Posted on 11/05/2010 8:57:51 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
You and I know it was never about facts, it was about hyping the green dream. Just look at the numbers. First from the opposition:
Of course they dont dare mention the amount of money their side has put into it, because, well, that would look imbalanced. Now have a look at the other side of the issue from the legislator who spearheaded the effort:
Logue: Big money beat Proposition 23
Logue spearheaded the Proposition 23 campaign.
AB32 was passed and signed by the governor in 2006. It provides that between 2012 and 2020 greenhouse gas emissions will be reduced to 1990 levels.
Proposition 23 would have postponed implementing major parts of AB32 until the states unemployment rate stood at 5.5 percent for a year. Now the jobless rate is around 12 percent.
In June, when Proposition 23 qualified for the ballot, the Enterprise-Record interviewed Logue and Robin Huffman of the Chico-based Butte Environmental Council. At that time, Logue was thrilled, and Huffman expressed concern.
Full story here at the Chico Enterprise Record
Heres the REAL dirty secret, from the LA Times:
But it was pure spin. As they say in the movie, Follow the money.
Two Texas-based oil refiners, along with California business trade associations and anti-tax activists thought they could halt the nations most ambitious effort to curb greenhouse gas emissions. But they were able to raise only $10.6 million. Most of Californias biggest companies, including Chevron, Pacific Gas & Electric and Sempra Energy, stayed neutral or actively opposed the initiative.
Backers were steamrolled by a $31.2 million campaign funded by such wealthy philanthropists as San Francisco hedge fund manager Tom Steyer, such big environmental groups as the National Wildlife Federation and the ClimateWorks Foundation, and such Silicon Valley green-tech moguls as John Doerr and Vinod Khosla.
10.6 million from big oil
31.2 million from big green
Yep, thats some dirty secret alright. But you wont see this reported on one side news outlets or green blogs.
Theres lot of hype about green jobs, but read this from a man who actually created some of them:
I know firsthand about green jobs. SunPower Corp., a company I chair and the second-largest U.S. producer of solar cells, has produced about 800 green jobs in California. But thats just a fraction of the 4,700 jobs lost when Toyota pulled the plug on its local Nummi automotive plant due to the high cost of doing business in California.
That pull the plug meme will be repeated again and again in the coming months.
And then theres this absolute rubbish:
Heres why, when you look at Californias energy supply
and you see all that hydro, nuclear, natural gas, and renewables, you have to ask yourself: wheres the dirty energy problem?
With coal making up only 18.2%, dirty energy and up to 40% of the electricity coming from out of state (remember Enrons manipulation of California?) dirty energy was really a non-issue.
But when we are talking green jobs, green energy, green money, green envy or just about anything else green, such facts dont matter.
Congratulations to California, you got the government and legislation you deserve.
Maybe Kieth Olberman of MSNBC will name me the worst person in the world for writing this fact check. Oh, wait.
fyi
California is in the toilet and STILL reaching for the flush handle.
Funny thing is that on the John and Kenn show, they noted that Prop 26 requiring a 2/3 legislative approval for fees is applicable to Cap and Trade...
We somehow won :)
Thank you Ernest! This will go out to my email list ASAP...
The Greenies are ready to file suit against Prop 26 due to its being in conflict with Prop 25. Which, BTW I don't agree with. The purpose of Prop 26 was to require a 2/3 majority to raise fees and levies, which is already a requirement for taxes. AB 32 has a lot of fees associated with its implementation.
This and the largest tax increase in California history will be the legacy of Schnitzelwagger.
Watch him run for the House or Senate next.
“California is in the toilet and STILL reaching for the flush handle.”
Californians (except for the conservative kind) do not realize the freight train ahead. The green energy fraud has mostly been a free lunch so far. The real costs are just beginning. The taxes and regulations to chase this Utopian dream will cause wide spread job losses. Other states will be very aggressive in recruitting California employers.
The good news is that the target CO2 emissions should be easy to achieve. The flight of businesses and production will lead much less energy used at least from businesses. The left should be proud of its effort to deindustrialize California.
He needs to go back to Austria.
Calif.'s Little-Noticed Prop 26 Squeaks Through in Dead of Night (Climate Change Cultists Saddened)
The only possible impediment would be if Prop 26 passed with a higher numerical popular vote, then a judge MAY rule 26 superior to 25, requiring a 2/3 popular vote on raising taxes outside the budget bill.
However, if the tax was inside the budget bill, the judge might not have the authority to order the budget to the ballot.
Lastly, how many constructionist judges do we have in the People's Republic of California?
In life you sometimes have to step aside and let a hard headed person make the mistake. Otherwise you are wasting energy and time. Let CA experiment with the green economy and uncontrolled spending. Like NJ and MI their people will sooner or later realize that tax and spending into debt will not work. This election cycle two blue states just went red, NJ and MI. NY, CA and MA have serious deficits, but it has not gotten bad enough for the majority to change to GOP. Give them time, and the GOP in Congress should not bail them out when the SHTF for those states.
California is in the hole to the tune of 100 Billion plus.
So much for that.
They have 52 of 80 seats, or 65%, in the legislature.
There's an open seat in the State Senate (probably the dead woman just elected) which will give them 25 of 40 seats there, 63%.
Can you pull this back up when they are freezing their backsides off.
Tx.
Paul
oh yea, lets really hype that green dream
Much of the "industry" you are thinking about has already left. Unless there is some sort of welfare system for power, this one may chase out the riffraff too, a common liberal tactic employed in wealthy counties such as Marin.
BTW, 20% of the power used in California is for moving and treating water. A lot of that is not going away under any circumstances.
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