environment, some because they don't want to give money to oil companies.

As far as the whole idea about the future people, well we're able to decipher the Rosetta stone and put up the Voyager Golden Records. We're able to make a pictogram that transcend written language and still get point or idea across. I think that the very idea as that stopping is ludicrous at best.

France must have figured something out to do with that waste, as have other countries that have nuclear facilities. So again that idea doesn't float with me.

If I have to change, you have to change too. It can't be no compromise from the other side. Or is that the way that it works best, because that's what I tend to understand from the greenies and liberals, "I don't have to change, YOU have to change."

What about the fact I can't just toss out my cellphone batteries, laptops, TVs, comptuers, other electronic waste? Since I can't get rid of those, I don't think that these hybrid batteries will have any different conditions.
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Old 07-01-2009, 08:24 PM   #70 (permalink)
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Sorry latecomer to the thread here.

So basically we make a rule, that does not really affect the businesses that much, but make us taxpayers pay more. This will enable us to create a whole new group of jobs for people to oversee it all. Now we can trade a commidity how much carbon we can emit, just amazing. Yep you can buy and trade polluting permits. Also there is a study by the EPA, that says that there will be limited energy growth, including some fo the silly stuff like farmers paying for rainforest to be saved in brasil, that works as them doing their part. Oh and a 98 page report that administration does not want us to see was suppressed, read the article about it here.
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A top Republican senator has ordered an investigation into the Environmental Protection Agency's alleged suppression of a report that questioned the science behind global warming.

The 98-page report, co-authored by EPA analyst Alan Carlin, pushed back on the prospect of regulating gases like carbon dioxide as a way to reduce global warming. Carlin's report argued that the information the EPA was using was out of date, and that even as atmospheric carbon dioxide levels have increased, global temperatures have declined.

"He came out with the truth. They don't want the truth at the EPA," Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., a global warming skeptic, told FOX News, saying he's ordered an investigation. "We're going to expose it."

The controversy comes after the House of Representatives passed a landmark bill to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, one that Inhofe said will be "dead on arrival" in the Senate despite President Obama's energy adviser voicing confidence in the measure.

According to internal e-mails that have been made public by the Competitive Enterprise Institute, Carlin's boss told him in March that his material would not be incorporated into a broader EPA finding and ordered Carlin to stop working on the climate change issue. The draft EPA finding released in April lists six greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide, that the EPA says threaten public health and welfare.

An EPA official told FOXNews.com on Monday that Carlin, who is an economist -- not a scientist -- included "no original research" in his report. The official said that Carlin "has not been muzzled in the agency at all," but stressed that his report was entirely "unsolicited."

"It was something that he did on his own," the official said. "Though he was not qualified, his manager indulged him and allowed him on agency time to draft up ... a set of comments."

Despite the EPA official's remarks, Carlin told FOXNews.com on Monday that his boss, National Center for Environmental Economics Director Al McGartland, appeared to be pressured into reassigning him.

Carlin said he doesn't know whether the White House intervened to suppress his report but claimed it's clear "they would not be happy about it if they knew about it," and that McGartland seemed to be feeling pressure from somewhere up the chain of command.

Carlin said McGartland told him he had to pull him off the climate change issue.

"It was reassigning you or losing my job, and I didn't want to lose my job," Carlin said, paraphrasing what he claimed were McGartland's comments to him. "My inference (was) that he was receiving some sort of higher-level pressure."

Carlin said he personally does not think there is a need to regulate carbon dioxide, since "global temperatures are going down." He said his report expressed a "good bit of doubt" on the connection between the two.

Specifically, the report noted that global temperatures were on a downward trend over the past 11 years, that scientists do not necessarily believe that storms will become more frequent or more intense due to global warming, and that the theory that temperatures will cause Greenland ice to rapidly melt has been "greatly diminished."

Carlin, in a March 16 e-mail, argued that his comments are "valid, significant" and would be critical to the EPA finding.

McGartland, though, wrote back the next day saying he had decided not to forward his comments.

"The administrator and the administration has decided to move forward on endangerment, and your comments do not help the legal or policy case for this decision," he wrote, according to the e-mails released by CEI. "I can only see one impact of your comments given where we are in the process, and that would be a very negative impact on our office."

He later wrote an e-mail urging Carlin to "move on to other issues and subjects."

"I don't want you to spend any additional EPA time on climate change. No papers, no research, etc., at least until we see what EPA is going to do with climate," McGartland wrote.

