SCOTUS Says EPA Can Regulate Carbon 360
ThanatosMinor writes "In a 5-4 decision today, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the EPA has the authority to regulate carbon dioxide emissions, saying that the EPA's reasons for not doing so in the past were 'arbitrary, capricious or otherwise not in accordance with law.' The ruling does not require the EPA to regulate carbon. But concerns about global climate change and its ties to human activity did appear to be deciding factors in the case." The AP coverage stresses that the ruling upholds the right of states to sue the Federal government over issues of global warming.
Nine old guys (and gals) (Score:4, Insightful)
What do nine old farts (gender neutral term to keep up with the times) know about climate science? Apparently as much as Leonarda Dicaprio and John Travolta. Enough to be dangerous.
Re:Nine old guys (and gals) (Score:5, Interesting)
Note that the supreme court dodged a bullet by not basing their decision on the question of the validity of anthopogenic global warming. As the New York Times reported:
In sending the case back for further proceedings, Stevens said the high court did not decide which policy the EPA must follow. "We hold only that EPA must ground its reasons for action or inaction in the statute," he wrote.
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Best descriptor of Slashdot's noise to signal ratio evar.
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"Scalia observes that there is a difference between an "air pollutant" and a "stratospheric pollutant." Milkey interrupts: "Respectfully, Your Honor. It is not the stratosphere. It's the troposphere."
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I wonder if he got it wrong or was pulling this from something else? The stratosphere, if this is the case, is different from the air or troposphere as we use it. If the idea of global warming and the regulation of Co2 does come before them, this might be an indication of how
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Insightfull? - Mods, please RTFA. (Score:3, Insightful)
This decision emphatically supports the quaint little notion that "science informs politics". Regardless of what appears to be your own "dangerous" ignorance on the subject of climate science, arguing against the core message in this verdict is nothing
Re:Insightfull? - Mods, please RTFA. (Score:5, Insightful)
The Bush administration has consistently governed favoring crony-ism, special interests, and religious wackos, instead of science.
http://www.wired.com/medtech/health/news/2004/02/
The Court told the EPA that they had to DO THEIR DAMN JOBS, regulate greenhouse gasses, or provide a reasonable explanation why they won't. You see for years in the face of overwhelming evidence they have simply failed to act in accordance with the law.
On the other big topic of debate here, whether this qualifies as "news for nerds," not all nerds are monomaniacally obsessed with computers. Some of us are interested in science, which is a study of how the real world works.
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And what the pro-lifers still say: What do you know about someone else's body inside yours?
I know that biologically it's a parasite which only exists due to the _voluntary_ actions and ongoing goodwill of the host.
It is a different set of DNA.
So's the bacteria that makes me sick. Should I stop taking antibiotics because it hurts them ?
Re:Nine old guys (and gals) (Score:5, Insightful)
Hmm. An amusing image just occurred to me, of parents suing their children for adversely affecting their financial well-being and causing stress and emotional turmoil...By the very fact of their existence.
It would be funnier if it were a bit further from being believable, though.
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I dunno.. I'm a parent, but I'm not sure the responsibilities are less than symmetrical overall. My kids have a responsibility to respect my wishes and property, but I have no obligation to respect theirs. Of course I do when I see fit, but legally it's at my discretion (since "their" property is actually mine, and their wishes have almost
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Whether abortion is or is not wrong, this argument is ridiculous. The fetus didn't "set up camp" inside anyone; it was formed there as a direct result of its parents actions and had no say in the matter.
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Where are the primary sources? (Score:3, Interesting)
I've heard this before, but never from a primary source. Can anyone direct me to the studies that support/refute this conclusion?
Right now all I have to go on is 2 videos (Gore's the Swindle video). I don't particularly trust either.
Re:Where are the primary sources? (Score:4, Insightful)
No change (Score:4, Insightful)
Quote from the article [sciam.com]'s author:
In 1857 the SCOTUS did the right thing, politically, by affirming that the Federal Government does not have sweeping jurisdiction over anything which can be remotely rationalized as commerce
As the plaintiff was not a citizen of Missouri, he, therefore, could not sue in the Courts of the United States. The suit must be dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
While it is a Good Thing that the slave population was officially outlawed (nevermind the gaping hole in the 13th Amendment which allows for a simple jaywalking ticket to make a person eligible for slavery), it is a Better Thing that our government be reminded, as often as possible, of the limitations on its power.
