Date: Fri, 9 Mar 2007 09:32:29 -0600
Reply-To: Jim Felder <felder@KNOLOGY.NET>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Jim Felder <felder@KNOLOGY.NET>
Subject: Re: Anybody burning WVO in Illinois?-Fryeday rant
In-Reply-To: <8C93073698B4DFA-1150-3BE2@webmail-de13.sysops.aol.com>
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Wonder why they don't also tax the production of electricity in a
hybrid as an alternative fuel? I've considered producing my own
diesel and have experimented with small batches. I find that
everywhere you look, people are a little bit afraid to come right out
and say they are making it and using it. There's always the presence
of a bureaucratic threat awaiting the production of biodiesel if it
gets to be too popular. Illinois seems to the the only state so far
that is not turning a blind eye towards the production of it.
On Mar 9, 2007, at 9:04 AM, David Clarkson wrote:
> save our money and feel good about pollution burping diesels
> instead of having to buy Al Gore's right pocket to left pocket
> carbon credits. I am a libertarian that believes that less
> government is the best government.
Why do people react so negatively to credit trading? In my experience
it means they usually don't understand it. It's something that has
worked very well over the last few decades to reverse the loss of
wetlands in this country, and I presume it could work equally well
for other side-effects of consumption like carbon, stream
degradation, etc. Yes, it does presume that people are going to
continue to consume, but what rational solution wouldn't. It's a way
that people who can manage NOT to pollute and who develop cleaner
industrial processes can get rewarded for their efforts. Credit
trading may not be the perfect solution, but we've got to have
something in place today or there won't be much left in 25 years.
And, like anything else, credit trading will depend a lot more on the
motivations of the people implementing it than any inherent
characteristics of credit trading. It doesn't have anything to do
with big government, it has to do with fixing an imperfect market:
the way things are done today, the real cost of pollution is hidden
from most of society while being passed along to society for payment,
while the people making the money from the imperfection are getting
off for free.
It's time to stick it to them, not us.
Jim
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