The EPA said in a written statement that Carlin's opinions were in fact considered, and that he was not even part of the working group dealing with climate change in the first place.

"Claims that this individual's opinions were not considered or studied are entirely false. This administration and this EPA administrator are fully committed to openness, transparency and science-based decision making," the statement said. "The individual in question is not a scientist and was not part of the working group dealing with this issue. Nevertheless the document he submitted was reviewed by his peers and agency scientists, and information from that report was submitted by his manager to those responsible for developing the proposed endangerment finding. In fact, some ideas from that document are included and addressed in the endangerment finding."

The e-mail exchanges and suggestions of political interference sparked a backlash from Republicans in Congress.

Reps. James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., and Darrell Issa, R-Calif., also wrote a letter last week to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson urging the agency to reopen its comment period on the finding. The EPA has since denied the request.

Citing the internal e-mails, the Republican congressmen wrote that the EPA was exhibiting an "agency culture set in a predetermined course."

"It documents at least one instance in which the public was denied access to significant scientific literature and raises substantial questions about what additional evidence may have been suppressed," they wrote.

In a written statement, Issa said the administration is "actively seeking to withhold new data in order to justify a political conclusion."

"I'm sure it was very inconvenient for the EPA to consider a study that contradicted the findings it wanted to reach," Sensenbrenner said in a statement, adding that the "repression" of Carlin's report casts doubt on the entire finding.

Carlin said he's concerned that he's seeing "science being decided at the presidential level."

"Now Mr. Obama is in effect directly or indirectly saying that CO2 causes global temperatures to rise and that we have to do something about it. ... That's normally a scientific judgment and he's in effect judging what the science says," he said. "We need to look at it harder."

The controversy is similar to one under the Bush administration -- only the administration was taking the opposite stance. In that case, scientist James Hansen claimed the administration was trying to keep him from speaking out and calling for reductions in greenhouse gases.
If you want to read the Carlin report that was not released here it is

Either way there are so many things in this bill including, how every new house needs to have an outlet in the garage for a hybrid. How before you sell your home a federal agent will rate your energy efficiency (This is a free service for now), etc... As I said elsewhere, good thing MJ died, so they can push this bill through under the radar.
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Old 07-01-2009, 08:46 PM   #71 (permalink)
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The tuna fishermen didn't change their habits because they wanted to kill less dolphins, they did it because they couldn't sell any tuna to people who wanted a dolphin free tuna purchase.
So you're saying "leave every environmental issue up to the people and hope they get it right in time?"

Quote:
People aren't riding bikes just because they want a cleaner environment, some because they don't want to give money to oil companies.
I would guess that the percentage of bike riders who ride bikes for political reasons rather than that they can't afford the gas or don't want to pay for the gas without any political ulterior motives is quite small.

Quote:
As far as the whole idea about the future people, well we're able to decipher the Rosetta stone and put up the Voyager Golden Records. We're able to make a pictogram that transcend written language and still get point or idea across. I think that the very idea as that stopping is ludicrous at best.
The Rosetta stone is 2200 years old, not 10,000 or 1 million. And the reason we were able to decipher it is because it happened to be a translation matrix that included classical Greek, which we were still able to read. Without the Rosetta stone, we'd have been unable to decipher hieroglyphics (also 8,000 to 998,000 years younger than the warning signs will be), and I should point out that hieroglyphics are pictograms. So basically under your idea we have to provide our own Rosetta stone, and hope that in 10,000 years or 1,000,000 years, assuming humanity is gone and another civilization has taken our place, that someone still knows how to read English.


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France must have figured something out to do with that waste, as have other countries that have nuclear facilities. So again that idea doesn't float with me.
France also has comprehensive national health care. Are you advocating that we do that, because France does it?

To the point, France still doesn't know what to do with its nuclear waste. They're fighting the same storage oppositions that the nuclear industry here is fighting. True, they do have a nuclear waste recycling program which delays the date that a given chunk of fuel will become waste that needs to be stores, but it also produces as a byproduct, plutonium. Having a bunch of plutonium lie around is very, very bad idea.


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If I have to change, you have to change too. It can't be no compromise from the other side.
I already told you I'm totally fine with nuclear energy as long as we know what to do with the waste. Saying "well France isn't solving the waste problem either but they're going full steam ahead and therefore so should we," is not a solution.

