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Election 08

Paul on the Record

An interview with Ron Paul about his presidential platform on energy and the environment

By Amanda Griscom Little
16 Oct 2007
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Grist and Outside
This is part of a series of interviews with presidential candidates produced jointly by Grist and Outside.
Ron Paul. Photo: MyTwistedLens via flickr
Ron Paul.

Enviros may roll their eyes at a candidate who dismisses the U.S. EPA as feckless and disposable, who believes all public lands should be privately owned, and whose remedy for an ailing planet is "a free-market system and a lot less government." But Ron Paul, the quixotic libertarian U.S. rep from Texas, has a bigger cult following online than any other presidential candidate*, and has won unexpected attention in the GOP debates with his provocative ideas.

Some of those ideas arguably have environmental merit. Paul is known for his zealous opposition to the Iraq war, which he duly notes causes pollution and the "burning of fuel for no good purpose." He wants to yank all subsidies and R&D funding from the energy sector, which many believe would benefit the growth of renewables. A cyclist himself, he has cosponsored bills that would offer tax breaks to Americans who commute by bicycle and use public transportation. Still, his libertarian presidency would, among other things, allow drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, boost the use of coal, and embrace nuclear power. Moreover, it wouldn't do diddly about global warming because, Paul reasons, "we're not going to be very good at regulating the weather."

I called Paul up on the campaign trail in Iowa to get the skinny on how the environment figures into his small-government agenda.

For more info on his platform and record, check out Grist's Paul fact sheet.

Listen to a clip of this interview:





question What makes you the strongest candidate on energy and the environment?

answer On energy, I would say that the reliance on the government to devise a policy is a fallacy. I would advocate that the free market take care of that. The government shouldn't be directing research and development because they are bound and determined to always misdirect money to political cronies. The government ends up subsidizing things like the corn industry to develop ethanol and it turns out that it's not economically feasible. So, my answer to energy is to let the market work. Let supply and demand make the decision. Let prices make the decision. That is completely different than the bureaucratic and cronyism approach.

On environment, governments don't have a good reputation for doing a good job protecting the environment. If you look at the extreme of socialism or communism, they were very poor environmentalists. Private property owners have a much better record of taking care of the environment. If you look at the common ownership of the lands in the West, they're much more poorly treated than those that are privately owned. In a free-market system, nobody is permitted to pollute their neighbor's private property -- water, air, or land. It is very strict.

question But there are realms of the environment that, by definition, can't be owned, right? How would you divide the sky or the sea into private parcels?

answer The air can certainly be identified. If you have a mill next door to me, you don't have a right to pollute my air -- that can be properly defined by property rights. Water: if you're on a river you certainly can define it, if you're on a lake you certainly can define it. Even oceans can be defined by international agreements. You can be very strict with it. If it is air that crosses a boundary between Canada and the United States, you would have to have two governments come together, voluntarily solving these problems.

question Can you elaborate on when government intervention is and isn't appropriate?

answer Certainly, any time there's injury to another person, another person's land, or another person's environment, there's [legal] recourse with the government.

question What do you see as the role of the Environmental Protection Agency?

answer You wouldn't need it. Environmental protection in the U.S. should function according to the same premise as "prior restraint" in a newspaper. Newspapers can't print anything that's a lie. There has to be recourse. But you don't invite the government in to review every single thing that the print media does with the assumption they might do something wrong. The EPA assumes you might do something wrong; it's a bureaucratic, intrusive approach and it favors those who have political connections.

question Would you dissolve the EPA?

answer It's not high on my agenda. I'm trying to stop the war, and bring back a sound economy, and solve the financial crises, and balance the budget.

question Is it appropriate for the government to regulate toxic or dangerous materials, like lead in children's toys?

answer If a toy company is doing something dangerous, they're liable and they should be held responsible. The government should hold them responsible, but not be the inspector. The government can't inspect every single toy that comes into the country.

question So you see it as the legal system that brings about environmental protection?

answer Right. Some of this stuff can be handled locally with a government. I was raised in the city of Pittsburgh. It was the filthiest city in the country because it was a steel town. You couldn't even see the sun on a sunny day. Then it was cleaned up -- not by the EPA, by local authorities that said you don't have a right to pollute -- and the government cleaned it up and the city's a beautiful city. You don't need this huge bureaucracy that's remote from the problem. Pittsburgh dealt with it in a local fashion and it worked out quite well.

question What if you're part of a community that's getting dumped on, but you don't have the time or the money to sue the offending polluter?

answer Imagine that everyone living in one suburb, rather than using regular trash service, were taking their household trash to the next town over and simply tossing it in the yards of those living in the nearby town. Is there any question that legal mechanisms are in place to remedy this action? In principle, your concerns are no different, except that, for a good number of years, legislatures and courts have failed to enforce the property rights of those being dumped on with respect to certain forms of pollution. This form of government failure has persisted since the industrial revolution when, in the name of so-called progress, certain forms of pollution were legally tolerated or ignored to benefit some popular regional employer or politically popular entity.

When all forms of physical trespass, be that smoke, particulate matter, etc., are legally recognized for what they are -- a physical trespass upon the property and rights of another -- concerns about difficulty in suing the offending party will be largely diminished. When any such cases are known to be slam-dunk wins for the person whose property is being polluted, those doing the polluting will no longer persist in doing so. Against a backdrop of property rights actually enforced, contingency and class-action cases are additional legal mechanisms that resolve this concern.

question You mentioned that you don't support subsidies for the development of energy technologies. If all subsidies were removed from the energy sector, what do you think would happen to alternative energy industries like solar, wind, and ethanol?

answer Whoever can offer the best product at the best price, that's what people will use. They just have to do this without damaging the environment.

If we're running out of hydrocarbon, the price will go up. If we had a crisis tomorrow [that cut our oil supply in half], people would drive half as much -- something would happen immediately. Somebody would come up with alternative fuels rather quickly.

