US House of Reps 2009 Climate Change Bill

Discussion in 'Environmental Discussion' started by SageBrush, Jun 26, 2009.

  1. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    Slated to start in 2012, most permits will be free, but those that are not will cost $13/ton CO2. Using petrol as an example, this is 13 cents/gallon tax.

    Yawn.
     
  2. robbyr2

    robbyr2 New Member

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    By 2012, will we even notice? If gas is $4, 5 or 6 a gallon?
     
  3. freo-1

    freo-1 New Member

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  4. F8L

    F8L Protecting Habitat & AG Lands

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    Did you just quote the WSJ as a source for climate change information? :nono:
     
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  5. freo-1

    freo-1 New Member

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    Read the article before you complain! :rolleyes:

    The Europeans have already been down this road, and all it amounts to is a TAX that feeds government coffers. It will cost people a lot of money, and will not have anything to show for it (Oh wait, it will have something to show: Loss of jobs, higher taxes, negative growth).
     
  6. F8L

    F8L Protecting Habitat & AG Lands

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    It's already costing us a lot of money if you consider how subsidiesed oil is. Why should I have to pay extra because some yahoo wants to waste oil? :)

    I read the article before I posted so don't roll your eyes at me.
     
  7. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    Well, since I have been advocating progressive tax on carbon for ... ohhh ... close to a decade now, that is a OK with me. My complaint is how little the tax is. To be fair though, I don't know how fast the tax ramps up.

    I could sure do without the $10B 'clean coal' research money nonsense. It should go towards building out the national grid for wind generation.

    Freo1 -- if you do not like tax, why don't you take steps to decrease our tax burden of supporting the military to keep the oil economy going ? How about keeping hte ~ $500B annual dollars that exit the country every year to buy foreign oil in the national economy?

    The economics of local clean energy are much more complex than a a repub talking point even begins to suggest. So which is it -- you want to have a valid conversation of energy economics, or just troll ?
     
  8. freo-1

    freo-1 New Member

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    I rolled my eyes for a good reason. If you did read the article, you would realize that this has already been tried (and failed), so dismissing the article because it's the WSJ is inappropriate (as in the finger wag, mate).

    This bill is LOADED with subsidized paybacks to special interests (do not deceive yourself).

    There is a reasoned debate regarding the total effect of man made climate change. While no one argues there is an issue, how much man is causing it is an open subject for debate, which the article adroitly points out.

    Your argument about someone wasting oil is well intentioned but misguided. There are a lot of things we COULD be doing besides TAXES to address the problem, but Congress would rather play political games to appease their interest groups.
     
  9. F8L

    F8L Protecting Habitat & AG Lands

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    Could you list the special interest groups please? I'm curious how they stack up against the current subsidies and "paybacks" we dole out to special interst groups on the other side of this issue. :confused:
     
  10. freo-1

    freo-1 New Member

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    And just what in the world do you think the tax will achieve?

    Disagreement with your position is anything but trolling, mate. If you check out the European economy, you will find that "Cap and Trade" was nothing but a shell game, and did not achieve any real reduction objectives.

    The US mainstream media reporting on major issues, in a word, STINKS! They are nothing more than disjointed entertainment. The Economist has far more accurate information than any of the sad periodicals that pass for news in the states. (The WSJ is perhaps an exception).

    My point is, READ up on the Cap and Trade experience in Europe, and your opinion may change.
     
  11. freo-1

    freo-1 New Member

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    Easy!

    Simply read the 300 plus page amendment that was DROPPED on Congress at 3AM this Friday, and you will see EXACTLY some of the special interest vote buying that went on.

    As I stated earlier, it's somewhat moot. The Senate will kill this, as they do not want to get voted out of office.
     
  12. F8L

    F8L Protecting Habitat & AG Lands

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    And you've read it already? :confused:
     
  13. freo-1

    freo-1 New Member

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    They were showing one of the Congressmen reading the more salient points of the bill on CSPAN, so yes, I have heard some of the groups that are getting special treatment. BTW, that is BETTER than some of the clueless wonders in Congress, who routinely vote on 1000 plus page bills the do not even READ before they vote on.

    Here is a link to the story:

    http://congress.blogs.foxnews.com/2009/06/26/house-filibuster/
     
  14. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    I have, and it won't. I'm all too aware of the corruption that emission permits has allowed in the European version -- and will be even worse in the US version. That does not change two things, however:

    1. Fossil fuel taxation is the only solution that will work, since taxation to cover the indirect costs of fossil fuel use (which is what is really needed for our market economy) ain't going to happen.

    2. I think a fair argument that the benefits will outweigh the corruption can be made. A trillion dollars a year of wasted US wealth the way things are now is a *lot* of pork.

