Understanding Biden Administration Energy Policy

  • Politicians have long been known for having a loose relationship with the truth. Generally, that takes the form of exaggeration or hyperbole. But the latest craze among Democrats is just making flatly contradictory statements.

  • In this category, it’s hard to top the performance of Pennsylvania Senate candidate John Fetterman on Saturday night, when he uttered this immortal quote:

  • I run on Roe v Wade. I celebrate the demise of Roe v. Wade. That's the choice that we have between us, in front of us.”

  • Video at the link if you don’t believe it. Clearly, Fetterman is not all there mentally.

  • But how different is that, really, from Joe Biden on energy policy?

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Some Thoughts On Affirmative Action

  • The Supreme Court arguments in the Harvard and University of North Carolina affirmative action cases took place on Monday. I listened to some substantial portion, although it was not possible for me to listen to the whole thing (some 5 hours in total). From what I heard, I agree with most commenters that affirmative action in the form currently practiced throughout academia is not likely to survive.

  • Affirmative action is one of those issues on which the opinions of our intellectual elites diverge almost completely from the opinions of normal people.

  • In a piece on Tuesday (November 1) discussing the likely outcome of the Harvard/UNC case, the New York Times took note of the broad public opposition to affirmative action in college admissions, even extending to heavily Democratic constituencies:

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UK Trapped In The Green Energy Cul-de-Sac

UK Trapped In The Green Energy Cul-de-Sac
  • Often I have referred to the situation that the UK, Germany, California and others have set themselves up for as “hitting the green energy wall.”

  • But now that the UK has actually gotten there and has begun to deal with the consequences, I’m not sure that “hitting the wall” is the best analogy. A better analogy might be “driving into the green energy cul-de-sac.”

  • After all, when you hit a wall you can probably just pick yourself up and turn around and be on your way. In the cul-de-sac you are trapped with no evident way of getting out. You might be in there for a long time.

  • This is where the UK finds itself today.

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NYC Hates Its Middle Class Homeowners

NYC Hates Its Middle Class Homeowners
  • Four years ago, just before our son was born, my husband and I bought our first home: a two bedroom, one bathroom apartment in Queens.

  • Queens has a lot to recommend it; it is often known as the City’s “middle class” borough, with almost no slums, and an equivalent lack of notable wealth.

  • It is not a small area: more than 100 square miles, with a population over 2.25 million. The homeownership rate is about 45%, which is high for New York City.

  • In addition, it is the most ethnically diverse county in the U.S., and a place where immigrants from all over the world have sought the American dream.

  • Unfortunately, our politicians are working hard to put an end to that.

  • About a year ago I joined the board of my building.. Within my first month of joining a senior board member, one who has been on the board for many years and is about 20 years my senior, sent us all the following email:

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CHECC Brief Challenging CO2 Endangerment Finding Now Publicly Available

  • Yesterday the Concerned Household Electricity Consumers Council (CHECC) filed a corrected version of its opening brief challenging the EPA’s Endangerment Finding as to CO2 and other greenhouse gases.

  • The brief can be found here.

  • The bizarre reason for the “corrected” filing was that the clerks at the DC Circuit rejected our initial filing on the ground that we used an excessive number of acronyms. They have a rule encouraging you not to use too many acronyms, but the rule gives no clue as to how many is too many. When you use the term “greenhouse gases” thirty times, should you shorten it to “GHGs,” or write it out every time? You only find out when they bounce the brief and require you to correct it. Anyway, with any luck the linked version is now the final one.

  • When you take a look at the brief, you will see that we are directly and openly challenging the fake science of predicted catastrophic human-caused global warming from GHGs.

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Some Information From Greenwich Village On The Upcoming Election

 Some Information From Greenwich Village On The Upcoming Election
  • Here in ultra-progressive Greenwich Village, there is no such thing as a Republican running a competitive race for an office at any level — local, city-wide, state or federal.

  • The only contests are between the left and the far left, or maybe the far, far left. All local and city-wide races are decided in the Democratic primary, and generally the Republicans do not even field candidates for the State Legislature and City Council races.

  • All of which makes the current issue of our local community newspaper, West View News, so remarkable. It is unlike any issue of this or any other local newspaper in this neighborhood that I have seen in an election season at any time in my nearly 50 years living here.

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