Posted by
10th Amendment Society-Hamiltonian on Thursday, April 10, 2008 12:00:00 AM
In James
Michener’s novel, Poland, there is a story of how the feudal
lords made it a capital offense for a peasant to grind their own grain with a
private millstone to make bread. Today’s
would be aristocrats are trying to institute a new lucrative measure of control
and rationing; carbon credits. In this new scheme certain well connected
bureaucrats and politicians will determine and ration how much coal, wood or
petroleum products they will allow a person, business and even country to use.
Under the ruse and guise of “protecting the planet” they will be the sole,
non-elected arbiters on how much carbon one can use for travel, heating and
industry. In short, they will control
all industrial processes along with modes and amount of travel. First, they
will paraphrase Henny Penny’s portentous, despairing cry of imminent doom, “The
sky is heating!” Then, the only solution
proffered will be absolute control of all combustion. Finally, only friends, contributors and
companies in which they or their collaborators own stock will be allowed
access to resources needed for industry
and the economy. This resembles the government-chartered monopolies in the age
of Mercantilism. In fact it will be a
type of Marxist monopoly envisioned in Ayn Rand’s novel, Atlas Shrugged. And who stands to benefit for this feudal
right to allocate resources and sell the permission to use carbon? It will be
their new excellencies, Al Gore, Robert Kennedy, John Edwards, Barak Obama and
the rest of the Democratic progressive elite.
P.S Carbon Dioxide is only 1/3 of one percent, that is
0.0034 of the pressure, volume and mass of the air. 79% is Nitrogen almost 21%
oxygen. All other gases< 1%. I doubt
it makes much difference compared to solar activity. Another idea to consider, wouldn't you think
the northern states like Michigan and Washington, as well as Canada and Russia
would benefit with a longer growing seasons, perhaps more rainfall and lower
heating cost? Perhaps a longer growing
season in the grain regions of the world, more rainfall, lower heating cost
would benefit humanity? It benefited
Lief Erikson, Greenland and Europe in the 1300's.
Michael Guy