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Or is that the way that it works best, because that's what I tend to understand from the greenies and liberals, "I don't have to change, YOU have to change."
Sometimes. To cherrypick your example, one side said "stop killing the dolphins," and the other said "I don't want to have to care if I kill dolphins." The compromise of "kill only half as many dolphins" wouldn't really have made anyone happy.


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What about the fact I can't just toss out my cellphone batteries, laptops, TVs, comptuers, other electronic waste? Since I can't get rid of those, I don't think that these hybrid batteries will have any different conditions.
Saying that you can't throw them in the garbage and therefore you "can't get rid of them" demonstrates a shocking lack of knowledge of the situation. Of course you can get rid of them. Take them to a recycling center. Many battery stores will take them to the recycling center for you. It will be the same with the hybrid batteries.

Saying that you can't ever get rid of something because you can't put it in the trash is like saying you can't ever defecate again because you aren't allowed to do it in the neighbor's yard.
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Old 07-02-2009, 04:58 AM   #72 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by shakran View Post
So you're saying "leave every environmental issue up to the people and hope they get it right in time?"

I would guess that the percentage of bike riders who ride bikes for political reasons rather than that they can't afford the gas or don't want to pay for the gas without any political ulterior motives is quite small.

The Rosetta stone is 2200 years old, not 10,000 or 1 million. And the reason we were able to decipher it is because it happened to be a translation matrix that included classical Greek, which we were still able to read. Without the Rosetta stone, we'd have been unable to decipher hieroglyphics (also 8,000 to 998,000 years younger than the warning signs will be), and I should point out that hieroglyphics are pictograms. So basically under your idea we have to provide our own Rosetta stone, and hope that in 10,000 years or 1,000,000 years, assuming humanity is gone and another civilization has taken our place, that someone still knows how to read English.

France also has comprehensive national health care. Are you advocating that we do that, because France does it?

To the point, France still doesn't know what to do with its nuclear waste. They're fighting the same storage oppositions that the nuclear industry here is fighting. True, they do have a nuclear waste recycling program which delays the date that a given chunk of fuel will become waste that needs to be stores, but it also produces as a byproduct, plutonium. Having a bunch of plutonium lie around is very, very bad idea.

I already told you I'm totally fine with nuclear energy as long as we know what to do with the waste. Saying "well France isn't solving the waste problem either but they're going full steam ahead and therefore so should we," is not a solution.

Sometimes. To cherrypick your example, one side said "stop killing the dolphins," and the other said "I don't want to have to care if I kill dolphins." The compromise of "kill only half as many dolphins" wouldn't really have made anyone happy.

Saying that you can't throw them in the garbage and therefore you "can't get rid of them" demonstrates a shocking lack of knowledge of the situation. Of course you can get rid of them. Take them to a recycling center. Many battery stores will take them to the recycling center for you. It will be the same with the hybrid batteries.

Saying that you can't ever get rid of something because you can't put it in the trash is like saying you can't ever defecate again because you aren't allowed to do it in the neighbor's yard.
I get 2 times a year to recycle products. If I miss any of those two times, I wind up holding onto the objects. If not I get fined or the building that I live in gets fined if I put these things in the compactor. We already have a mandate for ratio based recycling. So for X amount of trash we "should" have Y amount of recyclables. So even if people decide they don't want to use products that require a recycle such as soda bottles, we are still penalized and fined because we didn't recycle enough.

Now I'm supposedly able to bring my cellphones to the manfacturers and they'll dispose them. Apparently disposing them means that they can refresh and repacked my old cellphone and resell it in an emerging territory. How nice of them! They get to make more money and still charge me exorbitant fees for their service. It wasn't told that this was their disposal method. So it's not really disposed, but it's still in the some use. They get to ride more for free off my sale and generate more profits in an emerging marketplace.

Quote:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/10/ny...10recycle.html
March 10, 2008
Engineering a Tough Switch: Getting New Yorkers to Recycle Electronics
By JOHN ELIGON

They are often wedged in closets, collecting dust. Some inevitably end up between banana peels and apple cores in a landfill. In New York City, finding an appropriate final resting place for aging computers, boom boxes and televisions can be an arduous task.

An even more daunting obstacle might be educating their owners.

As the fate of a City Council bill requiring electronic waste recycling rests on the tip of Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s pen, many New Yorkers have no idea where and how to dispose of unwanted electronic items, many of which contain environmental hazards like lead and mercury.

Sabrina Brown, for example, has never heard of “e-waste” recycling.