Today, the government decides and they misdirect the investment to their friends in the corn industry or the food industry. Think how many taxpayer dollars have been spent on corn [for ethanol], and there's nobody now really defending that as an efficient way to create diesel fuel or ethanol. The money is spent for political reasons and not for economic reasons. It's the worst way in the world to try to develop an alternative fuel.

question But often the cheapest energy sources, which the market would naturally select for, are also the most environmentally harmful. How would you address this?

answer Your question is based on a false premise and a false definition of "market" that is quite understandable under the current legal framework. A true market system would internalize the costs of pollution on the producer. In other words, the "cheapest energy sources," as you call them, are only cheap because currently the costs of the environmental harm you identify are not being included or internalized, as economists would say, into the cheap energy sources.

To the extent property rights are strictly enforced against those who would pollute the land or air of another, the costs of any environmental harm associated with an energy source would be imposed upon the producer of that energy source, and, in so doing, the cheap sources that pollute are not so cheap anymore.

question What's your take on global warming? Is it a serious problem and one that's human-caused?

answer I think some of it is related to human activities, but I don't think there's a conclusion yet. There's a lot of evidence on both sides of that argument. If you study the history, we've had a lot of climate changes. We've had hot spells and cold spells. They come and go. If there are weather changes, we're not going to be very good at regulating the weather.

To assume we have to close down everything in this country and in the world because there's a fear that we're going to have this global warming and that we're going to be swallowed up by the oceans, I think that's extreme. I don't buy into that. Yet, I think it's a worthy discussion.

question So you don't consider climate change a major problem threatening civilization?

answer No. [Laughs.] I think war and financial crises and big governments marching into our homes and elimination of habeas corpus -- those are immediate threats. We're about to lose our whole country and whole republic! If we can be declared an enemy combatant and put away without a trial, then that's going to affect a lot of us a lot sooner than the temperature going up.

question What, if anything, do you think the government should do about global warming?

answer They should enforce the principles of private property so that we don't emit poisons and contribute to it.

And, if other countries are doing it, we should do our best to try to talk them out of doing what might be harmful. We can't use our army to go to China and dictate to China about the pollution that they may be contributing. You can only use persuasion.

question You have voiced strong opposition to the Kyoto Protocol. Can you see supporting a different kind of international treaty to address global warming?

answer It would all depend. I think negotiation and talk and persuasion are worthwhile, but treaties that have law enforcement agencies that force certain countries to do things, I don't think that would work.

question You believe that ultimately private interests will solve global warming?

answer I think they're more capable of it than politicians.

question What's your position on a carbon tax?

answer I don't like that. That's sort of legalizing pollution. If it's wrong, you can buy these permits, so to speak. It's wrong to do it, it shouldn't be allowed.

question Do you think it should be illegal to emit harmful pollutants?

answer You should be held responsible in a court of law and you should be able to be closed down if you're damaging your neighbor's property in any way whatsoever.

question Who would set the law about what pollutants could and couldn't be emitted? Congress?

answer Not under my presidency -- the Congress wouldn't do it. The people who claim damage would have to say, look, I'm sitting here, and these poisons are coming over, and I can prove it, and I want it stopped, and I want compensation.

question You've described your opposition to wars for oil as an example of your support for eco-friendly policies. Can you elaborate?

answer Generally speaking, war causes pollution -- uranium, burning of fuel for no good purpose. The Pentagon burns more fuel than the whole country of Sweden.

question Do you support the goal of energy independence in the U.S.?

answer Sure. But independence does not mean to me that we produce everything. I don't believe governments have to provide every single ounce of energy. I see independence as having no government-mandated policy: If you need oil or energy, you can buy it.

question What about being independent from the Middle East, so we're not buying oil from hostile countries?

answer I think it's irrelevant. We wouldn't be buying it directly, we would be buying it on the world market. I don't think the goal has to be that we produce alternative fuel so that we never buy oil from the Middle East. The goal should be to provide all useful services and goods through a market mechanism instead of central economic planning or world planning. That system doesn't work.

question What role do you think coal should play in America's energy future?

answer Coal is a source of energy and it should be used, but it has to be used without ever hurting anybody. I think we're smart enough to do it. Technology is improving all the time. If oil goes to $150 a barrel because we've bombed Iran, coal might be something that we can become more independent with. I think technology is super, and we are capable of knowing how to use coal without polluting other people's property.

question But coal technology has been proven to harm people -- with poisons like mercury and asthma-causing particulates -- so should old-style coal plants be allowed to continue operating?

answer Use of the technology I mentioned to prevent harm to people, even if it costs more for the coal producer, is another example of how costs must be internalized to the energy source. To the extent coal can be efficiently produced in a way that does not pollute another's property or another's physical body, it will be chosen as a viable energy source. Certainly no producer of energy or anything else has a right to pollute or harm another's property or person.

If coal is not competitively priced when all costs to keep production safe are internalized to the producer, then coal will not be purchased or produced. I do not happen to believe this will be the case, but it is for the market to sort out, not politicians in Washington. It may be that, from time to time, as other energy sources become scarce, "safe coal" will be viable even if it is not at some other point in time.

question What's your take on nuclear?

answer I think nuclear is great; I think it's the safest form of energy we have.

question Ethanol?

answer I don't think anything's wrong with ethanol -- it's just not economically competitive. It's only competitive now because those who produce it get subsidies.

question What environmental achievement are you most proud of?

answer Nothing really special, other than trying to explain to people that you don't need government expenditures and special-interest politics to promote safe, environmental types of energy. That comes about through a free-market system and a lot less government, and I think that's the most important thing I can contribute.

question You mentioned something in a past interview -- the Green Scissors campaign to cut environmentally harmful spending?

answer I'm not sure I understand that. Green Party?

question You had said in another interview, "I have been active in the Green Scissors campaign."

answer Green Citizens?

question No, scissors, like you cut paper with.

answer Oh, I don't recall exactly that. But I have a lot of environmentalists that work with me very closely and support these issues.

question Who is your environmental hero?

answer Nobody in particular.

question If you could spend a week in a park or natural area in the United States, where would it be?

