12/21/2007 1:54:24 AM
And what exactly is lame about it?
12/21/2007 3:02:27 AM
It's just how they do things.I've already switched over to these things, I just wish they'd start making them with less/smaller magnetic ballast so you don't have those absolutely massive white chunks of plastic at the bottom of the bulb.Looks like ass on the torpedo bulb lights.This would only be lame if they forced people to switch to something ridiculously expensive like LED light bulbs or something.Also:http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/reps/enduse/er01_us.html
12/21/2007 3:08:16 AM
Don't put blatantly misleading information in the thread title. It's not as though feds are going to come around and confiscate people's regular bulbs, or arrest you for having them. It's a regulatory thing more or less in keeping with what the industry was going to do anyway. It's not substantially different from making car manufacturers meet emissions requirements.
12/21/2007 3:09:17 AM
I don't have a big problem with it--as long as they can make the bulbs so they don't put out such shitty-looking light. Apparently, that problem has been solved:http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=cfls.pr_cfls_colorhttp://www.usnews.com/articles/business/economy/2007/12/19/faq-the-end-of-the-light-bulb-as-we-know-it.html
12/21/2007 3:20:42 AM
12/21/2007 5:44:31 AM
12/21/2007 9:55:19 AM
Well, since they require substantially more energy and resources to produce, requiring people to put CFLs in places such as attics, spare rooms, crawl spaces, sheds, and closets where they will rarely and perhaps never be used will make us all poorer while wasting resources. As such, the optimal solution is for everyone to replace the lights they actually use for more than 200 hours a year with CFLs and put cheaper Incandescent lights in the odd places where they will only be used 5 hours a year. If a person does not do it this way, such as installing too few CFLs or too many CFLs, then they are primarily hurting their own wallets in either electric bills or shopping bills. By passing a law, instead of many people misallocating and buying too few CFLs, everyone will be misallocating by buying too many CFLs; just as surely as if they had banned CFLs because they consume far more energy to produce.
12/21/2007 11:31:29 AM
this is fucking retarted. who is the government to tell me what kind of fucking lightbulbs to use.
12/21/2007 12:45:26 PM
fine with me--we already use these anyway. our power bill is fabulous
12/21/2007 3:24:35 PM
maybe i do not want to pay 3x for a lightbulb in a light fixture that i use minimally to which the savings on energy would be negligible.
12/21/2007 3:47:04 PM
cry me a riverOMG I'm going to spend 10 more dollars over the next five years![Edited on December 21, 2007 at 3:51 PM. Reason : .]
12/21/2007 3:50:56 PM
^^
12/21/2007 5:44:56 PM
Erecting a nuissance business is a little different then buying lightbulbAlso, you are forgetting that this is the FEDERAL gov't stepping in; not a city local ordinance.
12/21/2007 5:49:12 PM
Same mentality. "I don't like/don't have a use for/can't use/was conned into buying/can't control myself from using/can't afford/wish other people didn't have something, so it should be illegal.And you're right, erecting a business is different from buying a lightbulb. In one instance, you pay more money, in the other, people don't get hired, the public doesn't get what they want and tax money is rejected.Oh, and the point about it being the federal government. Such bans on light bulbs started as local bans. Like I said, first they came for the smokers...
12/21/2007 6:01:19 PM
12/21/2007 6:38:10 PM
Wait wait, someone plz explain why this is bad again? So the federal government is going to mandate retailers sell only energy efficient bulbs by a certain year. This doesn't mean you're going to have to go out January 1, 2012 and replace every single bulb in your house. It just means that if a bulb burns out in your house after said date, when you go to the store to buy a replacement, it is going to be an energy efficient bulb instead of an incandescent bulb.Ooo... big deal.. /sarcasm
12/21/2007 6:42:49 PM
In communist Russia light bulb screws you.
12/21/2007 7:29:42 PM
12/21/2007 7:45:00 PM
12/21/2007 7:55:51 PM
This will save people many times the cost of the original bulb, it makes perfect economic and regulatory sense. It will also dramatically reduce energy consumption nationwide. Its not as Draconian a measure as say, telling people who they can or can't marry.
12/21/2007 8:01:06 PM
^ Why? Is it your assertion that people are too stupid to use the right bulb for the right job? All the benefits you list will be realized simply from their invention and deployment, not thanks to an act of congress banning alternatives. If I am right and most people will figure it out then this law will increase energy consumption nationwide as millions of CFLs are manufactured that should not have been, increasing the cost people pay for both bulbs and scarce resources that had alternative uses. "So, yes, this is a bad. But, of course, it is not really that big a deal; which is why Congress felt confident in using it to make a political statement. Those that are harmed by this law will not figure it out until 2012, when they will be the problem of the 112th Congress. But everyone gets to see how enlightened today's 110th Congress is when it comes to the environment; and so close to an election too."
12/21/2007 8:18:31 PM
12/21/2007 8:54:53 PM
"I don't mind. I love the taste of Mercury!"
