[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 84 (Monday, June 2, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3325-S3329]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ENERGY POLICY
Mr. BARRASSO. Mr. President, today the Obama administration released
a new plan intended to shut down American powerplants. Instead of
celebrating his policies in the Rose Garden, President Obama delegated
the bad news to the Environmental Protection Agency.
Make no mistake about it; what they are announcing today is another
step in the President's plan to make electricity rates ``necessarily
skyrocket.'' Remember, that is what the President promised Americans
when he was running for President the first time in 2008.
Of course, when he was elected Congress said no--no to his radical
plan. Even when the Democrats controlled the House of Representatives,
Nancy Pelosi was the Speaker of the House, and the Democrats had 60
Members of the Senate--even with complete Democratic domination in both
Houses of Congress--Congress still said: No, Mr. President, this is a
bad idea.
So the President decided he knew better than the American people, the
elected representatives. He decided to go around Congress and go around
the American people.
I turn to the front page of today's Wyoming Tribune Eagle out of
Cheyenne, WY, and the headline is: ``Obama Lets EPA Do His Dirty
Work.'' The subheadline says: ``The president's charge to limit
emissions has caused him so much criticism that he is no longer leading
the pack.'' On the front page of the Wyoming Tribune Eagle they go on
to say:
When the Obama administration unveils its much-anticipated
proposal to curb power plant emissions, this cornerstone of
the president's climate change policy--the most significant
environmental regulation of his term--will not be declared in
a sun-bathed Rose Garden news conference or from behind the
lectern in a major speech.
It will not be announced by the president at all, but
instead by his head of the Environmental Protection Agency,
while President Barack Obama adds his comments in an off-
camera conference call. . . .
Talk about something that is unpopular with the American people, it
is this.
About 1 year ago, the President put out rules limiting carbon dioxide
emissions from new powerplants--powerplants that were being
constructed--but today--today--his Environmental Protection Agency is
applying tight new limits on the emissions of existing powerplants--
powerplants that are already there producing energy.
The administration says it is going to allow States ``flexibility''
in how they meet the new limits. I believe any ``flexibility'' that is
being offered is just an illusion. States will have a severely limited
number of options for what they can do to meet the standards. Every one
of those options is going to raise the cost of energy for American
families. That means consumers will not even get the illusion of
flexibility; they will get higher energy costs.
Businesses are going to have to find ways to pay for their own higher
bills because it is not just going to be families, when they turn on
the light switch, who are going to get a higher electric bill. As the
President said, electricity rates will necessarily skyrocket, but
businesses are going to have to find ways to pay for their higher
energy costs, which will mean hiring fewer people, laying off people,
passing on the cost to others.
That is why the U.S. Chamber of Commerce says an aggressive policy
targeting coal-fired powerplants will lead to less disposable income
for families and thousands of jobs lost. So families will have less
disposable income and thousands of jobs will be lost.
We just learned last week that our economy shrank by 1 percent in the
last quarter. The U.S. economy shrank. This is the first time in years
the economy actually shrank by 1 percent in the last quarter. It is the
first time it has happened, actually, since 2011. Our labor force
participation rate is at the same level it was when Jimmy Carter was
the President of the United States. So now the Obama administration
wants to put more Americans out of work.
The action they are taking today is the height of irresponsibility
and it is tone-deaf leadership. The Obama administration is going to
try to defend their extreme regulations by saying, once again, these
changes will help save lives and keep families healthy. The fact is
they are totally ignoring the undeniable fact that when Americans lose
their jobs, their health and the health of their children suffer.
There is an enormous public health threat from high unemployment,
specifically chronic high unemployment. It increases the likelihood of
hospital visits, illness, and premature death. It hurts children's
health and the well-being of families. It influences mental illness,
suicide, alcohol abuse, spouse abuse. It is an important risk factor in
stroke and high blood pressure and heart disease--major things that
impact a family, raise the cost of care. I saw it in my days of medical
training in medical practice, and the White House knows it too.
