It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Rep. Paul (R-TX) said in 2006: “The last thing we need is centralized government planning when it comes to our precious energy supplies.” Paul voted against the Clean Energy Act of 2007. He has also called for an end to “all subsidies and special benefits to energy companies.” Paul voted against the 2005 Energy Policy Act.
Paul voted in favor of the New Direction for Energy Independence, National Security, and Consumer Protection Act, which was hailed by environmentalists for its measures promoting clean energy. Paul is against government subsides for ethanol (Grist) and pro-nuclear power.
If Paul can't offer any pother solution to our environmental issues than that, then he hasn't the intellectual weight to solve many others either.
Originally posted by NeoVain
reply to post by Wookiep
lol... That is not even the occupy movement, just a few uninformed fringe protestors, looking for whatever excuse they can come up with to socialise...
Originally posted by apacheman
reply to post by NeoVain
The states? They are easier and cheaper to buy than the feds.
That is a bullcrap argument and reason to abolish the EPA, especially since most things covered by it have multi-state implications.
Moving it to the state level just creates new fortunes for lawyers and delays any effective controls.
If there are problems with it, fix the problems. Shuffling off to the states doesn't fix problems, it multiplies them.
Abolishing the EPA makes no sense: it is Pilate washing his hands.
the key to sound environmental policy is respect for private property rights," according to his campaign website. He says the free market prohibits pollution of one's "neighbor's land, air, or water
Paul opposes the Kyoto treaty and a carbon tax. He is also critical of the Environmental Protection Agency. "It's a bureaucratic, intrusive approach and it favors those who have political connections."
"Back in the '60s ... I went on a news excursion on the river downtown to show how bad the pollution was," Ellers recalled recently. "I remember we could see a layer of crud on the water but didn't appreciate its thickness until the photog on the trip, Marv Greene, said, 'Richard, dip your hand in there and pull it out.' "
The image of a black, gooey hand coming out of the Cuyahoga like a B-movie swamp monster defined the plight of the Cuyahoga. By association, it indicted all industrial American cities -- and a culture that for a century had generally viewed natural waterways as a means to an end.
"The Cuyahoga River -- the thick pollution on the water and the fire -- became a convenient example of what 'bad' really is," said Frank Samsel, whose company aided in early 1970s cleanup efforts.
"And the more you talked down about how terrible it was, the more the press and news jumped on it. But it also made people aware of the fact that things could be different."
In December 1952, a deadly smog settled over London. Trapped by cooler air above, the dirty cloud enveloped the city for four days. Rich with soot from factories and low-quality home-burned coal, the Great Smog, as it came to be known, caused some 12,000 deaths that winter.
Similar, though smaller, lethal clouds choked Liege, Belgium, in 1930, killing at least 60 people, and Donora, Pennsylvania, in 1948, accounting for a score of deaths.
These disasters forced the world to face the dangers of air pollution and inspired an ongoing movement for cleaner air. The United Kingdom adopted broad air pollution regulations in 1956, the first country to do so. In 1970, the United States created the Environmental Protection Agency and passed the Clean Air Act. The act originally empowered the EPA to determine safe limits and regulate six major air pollutants, now expanded to include 189 potential threats.
“It’s a huge act,” says Jonathan Samet, an air pollution researcher and professor of public health at the University of Southern California. “We’ve had tremendous declines in major air pollutants as a consequence.”
On environment, governments don't have a good reputation for doing a good job protecting the environment. If you look at the extreme of socialism or communism, they were very poor environmentalists. Private property owners have a much better record of taking care of the environment. If you look at the common ownership of the lands in the West, they're much more poorly treated than those that are privately owned. In a free-market system, nobody is permitted to pollute their neighbor's private property -- water, air, or land. It is very strict.
Originally posted by OutKast Searcher
Originally posted by NeoVain
reply to post by Wookiep
lol... That is not even the occupy movement, just a few uninformed fringe protestors, looking for whatever excuse they can come up with to socialise...
How do you know this???
Kind of an odd comment to make about a group that accepts all people, has no organization, and claims to be against ALL policital parties and candidates.
How exactly do you know they aren't part of OWS??? Do you have an official roster?
Originally posted by Wookiep
Out of ALL the GOP candidates the Occupy movement goes after Ron Paul??
Originally posted by Algernonsmouse
Originally posted by Wookiep
Out of ALL the GOP candidates the Occupy movement goes after Ron Paul??
Ummmmmmmmmmm......
NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Jesus Ron Paul worshippers are just too damn much.
Out of all the presidential candidates the Occupy movement is going after ALL THE CANDIDATES, including Paul and Obama.
hell, did you even read what you wrote?
"Out of all the GOP candidates..."
If you do not see the problem that starts right there then you need not worry about facts or reality anyway.
Originally posted by apacheman
Abolishing the EPA is a dangerously stupid idea, one that corporate America would dearly love to see happen: no more pesky rules against fracking aquifers, no oversight of toxic waste dumps, no place to complain to about waste dumped untreated into rivers.