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Jul 14 2009, 11:10 am
Sarah Palin's Cap-and-Trade Takedown
I usually don't resort to pile-ons, but erstwhile Atlantic Business blogger Conor Clarke, who's serving up his thoughts at the Daily Dish, has a fun, smart and necessary take down of Sarah Palin's splendidly strange cap-and-trade oped in the Washington Post today. Clarke does a smashing job with the heavy fact-lifting, but in the interests of summing up a cascade of wrongness in a single fact, consider this: Palin wrote a 700-word takedown of cap-and-trade that did not include the words pollution, emissions, carbon, or global warming.
Let's think about this for a second.
The point of cap-and-trade is to cap carbon emissions to mitigate pollution. There, that wasn't so hard. Yes, this will raise the price of energy for many Americans. That increase won't be as regressive as she suggests, but it won't be perfectly progressive either. And the overall impact of the cap-and-trade bill on worldwide global warming efforts -- whether it will encourage countries to join the fight or have no bandwagon effect at all -- is also in dispute. But if you're going to debate the policy, debate the policy. There are plenty of grounds to do so!
But this is not the stuff that national comebacks are made of. It's like writing a definitive oped about health care reform that does not include the words spending, costs, coverage, or medicine. Or like a high school student writing a paper about Catcher in the Rye that does not include the words Holden, Salinger, or Catcher in the Rye. At some point, negligence begins to look like you're deliberately avoiding the issue. And this is exactly what Americans mean when they say they're tired of politicians not having a real debate.
Let's think about this for a second.
The point of cap-and-trade is to cap carbon emissions to mitigate pollution. There, that wasn't so hard. Yes, this will raise the price of energy for many Americans. That increase won't be as regressive as she suggests, but it won't be perfectly progressive either. And the overall impact of the cap-and-trade bill on worldwide global warming efforts -- whether it will encourage countries to join the fight or have no bandwagon effect at all -- is also in dispute. But if you're going to debate the policy, debate the policy. There are plenty of grounds to do so!
But this is not the stuff that national comebacks are made of. It's like writing a definitive oped about health care reform that does not include the words spending, costs, coverage, or medicine. Or like a high school student writing a paper about Catcher in the Rye that does not include the words Holden, Salinger, or Catcher in the Rye. At some point, negligence begins to look like you're deliberately avoiding the issue. And this is exactly what Americans mean when they say they're tired of politicians not having a real debate.











Ms. Palin is also wrong to call cap-and-trade a tax. It is worse than a tax because only 15% of the proceeds from auctioned permits go into our national treasury.
– Robert Moen, www.energyplanUSA.com
Actually the number gets closer to 50% (by 2050).
Then again, 15% away from companies that report Multi-Billion dollar profits at the expense of the taxpayer is a lot to lose.
Better the initial 15% than to give any future gains to the companies you represent.
www.deese.com
Sarah Palin was for cap-and-trade before she was against it. Another mavericky reversal. Who can keep up??
http://www.seethroughthepodium.org/issues/climate/environment_mccain.pdf
Of course you realize that these "companies that report Multi-Billion dollar profits" will pass any costs associated with Cap & Trade to the consumer....hence, Cap & Tax.
It is so absurd only Bill Kristol could have written it! :P
Palin the energy wizard tries to lecture Obama, what a joke. there is a very interesting related post at http://iamsoannoyed.com/?page_id=588
Even the CBO doesn't discuss those things except to dismiss them as irrelevan to its analysis, because you cannot quantify their value.
The Cap & Trade legislation, the CBO and its supporters have nothing to say on what quantifiable benefits reduced emissions have, so why should Palin bother?
Even the EPA has said that the Cap-and-Trade bill would have pretty much zero effect on the environment, so it is a big drag on American businesses for no good reason.
Why should Palin address something that even the EPA says the bill doesn't address in any serious fashion?
This is just flat-out dishonesty on your part. You know what the EPA has said, so why did you write a whole post without mentioning what a dishonest piece of legislation this is?
How could you and your commenters fail to mention it? In your attempt at directing some snark Sarah Palin's way, you beclowned yourself.
I wish we could all site down and really talk about these things. It seems on every topic, we are all talking past each other. We need to realize that successful business is an important part of our country, and that we can not kill that goose, but we need to realize that there are a lot of people who want action taken sooner rather than later on what they perceive as a man made global warming issue. Those two groups also happen to not like each other much. But people, they are like two brothers in family. They need to learn to get along a live together. Stop attacking a person, or a politician. Start discussing what issues you have with what they are saying, without and digs or jabs. This is what I have to do with my children, and this is what so called 'elites' should be doing in this country so we can get down to the business of solving our problems.