McCain Finds His Crisis in Global Warming
Opinion Editorial by John Stossel -
Jun 14, 2008
25 ratings from readers
Should the government start "capping" our carbon dioxide emissions? John McCain thinks so, even though it would damage the U.S. economy — and any environmental benefits would be negligible.
“Instead of idly debating the precise extent of global
warming, ... we need to deal with the central facts of rising temperatures,
rising waters, and all the endless troubles that global warming will bring. We
stand warned by serious and credible scientists across the world that time is
short and the dangers are great. The most relevant question now is whether our
own government is equal to the challenge.”
With
that, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee John McCain threw his
support — again — to a complex government program to reduce carbon emissions.
He claims he can do this, without causing economic hardship, by using the power
of the free market.
As The Wall Street
Journal commented,
“His plan is ‘market based’ insofar as it requires an expensive, invasive
government bureaucracy to interfere with the market.”
McCain’s cap-and-trade system would have a bureaucracy set a
limit for CO2 emissions and auction tradable permits to carbon-emitting
companies.
McCain says the revenue would be “put to good use.”
Specifically, “We will add to current federal efforts to develop promising
technologies. ... We will also establish clear standards in government-funded
research, to make sure that funding is effective and focused on the right
goals.”
We’ve heard that before. You’d think McCain would have
learned that government isn’t cut out for this sort of thing.
For all his lip service to markets, there is no getting
around the fact that McCain will use force — that’s what government is — to
accomplish his goals. There are only two ways to do things: voluntary or
forced. The market is voluntary. No one is ever forced to buy or sell anything.
Cap-and-trade sounds good. Trade is good. But “cap” is
force. Government will make arbitrary decisions about how much CO2 will be
permitted in a thousand different situations.
I can only begin to imagine the bureaucracy that will be
required. Will chimney police go to every business and home telling you how
much you can emit? Will armed officials from a Department of Global Warming
raid your house and jail you if you run your air-conditioner too much?
I assume friends of Al Gore will get special dispensation
because they are working for the good of the nation.
How much will McCain’s plan reduce global temperatures?
He doesn’t say — probably because even the most radical
climate-change policies promise no more than a negligible reduction.
As Fred S. Singer, president of the Science &
Environmental Policy Project, told the Heartland Institute in 2007, “All these
schemes are quite ineffective in reducing the global growth of atmospheric CO2 —
never mind in having any effect on climate.
“The schemes do have one thing in common: They will damage
the U.S. economy and hurt the pocketbooks of every consumer...”
In other words, economic growth will be stifled — for what?
Roy W. Spencer, a research scientist at the University of
Alabama in Huntsville and author of
Climate
Confusion, says he’s “increasingly convinced” that climate change has
far more to do with natural phenomena like El Niño and the Pacific Decadal
Oscillation than carbon dioxide.
“Maybe the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere is higher now
than it has been in hundreds of thousands of years. So what?” he wrote in a recent
article for the National Review.
“Even though there has never been a single scientific paper
published that has ruled out natural variability for most of the warming we’ve
seen since 1850, Big Science has managed to convince politicians and much of
the public that the science is settled.
“Apparently, our addition of nine molecules of carbon
dioxide to each 100,000 molecules of air over the last 150 years can now be
blamed for anything and everything ... Hurricanes, tornadoes, heat waves,
floods, glaciers flowing toward the sea ... these used to happen naturally, but
no more.”
Spencer is one of many scientists who doubt the “consensus”
that CO2 will cause a global warming “crisis.” But politicians still want to
act.
McCain’s hero is Teddy Roosevelt, a hectoring, activist
president. To justify government interference in our lives, it helps to have a
crisis. In Islamic extremism, McCain has his foreign affairs crisis. In global
warming, he has his domestic crisis.
John
Stossel is co-anchor of ABC News’ “20/20” and the author of Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media (January 2005) as well as Myth, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the
Shovel — Why Everything You Know Is Wrong (May 2007), which is now available in paperback.