Archive for the ‘Regulation’ Category

Local CBS Meteorologist: Global Warming ‘extremism’ uses ‘squishy science’

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

Local Minneapolis-WCCO (CBS) meteorologist, Mike Fairbourne, says that the environmental movement is practicing “squishy science” when it ties human activity to global warming. Comments from WCCO.

Fairbourne is one of 31,000 scientists (9,021 PhDs) who agree that the human impact on global warming is overblown. Here’s the petition.

petition

“Do we need to be wise stewards [of the Earth]? Absolutely,” Fairbourne said. “Do we have to pin everything that happens on global warming? No, we need to have cooler heads.”

Asked why there has been so much momentum toward connecting human activity and global warming, Fairbourne said, “They’re doing it for a lot of reasons; some may be scientific, but most of them are political. We need to be calm and look at scientific evidence and evaluate it.”

Fairbourne, a University of Utah graduate, said he has talked “to a number of meteorologists who have similar opinions” as his, adding that he is concerned about “the extremism that is attached to the global warming.”

According to the Daily Glean, zero local MSP meteorologists publicly adhere to the theory that human activity is the cause of “global warming.” If the “evidence” supports global warming, why do so many scientists disagree?

Star Tribune readers respond:

worry poll link

squishy poll link

Frustrated NWA flight attendant starts fire mid-flight + other bizarre news

Friday, May 16th, 2008

Unbelievable!

A 19 year old twin cities resident and NWA flight attendant lit some paper towels on fire to set of the plane’s smoke alarm and bring the flight to an early end because he was frustrated with the MSP to Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada route.

nwa

KARE11.com reports:

The charge of setting fire aboard a civil aircraft carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison.

Pilot Steve Peterka told authorities that an indicator light came on about 35 minutes into the flight, showing smoke in the rear bathroom.

Peterka called Rojas, who was assigned passengers in the back of the plane, and asked him to check the bathroom, documents said. Rojas, another flight attendant and a passenger were credited with quickly putting out the flames with fire extinguishers, authorities said.

Investigators later found a lighter in one of the overhead bins. Rojas confessed after authorities interviewed him, the complaint said.


In other unbelievably bizarre news – another local 19 year old survived jumping head-first into a wood chipper.


And some less odd news – a MN Judge tries to close a loophole in a recent smoking ban. Since smoking is allowed only as part of a theatrical performance, bars held “theater nights” where patrons paid a small fee to become an “actor” in the evening performance (i.e. smoking).

Following the ruling, Bullseye owner Robert Ripley said he is asking his bartenders to prevent smoking indoors and remove all ashtrays.

But he also seized on a footnote in the ruling speculating that some performances may fit within the statewide ban and that they may be considered on a case-by-case basis.

“I think we’re going to start writing our own scripts,” Ripley said.

February, customers in bars from the Iron Range to the metro area — with the bars’ encouragement — started dressing in Renaissance costumes or calling themselves Garth Brooks and lighting up.

Many bars said it was an often-successful attempt to win back patrons after seeing steep declines in revenue after the ban took effect last year. Notices about the smoking performances were posted on doors outside the establishments, and customers would typically buy a pin for $1 or $2 designating them as part of the show.

But Abrams didn’t buy arguments made in court last week that the performances are a form of protected free speech that fit within the law’s exception.

“The criterion for selection of the cast appears to be people with $2 and a desire to smoke in the bar. There is not the slightest suggestion that talent or an interest in conveying a message, other than smoking, is sought from any actor,” he wrote.


Twin Cities get State OK to extend bar closing time for RNC – for a fee!

Twin Cities bars can stay open extra late during the Republican National Convention, thanks to a state measure signed Thursday by Gov. Tim Pawlenty. The provision, part of an omnibus liquor bill, allows bars within the seven-county metro area to stay open until 4 a.m. from the evening of Aug. 31, through the early morning of Sept. 5. The border cities of Northfield and New Prague are included.

Cities can decide whether to allow the later bar closings and what areas or license and zoning classifications would be affected. And they will be able to charge bars a fee of up to $2,500.

Because 2AM just isn’t late enough for national Republican big wigs. Or maybe it’s an attempt to make the city more protester friendly?


And speaking of the GOP RNC this Sept. in St. Ron Paul, city leaders are partnering with Humana to provide 1000 free bicycles during the convention.

freewheelin

To use a Freewheelin cycle, participants would register with credit cards to ensure that they don’t make off with the bikes, which otherwise are expected to be free to use. They then can go online, too, to track how many miles they’ve logged and calories they’ve burned.

Humana also is making 1,000 bicycles available to Denver during the Democratic National Convention, in turn giving Denver and the Twin Cities the opportunity to join Washington at the forefront of communal two-wheel initiatives.


Stories via the Daily Glean.

Bolivia’s president calls for the end of capitalism to save the planet

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

Scrap capitalism, save the planet: Morales

bolivia

This INVESTOR’S BUSINESS DAILY editorial follows up with some history of environmental protection under some other anti-capitalist systems.

