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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather- | |||
Texas Congressman vs. the EPA and Champ's Climate | |||
2015-08-11 | |||
A nifty chart at the end of the linked article, which is what caught my eye Sunday. Also an interactive pro-con debate, at the end, where the UN is cited on both sides of the argument! Champ is quoted as saying 14 of the hottest 15 years in history have come in in the first 15 years of this century. I wonder what planet he was on?
![]() Remaking America, in Bill Ayres image. But unlike the 1970s, when President Richard Nixon created the Environmental Protection Agency and President Jimmy Carter the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Energy, Obama has pushed his agenda with little support, or even the involvement, of Congress. He's done so almost entirely through authority granted to the EPA by an all-but-unanimous Congress decades ago and upheld in most respects by subsequent Supreme Court decisions. There you have it. Carter and Nixon in the same sentence! But Champ is unlike either one. Matched against his aggressive agenda has been equally furious push-back by Republicans in Congress. Leading the fight has been San Antonio U.S. Rep. Lamar Smith, a Southern Methodist University-trained lawyer and Yale graduate who has used his perch atop the House Science committee to wage war with the EPA like few others have. "The Environmental Protection Agency has released some of the most expensive and expansive regulations in its history," Smith said at July 9 hearing featuring EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy. "These rules will cost billions of dollars, burden American families and diminish the competitiveness of American industry around the world." Yeah, so what's yer point, Congressman? Nearly every Texas Republican has been outspoken against the EPA and any effort to curb the energy industry. But it has been Smith, in his role as committee chairman, who has spent the most time railing against what he called the "climate change religion" in a Wall Street Journal op-ed earlier this year. Another Rantburg reader discovered! Nobody says Einstein' theories are 'settled science', even though scientists have been testing them for a century. For U.S. Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson, D-Dallas, that opposition to the climate change consensus amounts to a dereliction of duty by Smith and the Republican leader who appointed him chairman. Johnson, the top Democrat on the panel, says Congress seems intent on ignoring climate change. And asteroid impacts. Don't forget those concerns!
Depends on what your definition of 'science' is. "While the Obama administration pretends to know The Clean Power Plan, he said, would simply do too little to help stave off climate change to justify the costs it will impose on businesses and consumers of energy. "If implemented, [it] would reduce global temperatures by only 0.01, or one one-hundredth of a degree Celsius. ... As a result of the rule, energy costs for Texans could increase by up to 20 percent in 2020. That is the definition of all pain, no gain."
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Posted by:Bobby |
#1 Yellowstone, TW |
Posted by: Frank G 2015-08-11 18:35 |