Paul button
answer There's probably hundreds of places. I probably have gone to Colorado more than any place, around Telluride and Ouray.

question Can you describe your connection to the natural world? Have you had any memorable outdoor or wilderness adventures?

answer My favorite thing is riding bicycles, and at home my hobby is raising tomatoes. I live on the San Bernard River in Texas and I belong to an environmental group that works very, very hard to protect the natural aspects of that river.

question Can you elaborate on what you've done personally to reduce your energy and environmental impact?

answer Well, no, other than the fact that I'm just always aware of doing anything damaging to the environment. I don't think I do anything that damages it at all. I don't ride my bike because I think I'm destroying the environment by driving my car; I ride it because it's a great way to be outdoors and enjoy the environment.


*[Correction, 16 Oct 2007: This article originally stated that Ron Paul's online following was second only to Obama's. In fact, by many measures, Paul's internet support is more widespread than Obama's or any other presidential candidate's.]



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Amanda Griscom Little writes about environmental politics and interviews green luminaries for Grist. She is a contributing editor for Outside magazine, and her articles on energy and the environment have also appeared in publications ranging from Rolling Stone to The New York Times Magazine.
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A cult following online second only to Obama's?

The author of this article is saying Ron Paul has "A cult following online second only to Barack Obama's.

I'm not 100% sure, but I think this is not true. Seems to me Ron Paul blows away every other candidate in every measure of internet support.

Anyone?

Excellent interview

I am new to this site and came across this interview on Digg but I give kudos to the interviewer for this effort and her interviews of the other candidates.  I am a supporter of Ron Paul and I believe firmly that his solution of allowing private property and local courts to address pollution is by far the best one.  I also applaud his desire to get the federal government out of the business of subsidizing industries and research efforts because they inevitably distort free market innovations by entrenching special interests and corporations who are then able to destroy start-up competition with their unfair, government sponsored advantages.  This has been going on for decades with disastrous results and continues at a fevered pace today.  I will also add that I firmly believe that any politician who thinks he/she with their 'bold policies' can change the world are inherently dangerous.  The world is far too complex for the will of a few to be forced on the masses.  Respect for each other's life, each other's rights, each other's property, each other's customs, and the rule of law is all we need to truly make this world a better place but it can only happen locally, one community at a time.  Ron Paul is the only one that gets it.

Paul vs Obama

There are 6 measures I use to track Internet mindshare and by all of these except one -- the mainstream media news reports carried (not accessed   mind you) by Google News, Paul beats Obama.

These four measures are alexa.com, trends.google.com (user queries), trends.google.com (mainstream press stories carried on the Internet), meetup.com, youtube.com and hitwise.com:

http://www.hitwise.com/political-data-center/key-candidat ...

I'd like to see cites used by the interviewer for the statement that Obama leads Paul in Internet popularity.

How can ANYONE...

Really think that Ron Paul gets it right on this one?  As a supporter of Dennis Kucinich, I'm often told that Ron Paul is a similar anti-war candidate.  Ron Paul is not like Dennis in any way.

It's obvious that Ron Paul is full of a big load of you-know-what as far as green issues.  And for the record, Ron Paul is anti-war.  Dennis is pro-peace.  There's a difference.  

Honestly, some of the stuff Paul says in this interview sounds like Bush.

NOBODY BUT DENNIS IN 2008!

Ron Paul is not 2nd to Obama

Ron Paul's Meetup members: 55,269
Obama's meetup members: 5,572

Ron Paul has WAY more REAL people willing to WORK to get him elected.

Ron Paul's YouTube subscriber's: 32,368
Obama's YouTube Subscriber's: 11,502

And if you want the debates to be about something OTHER than the war - vote for Ron Paul in the primaries. Since Republicans pick their nominee from 49% voters 51% delegates. Democrats choose their's from 100% Delegates' votes.  

Reactionary

The problem I see with RP's "solutions" is that they are reactionary in nature. You wait until after a coal plant or neighbor is polluting and causing you harm and then sue him, but by then it may be too late. And we had market solutions in the past, before the EPA, ESA, etc, they rarely work because those types of solutions are not ultimately about the environment, they are about the $$. These regulations were enacted because the previous system didn't work.

Ron Paul is a fruitcake.



Paul's internet popularity: a correction

robofx, James Bowery, and thruthunderyournose appear to be correct about Paul's internet popularity towering above the other candidates. Thanks for setting us straight. We've posted a correction.  

Lisa Hymas
Grist Senior Editor

Progressives should look elsewhere

Ron Paul's ambivalence on the environment is very clear when asked about global warming.  He is not convinced about the degree of human influence and doesn't consider it a big deal.  A previous post is absolutely accurate that his ideas - particularly his reliance on the market - sound a lot like George Bush.

Allowing the market to operate can potentially do some good.  Obviously, ending oil subsidies can assist in the development of renewable technologies.  But, his view of the world is pretty limited: perceiving everything in terms of markets.

There is a reason the government exists.  Corporations cannot pass laws and cannot be trusted to abide by them.  In fact, they are frequently in blatant violation of laws that have been set.  Ron Paul's faith in markets is frankly a little naive when talking about the environment, something which has consistently been undervalued in the marketplace.

There are also obvious inconsistencies within his worldview.  The harm of coal is just one instance.  How do you internalize mercury in the burning of coal?  And, how do you ensure that corporations are internalizing harm of their products or services?  This is the province of government agencies, again, because corporations have proven they are quite unwilling to abide by laws.

Paul's solution to violation of environmental principles (he doesn't really believe in laws) is litigation.  It is bizarre that he relies so heavily on the ability of people to sue when courts have been reluctant to grant standing to people harmed.  And, by the by, how do you argue harm has been caused if you dissolve the EPA responsible for setting limits?  

Anyway, I digress.  This guy just scares the hell out of me because so many progressives are on the Paul bandwagon due to his position on the war.

Robert Anderson

private vs. public land

I ran across this article on Google News. I am a Ron Paul supporter. I have a degree in economics and I consider myself somewhat of an environmentalist, too.

Private land is better than public land. Haven't you ever heard of the Tragedy of the Commons? Public goods are overused and abused to the detriment of the environment and all parties involved.

