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This is My Candidate ?

By
Real Estate Technology with Carmody and Associates LLC

For several years global warming has been the crisis du jour for the environmnentalists, liberal law makers and the media.  We have endured academy awards and Nobel Peace Prizes for AlGore and endless hype from the press. 

Save the RepublicansFor whatever reason, the Republicans have recently started to preach the party line (the Democrat party line) – now at the very moment growing groups of top scientists have declared global warming to be a hoax. 

The administration has sold out oil drilling in ANWR in favor of polar bears at the very time that we look for riots at the gas pumps over high gas prices.  And now Senator McCain, already a disappointment to many, adds his voice to the global warming chants.

Senator McCain is rock solid on my three major issues for the election: Conservative Justices for the Supreme Court, Control of spending and maintenance of Bush tax cuts, and International Security in the Middle East.  But he is wrong, in my view, on global warming and climate.  Senator McCain is still my candidate – but someone should tell him not to push his luck.

The attached article is from Steven Milloy and is drawn from the Competitive Enterprise Institute web site.

My source: http://cei.org/articles/mccain%e2%80%99s-embarrassing-climate-speech

McCain’s Embarrassing Climate Speech
Milloy column on Foxnews.com
by Steven J. Milloy
May 15, 2008

While no one knows who first uttered the sentiment "It’s better to say nothing and seem a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt," Republican presidential hopeful John McCain’s speech this week on climate change certainly supports the phrase’s validity.

McCain spoke at the facilities of Vestas Wind Technology, an Oregon-based firm that manufactures wind-power systems. The irony of the setting was rich given McCain’s outspoken opposition to pork-barrel spending.

He even risked his presidential hopes by criticizing ethanol subsidies ahead of the all-important Iowa caucuses. Next to solar power, however, wind power is the most heavily subsidized form of energy.

Taxpayers cough up an astounding $23.37 per megawatt hour of electricity produced, according to the Wall Street Journal. In contrast, coal and natural gas are only subsidized to a tune of 44 cents and 25 cents, respectively.

McCain lauded wind as a "predictable source of energy." He must have missed this Feb. 27 headline from Reuters: "Loss of wind causes Texas power grid emergency." The electric grid operator was forced to curtail 1,100 megawatts of power to customers within 10 minutes.

"Our economy depends upon clean and affordable alternatives to fossil fuels," McCain stated.

What he’s talking about is not quite clear since our current economy is about 75 percent dependent on fossil fuels and will remain that way for at least the next 25 years, as solar and wind technologies remain only marginal sources of energy.

If anything, we are likely to be even more dependent on fossil fuels in the future as nuclear power, which provides about 20 percent of our electricity, shrinks in availability as a supply of energy.

Although our energy needs are ever-growing, construction of nuclear power plants is not keeping pace — not one has come online in the last 30 years. Even if a few nuke plants are constructed during the next decades, they will not supply enough power to keep nuclear power at the 20 percent level.

McCain then demonstrated how little he knows about the science of global warming.

"No longer do we need to rely on guesswork and computer modeling, because satellite images reveal a dramatic disappearance of glaciers, Antarctic ice shelves and polar ice sheets. And I’ve seen some of this evidence up close…"

Global warming alarmism, however, is entirely based on the "guesswork and computer modeling" that McCain says isn’t necessary. The reason the United Nations relies on "guesswork and computer modeling" is because the glaciers that are receding have been doing so since at least the 19th century, before significant human output of greenhouse gases.

In any event, the melting of glaciers is not evidence that humans are involved. Glaciers have been advancing and retreating for hundreds of millions of years. Just because humans are witnessing changes in glaciers does not mean that humans are causing them; moreover, Antarctic ice is expanding while any melting of Arctic ice is not likely due to warmer air temperatures.

"We have seen sustained drought in the Southwest and across the world average temperatures that seem to reach new records every few years. We have seen a higher incidence of extreme weather events," McCain stated.

But that "sustained drought" is why the Southwest is commonly known as a "desert" — and it was a desert long before industrial emissions of greenhouse gases.

As to global temperature, the world has cooled since 1998 and the latest research from U.N.-approved researchers indicates that more global cooling is on the way. With respect to extreme weather events, I can’t think of a single scientist — even an alarmist scientist — who has the temerity to stand up and link specific weather events with climate change.

McCain’s apparent climate mentor, Al Gore, learned this lesson the hard way last fall.

McCain touted a so-called cap-and-trade system for controlling greenhouse gas emissions, citing the supposed success of the 1990 Clean Air Act amendments’ cap-and-trade system for the sulfur dioxide emissions linked to the alleged phenomenon of acid rain.

