In this edition, we’ll focus on ignorance, partisanship, gimmicks, and energy policy from “the Tiger”…oh my! Buckle it up and come on down below the fold.
Mr. Jon “Hyperbole” Harrison is at it again in a slightly humorous post about breaking VT up:
http://www.vermonttiger.com/co…
Mr. Harrison has been in VT for a whole 4 years now, so he’s an “expert” on the subject. The idea that Killington wants to join up with NH is about a productive idea, I think, as Brattleboro wanting to arrest Cheney and Bush…neither is even going to happen. Have fun trying to get a NH plow to come over and do the roads during a snowstorm there Killington. I’ve always said that if Killington gets to join NH, then I want my city to join AK…I want an Alaska Permanent Fund (read that as oil) Dividend check damnit! The post goes on to sing the praises of NH’s (property) tax structure and economy:
The New Hampshire law is perhaps even more convoluted and regressive than our own, hard as that may be to believe. Still, New Hampshire has no state income tax or sales tax. And its economy, at least in comparison to Vermont’s, is relatively modern and prosperous.
When I used to live in NH, my boss and one of my friends at work had houses of similar sizes in adjoining towns. The property taxes that my boss paid on her house were around double what my friend paid…mostly because my boss lived in a town with a high school and my friend lived in a town that just sent their kids to another town for high school. Sounds “fair” to me. I personally don’t think that VT’s fiscal future lies with nickel and diming its citizens with fees, having toll roads that will never go away, having a state liquor store on the highway, soaking the tourism and business community with taxes, etc., etc. like NH does.
The post goes on to opine about how to break up VT:
Portions of the Northeast Kingdom might want to join New Hampshire, but most of it would probably prefer to become a part of Canada. Ethnic ties already exist, and the Canadian social model would no doubt appeal to many in the Kingdom.
Ah, those wacky Canadian-style socialists in the Northeast Kingdom…they’re all over the place…in Mr. Hyperbole’s mind no doubt. BTW, it’s Chittenden Mr. Harrison…read a map sometime. Then he goes on to reminisce about how great things were when he lived in MA:
On the other hand, electricity, food and gasoline are cheaper in Mass. And taxes are lower, with more return for your tax dollar than Vermonters get.
Right, gas is cheaper in MA, except for every single time that I’ve been there in the last decade or so. Sheesh…
Here’s another take on the recent McCain fundraising trip to VT from “the Tiger”:
http://www.vermonttiger.com/co…
where they compare Leahy-sponsored federal funds that have:
helped clean up Lake Champlain, provide affordable housing and expand Vermont National Guard facilities
to a
bridge-to-nowhere.
And then there’s this post:
http://www.vermonttiger.com/co…
where “the Tiger” conveniently forgets that the “steroids in baseball” issue was originally investigated under a GOP Congress I believe.
Things certainly are strictly non-partisan over there at “the Tiger”.
Here’s some more anti-union and anti-teacher blather from “the Tiger”:
http://www.vermonttiger.com/co…
Stronger unions bad…employers good. “Better pay for teachers in such schools, in order to attract the teaching talent these students need” bad…less money for schools good.
“The Tiger” routinely advocates for gimmicks in order to try and solve real problems, like here:
http://www.vermonttiger.com/co…
where the solution to rising education costs is…more voting, and when that’s not enough…more voting on top of that. Here’s to that bastion of liberalism, the city of Rutland, where apparently the residents don’t vote on the school budget! I wish that “conservatives” that advocate more voting as a solution to education spending were honest about what they were stumping for. They want arbitrary caps on education spending, but they know that this idea wouldn’t be as popular as the issue of “more voting”…so they stump for that instead. I also wish that if a school budget was voted down in a municipality that the schools actually shut down. No budget, no school…just like no contract, no school. The fact is that school districts keep right on spending money whenever a budget is voted down now. I just wonder how that dynamic would change if the shoe was on the other foot. We need real solutions to education spending problems in this state, not more gimmicks.
Finally, we come to the (insane) energy policies that “the Tiger” routinely advocates…little to no alternative energy sources or conservation and just more of the same sources of energy that are costing us so dearly, in more ways than one. We’ll start with this post:
http://www.vermonttiger.com/co…
where “the Tiger” describes nuclear energy as “all-natural” after all. They also completely miss the point about the common argument against nuclear energy…pretty much all nuclear power plants in this country are permanent nuclear waste dumps. It doesn’t matter if the radioactivity at these sites “migrates”. None of the nuclear waste that’s been generated so far in the USA will ever be going to that failed waste dump site in NV, and every year that a nuclear plant stays online simply means more nuclear waste that will need to be stored…forever. I actually love the idea of getting our energy from natural nuclear energy sources…like the Sun. And I love this quote from Mr. Hyperbole in this post:
What really surprises me about this post is Paul’s – er, I mean Mr. Guy’s – failure to comment on it. I peg him as a fanatical anti-nuclear activist. Rumor has it that he’s retired to an ‘entertainment farm’ in the north of the state. There also seems to be a rumor circulating that he was killed in a freak motorcycle accident in upstate New York this past weekend. Nothing in the local papers, though.
My name isn’t Paul, I haven’t gone away, and I don’t drive a motorcycle…keep hope alive though. 🙂
“The Tiger” has also recently come out in favor of woefully inefficient incandescent bulbs:
http://www.vermonttiger.com/co…
I don’t know about the guys over at “the Tiger”, but I’ve been able to cut my electricity bill/usage a fair amount by using CFLs. I like my bulbs to generate more light then heat…call me crazy though.
“The Tiger” further disses the idea of alternative energy and conservation efforts in VT in these two recent posts:
http://www.vermonttiger.com/co…
http://www.vermonttiger.com/co…
And they are likely to realize that Vermont will be better off if it focuses on generating energy rather than conserving it, which is an exercise in diminishing returns. Alternative energy initiatives are plainly needed and inevitable. But there are two questions we’d like answered:
a) just how large will those ‘state subsidies’ be?
&
b) where will we go for ‘base load’ power to cover us when the sun isn’t shining and the wind isn’t blowing?
renewables are intermittent. Not only is Vermont sunshine-disadvantged, but the sun tends not to shine at night. As for wind, well, wind power is almost never available when it is most needed, on the coldest and hottest days.
This would be a great time to remind people of how the city of Burlington was able to cut it’s energy usage by roughly 10% a while back through conservation efforts. Someone should have told Dick Cheney that when he was going around the country at the beginning of the Bush Regime trying to sell the same idea that “the Tiger” keeps trying to sell, that energy conservation doesn’t work. It also would be great time to re-tell a story that I’ve told on other websites before. One of my former co-workers built a house for himself and his wife up along the Canadian border where he maximized the use of insulation and where he also used the power of the Sun and the wind to generate electricity. He did this over a decade ago and was able to stay completely disconnected from the electrical grid. There is no reason why this kind of technology can’t be used more widely today and why the govt. shouldn’t try to encourage its use. Our sources of coal, natural gas, and oil are finite, period. It’s way, way past time to wake up to this IMO.
P.S. – I promise to post about some issues with this election cycle soon JD.