If public resources are abused, then the answer, as Ron Paul says, is property rights. He is obviously familiar with the Coase Theorem, that states that when property rights are well defined, bargaining will result in the optimum outcome for everyone. Take, for example, our air and water--they are polluted because they are usually considered public goods rather than having private property rights. If I owned my own air, I could prevent companies from excessively polluting my air by charging them a fee--in effect, I sell some of my air to them. And I say "excessive pollution" because if the maximum pollution allowed was zero, the economy would grind to a screeching halt.

I do disagree with Ron Paul a little bit on the subject of pollution taxes, because the Coase Theorem doesn't work perfectly due to "transaction costs" which are almost always present in the real world. Either a pollution tax or a cap-and-trade approach are sound alternatives both economically and environmentally.

So, although I disagree with Ron Paul on some of the details, I am still going to vote for him, because of the "big picture" -- this will be the first time in my lifetime that I've had an opportunity to vote for a principled, intelligent candidate with true integrity; and with his strong grassroots support, he has a real chance of winning.

Public Land Abuses

Many times, public land abuses occur because laws that are on the books aren't followed, because federal agencies are so under funded they can't enforce them, or, as has happened during this administration, federal employees are told to ignore certain laws or mis-interpret them by politically appointed supervisors. Living in a state with a large amount of public land, I have seen first-hand results of the "tragedy of the commons" and when the Forest Service is asked why this happens, they almost always cite a lack of funding. Property rights are already well defined, and with federal or public land the rights belong to everyone. If you find that your public lands are being abused by a few to the detriment of many, take Ron Paul's advice and sue the federal goverment for non-enforcement of existing laws. Or better yet, vote for someone who will properly fund our federal agencies and not undermine the laws in place to protect our public lands.

Paul is not like Bush

Ron Paul is not like President Bush at all. Bush may say he is in favor of free markets, but he's not. He favors heavy subsidies to the oil industry; and when that backfires, making us dependent on foreign oil, his solution is heavy subsidies to the nuclear industry. The only reason he expanded Medicare to give people free prescription drugs was to subsidize the pharmaceutical industry. Bush was responsible for one of the biggest expansions of government ever in a very short period of time.

Favoring big government and favoring free markets are mutually exclusive positions. Bush is a liar, he lied about being for small government, he lied about his religious beliefs, he lied about being against nation building, he lied about the Iraq war, he lied about being against mercury in vaccines, etc., etc...

Much Like What I Have Been Saying Here All Along

Even if you disagree with Ron Paul's free-market approach (and I agree with him), he's the only candidate to my knowledge to point out that current policies of war, subsidy, and legalized pollution are causing significant environmental degradation, that current regulatory policies are captured and explicitly externalize pollution, and that Federal management of public lands is shameful. If just those issues were addressed, we would see an immediate benefit, even with regard to AGW, even though Dr. Paul doesn't believe it's been proven! For one example, it was pointed out that coal-fired power plants emit acid deposition (much less than formerly) and mercury - his point is that the current regulatory environment allows it, i.e., the government explicitly allows power plants to profit by trespassing with pollution on our bodies and properties. If such behavior were made tortious again (as it was in the early industrial revolution) the cost of stopping such pollution would make many coal-fired plants un-economic. With those plants shut down, the price of electricity would rise, calling more innovation into existence, since alternatives would have to pollute less than the coal plants they replaced. Again, even if you don't believe a real free market would result in less pollution than a more-regulated market, it is obvious that it would, if implemented, be radically better than what we have now.

Vince Daliessio www.libertyguys.org
Supreme Law

How can you argue on the one hand that litigation is Paul's solution to the violation of environmental principles while in the same breath claim that he doesn't really believe in laws?  His entire argument about how to truly protect the environment, and his political philosophy in general, relies entirely on following the letter of the law, be it the US Constitution, or the rights of private property owners to real legal recourse against those who have done them (the environment) harm.

In this very interview he states..."To the extent property rights are strictly enforced against those who would pollute the land or air of another, the costs of any environmental harm associated with an energy source would be imposed upon the producer of that energy source, and, in so doing, the cheap sources that pollute are not so cheap anymore."

This position relies heavily on laws and their strict enforcement.  It also shifts the burden of cleaning up pollution to those responsible for it.    This mechanism would force polluters to change their ways which, one could assume, would hurt their profit margins due to higher costs and would then drive up the price of their goods or services in the marketplace as they attempt to protect their profitability.  Take it a step further (as Paul suggests) and remove unfair government subsidies for that same polluter and suddenly the market, as a result of strict enforcement of the laws and rights of property owners, has created a real incentive and opportunity for entrepreneurs and innovators to enter the market with cheaper AND CLEANER products or technologies.  If we had this system all along and stopped special interests and lobbies from influencing government policy and subsidies I assure you the marketplace would be much further along innovating our way out of this mess.

The corn ethanol scam is a contemporary example of how government intervention makes matters worse. By subsidizing corn ethanol in this country we have increased our reliance on petro-chemicals to fertilize the corn, process the corn into ethanol, and transport the ethanol (since it cannot be moved by pipeline it must be shipped by fuel burning trucks).  In addition, we have driven the price of food inputs through the roof which hurts the lower and middle class people the most as food costs are a much larger % of income.  It also seems immoral to me to consciously convert food into fuel while people are starving across the world today with the unintended consequence of only enriching the very large corporate special interests and mega farmers.  Of course after all of that we have done little if anything to actually help the environment!  Doesn't sound terribly progressive to me.  Why not just remove the government subsides of big oil and ethanol, and enforce the laws and punish those who violate them?

Incentives are needed

Good post, Vince. Let me add something to my earlier post...

In order to reduce pollution, the polluters need an incentive. Property rights and litigation (as Ron Paul recommends), taxes, and cap-and-trade approaches all would give companies very good incentives for curbing pollution.

But what incentives do companies have under our current system, a system of regulatory bodies setting seemingly arbitrary limits? Currently, the incentive is not for companies to reduce their pollution, but to pollute up to the maximum allowable amount. And even more insidiously, the current system gives companies a strong incentive to lobby and capture their regulatory bodies so that they work in their favor. Under the current system, there is very little incentive to minimize pollution.