    3. It's disingenous to say the European system 'failied' because of the inherent weaknesses of cap™ the weakness is European will to tighten carbon limits. That weakness, I will argue, is more a case of not willing to jump way ahead of the rest of world than anything else. When the US adds it's carbon limits to hte world economy, changes *will* happen.

    Feel free to disagree with reasoned argument and data. But please, don't bore me with the "taxes are baaaaad" talking point.
     
  15. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    First WSJ, then FoxNews. What more can be said ?
     
  16. freo-1

    freo-1 New Member

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    The talking point "Taxes are bad" is valid, whether you like it or not. Check out the history books. In 1961, JFK lowered taxes, and the economy took off from the recession of the late 50's.

    What in the world makes you think "Cap and Tax" will work here when it failed in Europe? Besides, I don't see China and India "jumping on the bandwagon" anytime in the near future.

    All "Cap and Tax" will achieve is a loss of manufacturing and business in the good old US of A. Business leaders have already testified before Congress that is the case.

    If we were serious about this issue, nuclear power would have a resurgence. The US Congress is more interested in self serving interests than actually making long term beneficial decisions.

    BTW, do you realize that the majority of power in the Northeast comes from Canada? If it was not for nuclear power, the US would be in big trouble.
     
  17. freo-1

    freo-1 New Member

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    How about the Economist, mate? It's FAR more accurate than any of the loser US networks (CNN, ABC, NBC, CBS). The US news is guilty of the SIN of OMISSION. They do not report items that will put their political point of view in a bad light. At least the UK tends to report all the facts (even if they support a different point of view).

    I never realized just how bad US news reporting was until I lived overseas for a number of years. honestly, it's awful.

    Besides, a very wise man one told me "If you want to get close to the truth, read the Financial mags. They do not have political axe to grind, they just want people to make money".


    Lastly, let me state for the record that I'm a fiercely independent political thinker, and not tied to either major political party. So, my views are my own, based on life experience, and not tied to a party talking point (left or right).
     
  18. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    Getting off topic, but I read Bloomberg, the Financial Times of london, Housmann (spelling?) most days. Perhaps oddly, I have gained a lot of general background information regarding energy from Slashdot of all places.

    The Economist has too much slant for my taste. The editorial pages of the WSJ are a hack, and FoxNews is propaganda.

    You think taxes are bad ? I think pollution, climate change, idiotic wars, and unregulated banking is bad. Perhaps we should just agree to disagree, and let the thread return to topic ?
     
  19. freo-1

    freo-1 New Member

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    Slashdot, eh? I'll check it out.

    I think we can agree to disagree. I don't think we are all that far off on the subject, but reasonable people can and do disagree about solutions.

    Dialogue needs to remain open, honest, and respectful, otherwise, we can't learn.

    BTW, I think the US mainstream media is ALL propaganda (including NPR).
     
  20. Frayadjacent

    Frayadjacent Resident Conservative

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    Increasing taxation has a very tangible, quantifiable effect.

    Pollution is subjective. Yeah, dumping raw waste into rivers is bad. I'm against that kind of pollution because it directly negatively affects others. There is a tangible, quantifiable effect.

    Climate change, while it happens, is only theoretically caused by man. People have found correlations between CO2 emissions and climate, and then call it causation.

    Unregulated banking? You mean the kind where institutions are forced to give loans to otherwise unqualified individuals as a result of legislation (CRA) and litigation (lawyers like 0bama suing banks for not giving enough loans to black people)? Those things didn't cause things like the housing bubble, now did they? People defaulting on mortgages couldn't be because they bought what they couldn't afford?

    ANYWAY

    The topic IS taxation, because this cap and trade scheme IS taxation. It's punishing something that hasn't been scientifically proven (don't talk about any 'consensus' here. The scientific method for proving a theory doesn't include getting a consensus) is just faulty logic.

    The only specific effect that has been mentioned is $0.13 tax increase on a gallon of gas.

    What happens when electric utilities, most of which in the US burn coal, have to buy massive amounts of 'carbon credits'? They pass the cost on to the consumers. Translation: Electric bills for many Americans go up. Not by a few cents, but buy a few multiples, possibly. I'm talking doubling. Tripling.

    Think about your last electric bill. Think about your largest bill last summer. Mine was $180. That bill doubling will be VERY painful to my economy, but I can bear it. But what about my neighbors who don't make as much money as I do? They could be crushed.

    What happens to large companies that consume a lot of power when they have to buy these carbon credits? They lay off people. They move operations overseas. They pass costs on to consumers. All of those are bad for the economy.

    This bill is the most blaring example of the retards taking the wheel of the bus and steering it toward the closest cliff.
     
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