But even if acid rain were a genuine environmental problem — and studies leading up to the 1990 law cast significant doubt — controlling sulfur dioxide emissions is many orders of magnitude easier than controlling greenhouse gas emissions.

The volume of sulfur dioxide emissions to be eliminated is much smaller, the sources (coal-fired power plants) are relatively few and the smokestack technology is comparatively inexpensive.

McCain said that "A cap-and-trade policy will send a signal that will be heard and welcomed all across the American economy." This is unlikely since cap-and-trade’s economic harms have been exposed and condemned by the likes of the Congressional Budget Office, the Environmental Protection Agency and renown economists such as Alan Greenspan and Arthur Laffer.

Even the Clinton administration warned of the economic harms that would be caused by cap-and-trade.

Although China, the world’s biggest greenhouse gas emitter, vows not to reduce its emissions, McCain says the U.S. should act anyway. So as China, India and other developing nations become the world's greenhouse gas smokestacks, thereby nullifying any reductions made by the U.S., McCain willingly condemns the U.S. to more expensive and less available energy supplies for no environmental benefit whatsoever.

Undaunted by facts, McCain appears to be programmed with every nonsensical green platitude and policy — a truly worrisome situation since global warming regulation is shaping up to be the most important domestic policy issue of the upcoming election.

Many McCain supporters believe he is the candidate to lead the country at a time of war. But there is a war of sorts at home, too — the struggle against the greens for control over vital domestic energy and economic policy. We can’t afford to lose the latter war, either.

 

Comments(5)

ARDELL DellaLoggia
Better Properties Seattle - Kirkland, WA

I don't blog about politics, but this election is VERY confusing.  I don't feel like we have the right choice on the ballot.  Not for these trying times.

May 20, 2008 07:28 PM
» Bill Burress Nationwide Mortgage Originator
» Bill Burress Nationwide Mortgage Originator - Fort Myers, FL

Ted:

Again, we must hold our nose and vote for the Republican candidate.  For we know the alternative is much much worse.  I enjoyed our discussion yesterday on the phone.  I wasn't surprised that it turned political.  As we discussed, the real battle for conservatism is in Congress and the G.O.P. is letting it slip away.  What you said yesterday rings true.  If the Dems get a strong majority in the Senate and House, a republican president can't stop them.

I think the G.O.P. needs to get back to conservatism and stop trying to go to the middle or placate the left.

May 21, 2008 12:43 AM
Ted Baker
Carmody and Associates LLC - Winter Haven, FL
MidFloridaMediation.com

I also enjoyed the phone call, Bill. We have the same problem we had when President Bush was elected in 2000.  There was a razor thin majority for the Republicans in Congress and in the White House.  This left the Republicans in the political trenches trying to buy votes just like the Democrats.  The play has been to attract more moderates to our side.  This has resulted in a dilution of some of the conservative principles and practices that you and I would have preferred.  I believe it has been based upon poitical calculation rather than principled action in domestic policy.  And the result has been a slight tipping of the majority to left.

What I see for this election is going to be an effort to gain the support of independent voters which seem to make up more than a third of the electorate at the present time.  It is ironic that Senator McCain may, indeed, be the best candidate for the election because he may be the best lure for those independents who seek a moderate President rather than a hard core conservative.

My concern is that the Republicans need to keep reading the papers and actually understand the changing flow of events.  It is my view that gas prices have become more important, or at least more immediate, to the voters than the environmental concerns.  And neither party is offering short term relief.  The Republicans should at least be offering progress toward a long term solution.  The President should be pressing hard for legislation to encourage exploration in ANWR and coastal regions and he should be very vocal about the Democrat Congress if they do not take prompt action.  But it should be OUR issue.  And McCain should be trying to be ahead of the President.  If Senator McCain was giving a speech about environmental concerns he should have criticized the placement of the polar bear on the threatened species list.  The people who are paying more than $4.00 per gallon need to be more important than the polar bears for a while.

If we are going to pick our positions by political calculation rather then principle, we should at least get the math right.

 

May 21, 2008 01:34 AM
Kevin Robinson
Twin Falls, ID
Fractional Developer

I keep saying this: I really miss Ronald Reagan!

Our candidate is not really conservative enough for me but I will vote for him because I can't afford the other side of the coin.

May 21, 2008 03:10 AM
Mike Frazier
Carousel Realty of Dyer County - Dyersburg, TN
Northwest Tennessee Realtor

Ted,

It will be hard to pick a Presidential candidate with all the solutions. If America is overcome my our adversaries then we will not have to be concerned with global warming. Personally, I do not believe that there really is global warming but only cycles.

May 21, 2008 10:00 AM