Posted on 07/03/2010 7:11:27 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
As the U.S.A. celebrates its 234th birthday, the plight of a quintessentially American innovation says volumes about the state of the union.
As American as the grand slam, the Mustang convertible, and the constitutional republic, Thomas Alva Edisons incandescent light bulb is among this nations most enduring gifts to mankind. Granted U.S. Patent No. 223,898 on January 27, 1880 (after some 1,200 experiments), Edisons Electric-Lamp essentially made night optional for most Earthlings. Days stopped ending at sunset. Simple, convenient, and cheap, Edisons greatest invention also was far safer than the flammable kerosene lamps they replaced.
Todays federal government, naturally, had to hammer something that has hummed along nicely for 130 years. In one of his most shameful moments, former president George W. Bush foolishly signed the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007. EISA establishes performance criteria that Edisonian bulbs cannot meet. As the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) explains: These standards, which begin in 2012, will eliminate low efficiency incandescent light bulbs from the market.
According to an April 14 fact sheet from General Electric, which Edison founded in 1876, 276 versions of its incandescent bulbs will start to vanish just 18 months from now. Few Americans realize that federal busybodies plan to snatch their traditional bulbs. Sylvanias December 2009 survey of 302 adults found that awareness of the 2012 100-watt bulb phase-out is just 18 percent (error margin: +/- 5.7 percent).
EISA has made more common compact fluorescent lights, those swirly bulbs with distinct pros and cons. Costlier up front, energy-efficient CFLs eventually save money. They also require less frequent replacement than do traditional bulbs.
To discover CFLs negatives, try setting a romantic mood with a dimmer switch. This is, at best, a hit or miss proposition. Scarier still, just drop one onto your kitchen floor. Its internal mercury is highly toxic. If spilled, it requires something approximating a Superfund cleanup. The Environmental Protection Agency warns that if a CFL breaks on ones apparel or bedspread, Do not wash such clothing or bedding because mercury fragments in the clothing may contaminate the machine and/or pollute sewage (emphasis added).
CFLs should be discarded at recycling centers. Hundreds of millions of busy Americans, however, will toss these dangerous bulbs in the trash, atop table scraps and junk mail. CFLs will clog landfills from coast to coast. Decades hence, mercury will have leeched into the environment. Americans will wonder why people are suffering brain, kidney, and lung damage. Medical visits will yield lawsuits. And yet another national disaster will erupt, courtesy of Washington, D.C.
Team Obama, characteristically, inherited a big-government jalopy from the Bush-Rove administration and then turbocharged it.
As June 25s Washington Times detailed, 91 pages of brand-new FTC rules force manufacturers to label the front of CFL packages regarding brightness (in lumens) and annual energy cost (in dollars). Packages sides or rears must disclose bulbs lifespan, color appearance, wattage, voltage, and mercury content. This information may but need not appear in English, French, and Spanish.
If manufacturers cannot place all this information on small packages, the FTC offers this advice:
Lighting Facts format for small packages. If the total surface area of the product package available for labeling is less than 24 square inches and the package shape or size cannot accommodate the standard label required by paragraph (b)(4), manufacturers may provide the information specified in paragraph (b)(3) using a smaller, linear label following the format, terms, explanatory text, specifications, and minimum sizes illustrated in Prototype Label 7 in Appendix L.
As page 86 of these June 18 draft regulations illustrates, the FTC knows precisely what these labels should say: ( SEE ILLUSTRATION BELOW )
I think the incandescent light bulb was one of the great contributions to the art of architecture in the 20th century, says Howard M. Brandston, a legendary lighting designer renowned for relighting the Statute of Liberty before its rededication on July 4, 1986. Lighting played a huge role, as essential as the structures themselves. That was thanks to Thomas Edison.
If the federal government insists on banning the incandescent lamp, it significantly will decrease the quality of life in every home in America, Brandston tells me. The CFLs cannot be dimmed properly. When you dim one, the spectral power distribution and color quality of the lamp make people look cadaverous. Most people who wear makeup will not need to do so to look like the Bride of Frankenstein.
Here we have the government entering all of our homes. Our homes are our castles, says Brandston, a former adjunct professor of architecture at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and a founder of its Lighting Research Center. Now they are telling us how to light our homes, and they are putting onerous burdens on us in terms of handling these toxic CFLs. The government should not enter our homes, tell us how to live, endanger our health, and ruin our quality of life.