\

Ron Paul

Ron's saying that the pollution problem should be handled locally... The local people know about a problem long before the central inspectors find it! Think about this. The fed is not needed, the state would be much closer and handle the problem at the local area. Each state already has their own DEQ. Environmentalists, as are many who read this, would be our best line of defense. They will be constantly sticking their noses where they belong (pun intended) and helping to find the violators. Under "Big Gov." the Big Corps. have a way of getting special privileges. the Big Corps (and big Gov) do way more pollution than any one else. Also, No manufacture could produce any kind of fuel that would pollute any person (the good neighbor policy!) The individual states already have guidelines for this. Who needs the fed in this application. We have some frightening times ahead of us. Do you want more of the same old thing we've been getting? How many promises have we already heard. Ron has said that his mentor is Ludwig von Mises. Check him out and understand this man's philosophy. We could wish that all our politicians were so noble. He (RP) would never allow anyone to pollute a neighbor (because of his principals and his integrity) Of course he can't preside over individual cases, but his heart is in the right place. And please try to understand his position  of giving the wars, immigration reform, securing our borders from possible terrorists and the economy higher priority than global warming... I don't say this to offend anyone. But the reality is that these matters are more pressing (at this time) then the environmental issues which are also important, but not so pressing (from a presidential position!) Oh, if you really want to help fight fossil fuel pollution, then  Google: Joseph Newman    find his website and watch his latest video of his "energy machine". Joe may seem a little eccentric now, but I have been following this man's story for over 20 years and our own (Big Gov again) would not issue him a patent (fought against him tooth and nail!) for his revolutionary idea/machine... He runs a HUGE 7,500 lb machine off of a few 9v batteries. He figured out a way to use voltage to turn a motor (instead of current). What he has is REAL,  It's just real expensive to build a balanced machine to rotate at high speeds.      

litigation

My comment that Paul is for litigation but not laws was not illogical.  The point was he's in favor of suing.  Unfortunately, his political philosophy - that laws must be derived directly from the Constitution - does not allow for laws capable of dealing with modern environmental problems.  In other words, he is in favor of litigation; there just won't be any laws to protect the environment he so strongly urges people to protect.

The global nature of environmental problems is a perfect example.  How does one establish the guilt of an individual or a specific company to their property from 1500 miles away?

I would sue the manufacturers of toy companies using phthalates but in Ron Paul's world the EPA would not exist to set acceptable human levels.  Oh, but don't worry, the chemical company told me it was safe.

Robert Anderson

RP solutions "reactionary in nature?"

Dockens wrote:

"The problem I see with RP's 'solutions' is that they are reactionary in nature. You wait until after a coal plant or neighbor is polluting and causing you harm and then sue him, but by then it may be too late."

Dockens, have you considered applying for a job as a speechwriter for George Bush? I can imagine him appreciating your logic as a rationale for a military first strike against Iran:

"The problem I see with these diplomats' 'solutions' is that they are reactionary in nature. You wait until after the Iranian regime has nuclear weapons and is giving them to terrorists and causing you harm and then fight back, but by then it may be too late."

Your approach also holds a lot of potential appeal for extreme "law and order" types:

"The problem I see with due process is that it is reactionary in nature. You wait until after a criminal has committed a crime and caused you harm and then arrest him, but by then it may be too late."

Oops, there goes "innocent until proven guilty!" Hmm, maybe "reactionary" isn't always such a bad thing -- at least the way you define it.

Free market and property rights...

would be great tools if everyone had the same amount of money and property, within an order of magnitude.

I'm with davedenali.

(Speaking of which, and quite coincidentally, I'm eating some stollen with my coffee this morning. Yum! Fruitcake!)

mihan

mihan, maybe you should research the issue more before assuming that you are smarter than famous Nobel Prize winning Economists. But let's say, for a minute, that you're right, and that Ron Paul's plan did not work. Since Ron Paul does not have any hidden agendas (he doesn't support big corporations, he doesn't take money from lobbyists, etc.), I'm sure he would come up with a better way. He wouldn't let the environment suffer just so he could say that he's applying a particular theorem.

Also, let's not forget that the President of the United States is a leader, not a dictator (despite what Bush wishes). If Congress disagreed then his plan would not get implemented. We need to look at the big picture and get someone with principles, integrity, and intelligence in the White House.

Oh, and I completely forgot the reason I even came to this site. I am sick of Ron Paul's campaign being called "quixotic." If anybody in politics is deserving to be called quixotic, it's President Bush, who calls himself "the decider," and "the decision maker," and who started an unwinnable war in the name of idealism (at least his own view of idealism), and to eliminate the imminent threat of nonexistent WMDs (Wind Mill Devices?)

Re: Starchild "Reactionary"

Actually, I wasn't referring to assuming innocence or not, I was referring to setting limits on pollution before a company decides to go past those limits. Ron Paul seems to be for removing departments like the EPA, although they are the agency to set limits to pollution.

I am just suggesting to not get rid of the regulations, these define the limits.

Starchild says: "Oops, there goes "innocent until proven guilty!" Hmm, maybe "reactionary" isn't always such a bad thing -- at least the way you define it."

This actually isn't my definition of reactionary, this was how you changed my words to create a whole new and different definition.

I agree with much that RP says, but disagree about

Noam Chomsky said something like the following, "The free market has never been tried, not even once."

I find Paul's authenticity and integrity appealing, as I do his priorities.

He has demonstrated that our politics and policies are messed up, with that everyone can agree; that does not mean, however, that his theories for solutions are correct.

I agree that in an ideal situation the private property rights and the legal system should bring responsibility on the agitators.

One problem is that this doesn't necessarily take care of non-property owners, or even property owners for that matter, as, again, these are theories. We have never seen them really work, wholesale.

Another is that the courts themselves are political: as outside the boundaries of propriety they now are for instance, they require the politics of a fed up populace to bring them back in to line. For example: Enter Ron Paul.

Free-market economics and private property benefits theories in economics are just that-theories. I posit that unyieldingness concerning ANY idea is dangerous: it is a blind spot. Only the most avaricious tend to get to the pinnacle of "the marketplace."