One might say: How does the White House know? The New York Times
actually ran an article on this in November of 2011--November 17, to be
exact. The headline of the article was ``Policy and Politics Collide as
Obama Enters Campaign Mode.'' ``Policy and Politics Collide as Obama
Enters Campaign Mode.'' The article says a meeting occurred in the
White House between the American Lung Association and then-White House
Chief of Staff William Daley, and the meeting was about the
Environmental Protection Agency's proposed ozone regulations.
In that White House meeting, White House Chief of Staff Daley asked a
simple question when confronted with the argument that additional Clean
Air Act regulations would improve public health. Daley asked: ``What
are the health impacts of unemployment?'' Well, I have just gone over
them with you, Mr. President. Those are the health impacts of
unemployment. So the White House knows about it--totally aware about
it.
When the Environmental Protection Agency announced these new rules
today, the President himself was reportedly talking off camera--a
conference call--on the phone with the
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American Lung Association. Someone in that room should be talking about
the disastrous public health effects of the unemployment that these
rules are causing. The fact is that more regulation from Washington is
not what America needs right now.
States already have flexibility in how they approach environmental
stewardship, and many of them have come up with creative solutions.
Last month the Senate and Congressional Western Caucuses issued a
report called ``Washington Gets it Wrong--States Get it Right.'' The
report showed how regulations imposed by Washington are undermining--
undermining--the work being done at the State level to manage our
lands, to manage our natural resources, and to protect our air and our
water. It gave success stories--success stories--where the work being
done by States is more reasonable, more effective, and less heavyhanded
than the rules ordered by Washington.
America does not need Washington to pay lip service to flexibility
while mandating huge price increases in energy. America wants
Washington to stop the overreaching regulations and mandates and to
actually allow the States to get it right. Thousands of Americans have
already lost their jobs because of Washington's expensive and excessive
regulations. Now the President is putting more jobs on the chopping
block. That is why I have written legislation that would stop President
Obama's massive increase to the Nation's electric bill. I offered this
as an amendment last fall. Democrats in the Senate blocked it. I plan
to offer it again and to keep making the point that the President
should not have the power, the authority to impose these burdens on the
American economy and on American families.
My amendment blocks the issuance of new carbon standards for new and
existing powerplants. It would actually require the approval of
Congress--can you imagine that, the approval of Congress, the elected
representatives of the people--require the approval of Congress for
regulations that increase Americans' energy bills, such as new rules
proposed by the Obama administration today.
Congress should act on an affordable energy plan, but these kinds of
decisions should be for Congress to make, not for the President to make
on his own. That is true whether the President is a Democrat or a
Republican.
We all know we need to make America's energy as clean as we can, as
fast as we can. It is critically important though that we do this
without hurting our economy--a struggling economy, an economy where
people continue to sacrifice--and do this in ways that do not cost
hundreds of thousands of middle-class families their jobs.
We should look to States that have come up with ways to balance our
energy needs, the health of our economy, and our environment.
President Obama is taking the wrong approach. These new regulations
are going to hurt our economy. It is an economy that is already
shrinking. It is astonishing; our economy is shrinking, and it is
because of the President's other failed policies.
The policies introduced today will hurt middle-class families who are
struggling to find work or to keep the jobs they have now. They will
harm the health of many Americans. The President needs to change
course. If he will not do it on his own, Congress must do it for him.
So, once again, today we see the headline: ``Obama Lets EPA Do His
Dirty Work.'' ``The president's charge to limit emissions has caused
him so much criticism that he is no longer leading the pack.'' Instead,
he is hiding. The President today is hiding. If this is something the
President was proud of, he should have been at the White House in the
Rose Garden in front of the cameras making an announcement, not asking
his EPA Administrator to make it so he could be on a conference call
because he was ashamed to show his face to the American people because
of the impact these regulations are going to have on families all
across America.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, the President's Environmental Protection
Agency today--a group that directly reports to him and which reflects
his decisions about environmental matters--has issued a new proposed
regulation to reduce carbon dioxide emissions from existing powerplants
by 30 percent by the year 2030. Those are existing plants, and they
cannot be operated and have that kind of reduction unless they have
carbon capture, and there is no technology feasible with any
reasonable--there is technology, but it is not feasible economically to
capture carbon. So it is a dramatic hammering of a major portion of the
baseload electricity production in America. It just is, and it is going
to drive up costs.
