fraywatch
columns
- Palin-tology
Missed conceptions and bad taste.
Moira Redmond
posted Sept. 3, 2008 - A Rising Tide Swamps All Coasts
What do we know about global warming?posted Aug. 15, 2008 - What Really Goes on in the E.R.
Why it's important to discuss health issues in the Fray.
Moira Redmond
posted July 30, 2008 - Getting a Little Bit Crazy in Iraq
Watch Generation Kill, read the review.
Moira Redmond
posted July 22, 2008 - Fist Jabs, Satire, and the Last Private Places on Earth
What readers know about that New Yorker cover.
Moira Redmond
posted July 17, 2008 - Search for more fraywatch articles
- Subscribe to the fraywatch RSS feed
- View our complete fraywatch archive
Let's Talk About SexA candid debate on today's "hook-up culture."
Compiled by Adam ChristianPosted Friday, Feb. 23, 2007, at 12:00 AM ET
LuxLawyer considers the carbon tax's distributive effects:
[Applebaum's proposal] betrays a fundamental misunderstanding of the concept of elasticity. If there are a "wealth of innovations," then the amount of revenue raised by the tax won't be that great. That, for example, is why a lot of people believe that the US's CAFE standards are a better approach than a gas tax to reducing gasoline use: demand is (short term) inelastic, so a tax just increases costs and raises revenue without changing behavior. And if that's true, it again means that there will be a significant increased cost to consumers, resulting in a more regressive tax system.
Similarly, Breaker criticizes the tax for its failure to be Pareto efficient by allocating "compensation … worldwide in proportion to the harm." Vepxistqaosani3 brings attentions to Third World contributions to the global carbon load. MicheleG takes issue with the focus on Europe, where high taxes on energy already incentivize consumers to be efficient. For Human, the current paralysis in solving the global warming crisis indicates the ultimate failure of nationalism: "Why would the Germans want to harm their economy by imposing a carbon tax that helps all the other, non-taxing countries just as much? ... The world is too interconnected now, economically, socially, and environmentally… International problems require international solutions, with international enforcement."
To combat global warming, Madai envisions a utopic community of mixed-use skyscrapers in which "at most you'd have a horizontal walk of 1/8 of a mile to get to any basic middle class amenity." konark_girl calls unchecked population growth the elephant in the room:
Here's the crux -- you can reduce per capita carbon emissions, but if the number of people keep on going up, so will overall carbon emissions. And you cannot possibly deny third world people the chance for a slightly better life (not when the first world has luxurious lifestyles!), but any improvement in their lifestyles also up carbon emissions.
Absolutely no solutions will work unless there are massive campaigns to strongly curb population growth (before nature does it for us thru catastrophes, starvation, disease, or we do it through war and genocide).
But that's a proposal that's dead on arriavl, because religious right won't hear of it, and nor will soft-hearted lefties. On this topic all sides are equally pig-headed and deliberately obtuse, so of course, no politician dares mention it.
Daniel Engler's related discussion of the "statistical rhetoric" surrounding global warming also generated some heated words. not_abel cautions against the use of meaningless percentages in public debate:
The scientists just don't have any means of determining the probability that the simulations they're doing are accurate. Language is being used without regard to, even in contradiction of, scientific meaning for the purpose of creating a sense of urgency. That is the plain meaning of quantifying "subjective judgements".
If you are going to criticize those who question the science behind the consensus on global warming, you would do well to make sure that the standards that make it "science" are not bent to the purposes of propaganda when the science is communicated to the public.
For the_slasher14 here, the apocalyptic thinking around global warming paradoxically gives polluters a spiritual out:
as long as it is cheaper to pollute than to not pollute, the numbers and/or the noise-level of the rhetoric don't matter… There are people who figure that they'll be dead by the time global warming becomes catastrophic and in the meantime they're getting rich off of fossil fuels or whatever else they're up to which warms the planet. They are the spiritual heirs of James Watt, who said (as Reagan's Secretary of the Interior, no less) that the Second Coming was just around the corner and therefore, since the world would end then anyhow, there was little need for conservation.
The New York-based Carbon Tax Center has more information on advocacy efforts underway within the U.S. Safely emit some CO2 in the Science Fray, or scroll back through the archives to Slate's Green Challenge. AC … 11:23am PT
feedback | about us | help | advertise | newsletters | mobile
User Agreement and Privacy Policy | All rights reserved
- Today's Headlines
- [audio] Astronomer Discovers Black Hole At Center Of Own Marriage
Sun, 07 Sep 2008 01:00:14 -0400 - No One On SWAT Team Wants To Wait In Ventilation Duct With Howard
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 09:00:53 -0400 - [audio] Homicidal Surgeon General May Be Hazardous To Your Health
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 01:00:43 -0400 - » More from the Onion
The New American FamilyAndrew J. Cherlin | The picture-
perfect family? These days, There's no such thing. | Q&A: Mon., 3 p.m.
- Today's Headlines
- Sarah Palin: An Apostle of Alaska
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 21:12:32 GMT - Rethinking the War on Cancer
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 17:55:51 GMT - The Taliban's No. 2 cash source: ransom kidnapping
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 18:01:39 GMT - » More from Newsweek
- Today's Headlines
- Bye-Bye, Boomers
Fri, 5 September 2008 16:44:27 GMT - Living Down to Expectations
Thu, 4 September 2008 21:11:52 GMT - Busted Brand
Thu, 4 September 2008 18:58:59 GMT - » More from The Root

fraywatch