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You're absolutely right. We should abolish the Clean Air Act, then all the other environmental regulations and finally the EPA and then start arresting factory workers and operators for assault by poisoning.
Because just like the GPL is the only thing that gives people
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Factory workers? Surely you mean factory owners? The workers don't have any say in factory processes. They should, mind you.
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Sure, that's how things happen at the moment. And look at the state of the world. If workers had a say ( or had THE say ), they would make decisions that were more responsible. They'd be far more inclined to consider things like sustainability, or protecting the environment, etc.
Sorry, but that's just bullshit. There are massive institutional barriers that pr
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Relative risk (Score:2)
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If you shoo questions about abuses of power under the rug when you agree with the outcome, you will be bit in the ass when you don't.
Re:No change (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem with the CAA and EPA is not their end, but their means. A positive result does not justify abuse of process. If the CAA and EPA have powers beyond what is legitimate, and they are nevertheless recognized, what stops the same branches of power (be it Congress or the Executive or the judiciary) from abusing this same extension of authority for malicious purposes? The division and separation of powers exists for the purpose of preventing this abuse so that process is democratic and representative, and it does so reasonably well when respected.
Respect for the environment is a totally separate issue from respect for the mechanisms that prevent abuse. If people are poisoning each other, there are valid non-abusive mechanisms to prevent that. If no such mechanism exists then, and only then, should the system be reformed. Thankfully the system in the US is sufficiently flexible that no such reform appears to be necessary, in the long run.
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It should be noted that when the Clean Air Act and the EPA were established... pollution was pretty bad so it appe
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Thirteenth Amendment (Score:5, Interesting)
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*does not apply if "The Decider" dubs you a terrorist. Not valid in leased US territories within Cuba or overseas military bases.
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How might CO2 emissions be considered regulating commerce "among the several states"?
CO2 mixes over the entire world, and does not affect a transaction between individuals across state lines. Your argument is no better than the logic that they used to say that someone growing crops on their own land for their own consumption was subject to federal regulation (which is how they make Marijuana illeg
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before. Industries have been known to ask that the federal government step in with a set
of central standards, instead of having to deal with a myriad of local jurisdictional
regulations. This was the case with energy efficiency in appliances (e.g; refrigerators
IIRC) that led to Energy Star, and there have been hints of it within the CO2 realm as
well. Basically, the idea is to level the playing field, removing this dmiension
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I don't care what the industries want, I care what the Constitution says. Big business loves big government; as long as they are on the right side of whatever legislation is being passed. That's nothing new.
We should have a limited federal government and leave more power with the states. That's what the Constitution says.
9th, 10th, and 14th amendments say ... (Score:2)
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with a reasonable of the commerce lause.
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I don't think so. The fact that some industries find the diversity of law inconvenient is not an excuse to expand federal power to "standardize" these laws at the national level. The federal government's powers are few and defined, and if you open it up to whatever is convenient for an industry, then you have missed the point of the commerce clause.
The simple test is: any law at all meets your standards; therefore the commerce c
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It's a stretch, but it makes at least as much sense as allowing people to deduct the interest paid on a home loan. Personally I don't think that either are Constitutional, but I can see how -- under the influence of the wrong substance -- one might say that it's still a tax on income, even though such an "income tax" is based on all kinds of non-income variables.
Re:No change (Score:4, Interesting)
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I doubt the government will pass laws regulating them to any efficiency because it would end up giving defacto advantages and leverage to certain companies. I could start a fact
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The first part seemed to be crafted by the Liberals on the court in order to let them rule on the second part, since otherwise the case should have just been thrown out on procedural grounds. The majority five did
litmus test (Score:2)
If the answer is "yes" then I know you are a libertarian, with a consistent, coherent political philosophy. I may disagree with you on some issues, but at least we can have a conversation. If the answer is "no" or, worse, "that's not my point, and it's more complex than that... (i.e. equivocating)" then I know that you're a conservative who cries for li
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While I agree that most conservatives are inconsistent (or hypocritical even) in their sense of moral outrage
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JAMA, The Lancet, and other medical journals have advocated an end to the war on drugs, not on moral grounds, but because it makes for worse social and health problems. Even the National Review had a cover story a few years
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If this is a troll, it's a clever one: you're using the Dredd Scott decision [wikipedia.org] to support your argument that Congress can't use the Commerce Clause to justify the EPA. But Dredd Scott wa
In a press conference afterwards... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:In a press conference afterwards... (Score:5, Funny)
And then laughed and laughed, because everyone knows that Carbon can take 4 at a time...
