Page 5.
7/1/2009 5:52:42 PM
yeah there .... i dont see how this is anything other than black/white issue. i can understand partisanship on most issues but this shit is SHIT
7/1/2009 6:31:04 PM
^ well many environmentalist and liberals (non-politicians) do not like it either.Just that in this thread the left wing democrat liberal posters just hear Democrat leader and OBama support "CLEAN AIR" act and they get all happy, excited, and start hitting the bong without really thinking about the contents of this bill or its effect on our country.
7/1/2009 7:55:46 PM
7/1/2009 7:59:46 PM
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D995U3RO0&show_article=1
7/1/2009 8:37:05 PM
another victim of global warming
7/1/2009 10:08:31 PM
7/1/2009 11:26:48 PM
^^^^that's not my entire defense of cap and trade. it's a rebuttal to people who think they can predict a century (or even a decade) out on what cap and trade could bring.in fact looking back at my post, i said exactly what you said i wasn't saying:
7/2/2009 1:42:07 AM
^^while its true that nobody knows 100% for certain how cap and trade will work in our country, there is plenty of evidence it will hurt us. Look to countless European Countries, Australia, New Zealand, and even California for failure of cap and trade.
7/2/2009 8:55:18 AM
7/2/2009 9:21:28 AM
7/2/2009 11:05:03 AM
I do not understand why people expect to pay less taxes and get so many tax breaks just by having kids. If you can not afford kids do not have them. Why do I get punished and taxed more because i don't have kids or maybe have 2 kids versus someone who pops out 8 little brats to contribute to world overpopulation and crowding. Beyond the "replacement" rate I think its fucking absurd that taxpayers are forced to subsidize familes or welfare moms who enjoy irresponsibly having rediculously big litters. If you want 8 kids like my g/f's aunt good for you. Don't expect the tax payer to pay for your excessive breeding or whine that you can't afford a 60" TV with all the premium channels.
7/2/2009 12:50:07 PM
7/2/2009 12:52:20 PM
^ ?Legally the only thing parents are responsible for is providing food, shelter, clothing, and not being abusive/neglectful.Cell phones for a 13 yr old, a car to drive, legos, college tuition, or tons of video games are not required. The children could receive the same level of support with or without the tax credits/deductions. For all we know julie ann with her 8 kids is using the additional money received from various tax credits to buy booze, a new recliner, or to take crazy vacations after dropping the kids wth her mom.[Edited on July 2, 2009 at 1:00 PM. Reason : a]
7/2/2009 12:58:43 PM
i'm just answering your question. the kids didn't make the choice to be had. that's the argument for giving benefits to people who have kids. i don't like it either. but that's the argument. i don't know what the right answer is. i think part of the right answer is better sex ed and access to birth control for the poor.
7/2/2009 1:05:11 PM
if they mother can't afford to raise them, give them to a relative who can or mandatory adoption.but let's not stray from this bill, that sarijoul thoroughly approves of and told his Rep to vote for!
7/2/2009 1:48:10 PM
or you could misrepresent me.i've said what problems i have with the bill. but i still support it over nothing. and i also think we're probably not going to get much better right now because of the farm and/or coal states' representatives.[Edited on July 2, 2009 at 1:51 PM. Reason : and mandatory adoption? really? you think that's EVER going to happen?]
7/2/2009 1:50:35 PM
kevin drum via andrew sullivan:
7/2/2009 2:42:57 PM
oh, and it gives money to welfare moms, too. that's why I like it!come on. we don't need this bullshit welfare legislation to spur investment in "green technologies." Those technologies will be invented either way. All this will do is line the pockets of special interests and welfare moms. Note how companies can buy offsets from Al fucking Gore in order to get around this bill. Hmmm, convenient?
7/2/2009 6:35:12 PM
7/3/2009 9:40:42 PM
It reminds me of the Catholic church selling indulgences back in the day
7/4/2009 1:46:49 AM
7/4/2009 12:59:34 PM
the fuel economy standards fueled investment in fuel economy technology both here and in europe. this is a similar sort of limitation. but since there is no way to determine the acceptable level of emissions from every source, this is just a market-based approach. unfortunately special interests have kinda stacked the deck in their favor to a certain extent. and there definitely were taxes to pay for all those other technologies you talk about. they just weren't specific to those technologies.
7/4/2009 1:08:20 PM
and you don't think there are special interests on the other side pushing the issue, as well? *cough*AlGore*cough*
7/4/2009 7:29:41 PM
7/6/2009 7:29:27 PM
I'm not entirely sure what you are trying to say there, Hunt...