What I wish to say first and foremost is I am very worried about our
economy. This economy is not doing well, and anybody who has paid close
attention to it knows we have had one thing--one very important
positive factor--over the last half dozen years that has helped our
economy bounce back and even caused some industries to bring home
production from foreign countries; and that advantage--that positive
event--is a decline in energy prices. It is a direct result, primarily,
of fracking--our ability to produce more energy from existing wells in
a proven-to-be safe and effective way. It is going on over large
portions of America. Although this administration and the Environmental
Protection Agency have thrown up a host of roadblocks to try to keep it
from occurring, it is such a powerful, positive event it is virtually
unstoppable.
So that is good. That is helping our businesses prosper. I remember
in Alabama, north of Mobile where I grew up, there is a group of
chemical companies on the river. Those chemical companies are
international companies, first-rate companies, that were hammered when
natural gas, 10 or 15 years ago, surged in price so much. Many of them
reduced their capacity, some have closed and were sold, and we lost a
lot of good jobs.
It happened in Ohio. Ohio had a devastation among their strong
chemical industries. The industry is beginning to come back now because
of lower natural gas prices. But other industries too are very energy
sensitive such as the steel industry. We are in a life-and-death
competition to save America's steel industry. Energy is a huge portion
of that.
Electricity is a big portion of that. To eliminate nearly 40 percent
of our base load, to drive us on a path to drive up those costs
unnecessarily above what we can rationally achieve, is a mistake, in my
opinion.
Looking at Barron's this week--that is a business magazine. It comes
out weekly. It has articles that sum up the state of the economy in
America. Of course we know that first-quarter economic growth was
revised downward, downward to negative 1.0 from positive .1. This is
the first negative growth in years, since 2011. It was unexpected.
Corporate profits, excluding the depths of the recession, are the
lowest in 20 years in America. We have fewer people working today than
we had in 2007, although there are 15 million more people in America--
fewer people working and more of them are working part time than want
to work part time. We have a surge in part-time employment. That is not
good either.
Wages are down. Adjusted, probably for inflation, wages are down,
median income is down in America per family by $2,300. Your wages are
down. Your job prospects are down. Unemployment remains exceedingly
high, and we are now going to add, in effect, another tax, a regulatory
tax on the price of energy so a person's electric bill and their gas
bill are going to go up. That is the inevitable result of this. It just
is.
We have got to be careful about it. Europe is already regretting the
mistakes they have made. Spain has had to abandon their overly
ambitious plan for renewable energy. German businesspeople are telling
their leaders that if you do not change the energy policy in this
country, we are not going to be able to compete and be successful as we
have been in the world markets.
So this is not a little matter. It is about jobs. It is about middle-
income,
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hard-working Americans. The lower income people in this country pay as
much as 25 percent of their income for energy. Oh, the rich people, the
people who travel around in big jets and claim to be concerned about
the environment, pay much less. For those making over $50,000 a year,
you pay about 11 percent of your income on energy.
So higher energy costs are direct negatives for poorer, hard-working
people in America. Retired seniors have no ability to have an increase
in wages, trying to live on Social Security and a little savings. Boom,
you have got another $10, $20, $30 a month for the electric bill, the
gas bill. It erodes their standard of living.
Again, it erodes the ability of American business to be competitive
in the world marketplace. We have got to take back more work. In fact,
we are beginning to do that if we would do fewer bad things. We had a
good result with lower energy prices and this is going to undermine
that. It just is. We have got the pipeline. No, we will not do the
pipeline either. All that does is provide another source of oil and
gas, oil for America, that forces the existing American big oil
companies to compete with. It helps to bring down the price.
If you do not have another source from Canada, you have got less
competition. Competition helps bring down price. I do not believe this
administration wants to bring down the price of energy. In fact, I
think the opposite is true. In fact, President Obama said, before he
was elected, that we could have--if anybody built a coal plant it was
going bankrupt. That is not possible, to phase out the entire coal
industry so rapidly. We have done so much to clean it up. They have
spent billions and billions of dollars reducing the pollutants that
come out of smokestacks. It helped a lot. That is why our air is
cleaner than it has been in years. We have made a lot of progress. A
lot of money has been spent. But this is an excessive action, in my
view, focused primarily on CO2, carbon dioxide.