Ms. Brown, 20, a student from Richmond Hill, Queens, said she had three cellphones, an old laptop computer, an old television, two old radios and three old cameras sitting in her room.

“I don’t know where to take them,” she said.

Mr. Bloomberg has expressed strong opposition to a bill passed by the City Council last month that would fine New Yorkers $100 for throwing electronics in the garbage and would require manufacturers to take back their products and those made by companies that are no longer in business.

Mr. Bloomberg, who says the bill penalizes manufacturers for the behavior of consumers, is expected to veto the measure this week, but the bill may have enough support in Council to pass in an override or a compromise. Whatever the bill’s form, New Yorkers already have several opportunities to recycle their electronics, including collection events sponsored by the city’s Sanitation Department twice a year.
So we're trying to enact laws that force the manufacturer to deal with this. You can see that manufacturers are lobbying hard to not let such a thing happen as it is cost prohibitive to some if not flat out unfair even if they do not sell product in our state.

Come by NYC sometime, you'll see on street corners from time to time old CPU cases sometimes with full contents including hard drives, old printers, old monitors. People have actually taken the hard drives out, recovered them and used the data for identity theft, or expose the original owner and fear monger more identity theft because of someone else's bad judgment on disposal method.

I have other articles on how many people have TVs sitting in their closets because they don't know what to do with them before and after the digital switchover.
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Electronics Firms Fight State Recycling Programs - WSJ.com
Meanwhile, the Consumer Electronics Association, a trade group representing 2,000 electronics companies, is negotiating with the New York City officials to change a city ordinance that would require electronics companies to pick up old gadgets door-to-door.

The CEA says the ordinance, scheduled to take effect July 31, would cost the industry $200 million annually.

"We're extremely alarmed" by electronic recycling laws, says Bill Taraday, president of ToteVision, a Seattle maker of LCD screens with annual sales of about $10 million. ToteVision has had to pay 4% of its profits to cover its recycling bills in Washington since January, he says. If legislation like this existed in all 50 states, "we wouldn't be in business," Mr. Taraday says.
Surely the French are putting the waste in some space and taking care of that space. Same with the US for their small stock of nuclear power generators, aircraft carriers and submarines. Yucca Mountain in my opinion is more NIMBY fearmongering. Again, if I have to change, you have to a little also. Apparently the immediacy for greenhouse gases is so great, but the fear of radioactive materials and their storage is even greater.

People are living in Nagasaki and Hiroshima years after detonation of nuclear material. Chernobyl is going to recover over time as well.
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Darkness at Noon: Chernobyl: life after death, or somewhere in between
What I found, much to my surprise, was a place characterized by abundant life. The most startling aspect was the human life within the Chernobyl exclusion zone and at the nuclear power plant itself. In fact, 4,000 people are still employed by the power plant and work there on a regular basis. They are the workers who not only monitor reactor four and maintain the aging sarcophagus, but also those who are carrying out the closure of the remaining reactors, the last of which was finally shut off in 2000.

They work and even live inside the exclusion zone because this is their job. The guide at the power plant's visitor center tells us with a tinge of sadness in her voice that "back when the disaster first occurred people rushed here to help contain the situation because it was their duty - they were motivated by love of their country and they paid a high price. Now they come [to work on the Sarcophagus] because they need the work, they don't have a choice." We are told that the power plant takes the health of its workers very seriously - if anybody shows signs of radiation-related illness, they are immediately and permanently removed from the exclusion zone. Discovering the ironies that populate the darker corners of life, someone in our group asks, "doesn't that mean they lose their job, too?" The guide shrugs with a melancholy look of regret on her face and nods her head.

A much different vision of life can be found in Pripyat, the model Soviet city built in the 1970s to house the population that would be working at the Soviet Union's latest wonder-achievement, the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. Home to nearly 50,000 residents at the time of the accident in 1986, the city was evacuated three days after the explosion, never to be repopulated again. Because the residents were told that they would be able to return soon, they left most of their belongings behind. In fact, they left their lives behind to be re-created in the minds of visitors like myself 22 years later, picturing the daily experiences of an apartment's inhabitants as we carefully step over the broken glass and fallen radiator on the floor.

