Global Warming Tax Hikes Heading Your Way

Now
even President Bush wants action on climate change. “Reasonable and
responsible” legislation is needed, the White House asserts, to avert a
“regulatory nightmare” from overlapping state and federal rules. Are we
supposed to think costly federal
regulations, emission mandates, and hidden cap-and-trade taxes would be
reasonable and responsible?
Earth
warmed slightly over the last quarter century, as it emerged further from the
Little Ice Age, and humans likely played a role. However, literally hundreds of
climate scientists say catastrophic climate changes and dominant human
influences are over-hyped myths.
Our planet has experienced
numerous climate shifts, they point out, including prolonged ice ages, a
400-year Medieval Warm Period and a 500-year Little Ice Age. Climate scientists
still don’t understand what caused these events – or the temperature roller
coaster of the last century: as carbon dioxide levels rose steadily,
temperatures climbed from 1910 to 1945, fell between 1945 and 1975, and
increased again from 1975 to 1998, notes Syun-Ichi Akasofu, founding director of the
Five
of the ten hottest years in
These
inconvenient facts have forced alarmists to rely on computer models that
generate Frankenclime monsters realistic enough to scare people into believing
climate Armageddon is nigh.
Climate
models do help scientists evaluate possible consequences of changing economic
growth, emission, cloud cover and other variables. But they can’t reproduce the
actual climate of the past century. They cannot make accurate predictions, even
one year in the future, much less fifty. They do not represent reality, and should
not be relied on to guide public policy.
Models
reflect the assumptions and hypotheses that go into them – and our still
limited understanding of complex, turbulent climate processes that involve the
sun, oceans, land masses, and the atmosphere.
They do a poor job of dealing with the effects of water vapor,
precipitation, and high cirrus clouds on temperatures and climate, because the
underlying physics aren’t well understood, notes MIT meteorology professor
Richard Lindzen.
Like
the UN’s politicized IPCC climate control panel, models also place too much
emphasis on carbon dioxide. They pay insufficient attention to extraterrestrial
factors like changes in the Earth’s irregular orbit around the sun, solar
energy levels, and solar winds that appear to influence the level of cosmic
rays reaching Earth, and thus the formation of cloud cover and penetration of
infrared radiation from the sun. They likewise fail to incorporate the profound
effects that periodic shifts in Pacific Ocean currents have on temperatures and
sea ice in the
When
the US National Assessment compared the results of two top-tier computer models
for US geographic regions, the models frequently generated precisely opposite
rainfall scenarios,
Activists,
journalists, politicians, AlGoreans, and even scientists and corporate
executives naturally select the scariest scenarios, call them evidence, trumpet
them with hysterical headlines – and insist on drastic cutbacks in CO2
emissions and energy use. They’ll likely make millions, while other families
and businesses suffer. Many are bullish on wind and ethanol, but negative about
nuclear power.
Fully
85 percent of all the energy Americans use comes from fossil fuels. Less than
0.5% is wind power, which generates electricity only eight hours a day, on
average. Over half of our electricity is produced by coal, because it is
plentiful and affordable, and modern power plants emit few pollutants, but do
generate abundant plant food (the same carbon dioxide we exhale when we breathe).
Any
climate change regime would impose higher prices and new restrictions on coal-generated
electricity, oil and gas drilling, air and ground transportation, and heating,
air conditioning, agriculture, and manufacturing. In fact, any facility or
activity that generates more than 250 tons of carbon dioxide per year could be
heavily regulated: bakeries, breweries, soft drink makers, factories, apartment
and office buildings, dairy farms, and countless others. Permit, regulatory,
oversight, anti-fraud monitoring, and polar bear endangerment rules would cost
billions in still more highly regressive, hidden taxes.
Energy-killer
activists want to slash
Welcome
to the good old days – to Eco-Camelot, where “the climate must be perfect all
year.” Poor minority and blue-collar families will be in for some serious
belt-tightening, millions of jobs will head overseas, and demand for
unemployment benefits, mortgage bailouts, and energy welfare will soar, as
state and federal coffers run dry.
Worst,
in the end, all the cutbacks and sacrifices won’t make any difference, because
our climate is not driven by carbon dioxide – but by the same natural forces
that have caused major and minor climate changes since the dawn of time, say
scientists like Roy Spencer, Robert Balling, and Fred Singer.
Climate
change is no longer science. It’s politics – and Democrats would be thrilled if
a Republican president took the lead – and Republicans take the blame when the
bills start rolling in.
Climate
change is about power. Power to control
– and curtail – the power we rely on:
to build, heat and cool our homes … produce raw materials, food and consumer
products … transport people and products … and support modern living standards.
It’s
about the selection, production, taxation – and prevention – of energy. It’s about access to real energy, versus mandates to use futuristic, mostly illusory, and certainly insufficient “alternative”
energy. It’s about who gets to decide: how much energy we will have … where
that energy will come from … what it will cost … and whether there will be
enough energy to lift more families out of poverty.
It’s
about simulations, scenarios, and monsters conjured up by computer models that
should never be used to chart government policy – especially on matters that
will profoundly affect our livelihoods, living standards, life spans, and
dreams of a better future.
So
hold onto your wallets, and hope you can hold onto your jobs, homes, and cars.
You’re about to be put on a wild political roller coaster. And don’t expect
much honesty, transparency, or accountability from climate Armageddonites.
_______________
Paul Driessen is senior policy advisor
for the Congress of Racial Equality and Center for the Defense of Free
Enterprise, and author of Eco-Imperialism:
Green power ∙ Black death (www.Eco-Imperialism.com)
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