We all know about photosynthesis. We know how plants grow. We know
they take in carbon dioxide and breath out oxygen. We breathe in oxygen
and we let out carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is odorless, it is
tasteless, it is not poisonous, it is not harmful. In fact, plants grow
faster if there is more carbon dioxide than if there is less carbon
dioxide. This is a scientific fact that is not disputable.
So what do they say? They say, well, the Clean Air Act gives the
responsibility of eliminating pollutants from our atmosphere. It was
passed in 1970 before anybody even dreamed of global warming. So carbon
dioxide--when the law was passed, the Clean Air Act in the 1970s, they
had no thought whatsoever in the Congress that we would be banning
carbon dioxide. John Dingell, a long-term Democratic Congressman, one
of the longest serving ever, was a Member of Congress who voted on
that. He recently said they had no idea we were voting to regulate
carbon dioxide.
So how did it happen? Well, the environmentalists filed a lawsuit.
They said the Congress passed a law in 1970. That law said you should
reduce pollutants. You have a responsibility to reduce pollutants and
carbon dioxide is a pollutant. Why? Well, the IPCC, the International
Panel on Climate Change, said that CO2 creates global
warming, this perfectly positive small amount of gas in our massive
environment, that makes plants grow better, is increasing. It is. It is
increasing in the environment because of burning carbon fuels.
They said this increase is going to warm the planet. We are going to
have more storms, more tornadoes, and the coasts are going to flood and
all of this. Therefore, EPA should regulate it. Must regulate it. By a
5-to-4 ruling, the Supreme Court agreed. Congress has never voted for
that. Congress has voted against global warming legislation multiple
times. It would never ever pass this Congress if it were brought up for
a vote. Never pass.
So unelected folks in the Environmental Protection Agency, unelected,
lifetime appointed Federal judges, at least five of the nine, concluded
that this is a pollutant. So here we are.
I do not know whether we have got warming. I have assumed it is.
Temperatures, I believe over the last hundred years, have increased
about 1 degree. But I do think we need to be a lot more modest about
this. It is well below what the alarmists have been telling us.
How did it all happen? Why did the Supreme Court decide that this
plant food, CO2, is a pollutant? They said it was because
these models are saying the planet is warming and all of the scientists
agree, which is not true. But the scientists have said the planet is
warming, so therefore CO2 is a pollutant. They so ruled. But
things are not happening as the experts told us. It is just not
happening. I am beginning to wonder what is going on here.
This chart, the red line--this is zero. The red line is an average of
all of the computer models that projected what the increase in
climate--in temperature would be based on steadily increasing
CO2 in the atmosphere. Back in dinosaur days, we had a lot
more CO2 in the atmosphere than we have today. But it has
been reduced. It has been increasing as we go into the ground, get coal
and get oil and get natural gas and burn it. That emits more
CO2. It is released back into the atmosphere, actually. It
was sucked out of the atmosphere through plants and animals.
This was the chart. Every single climate change model that is the
foundation of the argument for dangerous global warming predicted more
than has actually occurred in the last 15 years.
This is the chart. You go back to about 2000 here. This green line is
the actual result from--I believe that is balloon temperature gauges.
It actually has not gone up at all since 2001. That is what, 13 years?
This is not the temperatures they were predicting. Besides, the charts
looks a little more dramatic than they are. This is zero. This is two-
tenths. They were predicting, from 1979 I believe was their key date,
that the temperature would increase 1.2 degrees. It has increased about
three-tenths of 1 degree. That is in this part.
But if you go here, when the chart is going off here, saying it
should be accelerating every year, it has been flat. So I do not know.
Some people say the Sun is involved in it. Some people have other
theories. I do not know. I have assumed we are going to have some
warming out there. But it is certainly not coming in at the rate the
alarmists have told us. That is indisputable fact.