Republicans and thinking Democrats running for Congress this fall should pledge publicly to repeal the federal ban on Thomas Edisons monumental creation. Why not try something worthy of the Spirit of 76? Keep traditional bulbs, CFLs, halogens, and everything else on the market, and allow Americans to purchase whatever bulbs help them pursue happiness.
July 4 would be a perfect day for such a Declaration of Incandescence.
Deroy Murdock is a nationally syndicated columnist with the Scripps Howard News Service and a media fellow with the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace at Stanford University.
Ooops! I forgot to include the link.
http://vu1corporation.com/
Read what the EPA says is necessary if you break one of the "green" CFL bulbs...it is considered a hazardous mercury spill. http://www.epa.gov/cfl/cflcleanup.html
I didn't know they were ready for prime time yet?
Speak truth to power.
Anti-CFLers wearing Edison masks should stage random CFL smashes in streets of the socialist utopia.
Turning a CFL on and off in a short period of time will sharply reduce its lifespan. Ideally, they should be left on for a minimum of 15 minutes.
Florescents give me a freaking headache, too!
...turn on your AM or shortwave radio, and enjoy the buzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz that the CFL bulbs cause.
Fortunately, my house is small and I don't use that many light bulbs. I've stocked up a lifetime supply.
LED technology will be available in a few years and will blow away CFLs.
When you have some time and want a giggle, go check out our fav government agency's, that would be the EPA, directions for cleaning up after a broken CFL pollutes your environment.
I’m slightly claustrophobic. For some reason florescent lighting greatly magnifies my discomfort! I go into a huge store with flo lights, and I feel like I’m handcuffed and in a tiny box! Have no idea why. At home, with incandescents, I’m fine, no discomfort at all. c-phobia not noticeable at all. But turn on a flo bulb?
The local electric co-op recently mailed all their customers a free CFL bulb.
I returned mine. The lady at the co-op wanted to know why. As I handed her the CFL and a copy of the EPA's cleanup procedure I said, "Why would I knowingly bring an environmental hazard into my home?" She had no response.
If they want my salt, they'll have to take it from my warm, high blood pressure hands.
I dis-connected the ones above my desk. A worker bee came in to fix the ballast last week and I told him the bulbs were off on purpose. They bother me. He left.
I have three on 24x7 (two are outside). That gets the longest lifetime out of them. I have a few more that I turn on once in the evening and off when I go to bed. Everything else is incandescent.
“...The local electric co-op recently mailed
their customers a free CFL bulb...I returned mine...”
-
You should have returned it ‘broken’...
and claimed that it arrived that way...
and that you were feeling ill...
and that you were on your way to see your doctor...
and that your attorney would be contacting them...
Boy do I have a salt story. I’ll wait. (It was low BTW).
Maybe we’ll all have to get light bulb handicap stickers for our front doors to have them. Can’t wait until they make us go to the special counter to purchase them and sign that we aren’t using them illegally.
Whether the incandescent bulb is too hot, too wasting of energy or what not should not really be the business of government.
You want LED systems ? Knock yourself out as long as you don;t vote for a bureaucrat that forces me to buy what I think is value for money for myself.
LET THE FREE MARKET DECIDE. If the value for money of Edisons invention drops to a point where it is no longer economical to own them, people will abandon them.
Why do we allow politicians and bureaucrats to decide this for us ? First, the light bulb, then what next ? Eat your veggies three times a day or else.... ???
What kind of people are we becoming ?
I just realized that my post could be misunderstood as a joke or a wise crack.
What I was asking about was the odor that comes from the sewer line in unused plumbing fixtures, when the water in the p-trap evaporates from non use.
There's a reason those suckers are subjected to government regulation.
Now, going back up the line to the consumer, that's where the demand for power comes from.
In reality there's not much demand on the grid that comes from incandescent lights because they are used only for residential lighting these days, which has been the case since WWII.
The argument you should be making is that there's NO ADVANTAGE in discontinuing incandescent bulbs used for residential lighting. On the other hand, there is an advantage in regulating power plants ~ and that's because the wind blows, water flows, people breath, and so forth.
Ironically, the future of lighting is LEDs. They’re even more energy efficient than CFL’s and have none of the drawbacks. Governments shouldn’t be wasting their time pushing dead-end CFL technology; but that would require them to act logically, and that’s expecting too much.
Cough - Sir Joseph Wilson Swan - Cough
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