12/21/2007 9:15:21 PM
For the same reason the Governor of North Carolina has to come out and impose restrictions on water usage. Because people are either too stupid to realize that they should be doing it, too lazy to do it, or to flippant to care.
12/21/2007 9:22:10 PM
12/21/2007 9:40:46 PM
12/21/2007 10:08:21 PM
12/21/2007 10:08:44 PM
12/21/2007 10:11:34 PM
Home Depot has 4 packs of 60W equivalent CFLs for $2.97. I doubt incandescents are much cheaper.
12/21/2007 11:20:15 PM
12/21/2007 11:28:13 PM
^ the problem is some kids go take EC 201/202/205 and come out thinking they're economic experts with a few simple supply-and-demand graphs and think those can explain and/or fix everything
12/22/2007 12:55:46 AM
12/22/2007 1:15:52 AM
HUR, even if we accept that you are 100% correct that creating a market to set prices will gauge the poor without curtailing consumption by the rich (all evidence to the contrary), let us look at what reality has done instead. Instead of a market of everyone paying a going rate for water, we have water being allocated by government set prices which differ not by how much it costs to supply, but by government price fixing. Farmers often pay 1/100th as much for water as their city counterparts. Since farmers owning thousands of acres are far more wealthy than your average renter in the city, what we are in effect doing is charging the rich far less than the poor for water (this is a bigger deal out west where water is regionally shared than it is in North Carolina where supplies are predominantly local). As such, since your rich yuppie with the 40k yard has probably been clever enough to link himself with either a local farm or get himself metered as a farm, then merely raising his bill to match the rest of us would be a great start. Why in the world would someone allocate water this way? Simple: once you decide to allocate a resource using the political system, just ask who has more influence over the political system? The rich represented by a motivated and well funded special interest group, or the poor which cannot be bothered to vote? Now, not only do the poor have less money, but they are also forced to pay higher prices for the same water! And you have the nerve to imply it is I that is insulated from how the world works?
12/22/2007 9:21:52 AM
yep. joe moneybags is north raleigh is rated as a farm. just keep thinking that.
12/22/2007 10:21:58 AM
^he was making a national argument you simpleton.^^exactamundo.
12/22/2007 11:08:03 AM
This is just like the ethanol debacle.This isn't happening because the government wants us to become green.This is happening because the light bulb manufacturers are ponying up shit tons of lobbying cash to get their products mandated.Why wouldnt you want legislation to FORCE your consumers to buy bulbs that:-Cost three times as much or more-Have relatively low differential of energy savings-Have toxic chemicals (mercury as has been pointed out)-Have terrible light gamma-Consumers generally aren't buying because its a mediocre productIf they REALLY wanted to go green, they should be MANDATING LED lights. At least then it would drive the cost of production down and make LED lights lower to entry. The one good thing about them is, even at 40-50 bucks per light, they actually PAY OFF over the course of 4-5 years and they have clean light, virtually never go bad, and aren't toxic to dispose of.
12/22/2007 12:59:41 PM
^ We have a winner folks.
12/22/2007 7:05:13 PM
^^ bingo. I wonder how much the CFL companies paid Congress to get this thing passed. Kinda reminds me of DuPont creating the CFC scare so they could sell more chemicals
12/22/2007 9:35:42 PM
12/23/2007 12:11:12 AM
Wait ... so how can the Federal government outlaw regular bulbs exactly? Congress regulates interstate commerce. So if I run a company locally that produces conventional light bulbs and only sell them in-state, would this ban apply? I totally want to start a "local organic compassionately-raised light bulbs" company.Having asked that ... I hate fluorescent light of all forms. Just as a matter of aesthetics and taste. This legislation is the functional equivalent of the federal government mandating that pants manufacturers only produce bell bottoms.[Edited on December 24, 2007 at 2:08 PM. Reason : foo]
12/24/2007 2:04:19 PM
What century are you living in? As of the Gonzales v. Raich (2005) decision the Interstate Commerce Clause has no teeth left. Congress can regulate any activity, even non-economic activities taking place entirely within a single state.
12/24/2007 2:12:51 PM
^Hmmm. I understood the rationale behind banning medical marijuana; otherwise the government would need a "border patrol" at every state border to keep the drug from being trafficked. I'm not so sure the government could make an argument they have a compelling interest in stopping "light bulb trafficking" (although I'd love to see that one hit the Supreme Court).
12/24/2007 2:24:58 PM
drugs are bad ummm k
12/24/2007 2:52:58 PM
12/24/2007 3:23:20 PM
12/25/2007 2:45:26 PM
12/25/2007 3:55:20 PM
Too true. The supreme court was just one check against government power. That it is no longer functioning is no excuse for politicians running amuck.
12/25/2007 10:49:29 PM
I don't understand why all y'all dislike fluorescent light so much. Perhaps I'm just used to it. I do love LEDs, though.
12/25/2007 11:49:51 PM
12/25/2007 11:55:41 PM