We in Congress need to be asking ourselves how much burden we can
afford to put on the American people at this time. The President--I
have got to tell you, one of the most frustrating things and
disappointing things to me is that the President in the last several
years--he has not in over a year now because I have been asking his
people before the environment committee to be sure and tell him not to
say it anymore. But he has two times said that the temperature is
increasing faster than the experts predicted over the last 10 or 15
years. Think about that. The President of the United States, in the
face of obvious data to the contrary, is repeatedly going out and
saying, it is increasing faster than the red line. That worries me. I
believe the President of the United States has a responsibility, when
he advocates for policies, to tell the truth, the whole truth, and
nothing but the truth.
That is not so. It is not increasing faster. It has hardly increased
at all in the last 10 or so years.
Then they say the storms--the President and his team when Sandy hit
go out and say this is all a direct result of global warming. See?
Every time there is a storm, every time there is a drought, and every
time there is a problem, it is always climate change, global warming.
Dr. Roger Pielke laid out the numbers. I don't have the details here,
but he testified before the Environment and Public Works Committee and
he said: It is not so, hurricanes are not increasing. It is not hard to
see how many hurricanes you have.
You simply go back each year. They are quite calculating. He went
back and calculated the hurricanes--how many category 5's, 4's, 3's,
2's, and 1's. The result is pretty astonishing that we have had fewer
of them. This chart is hard to read. I will quote what it says:
Hurricanes have not increased in the US in frequency,
intensity or normalized damage since at least 1900.
He has not been disputed either. They have tried to push back and
attack him, but nobody has produced
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data that dispute what he says because it is easier to calculate that
data.
This is important. Dr. Pielke recently produced an analysis that said
it has been 3,140 days since this country has had a category 3
hurricane. Camille was a 5, and we have had some others in the past.
But we have had almost 10 years since we had a category 3. Sandy, this
storm which hit the Northeast, which was very rare, happened to miss
the southeast, missed Florida, and hit the Northeast. It was not even a
hurricane when it hit land. It was below the speed, I understand, of a
hurricane. At best, it was a category 1. It just happened to hit the
Northeast where people are not used to it, and it did a lot of damage.
How can it be argued, I ask colleagues, that global warming is
causing more storms? Moreover, the 2012-2013 tornado season was one of
the lowest in the past 50 years. Only 5 out of 50 years have been that
low.
We are not seeing an increase in tornadoes. We read about them more.
We have The Weather Channel, and they talk about them more. But, in
truth, the numbers aren't there.
Now, if hurricanes are down--and it has been 3,100 days since we have
had a category 3 hurricane--it is about the longest in history that we
recorded. It is an unusual drought of big hurricanes. It means a lot to
me. I live in Mobile, AL, and I remember Hurricane Frederic in 1979
barreling up Mobile Bay. I remember the fear people had who had been
there when Camille hit nearby in Mississippi. I know something about
hurricanes, and they are very real factors. It surprises me we have had
as few as we have had. We have also not seen an increase in tornadoes.
What we are proposing is that we have to carry out a policy that
would go beyond our technology to produce electricity in a cost-
effective manner, and it has the impact of massively closing base-load
coal plants. Existing plants are going to be hammered, and new ones
will not be built.
I am also on the subcommittee of Environment and Public Works that
deals with nuclear power. Not a single American since the beginning of
nuclear power 50 years ago has been killed as a result of a nuclear
power accident. How many die in natural gas pipelines, drilling rigs,
coal mines, transportation of coal, and so forth?
We basically shut down nuclear power. I am telling us this is a big
problem for our country, the erosion of nuclear power. We had four
plants close--existing nuclear plants close. They have been hammered
with regulations, and they have never been safer. We have never known
more about how to operate a nuclear plant safely than we know today.
But they know only one or two are being constructed, and this assault
on nuclear power has the potential to erode the 20 percent of our
electricity that comes from nuclear power. So if we lose the coal and
we lose nuclear power--and most of these plants are 30-plus, 40 or 45
years old, and they will soon be at the end of their lifetime. If we
don't replace them, where will our energy come from, pray tell?
In any finding, anything that we do today to try to impact
CO2 is only a drop in the bucket worldwide. They are
building coal-fired plants in China, India, the East, the Middle East,
other places, and Africa in large numbers. We are a very small part of
the overall picture, and our actions are not going to reverse this
trend.
