Sunday, April 24, 2016

The Climate Carnivel Hustle : Redistribution for Control

 SunEdison          headquarters in Belmont, Calif.

The Ogbjma administration is totally corrupt, right? According to Mr Ogbjma and his fellow travelers in Mr Ogbjma's jihad for transformation of our society, the 'new wave' system is working perfectly and as intended. The corruption is the opposition that stands in their way of limiting individual freedom.

The freedom to chose is a killer for progressive socialism. 

But this isn't anything new for the Ogbjma and his people that are fully involved in reigning in the population's options for having a future to obtain prosperity.

What's happening in Paris, the climate change summit is to organize and implement a "fundamental" change in how countries regulate income and it's distribution among their respective populations. And it's not lost most of us that is paying attention, much of the redistribution revenue from countries that have gained prosperity from fossil energy will go to countries that are destructive and failing and that are controlled by socialist tyrants or much worse.

I wonder what's behind this strategy?

History of a Climate Con: Al Gore had a revelation: Energy taxes would be a loser for Obama.

By Holman W. Jenkins, Jr. 
April 12, 2016 7:02 p.m. ET

 How’s this for an irony? As state attorneys general gin up a fake securities-fraud case against oil companies over climate change, starting with Exxon Mobil Corp. , the Securities and Exchange Commission has launched a real securities-fraud investigation of the nation’s biggest solar power company. SunEdison’s sin: allegedly exaggerating its amount of cash on hand to resist an impending bankruptcy.
 
A little history is in order to appreciate the cynical nadir of climate politics in the U.S. You wouldn’t know it from media coverage, but the closest the U.S. Congress came to passing a serious (if still ineffectual) cap-and-trade program was during the George W. Bush administration in early 2007. Then, within days of Barack Obama’s election in 2008, Al Gore announced a revelation: the “climate crisis” no longer required such unpleasant, de facto energy taxes. The problem could be solved with painless handouts to green entrepreneurs.  Hooray! Everybody loves a handout. The activist duo Michael Shellenberger and Ted Nordhaus noted that the shift in Mr. Gore’s thinking was “highly significant.” “He knows that cap-and-trade, and most any new regulation, would raise energy prices—a political nonstarter during a recession.”      
 
A proposed oil tax swiftly disappeared from the Obama transition website. With control of all three branches of government in hand, the imminent climate threat to humanity suddenly appeared not so urgent after all—passing a “signature” health-care law did. Democrats, it turned out, were in favor of climate root canal only when Republicans were in charge.
 
OK, this is old hat, but what should be striking is how thoroughly the climate lobby has played along. Its main function today has become stringing up apostates as a distraction from Democratic unwillingness to propose policies costly enough that they would actually influence the rate of increase of atmospheric greenhouse gases.
 
Take the Exxon prosecution, promoted by the attorneys general of New York and California and a host of their Democratic brethren. Though the case is never meant to be adjudicated in a courtroom, suppose it were and suppose a jury somehow found for the plaintiffs. How would Exxon pay a securities-fraud judgment? By selling oil and gas.  Attacking Exxon is not climate policy making; it’s a distraction. Its purpose is to foster an atmosphere conducive to the Gore-Obama green pork-barrel strategy.

Or take Sheldon Whitehouse, the U.S. senator who has gained notoriety lately by urging the Justice Department to launch a RICO investigation of climate skeptics. He doesn’t urge his Rhode Island constituents to adopt the life-style sacrifices that would actually reduce fossil-fuel consumption. Mr. Whitehouse’s devotion to understanding climate science at all is so microscopic that, in his latest letter of complaint to the Journal, the only science he cites is a Gallup poll.

Or take Paul Krugman’s columns in the New York Times insisting that if you don’t vote Democratic this fall, the planet is doomed. The colossal unmentionable is that climate activism today exists to promote the Democratic agenda, whatever it may be this week. One thing it isn’t, though, is advocacy of, or even mention of, policies that might actually alter the course of climate change.

The president’s power-plant rules, even if climate models are accurate, would affect global temperature a century hence by 0.03 degrees Celsius. His fuel mileage rules, though costly to Detroit and a life-support for Tesla, would have even less effect. The renewable subsidies that SunEdison exploited so recklessly that it may soon be in chapter 11 are good for killing birds. The non-binding Paris agreement Mr. Obama signed in December explicitly stipulates that India and China , the two fast-growing emitters, will keep on emitting as if no agreement had been signed.  We could go on—not that, under any circumstances, a serious whack at global greenhouse emissions was ever in the cards.
 
Last week, Oxford University scientists said that, to avoid serious climate risks, all building of gas and coal plants must stop this year—which isn’t going to happen. Does this mean you should despair over a possible human effect on climate? No. Climate models are highly uncertain and suggest a broad range of possible outcomes; the media reports only the worst-case scenarios.

And left out is the most important variable of all, the near-certainty of large changes in how humans produce and distribute energy over the next 100 years thanks entirely to the independent advance of technology. In the meantime, if the attorneys general are looking for real disclosure violations to prosecute, the place to start is the climate lobby’s support—expressed in increasingly vituperative and vicious terms—for subsidies and handouts in the name of climate change that will have no impact on climate change.
WSJ  4-14-2016

No comments: