Global Warming Facts
Opinion Editorial by Walter E. Williams -
Oct 5, 2007
42 ratings from readers
To what extent are Earth's CO2 levels caused by human activity? How do current levels stack up historically? And are polar bears really being killed off? Myth and ignorance abound. Arm yourself with facts.
Despite increasing evidence that man-made CO2 is not a
significant greenhouse gas and contributor to climate change, politicians and
others who wish to control our lives must maintain that it is.
According to the Detroit
Free Press, Rep. John Dingell wants a 50-cents-a-gallon tax on gasoline. We’ve
heard such calls before, but there’s a new twist.
Dingell also wants to
eliminate the mortgage tax deduction on what he calls “McMansions,” homes that
are 3,000 square feet and larger. That’s because larger homes use more energy.
One might wonder about Dingell’s magnanimity in increasing
taxes for only homes 3,000 feet or larger. The average U.S.
home is around 2,300 square feet, compared with Europe’s
average of 1,000 square feet.
So why doesn’t Dingell call for disallowing mortgage
deductions on houses more than 1,000 square feet? The reason is there would be
too much political resistance, since more Americans own homes under 3,000
square feet than over 3,000. The full agenda is to start out with 3,000 square
feet and later lower it in increments.
Our buying into global warming hysteria will allow
politicians to do just about anything, upon which they can muster a majority
vote, in the name of fighting climate change as a means to raise taxes.
In addition to excuses to raise taxes, congressmen are using
climate change hysteria to funnel money into their districts.
Rep. David L.
Hobson, R-Ohio, secured $500,000 for a geothermal demonstration project.
Rep.
Adam B. Schiff, D-Calif., got $500,000 for a fuel-cell project by
Superprotonic, a Pasadena company
started by Caltech scientists.
Money for similar boondoggles is being called
for by members of both parties.
There are many ways to reduce CO2 emissions, and being 71
years of age I know many of them. Al Gore might even consider me carbon neutral
and possibly having carbon credits because my carbon offsets were made in
advance.
For example, for the first 15 years of my life, I didn’t use
energy-consuming refrigerators; we had an icebox. For two decades I listened to
radio instead of watching television and walked or used public transportation
to most places.
And for more than half my life I didn’t use energy-consuming
things such as computers, clothes dryers, air conditioning and microwave ovens.
Of course, my standard of living was much lower.
The bottom line is, serious efforts to reduce CO2 will lead
to lower living standards through higher costs of living. And it will be all
for naught because there is little or no relationship between man-made CO2
emissions and climate change.
There’s an excellent booklet available from the National
Center for Policy Analysis titled “
A Global Warming Primer.” Some of its highlights are:
“Over long periods of time, there is no close relationship
between CO2 levels and temperature.”
“Humans contribute approximately 3.4 percent of annual CO2
levels” compared to 96.6 percent by nature.
“There was an explosion of life forms 550 million years ago
(Cambrian Period) when CO2 levels were 18 times higher than today. During the
Jurassic Period, when dinosaurs roamed the Earth, CO2 levels were as much as
nine times higher than today.”
What about public school teachers frightening little
children with tales of cute polar bears dying because of global warming?
The
primer says, “Polar bear numbers increased dramatically from around 5,000 in
1950 to as many as 25,000 today, higher than any time in the 20th century.”
The primer gives detailed sources for all of its findings,
and it supplies us with information we can use to stop politicians and their
environmental extremists from doing a rope-a-dope on us.
Walter E. Williams
is a professor of economics at George Mason University in Fairfax,
Virginia. He has authored more than 150 publications, including many in
scholarly journals, and has frequently given expert testimony before
Congressional committees on public policy issues ranging from labor
policy to taxation and spending.