Featured Post

Angle Calls for Social Security Privatization

Tweet Nevada U.S. Senate hopeful Sharron Angle (R) says the nation’s Social Security system needs to be privatized noting it was done before in Chile, the AP reports. Taegan Goddard’s Political Wire

Read More

MRC-TV: Bozell to Appear on ‘Hannity’, ‘Fox & Friends,’ C-SPAN to Discuss Media Bias Following Rep. Giffords’ Shooting

Posted by admin | Posted in The Capitol | Posted on 13-01-2011

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

0

NewsBusters publisher and Media Research Center president Brent Bozell will appear on tonight's "Hannity" as well as tomorrow morning's "Fox & Friends" and C-SPAN's Washington Journal.

All three appearances will focus on the media's biased coverage in the wake of Saturday's assassination attempt on Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Arizona).

Tonight's "Media Mash" segment on "Hannity" should air around 9:30 p.m. EST. Bozell's live interview on "Fox & Friends" should commence live around 8:15 a.m. EST tomorrow morning.

Just after the "Fox & Friends" appearance, Bozell will sit down at C-SPAN's Washington Studio for the January 14 edition of "Washington Journal," a call-in interview program. That appearance is scheduled at 8:30 a.m. EST.

For an archive of NewsBusters coverage of bias following the Giffords shooting, click here.


NewsBusters.org - Exposing Liberal Media Bias

MRC-TV: Bozell to Appear on ‘Hannity’, ‘Fox & Friends,’ C-SPAN to Discuss Media Bias Following Rep. Giffords’ Shooting

Posted by admin | Posted in The Capitol | Posted on 13-01-2011

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

0

NewsBusters publisher and Media Research Center president Brent Bozell will appear on tonight's "Hannity" as well as tomorrow morning's "Fox & Friends" and C-SPAN's Washington Journal.

All three appearances will focus on the media's biased coverage in the wake of Saturday's assassination attempt on Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Arizona).

Tonight's "Media Mash" segment on "Hannity" should air around 9:30 p.m. EST. Bozell's live interview on "Fox & Friends" should commence live around 8:15 a.m. EST tomorrow morning.

Just after the "Fox & Friends" appearance, Bozell will sit down at C-SPAN's Washington Studio for the January 14 edition of "Washington Journal," a call-in interview program. That appearance is scheduled at 8:30 a.m. EST.

For an archive of NewsBusters coverage of bias following the Giffords shooting, click here.


NewsBusters.org - Exposing Liberal Media Bias

Emanuel: Giffords should not be exploited

Posted by admin | Posted in The Capitol | Posted on 13-01-2011

Tags: , , ,

0

(CNN) - At a press conference Tuesday, Chicago mayoral candidate Rahm Emanuel said his 2008 comment that politicians should “never let a good crisis go to waste” does not apply to the Arizona shootings.

“What I said was never let a good crisis go to waste when it’s an opportunity to do things you had never considered or you didn’t think were possible,” Emanuel said. “That’s not intended for this moment; it doesn’t apply for this moment.”

The statement has been cited as an example of inflated political rhetoric that politicians and pundits are now warning against.

Emanuel recruited Giffords to run for Congress when he was chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and started the “Congress on Your Corner” events. The shootings in Tucson occurred at one of those events.

The former Illinois congressman and White House chief of staff said he thinks it’s important for politicians to continue outreach in their communities.

“Do I worry? Yes,” Emanuel said, but added “I won’t change.”

“I do not feel that fear should grip us, but since 9/11 we’ve secured every federal facility with the exception of our district offices. After the events of last weekend it is clear that our district staffs are vulnerable. Members should have the resources and the latitude to take the appropriate security measures in order to protect themselves and their staffs,” Emanuel said.

- CNN’s Cody Combs contributed to this report


CNN Political Ticker

Emanuel: Giffords should not be exploited

Posted by admin | Posted in The Capitol | Posted on 13-01-2011

Tags: , , ,

0

(CNN) - At a press conference Tuesday, Chicago mayoral candidate Rahm Emanuel said his 2008 comment that politicians should “never let a good crisis go to waste” does not apply to the Arizona shootings.

