I help to be recognized. I weep for the flash bulbs. I spend money like I have it around those with influence. I'm full of nothing!

With all the talk about whom the candidates vice presidential candidates may be, who wears flag pins and who does not know how many homes they own I thought it would be fun to look at 3 bills waiting to be passed (or rejected) by the big boys in DC.

These are not stances that will change the world but it will make our daily living a bit cleaner and less potentially life-threatening. While John McCain has taken steps in the right directing concerning environmental protection, Obama is clearly the choice for a cleaner America that utilizes progressive approaches to tough energy issues. Ultimately gaining independence from foreign oil is top priority for everyone. McCain wants to build nuclear power plants and drill more oil, while Obama wants to invest in technology and do things the “right” way for both today and tomorrow. Sure, this may sound like a biased opinion but ask most experts and they’ll admit that Barack Obama has a more visionary approach. Anyways, here are a couple bills that help showcase this fact.

The use of asbestos in products and the manufacturing industry could come to a close in 2009. Senator Patty Murray introduced the “Ban Asbestos in America Act” that has been introduced and passed by the full U.S. Senate. However, the bill does contain a harmful pro-industry amendment eliminating coverage for workers exposed to products containing on percent or less of asbestos. CWA and the AFL-CIO will work to have this language omitted in the final Senate-House legislation.

Congresswoman Betty McCollum has introduced the “Bruce Vento Asbestos and Prevent Mesothelioma Act of 2008.” This legislation is not expected to be passed by the full house during 2008, so this is basically groundwork in order to get the bill passed in 2009. Asbestos exposure of course can cause many lung issues and deadly cancers such as pleural mesothelioma.

Another bill is the “Chemical Facility Anti-Terrorism Act of 2008.” These are all supported by the Blue-Green Labor/Environmental Coalition.

With Barack Obama as president and a congress dominated by democrats, the above legislation should all pass.


Comments
on Aug 25, 2008

Ultimately gaining independence from foreign oil is top priority for everyone. McCain wants to build nuclear power plants and drill more oil, while Obama wants to invest in technology and do things the “right” way for both today and tomorrow. Sure, this may sound like a biased opinion but ask most experts and they’ll admit that Barack Obama has a more visionary approach.

Visionary?  no.  Just more talking points.  The need for alternatives is seen by all, and the point going for Obama is his honesty in admitting what is needed - at least partially.  And that is higher oil prices.  As long as Oil stays cheap (relatively), no alternatives will compete.  Period.  The reason we are not running the planet on WHale blubber is that about 150 years ago, man found a "cheaper" alternative - oil.  Once the price of oil rises to make something else cheaper, then OIl will go the way of Whale blubber.  And it will not be algore jetting around the world that makes it so.

Obama gets a point for his truthfulness about energy, but then loses one for his talking points about alternatives.  he will do nothing for alternatives unless he does something for Oil - as in keeping the price high.  McCain?  You are right, no vision there.  Just politics of the pocketbook.

on Aug 25, 2008

Obama must have a magic wand to make the things he wants to happen happen. I live in reality not fantasyland.   

Where will the electricity for these million cars come from? Not nuclear power (see above). And not anywhere else, if Obama means this: "I will set a hard cap on all carbon emissions at a level that scientists say is necessary to curb global warming -- an 80 percent reduction by 2050."

No he won't. Steven Hayward of the American Enterprise Institute notes that in 2050 there will be 420 million Americans -- 40 million more households. So Obama's cap would require reducing per capita carbon emissions to levels probably below even those "in colonial days when the only fuel we burned was wood."

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2008/08/obamas_economic_fairytale.html

on Aug 27, 2008

McCain wants to build nuclear power plants and drill more oil, while Obama wants to invest in technology and do things the “right” way for both today and tomorrow.

Please elaborate on what investments fill your tank and heat your home today? Just curious so I can get myself some. Are they cheap, or will I need to take an oil companies windfall profit to get it? Obama's only vision are those of grandure...proof...how many Prius's does he drive?

on Aug 27, 2008

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2008/08/obamas_economic_fairytale.html

Written by a conservative(Sarcasticaly) "this must be history and completely 100% accurate just like a non-partison report."

 

on Aug 30, 2008

Obama gets a point for his truthfulness about energy, but then loses one for his talking points about alternatives.  he will do nothing for alternatives unless he does something for Oil - as in keeping the price high

Not necessarily. There are two ways of ending the oil dependance, and you focused primarily on one - a high oil price (which inevitably makes alternatives more attractive, and you end up with a point where the oil price is higher than the alternatives, and hence the alternatives are used). However I think when Obama is talking about investing in it today he's also looking at bringing down the price of those alternatives. This could be done in several ways - you could subsidise the alternatives, and/or you could subsidise investment into the alternatives which would be likely to help lower their cost (e.g. research into a more efficient wind turbine, etc.)

My own view is that both candidates could learn a bit from the others policies - make it easier (/remove bans) for offshore drilling (and drilling for oil in general), but then include a tax on oil to reflect the environmental damage it does, and provide subsidies for environmentally friendly+renewable alternatives.

 

 

on Aug 30, 2008

However I think when Obama is talking about investing in it today he's also looking at bringing down the price of those alternatives. This could be done in several ways - you could subsidise the alternatives, and/or you could subsidise investment into the alternatives which would be likely to help lower their cost (e.g. research into a more efficient wind turbine, etc.)

True, the law of supply and demand is the law of SUPPLY and DEMAND. SO there are always 2 sides.  However, as has been demonstrated in the past, subsidies do not work.  FOr 2 reasons - one is they never go away, and 2 is that they do not follow the smart money (there is no incentive to).  Investment is just what the word means.  People are looking for a return, so they do not invest in icebergs to india.  Government has no such incentive, so they do.  The money is wasted and nothing to show for it.  There have been subsidies for ethanol for the last 30 years.  And all we have to show for it is a dead end (we are trading food for fuel - a no win situation).