| Senate Not Settled on Cap and Trade | | Print | |
| Written by James Heiser | ||||||||
| Wednesday, 11 November 2009 15:30 | ||||||||
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Despite the decision last week of Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) to disregard the rules of the Senate to move the Kerry-Boxer bill out of committee, it seems that the prospect of pummeling voters with thousands of dollars a year in new taxes to fund a massive transfer of wealth from the First World to the Third World is proving untenable on the floor of the Senate even for Democrats such as Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.). The U.N. chief met with members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee late Tuesday afternoon to discuss the status of negotiations on a new international pact to slow global warming before 192 nations meet in Copenhagen next month. The meeting came a day after President Barack Obama said he was willing to go to Copenhagen if his presence would help clinch a deal. Ban apparently backed away from recent comments by Rajendra Pachauri of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, in which he castigated the Obama administration for failing to deliver on cap and trade. Now, rather than a race to adopt a treaty at the December conference in Copenhagen, Ban appears to be conceding that it will be necessary for the internationalists to pursue their goals more slowly. On Tuesday, Kerry said that the bill would come to the floor "as soon as practical" and he was confident that when it did, the U.S. Senate would do its part. Without the United States agreeing to the plans that will be formally proposed in Copenhagen, any treaty would be “dead on arrival.” Regulations that would cripple industry and drain hundreds of billions of dollars from industrialized nations that are already suffering because of the grave economic troubles wracking the world economy cannot be implemented unless the Americans concede to carrying a substantial portion of the bill.
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Rmoen
said:
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... From my vantage point, support for cap-and-trade (i.e. climate bill) has evaporated. Daily I read editorials, comments and letters-to-the-editor from all over the nation. When the House passed the cap-and-trade bill it was maybe 2-to-1 against cap-and-trade, opinion now is off the charts against it. This agrees with recent polls: 'attempting' to slow climate change with cap-and-trade is a low priority among Americans. Frankly, I don't see Americans supporting cap-and-trade or any CO2 regulation until we have our own 'Climate Truth Commission.' ...and no longer rely upon the climate opinions of the United Nations. The UN is a biased political organization whose climate forecasts haven't proven prescient. The United States needs our own objective, transparent climate commission to think-through global warming. -- Robert Moen, www.energyplanUSA |
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Flu-Bird
said:
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Reject CAP & TRADE This whole CAP & TRADE should be completly rejected its just bigger goverment more usless regulations and higher taxes on us all and this whole GLOBAL WARMING is the biggist fruad ever laid upon the world |
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Apparently, the Senate will not be voting on “cap and trade” any time soon, and all UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon can do about it is tap his foot impatiently and complain to the media.