Contrary of the image in my mind of a barren, windswept cityscape permanently drained of life by the events of that day, in fact life is everywhere. 22 years without human interference has had a startling effect as the forest has gradually reclaimed the territory it was once forced to concede in the name of socialist progress. Houses have been engulfed by the forest, apartment buildings dwarfed by the trees, and streets and sidewalks obscured by moss until little trace of them remains. Nature has even found its way inside several buildings, with trees, shrubbery, and grass growing out the windows from within. We see the telltale evidence of wild boars that wander the city rooting up tasty morsels from her soft, mossy soil. We are told that herds of wild horses roam freely on the open plains, and that native zubry (European bison) will soon be re-introduced to the area.
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FRONTLINE: nuclear reaction: Why the French Like Nuclear Energy
Bataille went and spoke to the people who were protesting and soon realized that the engineers and bureaucrats had greatly misunderstood the psychology of the French people. The technocrats had seen the problem in technical terms. To them, the cheapest and safest solution was to permanently bury the waste underground. But for the rural French says Bataille, "the idea of burying the waste awoke the most profound human myths. In France we bury the dead, we don't bury nuclear waste...there was an idea of profanation of the soil, desecration of the Earth."

Bataille discovered that the rural populations had an idea of "Parisians, the consumers of electricity, coming to the countryside, going to the bottom of your garden with a spade, digging a hole and burying nuclear waste, permanently." Using the word permanently was especially clumsy says Bataille because it left the impression that the authorities were abandoning the waste forever and would never come back to take care of it.

Fighting the objections of technical experts who argued it would increase costs, Bataille introduced the notions of reversibility and stocking. Waste should not be buried permanently but rather stocked in a way that made it accessible at some time in the future. People felt much happier with the idea of a "stocking center" than a "nuclear graveyard". Was this just a semantic difference? No, says Bataille. Stocking waste and watching it involves a commitment to the future. It implies that the waste will not be forgotten. It implies that the authorities will continue to be responsible. And, says Bataille, it offers some possibility of future advances. "Today we stock containers of waste because currently scientists don't know how to reduce or eliminate the toxicity, but maybe in 100 years perhaps scientists will."

Bataille began working on a new law that he presented to parliament in 1991. It laid plans to build 3-4 research laboratories at various sites. These laboratories would be charged with investigating various options, including deep geological storage, above ground stocking and transmutation and detoxification of waste. The law calls for the labs to be built in the next few years and then, based on the research they yield, parliament will decide its final decision. Bataille's law specifies 2006 as the year in which parliament must decide which laboratory will become the national stocking center

Bataille's plan seems to be working. Several regions have applied to host underground laboratories hoping the labs will bring in money and high prestige scientific jobs. But ultimate success is by no means certain. One of these laboratories will, in effect, become the stocking center for the nation and the local people may find that unacceptable. If protesters organize, they can block shipments on the roads and rail. The situation could quickly get out of hand.

Nuclear waste is an enormously difficult political problem which to date no country has solved. It is, in a sense, the Achilles heel of the nuclear industry. Could this issue strike down France's uniquely successful nuclear program? France's politicians and technocrats are in no doubt. If France is unable to solve this issue, says Mandil, then "I do not see how we can continue our nuclear program."
I find it more acceptable that they are making attempts to figure it out than just say, "We don't know what to do with it, so we're not doing anything." Even if as they say it takes 100 years, they have emitted less of the offending greenhouse gases and associated pollutants, but of course traded that off for nuclear material which is a bit more localized.

---------- Post added at 08:58 AM ---------- Previous post was at 08:34 AM ----------

here's a new one, and yet more reasons why I don't trust legislation to deal with this. While this is very tangible materials, the idea of the rest of the emissions in my opinion is not truly measurable it is just best guess on behavior in a slice of time. Depending on what time of the year it is, my electricity usage goes up and my oil burning goes down and my electricity usage goes down and my oil burning goes up. My driving also fluctuates. I assume it is not much different with companies, and again, if you can't stick a meteric on it that says EXACTLY how much, it's not any better than the policy of assessing property value for property taxes. When the city needs more money, they asses the value higher or give a higher percentage multiplier. Either way, it's a best guess with no rhyme or reason.

As far as the recycling.... yeah good job on that one!

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Monday, Jun. 30, 2008
Your Laptop's Dirty Little Secret
By Bryan Walsh

Coal, steel, oil — we think of these old-economy industries, and we picture pollution. Smoggy skies, fouled rivers, toxic waste. As we make the transition to a new economy, we imagine that industrial pollution will become a thing of the past. Mobile phones, laptops, MP3 players — they conjure images of spotless semiconductor factories and the eternal summer of Silicon Valley where the digital economy was born.

