At a conference call for bloggers, I was able to ask Libertarian Presidential Candidate Bob Barr about his views on global warming, an area where I had criticized him last week for some seeming inconsistencies. Here is candidate Barr's answer…
Although I certainly do not believe that there is anything approaching a clear linkage between CO2 emissions and global warming, as many maintain, I do believe that it is something we need to be looking at, to establish exactly what the parameters and correlations are, if any, between man-made phenomena such as CO2 emissions and industrial emissions and global warming.In response to other questions from other call participants, Congressman Barr laid out his positions on a range of other issues…If it bears out that it is simply a geological cyclical issue or whatnot, regardless of where we might wind up with regard to global warming, I do commend, for example, folks like Boone Pickens, who has indicated -- again regardless of what we find are the causes of global warming -- that we need to really start working towards developing alternative sources of energy over the long-term. Some people, as the former Vice-President has indicated, believe this is an imperative because of global warming. Others, like Boone Pickens, take a more market-driven approach, that is that global warming seems to be occurring, and we need to discover why and what the correlations are, but even regardless of that, we need to be developing alternative sources of energy over the long term.
Over the short term – and this is me talking, not Boone Pickens – we are and will continue to be petroleum-based economy. That is not going to change in the short term, and we need to therefore do everything we can to develop sources of petroleum, so that we have the energy we need in the short term so that in the long term, we will be able to develop the alternative sources we need, whether that is natural gas, solar to some extent, wind to some extent, or perhaps something that has not even been invented yet.
Groovy.
BTW, I'm not sure what makes the 4th Amendment a dealbreaker, but this Libertarian objects to some -- but not other -- types of intelligence operations whether they are here or elsewhere:
Assassination (Castro)
Kidnapping (Noriega)
Manipulation of Political System (Think Iran, 1953)
Note that Castro is the only assasination attempt they've admitted to, and he's still alive, which brings me to the best reason not to believe that the CIA killed Kennedy: he's dead.
If the CIA assasinated Castro as well as they do most things, he'll probably live forever.
It's not just that "they might get mad at us", though 9/11 proved conclusively that blowback can and will happen, but it is a matter of fundamental democratic principals.
If our government is doing things to which they can never admit, then what oversite to voters have over what our government does? For whom do we vote if we want behavior about which they regularly lie changed? It's not like they can lie to the locals and tell Americans the truth!
If we want to have a republic, rather than an Empire, it implies that Americans must know what their government is doing and beable to control their government. As always, I concern myself only with what is best for America. The rest of the world is not my problem.
Don't forget that the worst fear of the Founding Fathers was continual involvement in pointless wars on other continents. The power to declare war was given to congress in order to avoid precisely what we have now -- an imperial President who acts just like any 18th century European king, with the added drawback that he doesn't bother to plunder the countries he invades, so even when we 'win' we lose.
Posted by: Rich at August 1, 2008 6:37 PM