So, the free market will solve everything if we just let it operate properly. Well, our democratic system was supposed to operate with a certain felicity and integrity, too, and act as a mechanism to solve problems. It was intended that it regulate the economy within constraints. The political system has been corrupted by money. Get rid of the money; don't get rid of the system. Isn't it right now that we have the economic system parasitizing the political one, not the other way around? Ideal states for the so-called "free market" and "private property" mechanisms are probably as intractable as that for the political system. Of public land and private he says that private is less fouled? Absolutely false.

Regarding making all things private property: this planet is 7,900 miles in diameter: that is it. The PLANET, regardless of our thinking, even, should have some open natural spaces, although I am sure that humans fundamentally need it too. We are part of the planet, inseparable. It is time for economic and political systems that maintain the vitality of natural systems: this is what we live on now and what we live on in the future. It requires an algorithm not of a marketplace! Not of human activity alone! It requires rigor not just as to markets and property but to goodness, wholesomeness, and propriety.

All that said, I would vote for Paul so that he could set about on his worthy immediate goals with the knowledge that the courts and the congress would temper some of his really radical notions.


Good and Bad

As a green libertarian, I find Ron Paul to be very attractive, though part of me cringes at his acceptance of coal and nuclear.  I'm libertarian, but not as zealously free-market as Ron Paul.  An ideal pairing would put Ron Paul as the vice president to someone like Edwards.  Or even Ron Paul and Kucinich would make a nice match - perhaps balance each other out!

Some mentioned and unmentioned benefits and detriments of Paul's proposals:

-Drug war ends; industrial hemp boosts production of environmentally sound products like hemp biofuels, hemp plastics, hemp clothing; marijuana production boosts economy and revives farming from death by corn

-Military operations are cut significantly; fossil fuel use cut considerably

-Separation of big government and big industry creates a fairer markeplace for competitors with oil, corn, plastics, cotton, coal, etc, by not giving them subsidies

-National Parks and Public Lands would have to be somehow safeguarded from the abuses of private entities

-Officially recognizing pollution as an attack on the property/health of another may result in more stringent laws; China's pollution, which migrates over the Pacific to California, would be seen as an international attack on American property

Ron Paul is stuck in the 1800s

It's nice to hear a candidate who is on board with the concept of "don't subsidize pollution", but mostly he's stuck in the mindset that environmentalism = clean lakes at the campground.

And partly this is the fault of libertarianism in general, which balks at anything that has the appearance of collectivism. Global warming is a collective problem. If my neighbor emits more than their fair share of CO2, it's not going to affect my land or my property in any way. The harm caused by CO2 emissions is not one individual harming another; it's the collective actions of civilization harming itself.

litigation, laws, and the EPA

The Federal government does not hold (or should not hold) a monopoly on setting laws nor standards. Ron Paul's adherence to the US Constitution means that he is strongly in support of the sovereign rights of the States and the States' judicial systems. States and local governments should be more effective at legislating and prosecuting meaningful environmental laws because they are closer to the issues of pollution.  Lawsuits would be (and currently are) prosecuted at the state and local level most of the time anyhow.

Over time, private enterprises and non-profits could easily replace the EPA and create independent and competing guidelines and testing.  Phasing the EPA and allowing independent, private laboratories to compete with the EPA for standard setting could only help the science, the environment, and the consumer.  Why can't private companies or organizations with rigorous missions benchmark and test environmental products and issues?  The EPA is in full effect today and still tainted toys get through.  Why can't an entrepreneur start a business that says they will put their stamp of approval on imported products from China and assure their safety?  Consumers may have to pay a bit more for products that have this assurance but if the company is reputable and does a good job consumers will demand that stamp on products they buy because they recognize the obvious value.  If that company screws up or loses the public trust they can be held liable and if they were dominant they have just given a market opportunity to a new entrant to do the job better.

Ever been to www.ewg.org?  They do tremendous work as a non-profit and offer consumers independent testing of cosmetics and household products that the FDA doesn't even touch.  Why can't there be more of that?

Anyhow, Ron Paul has said numerous times that getting rid of the EPA is very low on his list of priorities and would also require a consensus (so probably never happens anyhow).  As an earlier poster commented, his immediate and prioritized policy of ending the war will have the most dramatic, beneficial environmental impact out of every candidate (Kucinich excluded).

 

Setting standards

"The Federal government does not hold (or should not hold) a monopoly on setting laws nor standards."

This is inherently contradictory. In order to have a standard, there must be a single body who sets the standard, and that body must have the authority and legitimacy to enforce it. If the market is full of a zillion competing "standards", then it's not a standard - it's a mish-mash of individuals doing what they want, which is the opposite of a standard. No monopoly, no standard.

The alternative is exactly what we have now: everyone deciding for themselves what constitutes "green" or "responsible" behavior, forcing individuals to do endless legwork to decipher what the claims mean in reality. We already have that system today. So if you want to see how effective it would be, look no further than the present.

And yes, the EPA is less effective than it could be precisely because it has been crippled by Reaganism. A government agency can't do its job when its own leadership believes that government can't / shouldn't solve problems. Well no wonder it fails to do its job - it's designed to fail, to "prove" that it shouldn't exist.

I hope no Grist/Outside financial arrangement

exists. This is why:

Outside subscribes to the "ecoterrorism" mantra.

They show individuals in all their pictures, rarely groups or families having fun together.

(Do this: pick up any old copy and count the number of pictures of individuals and the number of people doing things together)

There is never a celebration of good old-fashioned fun in the great American outdoors. The symbolism, innuendo, focus, conjecture, subject matter is always on individual satisfactions, spending money, winning against others, and enjoyment of technology. I have never seen a picture or an article of people just sitting around enjoying a campfire and conversation for instance. Very sterile. Very technology oriented.

They lionized Richard Lindzen, an outlandish global warming skeptic, in a very one-sided way in their October 2007 issue.

They will never hesitate to glorify New York City, even though the place in the world center of a variety of capitalism the never ceases to look askance at the destruction of the natural world.

They continually glorify wealth. It is clearly a subject much dearer to their hearts than nature.

Outside portends to be an environmentally oriented publication while at the same time subliminally favoring anti-environmental, anti-organic, anti-natural, and anti-heritage-in-nature viewpoints. They very nearly always have conclusions that are non-environmental or otherwise hope-less when they touch on environmental problems.

