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_sabotage_ wrote:Thank you for making your moral standpoint clear. I have nothing more to say.
_sabotage_ wrote:Yes I can see you see it that way. You are happy to have the government force me to buy products that are polluting in their production in China, transportation, lifetime and waste period at 9 times the cost, so that that there is a green economy.
_sabotage_ wrote:Like not exhaling if you happen to be among the billion living off a dollar a day. Dude, you are crazier than Nero.
_sabotage_ wrote:You are such a dumbass. 60 years ago Schauberger said water would cost more than gas if things went on. Everybody laughed. If you put a price on air, what will happen? You can ask Player how our water situation is going. Has raising the cost of water improved it?
Their stated goal is to stabilize world population at about a billion people. How do you hope to achieve that?
You hope to control all resources and destroy the middle class with your incentives, but denying access to solutions
_sabotage_ wrote:For 99.9999999% of human history, I could build whatever I wanted however I wanted. Now, we have people there to protect me and tell me exactly what products I can use to build. My adoptive mother brought me back a silver Mexican coin with a pyramid on it when she returned from representing Canada in NAFTA. That thing that signed away Canadian manufacturing. The products come fro China whether I like it or not. As such, the only thing that you are doing is increasing the price of conventional goods and changing half my heating bill over to carbon tax while costing me 900% more than it should.
Because even if I use those shitty polluting products to reduce my heating in half, I'm going to have to still pay carbon tax on the heating of my home. And it will reach the same price if not higher than my initial costs, but I'm out money on reno.
The carbon scheme was also set up to recognize only certain types of carbon eliminating programs. If I have 11 acres of mixed forest which I leave as is, I don't get shit. If I cut it all down and plant a monoculture in its place, then I could.
You are selling the continued destruction of the world at a more expensive price. If competition is not allowed in the market, and there is a massive incentive not to let them become available such as the fact that there are now as more green jobs than oil jobs according to some pundits, then it is just forcing us onto an existing system at a higher consumer cost. Sounds familiar.
Who are they? The signers of agenda 21 which more than 150 nations are. The US was one of the first and Bush Sr considered it a priority. All administrations since have followed suit. The countries agreed in signing to stabilize their populations. But it isn't adequately funded. When housing tax pays for schools and gasoline tax pays for roads, which tax is going to pay for agenda 21?
Dude. Dude. Either just admit that you have an incentive to see this through or admit you fell for their plan.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Neoteny wrote:Mets, why do you want to tax breathing Africans?
_sabotage_ wrote:You are such a dumbass.
thegreekdog wrote:_sabotage_ wrote:You are such a dumbass.
Mets - Have you ever been called a dumbass? Seems like you're too nerdy for that particular word.
Metsfanmax wrote:Neoteny wrote:Mets, why do you want to tax breathing Africans?
Well, I can't very well tax the non-breathing ones.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Neoteny wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Neoteny wrote:Mets, why do you want to tax breathing Africans?
Well, I can't very well tax the non-breathing ones.
Would farts be included in your taxing scheme,
and might you be able to find a workaround on taxing dead Africans? Perhaps by taxing surviving relatives for gases associated with decomposition?
If I define entropy like English is not my first language, and then simplify the concept to the point to where it barely even applies, would it be acceptable for me to call you a dumbass for not having a hemp house in Canada?
_sabotage_ wrote:A person exhales as much carbon dioxide per day as a car going 3 miles. If an average car gets 30 mpg, and the tax "starts" at .13 per gallon, what's to stop them from charging people to breath?
Yeah yeah, same shit they said about Obamacare. If you like your left lung, you can* keep it.
And just as Player screams, yes I love it but I wanted a one payer system but the Tea Party. You to will have your Tea Party, and no doubt continue to support it long after it has become clear what agenda 21 meant by
achieving a more sustainable population, and sustainable settlement in decision making.
The reason it is not binding is because it would have had to be opened to debate if it were. But instead they left it non_binding so that we could sign on without debate. Our commitment has been given by every resident since still without debate. Why no debate, perhaps because only 9% of the population support it.
You think you are making a better world, just as Player insists to those who are telling her that the ACA is going to drive their quality of living down without necessarily providing better healthcare.
You make it clear that you don't care about the sustainability of the products we use, merely that money is being directed towards green development.
Do you think that if people were allowed to build houses superior in all ways to conventional housing at a cheaper price, they wouldnt ? You know they would and you know what it would do to many markets. So stop trying to hide behind science and come clean.
Climate change as a product of CO2 is a scam to make you pay to breath and to increase the price of consumption with the money and power going to those who think that we shouldn't be here and if we are then its with their OK and under their rule.
_sabotage_ wrote:Yes you could make unfounded allegations and I could respond that government mandates industrial hemps THC level to a non phsycoactive level. That is I can provide government regulation to back up my position.
I can also provide 100% conclusive data on hempcrete,
You can do neither. When you voice your support for government levying a tax, you can not turn to existing regulation, because its something you have said you are against, so you support the tax, but not how it will be used.
Nor can you prove that CO2 possesses the properties you are so adamant about.
As a Mets fan, you should be quite clear on the fact that just because you support a thing, that thing doesn't always deliver. And you should also be clear that likely as not more people support your rivals.
My support of hempcrete does nothing to your freedom or cost of living (except show you you could be living better cheaper) and yet your support of carbon tax itself does this to me, and the things that will be brought about through your support will as well.
Metsfanmax wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Those are two mutually exclusive options. By asking government to not get involved, you're no longer avoiding government, but becoming involved in the political process. If you have enough influence to get them to stop listening to lobbyists, you also have enough influence to get them to make better energy policy.
Well, one can never muster enough influence to block politicians and bureaucrats from incentives which are conducive to their self-interests. It's not a matter of influencing politicians, but rather it's about influencing people's opinions about government and curtailing the scope of the national government so that (a) the worst people in government can do the least harm and (b) people's expectations of government are updated with proper parameters.
Of course not. Instead, one should focus on convincing politicians that their self-interests include listening to their constituents, or else they won't be around next term. So I agree that it's about influencing people's opinions, but mostly because that's the way to convince a politician that they should act a certain way.
Metsfanmax wrote:
It's also not always the case that allowing the market to go unregulated is good in the long-term (with global warming being a paramount example). Even in the absolute best case scenario based on the arguments you have previously made, where we remove all government regulation and increases in efficiency cause us to stabilize or decrease carbon dioxide emissions, that's not going to change China's ever-increasing demand for coal. So any policy has to consider the global influences as well. A carbon tax with an associated tariff on imports from non-carbon-pricing countries has the possibility of inducing serious global changes.
That's a possibility, but it's far from a certainty. Part of the motivation here is that advocating for something simple and transparent like a flat tax on all sources into the market is that it's much harder for special interests to corrupt than a system like cap-and-trade. If you design your policy with that in mind, you minimize the risks of your policy getting spiked. And the stakes are high enough to make that bet anyway.
I don't necessarily disagree with this, but it's going too far afield from the topic at hand. I need to work within the system we have now, because we can't wait another two decades to start seriously addressing this problem.
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