Wow, this article is silly (Score:2, Interesting)
Important side note (Score:5, Interesting)
"While the president had broad authority in foreign affairs, that authority does not extend to the refusal to execute domestic laws."
This might so come back to haunt them as precedent.
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Maybe they will suddnly change the studies to show CO2 is only a small contributor to warming, say on the order of burning a candle in a house causes the house to become warmer.
After all, our global warming is the same as the global warming and loss of polar ice caps on Mars. It must be the sun that is the big factor, just like your house gets colder in winter and warmer in summ
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Have I missed something? I thought the political debate was mostly over (People cause warming) and the scientific debate was just starting to warm up. (Sun cycles causes most of the warming vs People cause most of the warming)
We started our industrial revolution at the turn of the century. Up until the 1970's the big problem was global cooling and the pending ice age. Why didn't we have heating instead of cooling in the industrial revolution?
Again, the political debate is over. Cl
Re:Important side note (Score:4, Insightful)
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Really? Clinton had the Patriot Act, Guantanamo, secret CIA prisons, tribunals, indefinite detentions w/o a trail or a lawyer, waterboarding, extraordinary rendition, etc etc?
That's why so much of the Democrat congress are acting so strangely: they want those laws, powers, and abuses in place when one of their own finally gets back in the White House.
Why are you so full of shit today, Brandybuck?
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To take just one tiny example, from this evening's headline: Clinton fired 93 US Attorneys, Bush only fired 8. But guess who's getting rake over the rusty razor blades for it?
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Bodes poorly for U.S. oil imperialism (Score:5, Interesting)
The two agencies, the U.S. Export-Import Bank and the Overseas Private Investment Corporation, are a form of corporate welfare to Big Oil. When Big Oil wants to destroy the environment in a third world country, banks shy away due to political instability. In steps the U.S. government to provide taxpayer-guaranteed loans.
The lawsuit is over the narrow issue of that these agencies did not do environmental impact studies in compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). Now that the Supreme Court has already ruled that carbon dioxide may be classified as a pollutant, the district court that is deciding the Big Climate Lawsuit must follow precedence.
I would rather have seen OPIC and Ex-Im dismantled over the fundamental reasons they are wrong: unconstitutional, corporate welfare, exploitation of third world countries, and destruction of the environment directly attributable to oil drilling and transport. But as is usually the case, the strongest legal case does not necessarily correlate to the strongest moral/ethical case.
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Too bad the government has sovereign immunity [wikipedia.org], which I seriously doubt they would waive in this case. Even in the unlikely event that they waived immunity, AND they were found guilty, you would still have to calculate the percent of damage by the specific "infractions" of those agencies, compared to all other influences in the world, which would be nearly impossible. Additionally, the money doesn't just come from nowhere. Any award would si
Waiting to Exhale... (Score:5, Funny)
Perverse Outcome: Administrative rules could make it illegal to breathe.
Alternative Constitutional Theory to Challenge the Ruling: Tension between First Amendment and Commerce Authority since it is necessary to breathe in order to speak freely.
Alternatively, massive new entitlement programs may be funded by requiring the purchase of respiratory carbon credits.
Next year: Increasing the entropy of the surroundings will constitute a violation of the Clean Air Act. Do your part to limit your entropy footprint.
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Don't worry, I am. Every day I add another layer of blocks to my neatly ordered stack in the corner, creating order where before there was a chaotic bag of blocks, thereby offsetting my entropy.
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Things always take more to arrange, which is to say, arranging costs m
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--
Carbon free energy: http://mdsolar.blogspot.com/2007/01/slashdot-user s -selling-solar.html [blogspot.com]
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Great regulated respiration (Score:2)
All those mammals...they just gotta go.
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stop it. Biologically active carbon is part of a recirculating cycle, mineralized carbon in fossil
fuels has been out of the cycle for a long time*, and adding it back in the form of CO2 is the
problem NOT BREATHING. However, if you seriously think breathing is a problem, then by all means,
do us all a favor and STOP. kthxbai
* And as an animal, that's a good thing. 20% atmospheric O2 is tasty.
Politician claims CO2 not an air pollutant... (Score:2)
When (if?) he wakes up, let's ask him again if he thinks CO2 is a pollutant...