7/6/2009 7:45:26 PM
Sorry, it wasn't in response to any particular post, just a general point I thought was interesting. After re-reading it, it is a little ambiguous if one hasn't read the article.[Edited on July 6, 2009 at 8:07 PM. Reason : .]
7/6/2009 8:06:28 PM
7/6/2009 8:14:43 PM
7/6/2009 9:11:47 PM
^ your argument only works in the case that GHG are actually a problem. Something which has yet to be truly proven either way. No one is paying a price for GHG emission right now because there's no point in doing so.And, CO2 not having a price doesn't adequately explain why there is so little investment in alternative energy. Rather, the sheer inefficiency and lack of any profitability prevent any interest in these technologies. Yes, it's a bit of the "chicken and egg" scenario, because no one wants to invest in a crude technology but the tech can't get past "crude" without investment, I recognize that. However, we accept that technology gets created either way. When oil prices surge high enough, people will again be interested in alternative energy.And, a Cap and trade system might help alleviate the CO2 "problem," but this particular one certainly doesn't do anything.
7/7/2009 7:33:41 AM
7/7/2009 8:17:31 AM
^^ Um. I was directly responding your comment that these technologies would be developed eventually. That simply need not be the case. No matter how you feel about global warming, it is a simple fact that there will be very little incentive to invent new technologies that reduce ghg emissions if there is no cost associated with these emissions. The question of whether there "should" be a cost to emitting ghgs is a related but separate question.
7/7/2009 8:38:05 AM
7/7/2009 10:45:49 AM
7/7/2009 1:53:58 PM
7/7/2009 6:37:34 PM
^ I think you're losing track of your arguments, friend.First, you said these technologies would be developed w/out government intervention. Now you're saying that these technologies are incredibly unprofitable. Boy I bet businesses are climbing over themselves to invest in incredibly unprofitable technologies. Look, its pretty cheap to fuel our society on oil. However, it won't be so cheap once we are start essentially charging people for the emissions that result from using oil.Now, "should" we actually set a price for ghg emissions? That depends first on whether you think global warming is real. You don't think it is, so you don't think we should. But, hey, we are not talking about (again). We are talking about your specific, original claim that carbon saving technologies would be developed in the absence of government interviention. There is simply no reason to believe that would be the case, given the arguments I have layed out.The good news is that you now apparently agree with me. Without a price set on ghgs, fossil fuels are dirt cheap. So pour money into inventing new fuel sources that are unlikely to be near as cheap??? Glad we got this cleared up.
7/7/2009 8:53:21 PM
7/7/2009 9:22:58 PM
Lets get away from the global warming debate for a minute (even though it was the impetus for this bill).This quote is telling:
7/8/2009 12:59:45 AM
7/8/2009 7:26:02 AM
Just so everyone knows, the impact of capping ghg emissions at X amount is exactly the same as taxing ghg emissions to reduce ghg emissions to X amount. The only difference is that the government does not typically capture as much revenue under cap and trade because some permits are given away and not auctioned off. If all permits are auctioned off, they are exactly the same. Personally, I prefer cap and trade because it is 1) more politically feasible (why lament what you can't have) and 2) it gives you more certainty about what ghg emissions will be in the future (its hard to figure out what tax you need to reduce ghg emissions to X level and could change with time). [Edited on July 8, 2009 at 7:56 AM. Reason : ``]
7/8/2009 7:43:02 AM
7/8/2009 7:53:49 AM
^ Haha personally, I don't think aaronburro gives a fuck about this issue. He just like pissing "liberal hippies" off. At least, I hope that's it. I can understand trolling more than I can understand a willful disrespect for the environmental resources that sustain our existence and an arrogant dismissal of the scientific community that studies our impact on them.I'll keep my fingers crossed that aaronburro will drop the act.
7/8/2009 8:09:32 AM
7/8/2009 10:21:11 AM
7/13/2009 1:06:40 PM
exactly. if you want to get rid forms of power that release carbon, then tax releasing carbon. Increase the tax over the next 10-20 years. You'll get technologies that capture the carbon instead of releasing it plus you'll make alternative energy more competitive without singling out individual technologies.
7/13/2009 1:18:39 PM
the first half of this video handles the Waxman-Markey debate pretty wellhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Psfn6iOfS8
7/13/2009 2:45:02 PM
7/13/2009 11:24:12 PM
7/16/2009 9:07:27 PM
7/16/2009 9:26:34 PM
He called her Mam to.
7/17/2009 9:09:40 PM