Morales is a Marxist, so the environmental records of the communist and socialist systems he touts to save the earth are instructive.

After communism fell in Eastern Europe, some of the biggest revelations were about how vast the pollution was in countries where no one was permitted to own or care for land.

Getting rid of capitalism created the black rivers of China, filled Eastern Europe’s skies with unfiltered coal and diesel exhaust, brought deforestation that’s led to sandstorms in China, spilled oil that destroyed Siberian lakes, and poisoned land with mercury and nickel waste in large swaths of Eastern Europe and Cuba.

It also brought the still-dead nuclear devastation of Chernobyl. Diverse as these regions are, the lack of capitalism means there was no accountability or incentives to save the earth.

And, sadly, it’s still that way now. According to the Blacksmith Institute, the 10 most polluted places on earth are in Azerbaijan, China, India, Peru, Russia, Ukraine and Zambia, all of which have long histories of communism, socialism or nationalist isolation, the very alternatives Morales proposes to replace capitalism.

Morales’ attack on capitalism represents the real agenda for the radical environmentalists. They seek global governance and an end to private property, an unsalable concept given the record of communist countries. So they’re marketing it under a new brand name, wrapped in the greener concept of “saving the earth.”

But in reality, it’s capitalism — combined with the framework that enables it to flourish, like rule of law and property rights — that has lifted billions of people out of poverty and improved the environment. Contrary to Morales’ assertions, the most capitalist countries are also the cleanest.

According to a 2006 study by the Heartland Institute, free enterprise does more to protect the environment than state intervention.

“The nations that have the best track records on environmental protection and improvement are those with the highest amount of free-market capitalism,” wrote Samuel Aldrich and Jay Lehr, in “Free Enterprise Protects the Environment.”

Romanticization of nature to promote state control hasn’t had it this good since the days of Rousseau’s noble savage. The only problem for environmental radicals, of course, is that sometimes the designated “savages” accidentally reveal the truth.

http://www.ibdeditorials.com/…

The Real Cost of Tackling Climate Change

Monday, April 28th, 2008

The Real Cost of Tackling Climate Change

Steven Hayward does the math:

 ”Way too little and way too late,” runs the refrain, followed by the claim that nothing less than an 80% reduction in emissions by the year 2050 will suffice – what I call the “80 by 50″ target. Both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama have endorsed it. John McCain is not far behind, calling for a 65% reduction.

Right now our cars and trucks consume about 180 billion gallons of motor fuel. To meet the 2050 target, we shall have to limit consumption of gasoline to about 31 billion gallons, unless a genuine carbon-neutral liquid fuel can be produced. (Ethanol isn’t it.) To show how unrealistic this is, if the entire nation drove nothing but Toyota Priuses in 2050, we’d still overshoot the transportation emissions target by 40%.

The enthusiasm for an 80% reduction target is often justified on grounds that national policy should set an ambitious goal. However, claims on behalf of alternative energy sources – biofuels, hydrogen, windpower and so forth – either do not match up to the scale of the energy required, or are not cost-competitive in current form.

How on God’s green earth will we make up the difference? Someone should put this question to the candidates. And not let them slide past it with glittering generalities.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120934459094348617.html

Reduced speed in Alabama

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

Thanks to the Daily Dixie for informing us of this proposed measure to reduce the maximum speed limit in Alabama from 70 to 65.

I wonder if the police will enforce the 65 mph limit with the tenacity that the 50 mph speed limit is enforced in downtown Birmingham?  Traffic regularly moves at over 70 mph through the 50 mph speed limit zone; not that I’m complaining about the lack of enforcement.  But setting arbitrary, unenforced speed limits that no one follows anyway just isn’t good policy.

Stop playing market games

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

Watch as Republican Presidential Candidate Ron Paul is interviewed Glenn Beck (4/1/08, CNN Headline News).  They discuss the proposed housing market rules and hybrid incentives and the oil companies.

Summary:  the government does “something” to fix problem A and that causes problems B and C, which are worse problems than problem A that they “fixed.”

The biggest problem:  the Congress won’t just follow the Constitution.

ronpaulglennbeck

Biofuels quota => higher food prices? part II, US edition

Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

Biofuels quota => higher food prices? part II, US edition.

Q:  How much of the US corn crop is used for ethanol?

e85

I was surprised to find out today that about a third of the US corn crop is used to produce ethanol!  That’s according to this USA Today article discussing the expected higher prices for corn this year.  The article fingers biofuels mandates as one major contributor to the higher demand, and thus, the higher price of corn.

High energy prices have increased the cost of production. In addition, the U.S. and other nations have mandated increased use of biofuels, including corn-based ethanol. That has led to competition for acreage, contributed to a doubling of many grain prices and caused food riots in nations such as China and Pakistan.

