Imagine an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting where all the members showed up
drunk and with extra cases of wine, beer, and booze to keep them happy. Now
imagine that that same group of drunks was empowered to make trillions of
dollars worth of economic decisions for everybody in the world. This absurd
scenario swiftly summarizes the United Nations Climate Change
Conference beginning
today<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3680829:5374127038:m:1:147140772:232C959A17E20939AD244967B38BDA85>,
and lasting through December 18, in Copenhagen.

Despite the fact that the entire conference is founded on the belief that
human economic activity, especially flying and driving, is emitting levels
of greenhouse gasses that will soon kill us all, plutocrats from around the
world have marshaled over 1,200 limos and 140 private
planes<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3680835:5374127038:m:1:147140772:232C959A17E20939AD244967B38BDA85>to
travel to and around Copenhagen over the next two weeks. When they are
not participating in the world’s oldest
profession<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3680836:5374127038:m:1:147140772:232C959A17E20939AD244967B38BDA85>,
conferees will be negotiating over a successor treaty to the 1997 Kyoto
Protocol which obligated most developed nations to reduce their greenhouse
emissions by 5 percent below 1990 baseline levels by 2012.

So how did those Kyoto emissions reduction pledges turnout? According to U.N.
data<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3680837:5374127038:m:1:147140772:232C959A17E20939AD244967B38BDA85>,
between 2000 and 2006, the 27 European signatories actually
*increased*their emissions by 0.1%. Canada even saw a 21.3% emissions
rise. Meanwhile,
the U.S., who was not bound by the treaty since the U.S. Senate voted 95-0
not to subject our economy to costly regulations that China and India were
specifically exempted
from<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3680838:5374127038:m:1:147140772:232C959A17E20939AD244967B38BDA85>,
actually reduced our emissions by 3% over the same time period.

One key reason Europe failed to meet their Kyoto obligations was the
tremendous cost of reducing emissions,
estimated<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3680839:5374127038:m:1:147140772:232C959A17E20939AD244967B38BDA85>at
$67.75 billion to $170.84 billion through 2008. Because of the high
costs
of reducing emissions, Copenhagen is seen, especially by Europeans, as an
opportunity to force the U.S. to join the other developed countries required
to reduce emissions. The economic stakes are huge. Nick Main, global
managing partner for climate change and sustainability at the consulting
firm Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, tells the Los Angeles Times: “One of the
reasons that this negotiation is difficult is it really does involve issues
of competitive and comparative advantage between countries. This is really
an economic debate of, ‘How do you pay the costs?’”

And the costs to our economy would be huge. A Heritage Foundation
analysis<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3680840:5374127038:m:1:147140772:232C959A17E20939AD244967B38BDA85>of
Waxman-Markey found that this energy tax would have serious
implications
throughout the economy. For a household of four, energy costs (electric,
natural gas, gasoline expenses) would rise by $436 in 2012 and by $1,241 by
2035, averaging $829 over that period. Higher energy costs would increase
the cost of many other products and services. Overall, Waxman-Markey would
reduce gross domestic product by $393 billion annually and by a total of
$9.4 trillion by 2035.

The Obama administration is sadly mistaken if it believes they can
unilaterally submit the American people to such an economic disaster. Even
Senators within the President’s own party have expressed grave concerns with
the administration’s Copenhagen promises. Sen. Jim Webb (D-VA) recently
wrote<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3680841:5374127038:m:1:147140772:232C959A17E20939AD244967B38BDA85>the
President: “Although details have not been made available, recent
statements by Special Envoy on Climate Change Todd Stern indicate that
negotiators may be intending to commit the United States to a nationwide
emission reduction program. As you well know from your time in the Senate,
only specific legislation agreed upon in the Congress, or a treaty ratified
by the Senate, could actually create such a commitment on behalf of our
country.”

With unemployment still in the double digits, now is not the time to
subjecting the U.S. economy to costly new rules, especially rules that are
not equally applied to developing countries like India and China.


-- 
$6.4 Billion Stimulus Goes to Phantom Districts
http://watchdog.org/2009/11/17/6-4-billion-stimulus-goes-to-phantom-districts/
So, where is that money now?

-- 
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