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Wednesday, September 05, 2007
John Stossel :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Return of Toilet Man
by John Stossel
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Was the Copenhagen Global Warming Summit Walk-Out a Win for the U.S.?


"Don't bother debating with John Stossel and the libertarians. They are worst than Republicans."

That's a comment from climateprogress.org, Joe Romm's blog about global warming. It was a reaction to C-SPAN's coverage of an Independent Women's Forum (IWF) discussion on energy policy that I moderated last week.

Romm was the star of the event. I didn't recognize him until he reminded me I'd interviewed him a decade ago. Then I remembered he was "toilet man." That's what I called him privately when he was the energy department bureaucrat under President Clinton who defended the government's demand that all of us buy "low-flow" showerheads and "water-saving" toilets.

I did a "Give Me a Break" segment on that for "20/20" mocking the endless rule-making process, which somehow concluded that exactly 1.6 gallons is all that every toilet needs. I interviewed people who were so unhappy with their new toilets that they were combing junkyards for old ones, or going to Canada to buy them, because 1.6 gallons doesn't always get the job done. Homeowners and apartment managers kept telling meme, "The toilets don't work!"

"They do now," Romm said to me last week. Manufacturers eventually made 1.6 gallons flush successfully, proving, he suggested, that my "Give Me a Break" was misguided and that government rules spur improvements. Now, he says, we need to save the earth by passing rules that restrict carbon use.

The fact that it took years for manufacturers to solve the flushing problem, at great expense to consumers, and that during that period many people had to flush several times, wasting lots of water, and that the one-size-fits-all rule applied to all of America, forcing flushing embarrassment and lousy showers on people in Vermont and other places that have plenty of water and don't need to conserve, and the water savings were less than 6 percent of what farms use every day for irrigation -- none of that bothers Romm.

He now works at the Center for American Progress, a lefty think tank where policy wonks seem to think that government telling us what to do is the solution to many problems.

Of course, simply privatizing water distribution, allowing its price to rise or fall as supply and demand warrant, would have been a far fairer solution. But President Clinton's energy department didn't want to bring in the evil free market.

Now, "let the market work" is a slogan among the segment of global-warming catastrophe crowd that advocates carbon "cap and trade."

I'm all for trade.

But there's less talk about the "cap" part. That's the government force part. Continued...

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About The Author
John Stossel blogs at http://blogs.abcnews.com/johnstossel/ is an award-winning news correspondent and author of Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the Shovel--Why Everything You Know is Wrong.
 
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©Creators Syndicate
Conservation
We have become a wasteful nation. A throw away society. My parents lived through the Great Depression and instilled into me and my siblings to appreciate what ever we had, be it clothes or car etc.
I agree aurorawatcher, Gore jumps on the latest trend train to be seen, heard and make a buck off of peoples fears. Nice guy........The "Do as I say not as I do" pontifiacting blow hard.
Regarding the fluorescent lights, there is a place for them but I believe we shouldn't be forced, by another law invading our homes, to use only that type of lighting. Hello, Big Brother !

Yes, burning wood produces emissions
So does burning oil and coal. Even if you have an all-electric house with electric baseboard, emissions will have to be generated to heat or cool your home, unless you get your electricity from solar, wind, geothermal or nuclear power. I am not all that worried about producing emissions because I think human-caused global warming is a con job. I am much more interested in making wise use of the resources God gave us. We shouldn't waste. There are ways to conserve and do so wisely without substantially damaging the lifestyle we enjoy. Those are good things. Al Gore, on the other hand, is a ridiculous hypocrit, which is not a good thing.

Vic, you're not using the right florescent bulbs. Trust me! We've got a couple for reading that put out WAY more light than any incandescent and they use a whole lot less electricity.
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