They have an ostensible circulation of 650,000. They rarely write about any of the major environmental organizations. They could do much good without losing readers, but they don't. Everyone knows these problems exist. Their readership, if any readership does, certainly supports more thorough and substantial environmentally reporting.

They do not tackle major environmental issues with hard-hitting journalism.

Please beware. Thanks.


My point was...

States should be able to standards that better reflect the environmental challenges and realities each are facing.  This approach should do better than the Federal government applying blanket, one size fits all policies with enforcement.  

It is impossible for one agency or organization to 'monopolize' perfect knowledge or information regarding the environment and also simultaneously know the finest ways to deal with protecting it from a policy standpoint.

Wouldn't it be in the interest of the country to have competing approaches on the state level and then share best practices?  

The practical approach of day to day enforcement of private property rights and ending government subsidies would only enhance the system.
 

Brilliant!

Actually, I see Ron Paul's approach as brilliant, if you understand the principle behind the thinking.  Allow me to preface my thoughts first.

Government is hardly ever the solution.  Especially when it's the Feds and a 'one size fits all' answer.  Typically, the more local an issue, the more control citizens have over their own lives.  They can work it out amongst themselves instead of being told what to do by a nameless, faceless agency.

Second - it's almost always about money and power.  The EPA is 'about the money.'  So neither side can claim the high ground.

And third - there is no perfect solution.  People have biases... we have bad judges making bad rulings... etc, etc.  The best we can do is try.  Which is where the Constitution and Dr. Paul's approach comes in.

I see two basic approaches in dealing with issues like this.  One is to come up with 100 laws to try and stop people from doing something, only to find you have to keep on writing more laws because people find loopholes.  

The second would be what Dockens refers to as 'reactionary.'  I would refer to it as each individual being accountable to one basic 'rule of law.'  The phrase 'life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness' once read 'the pursuit of property,' an indication about how important it was to the Founding Fathers that people have a right to own property.  It should be a natural or inalienable right, like religion, and not a right given to us by the government.  The key to following this basic natural law is not infringing on another's rights, also a natural right.  

In the perfect world, people would look at that basic principle and think before they did something that might infringe on the rights of another.  This isn't a perfect world - but there's no perfect law either - possibly the reason the Founding Fathers tried to clarify what rights came from 'our Creator.'  I do believe most people would be inclined to think first if they had to follow one basic rule of law.  When there are 100, all we try to do is get around them.

Finally, regarding being 'reactionary in nature.'  Somewhere in the '100 laws' approach, there is bound to be government infringement on the inalienable rights of the property owner - meaning the government has now given you your rights.  Everyone is punished for something that might happen, rather than ruling on individuals who have broken the law.  Should we be preemptive in case someone breaks the law, or assume innocence until proven guilty?    

The basic principle of a right to private property, to liberty, and to doing no harm to your neighbor is not only simple, and constitutional... it's brilliant!


Necessity Of A Single Standard?

If a single unitary body needs to be empowered to enforce a single, unitary standard on everybody, then why are we all being sold on AGW theory as a scientific "consensus"?

More to the point, I work in the occupational health field, and OSHA hasn't ever set the most protective standards for industrial chemical exposure. independent groups like ACGIH are way ahead of them.

It's a weak argument that ignores the wants and desires of each individual in favor of what 50%+1 voters can be defrauded into accepting, at BEST, and  what a gaggle of clueless regulators can be captured into doing, usually.

I wish he had made a more considered remark on nuclear power, for although the technology for safe, environmentally-friendly nuclear power exists, its deployment is hampered by the closed, monopolistic, nuclear power industry and its captured regulatory agencies.

Again, though, it isn't hard to understand Dr. Paul's prescription - stop subsidizing pollution, and stop repressing the right of individuals to a redress of pollution grievances. If we can get that done, and AGW is determined to be a real threat, we will ALREADY BE MOVING ON IT.

Vince Daliessio www.libertyguys.org

Emperor Paul would be a bit scary.


President Paul would only be able to get the least controversial points of his program past the congress and supreme court.

If the majority of citizens liked his philosophy, it would take several congressional elections to transform congress into a likeminded body. If the majority of citizens disliked his philosophy, they could replace him in four years.

Think of him as a counterweight.


Things Everybody Should Know About Energy

Scary indeed

Either this blog is full of trolls from the Ron Paul campaign or there are a lot of people that don't know anything about real land.  

Paul wants to sell off the National Forest, drill in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, lower the minimum wage, and he against ratifying Kyoto.  Why is Grist giving him space?  He wants to get rid of the EPA for Christ sake and actually believes that private land is better managed.  

Old growth forest does not exist on private land.  Yes, I do know about the private hunting estates that have a speckling of big trees on them and these do provide places for Cheney to shoot his friends.  Large tracts of old growth exist in public land and nowhere else.  Many endangered species exist exclusively on public land because there is no way to stop development on private land.   US waters are vastly cleaner than they were in seventies thanks to the Clean Water Act.  Sure, the EPA is a bunch of bumbling bureaucrats but the fact that our waters are improving suggests that sometimes they have the power to stand up to corporations.  Bush feels the same way as Ron Paul about the EPA.

We are on a runaway train fueled by corporate greed and Paul would have us remove the only brakes on the system that actually work.

What is really sad is that Grist gave him the time of day and that many readers actually buy it.


Change

People are desperate for change and many seem willing to blind themselves to Ron Paul's faults and what he really supports. See the post by hikerreese above, he says it well. I would rather have a candidate who is against the war and will support the environment, not leave it to the greedy hands of private ownership.

Ron Paul

Sometimes hype, money and/or good looks seems popular with the disasterous results - Bush (money,Hillary - (more money and hype) etc.  It would be more honest to see Kuncinich and Ron Paul be the canidates for president.  Doesn't honesty mean anything any more?  Let's have an honest debate on the future of the USA instead of the hell hole vested interests will (are making) make this country.  What about the constitution? Bush has not been impeached. What does that say about what goes on the Washington?
I personaly see a balance in socalism and free market.  Ron has a point - the balance is about other's rights - human rights and free speach.  What is the best way to do it? Ask all the canidates that one.  
All government is socalism. It is the agency which makes sure that we can exist together on the planet. Make it a dirty word is to see the world go to hell in a hand basket. Bush's war is an example of what happens when this is not understood.  Goverment becomes a tool for selfish interst.
Good luck Ron. I hope ypu are right and can create courts that are free from corruption and can see the bigger picture. Remember even animals have rights too.  We need them.  Good luck Dennis. Make peace possible and craete a positive progressive future.  May the best man win.  The best man or woman does not come from New York...