I don't know and I don't pretend to know all of the answers, but I
would say that if we have more CO2 and we have more global
warming and global climate change, how do we know it won't result in
fewer hurricanes? We have had fewer.
How do we know it won't result in fewer tornadoes? We have had fewer
tornadoes.
Life on the planet has tended to be more healthy and prosperous in
times of higher temperatures than lower temperatures. I certainly don't
want to see a surging temperature in America and rapidly changing
conditions. I think we could have real damage. As I said, I don't know
what the full answer is.
I am just saying in my judgment, this administration is pushing this
beyond what is reasonable. It is going to adversely affect the economy
of America. It is going to drive up the cost of every household's
electric bill, every household's gasoline bill. Every business in
America that hires American workers is going to try to export products,
and those products are going to be more expensive because they had to
pay more for their energy.
The last thing we need to be doing at this point in American history
is driving up--artificially--the price of energy. One expert said a
number of years ago that the lifespan--the average lifespan of a person
in a nation where electricity is readily available--is twice that
wherever it is not readily available.
I have been in poor places in the world where there is not
electricity. You see the difficulty they have with water, you see the
difficulty they have with cleanliness and so forth, and cooling and
keeping food refrigerated and the disease that comes from that.
Energy is a positive force. It has made this world--the western
world, the developed world--so much more prosperous. It is creating
wealth that we can then use for good causes--to clean up the
environment, and to produce healthy foods for billions worldwide.
I don't think we should see energy as an evil thing. I think energy
is a good thing, and we don't need to drive the price up. It makes life
harder for people, especially those of limited income.
I thank the Chair for the opportunity to share these thoughts. It
means a lot to me. We will keep working on it. We will analyze in
detail, as time goes by, the proposal the President has presented. I
remain very concerned, as a matter of constitutional order, that this
is being done without a vote of the people. This is being done by a 5-
to-4 Supreme Court ruling, an aggressive President, and an aggressive
EPA.
It seems as if there is not enough, and there is an inability in
Congress to do anything about it. The average American who disagrees
has no voice, apparently, in being able to have their voice heard. So
we will continue to talk about it and as time goes by, we will look at
the trend and hopefully we can reduce some of the excesses that I think
clearly exist.
I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. King). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, having just come down from the chair, I
wish to briefly respond to the remarks of the junior Senator from
Alabama, who engaged in a pretty stunning and broad denial of science
for about 15 minutes on the floor of the Senate as part of what I
imagine will be a pretty robust critique this week of the new EPA rules
from the administration.
When we were all schoolkids, we probably had the chance to read the
play ``Inherit the Wind.'' It is rather de rigueur for students to
read. In the end, as Drummond is essentially excoriating Matthew
Harrison Brady on the stand, the book ends with almost a sense of
sorrow about the unraveling of Brady's argument and the kind of figure
he is portrayed at the end of the book to be.
My hope is that the same degree of strange affection may be the
legacy of those who come to the floor and engage in the same denial of
basic science that is at the root of the Scopes Monkey Trial in the
book which made it famous.
Our colleague talked about the fact that the jury is still out as to
whether the planet is warming. Here are the 10 hottest years on record
since 1880: 2010, 2005, 1998, 2013, 2003, 2002, 2006, 2009, 2007, and
2004.
The Senator said that all the science doesn't really suggest global
warming is happening. Well, he is right. Ninety-seven percent of
scientists with peer-reviewed literature have come to the conclusion
that the planet is warming and humans are contributing to it.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said this in their last
report: ``Warming of the climate system is unequivocal.''
My friend said: Well, even if it is happening, we are really only a
small part of the problem. So why is it even necessary for us to act?
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Well, we are not a small part of the problem. We are 5 percent of the
world's population and 25 percent of the world's pollution. And even if
the specific actions this week do represent a very small percentage of
the ultimate solution when we talk about trying to get the temperature
of the planet under control, that is a terrible argument in and of
itself. Is that a reason why none of us should bother to vote--because
each one of our own actions in and of itself really doesn't affect the
overall outcome? It is the collection of all of the actions we take in
a democracy that makes the difference, and it is the collection of
actions we will take as a community of nations and a community of
individuals that will ultimately make the difference.
I imagine this debate will continue.
____________________