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By your argument, EVERYTHING is a pollutant that can be regulated by the EPA!
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> When (if?) he wakes up, let's ask him again if he thinks CO2 is a pollutant...
Then you can submerge him in water, and ask if that's a pollutant.
Not about Global Warming (Score:5, Informative)
To quote: "We hold only that EPA must ground its reasons for action or inaction in the statute."
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Direct Impact of CO2 itself? (Score:4, Interesting)
Interestingly enough, humans don't have any way to sense the oxygen concentration in air. The air in a nitrogen filled room can feel perfectly fresh right up to the point where you get dizzy and pass out. Instead, we sense CO2 concentrations -- a room with normal levels of O2 but several percent CO2 will be distinctly unpleasant to breath. At about 1000ppm CO2 a room may start to feel stuffy.
I've heard of some projections () of 650-970 ppm CO2 by 2100. The change over time will certainly be too slow for anyone to notice, but I find it remarkable that we may be heading to the point where outdoor air will be as high in CO2 as what we now consider stale. [wikipedia.org]
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They do, actually. However, the mechanism that regulates blood oxygen saturation works much, much slower (hours to days) than the one that reacts to excess blood CO2 concentrations.
The U.S. business climate is now F....d. (Score:2, Insightful)
This is what we get for cutting back on science requirements for our schools. A bunch of people who don't know the first thing about the carbon cycle making laws based on religious Voodoo.
The Great Global Warming Swindle (Score:4, Insightful)
I watched The Great Global Warming Swindle [google video] AND Inconvienent Truth.
I have to say, other than a nice graph of carbon dioxide and temperature, the rest of the film was science by consensus. "90% of scientists now agree". Furthermore, Al only makes the statement that "the relationship between the [two lines] is a complicated one". With that one line, he avoids the actual science of global warming. It allows him to gloss over any kind of investigation of solar activity, dissolved CO2 levels in the oceans, the ratio of CO2 to other green house gasses. Yes, there is more than one, but Al never mentions that. Instead he only shows the PPM increase, and not a percentage increase. He also fails to go into why the upper atmosphere is not increasing in temperature whereas ground temps are (hint: solar radiation heats the ground more effectively than green house gasses)
What we have, and everyone has to admit this, is the only real correlation is our ability to measure CO2 in PPM, and an increase in temperatures (at the same time an increase in solar activity). Anyone with statistics experience will tell you correlation is not causation. We simply have to wait for the many factors to fluctuate so we can tease out the real relationship.
I love the environment and animals (I was going to be a park ranger), but I call BS (Bad Science) when I see it. How embarrassing will it be in 50 years, when we've passed a local solar maximum and things are back to normal? Until our confidence [and understanding] is so high in the matter, we shouldn't be legislating first and asking questions later.
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It's really "The Courts" (Score:5, Insightful)
It's really "The Courts". (Unfortunately that seems to be lumped into YRO.)
How is it News for "Nerds" ?
- It's regulation of tech.
- It's related to science.
- It's going to require major technological innovation.
- It's likely to drastically affect nerds' ability to use technology and/or energy.
Just for starters
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Re:YRO? (Score:5, Interesting)
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As far as the article is concerned - well, about damn time. CO2 is a pollutant just like everything else and the US environmental agency has been giving all kinds of lame excuses for not considering it as such.
Thank you for your cooperation (Score:3)
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Offtopic would have been appropriate. So if this is according to you, just an observation of people trying to get first post, then the type of mod validates my post even more.
BTW, Try it sometime. Change your modifier to give more credit to flaims, trolls, and underrated mods. You will be rather surprised at how the moderation system get used to suppress dissenting but otherwise valid o
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Naa, I think the surest way to get modded into oblivion on
And I say this as I'm typing on an Apple machine while my Apple laptop is sitting on the charger in the other room. Fukkin fanboys.
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Dissent (Score:5, Informative)
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Have you thought about growing a brain? [wikipedia.org]
Obviously not. [wikipedia.org]
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I'm no scientist, but you're an idiot.
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I fucking hate having an ID so close to yours.
And that's a fact.
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It isn't like the republicans have had a clear reign of the house and senate. There were always certain tactics that could be done to stop anything the other side thought was worth stopping. This isn't to say that the republicans were acting like republicans nor that anyone is proud of them. Most
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Make it 10%, just to get the point across. The other 90% may be chosen arbitrarily, even if they're all oxygen it won't matter.