With ethanol demand surging, U.S. farmers last year planted the largest corn crop since 1944. Even with the predicted decline in acreage, the 2008 crop could be one of the largest on record. Still, with the ethanol industry expected to claim about a third of the corn crop, and the USDA saying that stockpiles are lower than expected, there is the potential for shortages.

“Basically, we’re spending our tax dollars to raise the price of our food so we can subsidize the ethanol and big oil companies,” says Ray Atkinson, Pilgrim’s Pride director of communications.

Which is exactly my point in this post.  Some well-intentioned government farm aid programs produce counter-productive incentives by helping one groups of people (farmers get paid to not plant) and hurt another group (higher food prices for consumers in the US and globally).

Cuban DVD Player Sales

Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

Follow up on my recent post about Cuba finally lifting their ban of DVD players. This AP article discusses the current Cuban marketplace following Raul’s decision to allow sales of DVD players and many other previously restricted goods. Cheap electric bikes had been banned because the government didn’t think their power grid could handle the strain of charging all the batteries on all those bikes.

The government is also allowing regular citizens to purchase cell phones and stay at nice hotels, which were previously restricted to foreigners and high-up government officials.

dvd-shoper

Cubans snapped up DVD players, motorbikes and pressure cookers for the first time Tuesday as Raul Castro’s new government loosened controls on consumer goods and invited private farmers to plant tobacco, coffee and other crops on unused state land.

The change is a sharp contrast to the early days of Cuba’s revolution, when the government forced or encouraged private farmers to turn their land over to the state or form government-controlled collective farms. But without more details, it was difficult to tell the significance of program, which began last year but was announced only this week.

Many of the shoppers filling stores Tuesday lamented the fact that the goods are unaffordable on the government salaries they earn. But that didn’t stop them from lining up to see electronic gadgets previously available only to foreigners and companies.

Cuba’s communist system was founded on promoting social and economic equality, but that doesn’t mean Cubans can’t have DVD players, said Mercedes Orta, who rushed to gawk at the new products.

“Socialism has nothing to do with living comfortably,” she said.

“Very good! DVD players on sale for everybody,” exclaimed Clara, an elderly woman peering at a black JVC console. “Of course nobody has the money to buy them.”

Hopefully Raul will continue implementing this type of free-market reform and realize that legislating social and economic equality only leads to poverty for most.

Which country is the largest importer of rice?

Saturday, March 29th, 2008

I was surprised to find out that The Philippines is the largest importer of rice in the world. However, there is a problem because global supplies of rice are currently shrinking as the governments of some rice exporting countries, such as Egypt, India, Vietnam and Cambodia, have decided it is in the interest of their citizens to ban or restrict the export of the grain to keep the prices lower at home.

riceman

Conversely, many US farm aid programs are in place to keep the prices of crops and related food products, like sugar, high at home to help farmers at the expense of the consumer.

Unfortunately, neither of these types trade incentives is good for the average person. In the US, we overpay for sugar or substitute corn-syrup as an alternative to support corn production over sugar production. Meanwhile Egyptian and Indian rice growers will be hurt by the lower prices of their crops because the demand is domestic-only which in turn causes consumers in rice importing countries, such as the Philippines, to pay much more for rice than they would otherwise.

Fortunately, there are some rice reserves in Vietnam and Thailand.

To a lot of people, the price of rice is a big deal:

Rice prices jumped 30 per cent to an all-time high on Thursday, raising fears of fresh outbreaks of social unrest across Asia where the grain is a staple food for more than 2.5bn people.

These foreign sales restrictions have removed about a third of the rice traded in the international market.

“I have no idea how importing countries will get rice,” said Chookiat Ophaswongse, president of the Thai Rice Exporters Association. He forecast that prices would rise further.

Rice is also a staple in Africa, particularly for small countries such as Cameroon, Burkina Faso and Senegal that have already suffered social unrest because of high food prices.

Thai rice, a global benchmark, was quoted on Thursday at $760 a tonne, up about 30 per cent from the previous daily quote of about $580 a tonne, according to Reuters data. Some traders, however, said the daily jump was not as steep, adding that Thai rice had already traded at about $700 a tonne this week.

Rice prices have doubled since January, when the grain traded at about $380 a tonne, boosted by strong Asian, Middle Eastern and African demand.

Something to think about the next time you have a plate of combination stir-fried rice.

More of this story.

Biofuels quota => higher food prices?

Monday, March 24th, 2008

John Beddington, the [UK] government’s current chief scientific adviser, has already expressed scepticism about biofuels. At a speech in Westminster this month he said demand for biofuels from the US had delivered a “major shock” to world agriculture, which was raising food prices globally. “There are real problems with the unsustainability of biofuels,” he said, adding that cutting down rainforest to grow the crops was “profoundly stupid”.

breadbasket

This piece in the Guardian discusses why the UK is about to fight the EU’s pending biofuels quota of 10% by 2020. Not surprisingly, the EU’s quota could result in higher food prices. Does anyone actually expect a government quota to produce positive results? Or even, results without unintended negative consequences?