“So,
have you enjoyed the debate over health care reform?” Paul Krugman
asked in late September. “Have you been impressed by the civility
of the discussion and the intellectual honesty of reform opponents?
“If so, you’ll love the next big debate: the fight over climate
change.” the New York Times columnist wrote.
Sarcasm
aside, the discussion – if one can call it that - of global warming
is going to be painful, particularly if the make-Obama-fail crowd
has its way, and if the major media does its usually sloppy job
of defining the issue. Nonsense like “death panels” come to mind.
The
whole world is anticipating the U.N.-sponsored climate talks in
December in Copenhagen where another attempt – post-Koyoto – will
be made to reach an international agreement on cutting greenhouse
gas emissions by sharply reducing carbon emissions into the atmosphere.
Washington observers say the original plan was for President Obama
to go to the Danish capital with a pledge from the U.S. to do its
part, backed up by new “cap and trade” regulations enacted by the
U.S. Congress. Now there is speculation he my not go to Copenhagen
at all. And the probability is that if he goes, it will be with
empty hands.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel spelled out the problem in clear, unmistakably,
and probably undiplomatic, clarity. The European Union can get together
in advance and proceed to the Copenhagen talks with a unified position,
she said, the U.S. cannot. What U.S. negotiators can present is
subject to U.S. politics. Therein lies the rub. The European Union
Environment Council met this week in Luxemburg for further work
on its common front. Meanwhile, Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula
da Silva said Monday Brazil wants to arrive at a common position
among all Amazon basin countries for Copenhagen and is considering
inviting presidents of all Amazon states to discuss the issue November.
26. “The issue of climate change is seen in Berlin as one of the
most important facing the world this year as the effort continues
to come up with an agreement to succeed the Kyoto Protocol, which
expires in 2012,” says the German magazine Spiegal. “Germany,
together with the European Union, has set a target of a 20 percent
reduction in CO2 emissions by 2020 relative to 1990 levels. The
EU has said it would up that target to 30 percent if other major
polluters join them. A panel of United Nations scientists has said
that a 25 percent to 40 percent reduction by industrial countries
is necessary to avoid catastrophic consequences stemming from global
warming.”
Legislation
is currently before Congress for a 17 percent reduction in this
country’s CO2 emissions by 2020 relative to 2005 levels, with an
83 percent reduction by 2050. German Environment Minister Sigmar
Gabriel “has been quick to criticize the proposal,” telling Spiegal
the US needs to do more and that when it come to dealing with the
climate claim threat, “the US and Europe live in two different worlds.”
The
U.S. House of representative has already passed a cap-and-trade
climate bill, the Waxman-Markey act – which the Europeans say is
not strong enough – but which if it were enacted would lead to a
reduction in greenhouse gas emissions. As with the healthcare debate
the biggest problem is the Senate and there, the political right
and the Republicans are geared up for a knock-down-drag-out fight.
In
a very real sense, the fate of the world’s deliberations on climate
change and probability of failure at Copenhagen is being held hostage
by the volatile politics of the U.S. The political rights is geared
up to take the President down on this issue and any others they
identify.
The
naked attempt to undermine the Obama Presidency is becoming more
shrill each day. Last week, the cat dragged in none other than Alan
Keyes, a 2008 presidential candidate who is a plaintiff in a lawsuit
challenging Obama’s citizenship. “Obama is a radical communist,
and I think it is becoming clear. That is what I told people in
Illinois and now everybody realizes it’s true,” Keyes told a radio
interviewer. “He is going to destroy this country, and we are either
going to stop him or the United States of America is going to cease
to exist.”
And
the shock troops are ready. In come the “tea bag” people. A few
days ago, the internet web publication sent out an appeal to its
readers to “join the conservative revolution. “Just before the 2008
elections, the conservative economist and commentator Thomas Sowell
warned that a Barack Obama presidency would prove a ‘point of no
return’ for America.” said the appeal. “Why? Because once in power,
Dr. Sowell explained, President Obama and the Democratic majorities
in Congress would effect such radical changes in our nation’s economy,
legal structure and social fabric that there would be no rolling
them back. Today, we stand on the brink of Dr. Sowell’s predictions
coming true.”
The
appeal went on cataloging things on the brink of happening, like
healthcare reform, a “wise Latina” on the Supreme Court, and progressive
income taxes. Among them is the charge that we are on the brink
of “enacting ‘cap- and-trade’ legislation that will cripple American
competitiveness in the global economy, double home utility bills,
add thousands to the cost of new cars, and cost U.S. workers an
estimated 2.5 million jobs per year - while doing next to nothing
to impact a ‘global warming’ problem that is largely fictitious
to begin with.”
The
“conservative revolution” says, “here in the conservative underground
you’re free to speak your mind” even if (among other things) “...
you don’t believe that Barack Obama is the Second Coming of J.C.
(unless that J.C. is Jimmy Carter) and “... you don’t believe that
man-made “global warming” is a proven fact - much less an excuse
for destroying the U.S. economy - just because Al Gore says so,
especially when hundreds of respected scientists publicly disagree
with him.”
“Barack
Hussein Obama is actively pursuing cap-and-trade legislation,” says
the CR. “Ironically, instead of taxing the very air we breathe,
it would instead, in a manner of speaking, tax the air we exhale
and give the government unprecedented control over the economy and
American businesses.”
Admittedly,
Human Events and the people activating the “conservative revolution”
are the far right. However, as has been demonstrated clearly in
the campaign against healthcare reform, the efforts fit right in
with the political objectives of the broader political right and
the current Republican Party leadership
Consider
the views of Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK), the ranking Republican on
the U.S. Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works, who says
he plans to be in Copenhagen in December as a “ one-man truth squad.”
He recently told an interviewer “God’s still up there. We’re going
through these cycles. … I really believe that a lot of people are
in denial who want to hang their hat on the fact, that they believe
is a fact, that man-made gases, anthropogenic gases, are causing
global warming. The science really isn’t there.”
Inhofe
recent reiterated what he told the Senate back in 2003, that “much
of the debate over global warming is predicated on fear, rather
than science,” global warming the “greatest hoax ever perpetrated
on the American people” and that “environmental extremists exploit
the issue for fundraising purposes, raking in millions of dollars,
even using federal taxpayer dollars to finance their campaigns.”
The
Right has added new elements to its propaganda this time around.
In addition to claiming the Obama Administration is out to wreck
the economy they are attempting to convince black people that action
on climate change is not in their interest (witness black “conservatives”
Thomas Sowell and Alan Keyes). As if African Americans and other
peoples of color should somehow have less concern than other people
for the future of life on the planet. Or, as if many people recognize
that those communities most immediately and directly threatened
by rising sea levels are in the delta areas of Africa and Asia.
Actually,
all working people have ample reason to support early and effective
action on climate change. U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu recently
joined in the call for meaningful action by Congress.
“Comprehensive
energy legislation will unleash the American innovation machine
to create new industries and clean source of energy to power our
economy,” he said. “It is the single most important step we can
take to secure our economic prosperity and leave a healthier planet
for future generations.” A national commitment to resolutely confront
the climate change challenge will facilitate the development and
deployment of new technologies, creating a cleaning environment,
refurbishing the nation’s physical infrastructure and helping to
alleviate the unemployment crisis. We all have a stake in this.
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October
22 , 2009
Issue 347
is
published every Thursday
Executive Editor:
Bill Fletcher, Jr.
Managing Editor:
Nancy Littlefield
Publisher:
Peter Gamble
Est. April 5, 2002
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