Carbon Tax / Wallet Rape

The upcoming Carbon Tax is the worst thing Canada has done to it’s people since GST.

“For the record, I hate icebergs, so to hell with them. Their only good for putting old people on to get rid of them.
Don’t volcano’s put out more emissions then we will ever put out? why don’t the liberals put a volcano tax on countries with volcanoes? I have a hybrid-volcano and I’m getting 58 miles per gallon of lava.”
- The Sudbury Star

The article below is good too.

Excepts From the Globe & Mail:
Margaret Wente: “Carbon cuts are just a fantasy”
– June 24, 2008

VANCOUVER — I have bad news for Stéphane Dion. Out here in B.C., the people are revolting. Gordon Campbell’s much-applauded carbon tax was pretty popular in February. But now, as people are being hammered by record gas prices, the enthusiasm has cooled. A new poll says a whopping 59 per cent of British Columbians now oppose the tax – and it hasn’t even kicked in yet.

Beware the fickle voters. Everyone loves carbon taxes, until they have to pay them. But there’s a much bigger and more serious reason for people to be skeptical of carbon taxes, cap-and-trade plans, green shifts, offset schemes and all the other policy proposals that have fueled such mind-numbing debate. The reason is that they won’t work. And you don’t have to be a climate-change denier to see why.

I know, I know. Mr. Dion likes to tell us the planet’s fate is in our hands. Sorry! It’s not. It’s a big old world out there, and most of the six billion people in it are scrambling to use more energy, not less.

Despite our good intentions, we can’t do anything about it. Last year, China clearly overtook the United States as the world’s biggest CO2 emitter. It now accounts for two-thirds of the yearly increase in global emissions. China and India will build a new coal generator roughly once a week for the next 25 years. As we ditch our gas-guzzling SUVs, the Chinese are buying 20,000 new cars every day. Two billion people still lack access to electricity. If we try to tell them they can’t have it, they’ll just laugh at us.

Could we reduce our carbon footprint enough to compensate for all this furious growth? Not a chance. We’d have to repeal air travel, cars and the rest of the 20th century. Global warming is really hard to fix. But don’t take it from me.

In other words, it will take a massive technological revolution to stabilize greenhouse gas emissions, and anyone who says otherwise is kidding you. It’s all very well to say that we ought to lead by example, and do what we can. It’s a good thing to start figuring out how we can eventually wean ourselves off fossil fuels. But if all our efforts to regulate carbon amount to scooping sand from the Sahara with a teaspoon, shouldn’t we face facts?

“We may have set ourselves down the wrong path when we framed the challenge of mitigating greenhouse gases in terms of reducing emissions,” says Mr. Pielke. He says only massive long-term investments in carbon-neutral technologies will do the trick. Keep that in mind during the next eye-glazing round of green debates.

So basically in about 2 years apples will cost $10 each. AWSM.

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