Friday, December 25, 2009

Something to remember in 2010 and 2012

This AP article on the UN climate summit in Copenhagen has this tidbit:
A $30 billion fund over the next three years, scaling up to $100 billion a year by 2020, was a key element of the deal brokered by President Barack Obama with the leaders of China and other major developing countries at the 193-nation conference that ended last weekend.
By now, it should be painfully apparent the whole UN climate change thing is more about redistribution of wealth than it is about melting ice caps. Furthermore, it is wealth that O doesn't have.

This is just one more example of the Democrats' fiscal irresponsibility. They can expect to be held responsible in the upcoming election cycles.

Friday, December 18, 2009

On the climate change discussion

The AP recently published an interview with Frank Euredi of Kent University. In it, Euredi basically lamented the state of the climate debate; various groups "knowledgeable or oblivious" shouting back and forth, in his view, with the Internet playing an enabling role. Then he makes this irksome observation:
Democracy in action? That’s one way of seeing it. But is something deeper afoot? As the amplification of human opinion becomes more democratic, is the suspicion of the expert and the intellectual — a long-held trope in American society — going globally viral?
A long-held trope? Oh, my. Oh, the condescension.  Where to start?

To take the current debate and generalize on the American character is to show a lack of understanding of both.  Whereas Euredi's characterization of the latter is more of a cheap shot, I shall instead address the former.

The current debate is mostly about wealth transfer between the haves and the have-nots at the expense of the public purse.  That fact alone, not to mention the numerous questions raised about the underlying data and climate models, makes this debate everyman's concern.

I can understand how Euredi would like the discussion be limited to the science community and the rest of us to just shut up and sit down.  And, the rest of us would most likely do just that if this whole climate discussion was limited to science.  But, the climate discussion is not now, if it ever was, about pure science and Euredi needs to accept the involvement of those other affected groups as legitimate.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

More CO2 regulation nonsence

There now is much ado over 1) O cannot sign a treaty at COP15 limiting CO2 emissions without concurrence of the Senate (true) and, 2) O is holding the upper hand because of the threat that the EPA will take over CO2 emissions in a "command and control" mode (false).

Congress has the authority to take climate change and CO2 emissions off the plate of not only the EPA but also the Supreme Court which ruled on CO2 emissions. All that is required is a Senate with the will to stand up against this abrogation of our national sovereignty.