[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 104 (Wednesday, July 13, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H4952-H4953]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BULB ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Virginia (Mr. Connolly) for 5 minutes.
Mr. CONNOLLY of Virginia. Madam Speaker, we are 2 short weeks away
from defaulting on American debt, which would devastate our economy and
plunge this country, if not the global economy, into a steep recession.
We are engaged in three overseas wars as part of the broader struggle
to defeat terrorism. Century-old autocracies are crumbling in the
Middle East. Extreme drought is destroying farmers' livelihoods across
the Southeast, Texas, and Oklahoma, while floods of biblical
proportions inundate the upper Midwest. Unprecedented tornadoes have
killed hundreds of people in Missouri, Alabama, and Virginia, while the
melting of glaciers and polar ice continues to accelerate. Meanwhile,
our economy stagnates for lack of any new congressional action to
expedite growth.
In response to these existential threats at home and once-in-a-
lifetime opportunities for democracy abroad, the Republican leadership
has brought to the floor a bill to repeal a nonexistent ban on
incandescent light bulbs passed by a Republican Congress and signed by
a Republican President, President Bush. That's right, light bulbs.
Connoisseurs of Internet hearsay are aware that Tea Party conspiracy
theorists think President Obama is trying to outlaw the incandescent
light bulb even though President Bush signed that law into enactment.
Cooler heads, such as representatives of every major light bulb
manufacturer in America, from Philips to Johnson Controls, actually
support the light bulb efficiency standards because they provide a
competitive advantage for American manufacturers relative to their
Chinese competitors, who produce shoddy, light-inefficient bulbs. Who
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knew that the Tea Party contained so many Manchurian sympathizers who
have hidden their proto-internationalist agenda beneath the folds of
the Don't Tread on Me flag?
As we have heard, those who would repeal the light bulb efficiency
standards believe we are ``taxed enough already.'' Apparently the
lowest Federal tax burden in 60 years has left these zealots with extra
disposable income, and they want to spend it on inefficient light
bulbs. In fact, repeal of the light bulb standards would give Americans
the liberty to spend $85 extra per year on light bulbs to produce no
additional light. It's hard to understand how ideologues in this House
can suggest imposing $85 per year on their constituents in order to buy
light bulbs which consume more electricity than necessary.
Those who are baffled by Republican support for this anachronistic
incandescent bulb tax may want to refer to the legislative record of
the House over the last 7 months. The Republican Party has deviated so
far from its historic support for conservation that it now supports
legislation that would allow air and water pollution with impunity. The
new Republican Caucus supports legislation like the BULB Act, which we
dealt with last night, and retrogresses to the time of Thomas Edison
and the invention of the light bulb. These Republicans sound like flat
earthers, and they must really mean it when they call themselves
originalists.
This entire situation would be humorous but for the gravity of the
threat our Nation faces, from climate change to the debt puzzle, or the
opportunities that we will forgo in the Middle East because this House
is distracted by a paranoid attack on light bulbs.
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