But the tech industry has a dirty little secret: it has toxic waste of its own. Phones and computers contain dangerous metals like lead, cadmium and mercury, which can contaminate the air and water when those products are dumped. It's called electronic waste, or e-waste, and the world produces a lot of it: 20 to 50 million tons a year, according to the UN — enough to load a train that would stretch around the world. The U.S. is by far the world's top producer of e-waste, but much of it ends up elsewhere — specifically, in developing nations like China, India and Nigeria, to which rich countries have been shipping garbage for years. There the poor, often including children, dismantle dumped PCs and phones, stripping the components for the valuable — and toxic — metals contained inside. In the cities like the southern Chinese town of Guiyu, they work with little protection, melting down components and breathing in poisonous fumes. What can't be recycled is simply dumped, turning already poisoned rivers into toxic sludge. It's all done in the hope of earning a few dollars from the detritus of the clean digital economy.

Michael Zhao has seen the damage firsthand. A journalist connected with the Asia Society, Zhao traveled to Guiyu — which processes up to 1 million tons of electronic garbage a year — to film a documentary on the impact of e-waste. "I saw people putting leftover parts on coal fired stoves, to melt down the waste to get to the gold," he says. "It'd produce a reddish smoke that was so strong I couldn't stand there for more than a couple minutes before my eyes would just burn." (Hear Zhao talk about the e-waste on this week's Greencast.) Urban China is so polluted that few Chinese escape without some damage to their health, but Zhao says that local researchers have found that the children of Guiyu fare worse than their counterparts in nearby cities, suffering from respiratory illnesses traced back to e-waste.

Officially, this shouldn't be happening. The Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal was established by the UN in 1989 to control the hazardous garbage flowing from rich countries to poor ones. The convention allows countries to unilaterally ban the import of waste, and requires exporters to get the consent of destination countries before they send trash abroad. But the United States, a prime source of e-waste and other toxic waste, never signed onto the treaty, leaving it weakened, and some of the destination nations — most prominently China — quietly allow the dumping to continue, for the money it brings in. At an international summit on the convention held last week in Bali, Indonesia, environmentalists and many poor countries insisted the agreement had failed, and pointed to the growth in e-waste as a main reason. "We are faced with the ugly truth that the Basel Convention has been unable to accomplish even the prerequisite steps of addressing the inequities and exploitation made possible by globalization," Jim Puckett, director of the Seattle-based Basel Action Network, told delegates at Bali.
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Old 07-02-2009, 06:51 AM   #73 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Xazy View Post
Sorry latecomer to the thread here.

So basically we make a rule, that does not really affect the businesses that much, but make us taxpayers pay more. This will enable us to create a whole new group of jobs for people to oversee it all. Now we can trade a commidity how much carbon we can emit, just amazing. Yep you can buy and trade polluting permits. Also there is a study by the EPA, that says that there will be limited energy growth, including some fo the silly stuff like farmers paying for rainforest to be saved in brasil, that works as them doing their part. Oh and a 98 page report that administration does not want us to see was suppressed, read the article about it here.


If you want to read the Carlin report that was not released here it is

Either way there are so many things in this bill including, how every new house needs to have an outlet in the garage for a hybrid. How before you sell your home a federal agent will rate your energy efficiency (This is a free service for now), etc... As I said elsewhere, good thing MJ died, so they can push this bill through under the radar.
That the piece Carlin wrote is being called a report, and that people are saying it has been suppressed, is a joke. What he did was a literature review that the EPA decided against including in the final report. There was not one line of original research in what he submitted, he just did a lit review and forwarded it to the group that was doing the final report.

I work part time and do some consulting for a private research institution that evaluates a federal children's mental health initiative. They write congressional reports as well. Ive submitted materials to be included in the congressional report that were left out. That was to be expected, given how many research analysts are there.

In fact, it is so obvious that that is NOT a report that you can see it in the title:
"Comments on Draft Technical Support Document for Endangerment Analysis for Greenhouse Gas Emissions under the Clean Air Act"

So the guy, who is an economist, by the way, writes some comments on a report, the authors ignore him, and all of the sudden its "suppressing a report?"

Again, the challenge remains: find me a piece of original research that disputes global warming that is being suppressed without reason and well talk about conspiracy. Before that, open letters by theologians and comments by economists are not new and relevant research.
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