Different laws in different states

"The Federal government does not hold (or should not hold) a monopoly on setting laws nor standards."

This is inherently contradictory. In order to have a standard, there must be a single body who sets the standard, and that body must have the authority and legitimacy to enforce it. If the market is full of a zillion competing "standards", then it's not a standard - it's a mish-mash of individuals doing what they want, which is the opposite of a standard. No monopoly, no standard.

No, it's not contradictory at all.  For example, every state and locality has speed limits on roads.  There are different limits for different roads, but that does NOT mean that "it's a mish-mash of individuals doing what they want."  There are "laws" and "standards" for how fast people can go on various roads.  

Or to take another example, I sat on a jury in a medical malpractice case several years ago, in which the criterion for judgement was what was standard practice in North Carolina.  

The great thing about states or localities making laws and setting standards is that there is an opportunity to compete.  There is also an opportunity for laws and standards to be appropriate for state and local conditions.  

The fact that there isn't a federal law or standard on some issue doesn't mean that there are no laws or standards on that issue.  

Mark Bahner

local and state laws

States almost never use a stricter pollution standards than the EPA requires them to use.  When the EPA weakens pollution standards, States follow suit and weaken theirs as weak as the feds let them.  If we eliminated federal laws and the EPA we would have pollution laws but they would be a lot weaker and enforcement a lot spottier.  

We like to think that local governments are more honest than the feds and sometimes they are but they are powerless.  Locals governments can't afford scientists so they are forced to trust corporate scientists or the EPA.  Without nationwide pollution laws polluters would shop around and find city councils that are either polluter friendly or have no ability for enforcement.  

Private property advocates complain about the US Fish and Wildlife telling them they can't destroy critical habitat for endangered species.  They also claim the right to pollute their land.  Ron Paul is their champion.  

On the Grist/Outside financial arrangement

First, thanks to all for thoughtful responses, regardless of position taken.  Our decision-making at a national level would be vastly improved with such respectful discourse.

Second, although slightly off-topic, thanks to "american" for the skinny on Outside Magazine. Having a keen eye for the obvious, I cancelled my subscription after counting 14 ads in one issue for generally gas-guzzling SUV's, including the Hummer.

The fact that the United States still produces millions of planet-hostile vehicles is a pretty good example of the myth of the free market.

"States almost never use a stricter..."

Hmmmmm... Really hickerreese?  Here is a very fresh example of the largest state in the country getting thwarted by a politically powerful federal agency (your beloved EPA) as the state attempts to exercise its Constitutional right to enact more stringent emissions standards within its own borders:

"Title: Sue obstructionist EPA

Agency stonewalling California's waiver request

Published: Tuesday, October 23, 2007

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger should make good on his threat to sue the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for failing to grant his state the waiver it needs to set tough new limits on auto emissions of greenhouse gases.

Oregon should be first in line to join that lawsuit. Right behind should be the 13 other states that have adopted the same tailpipe standards but can't put them in place until the EPA gives California the required waiver that's clearly allowed under the federal Clean Air Act. The same waiver that the EPA has granted California for air pollution controls without question or delay dozens of times in the past..."

Read rest of article here: http://www.registerguard.com/csp/cms/sites/dt.cms.support ...

A perfect example of why we all need to think hard about the wisdom of voting to empower the Federal government more and more, election after election, year after year. Is it really doing what we think it is beyond the rhetoric or would we truly be better off having more influence on local and state levels regarding the issues that concern us most?  

This is also an indictment of how special interests who have consolidated power in Washington and then can impose their will across the whole country are the real problem.


Ron Paul

How come I kept hearing a coo coo clock sound when I was reading his interview?

quick search results yield

Definition:

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Key symptoms are:

Well-defined, vivid, visual hallucinations. In early stage, the person may even acknowledge and describe the hallucinations. Other types of hallucinations are less common but sometimes occur. These might be auditory ("hearing" sounds), olfactory ("tasting" something) or tactile ("feeling" something that isn't there)...

The complete fact sheet ..

Ron Paul is opposed to a woman's right to choose.
That makes him totally unfit in my book.

I want a politician who actually respects all human beings in all things, not just those he/she chooses based on a personl belief system.

Liberal is good!

State's rights

Some would argue that Ron Paul's view on abortion coincides with exactly what you desire, 'respects all human beings in all things..'  The difference being the definition of 'human beings'.

Ron Paul's views on life and rights to life, especially that of the fetus, are guided by his experience as an obstetrician who has delivered over 4,000 babies and who has also witnessed late-term abortions in practice.

Ron Paul says that in his medical practice if he injures a fetus or unborn child then he is legally liable for that baby.  He also points out that if someone negligently injures a pregnant woman, like in a car accident, that person is liable for the life of both the mother and the unborn child.  If a pregnant woman is murdered, the murderer is responsible for the deaths of both lives.  In all of these examples the fetus legally has a right to life and another person who injures or takes that life is liable.  

While Ron Paul's definition of life is from conception forth his view on abortion law allow both definitions to coexist.  Our Constitutional Republic specifically allows this by leaving these issues to be decided by the States independently.

Many people agree with Ron Paul's definition of life and feel very strongly about it.  However, with the federal government involved they are forced to live in a system that requires them to fund abortions with their tax dollars.  Conversely, many people disagree with Ron Paul's definition of life and or feel very strongly about a woman's right to choose.  If abortion was federally abolished they would be forced to live in a system in opposition to their beliefs.

By removing Federal jurisdiction and leaving the issue to the States and allowing them to set their own laws according to the will of their respective populace the our Constitutional Republic allows for both views to coexist.

Ron Paul is not trying to 'force' his views on everyone.  In fact, he is taking himself out of the de