[Vision2020] Cooling on Warming

Art Deco art.deco.studios at gmail.com
Thu Mar 28 09:13:55 PDT 2013


  [image: The New York Times] <http://www.nytimes.com/>

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March 27, 2013
Cooling on Warming By GAIL
COLLINS<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/oped/columnists/gailcollins/index.html>

Is spring actually here? We are definitely getting tired of snow stories.
It’s time for some sun. And then the drought stories!

At which point we will ask ourselves: What ever happened to worrying about
global warming? You may remember what a big deal President Obama made about
climate change in his Inaugural Address. It definitely looked as if the
ozone layer was making a comeback. Later, in the State of the Union speech,
Obama came back to his battle cry again and urged Congress “to get
together, pursue a bipartisan, market-based solution to climate change,
like the one John McCain and Joe Lieberman worked on together a few years
ago.”

Urging the House and Senate to follow the lead of the two most notorious
shape shifters in recent political history was perhaps not a favorable
omen.

Nor was the fact that earlier this month, a deeply noncontroversial Senate
resolution commemorating International Women’s Day had to be taken back and
edited because someone objected to a paragraph — which had been in an
almost identical version passed in the last Congress — stating that women
in developing countries “are disproportionately affected by changes in
climate because of their need to secure water, food and fuel for their
livelihood.”

You may be wondering who the objecting senator was. Normally, these things
are supposed to be kind of confidential, but in this case the lawmaker in
question is proud to let you know that he is — yes! — Ted Cruz of Texas.

“A provision expressing the Senate’s views on such a controversial topic as
‘climate change’ has no place in a supposedly noncontroversial resolution
requiring consent of all 100 U.S. senators,” a Cruz spokesman said.

Do you think everything in the world is now about Senator Ted Cruz? Sure
seems like it. Although I would discount the rumors that he is responsible
for the helium shortage or the sinkhole epidemic.

There was a time, children, when the Republican Party was a hotbed of
environmental worrywarts. The last big clean air act of the Bush I
administration passed the House 401 to 21. But no more, no more. You’re not
going to get any sympathy for controlling climate change from a group that
doesn’t believe the climate is actually changing. As Tom DeLay, the former
House majority leader, used to say, “Only nature can change the climate — a
volcano, for instance.”

It’s sort of ironic. These are the same folks who constantly seed their
antideficit speeches with references to our poor, betrayed descendants.
(“This is a burden our children and grandchildren will have to bear.”)
Don’t you think the children and grandchildren would appreciate being
allowed to hang onto the Arctic ice cap?

In his cheerleading State of the Union speech, the president did mention
that if Congress, by any wild chance, failed to take action, the
administration would do some things on its own. The Obama White House
accomplished quite a bit without legislative help during the first term,
imposing some big new regulations on automobile fuel efficiency,
encouraging the production of biofuels and creating new standards on home
appliances. It’s a pretty impressive record, given the fact that the mere
implementation of a Bush-era regulation on light bulb efficiency was enough
to spark the Michele Bachmann Light Bulb Freedom of Choice Act, and Senator
Rand Paul’s historic dual-purpose rant claiming that the administration
favored “a woman’s right to an abortion, but you don’t favor a woman’s or a
man’s right to choose what kind of light bulb.”

The light bulb standards survived. The world continues to turn.

But a carbon tax/fee is the key to controlling climate change. That or just
letting the next generation worry about whether the Jersey Shore is going
to wind up lapping Trenton. Currently, majority sentiment in Congress is to
hope for the best and pass the baton to the grandchildren. (When it comes
to rising-sea-level denial, the champion may be North Carolina, where the
Legislature has voted to base state coastal management policy on historic
trends rather than anything the current experts have to say. “This means
that even though North Carolina scientists predict 39 inches of sea-level
rise within the century, North Carolina, by its own law, is only allowed to
prepare for 8. King Canute would be so proud,” said Senator Sheldon
Whitehouse of Rhode Island in a recent speech.)

Congressional stalwarts are working new carbon-tax legislation, but don’t
hold your breath. This month, during a free-for-all of amendments in the
Senate budget debate, Whitehouse actually did propose a nonbinding
resolution establishing “a fee on carbon pollution.” The amendment failed,
41 to 58.

“We were pretty stoked at how well it did. It was 42 counting Frank
Lautenberg, who wasn’t there,” Whitehouse said in a phone interview.

That’s the ticket. When all else fails, we’re going for major league
optimism. The grandchildren will at least appreciate the perseverance.




-- 
Art Deco (Wayne A. Fox)
art.deco.studios at gmail.com
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