“What I said was never let a good crisis go to waste when it’s an opportunity to do things you had never considered or you didn’t think were possible,” Emanuel said. “That’s not intended for this moment; it doesn’t apply for this moment.”

The statement has been cited as an example of inflated political rhetoric that politicians and pundits are now warning against.

Emanuel recruited Giffords to run for Congress when he was chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and started the “Congress on Your Corner” events. The shootings in Tucson occurred at one of those events.

The former Illinois congressman and White House chief of staff said he thinks it’s important for politicians to continue outreach in their communities.

“Do I worry? Yes,” Emanuel said, but added “I won’t change.”

“I do not feel that fear should grip us, but since 9/11 we’ve secured every federal facility with the exception of our district offices. After the events of last weekend it is clear that our district staffs are vulnerable. Members should have the resources and the latitude to take the appropriate security measures in order to protect themselves and their staffs,” Emanuel said.

- CNN’s Cody Combs contributed to this report


CNN Political Ticker

A New Judge For the Giffords Case and An Early Problem For Him

Posted by admin | Posted in The Capitol | Posted on 13-01-2011

Tags: , , , ,

0

As you may know, every member of the Arizona Federal Judiciary has been recused in full from further participation in the criminal case against Jared Lee Loughner. This was inevitable in light of the fact the top line murder victim in the case was their friend, and Chief Judge, John Roll. We now know who has been appointed from outside of the Arizona District to handle all further proceedings in the matter. By Order of 9th Circuit Chief Judge Alex Kozinski, that would be Judge Larry A. Burns of the California Southern District (CASD).

From Ginny LaRoe at The Reporter, comes the pertinent information:

Burns’ experience with the federal death penalty — both as a prosecutor and judge — factored into Burns’ selection, Kozinski said today.

“I wanted a judge who [was] well-respected, and had the reputation of being fair and well thought of by both sides,” Kozinski said, “and I wanted to have a judge who had some experience with the federal death penalty because that’s a possible situation here.”

As a practical matter, Kozinski said, he also considered proximity to Arizona, though a change of venue isn’t out of the question.

Burns is a 2003 Bush appointee who was a career prosecutor before ascending to the federal bench. He was an assistant U.S. attorney for California’s Southern District from 1985 to 1997 and before that was a deputy district attorney in San Diego. He became a magistrate before his promotion to an Article III spot.

Burns is, as you might expect from his prosecutorial background, a fairly no-nonsense law and order kind of judge. In addition to death penalty experience, Burns has big case experience in matters familiar to most readers here, the Duke Cunningham case and the Tommy “Special K” Kontogiannis case.

Judge Burns is out of San Diego as are, conveniently, the specially appointed Federal Public Defenders that have been assigned to Jared Loughner, Judy Clarke and Mark Fleming; they will be familiar with each other and that should makes things smoother than would be expected for such a cobbled together court process.

One other thing, as you can see from the above link regarding Kontogiannis, Judge Burns doesn’t take kindly to any gruff or shenanigans by the DOJ/US Attorneys appearing in front of him.

In a highly unusual move, U.S. District Judge Larry Burns sent a 15-page brief of his own to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, curtly noting that the court filings of prosecutors “mischaracterizes substantial, relevant portions” of the case.

The reason I relate the ability of Larry Burns to hold government attorneys to some base level of credibility and propriety is that there is already a very meaty and germane issue percolating in the Loughner prosecution. Namely, is Judge John Roll a proper victim so that Federal court even has jurisdiction against Loughner for a murder count involving Roll as the victim?

As Josh Gerstein has pointed out, the facts may not really support Federal jurisdiction:

The actions and motivations of U.S. District Court Judge John Roll just before he was shot dead at Rep. Gabrielle Giffords’s campaign event in Tucson on Saturday are important for the public narrative about the tragedy, but they’re also vital to the federal criminal charge for his murder.

The criminal complaint federal prosecutors filed Sunday against the alleged shooter, Jared Loughner, goes to some lengths to demonstrate that Roll didn’t show up at the Giffords event just to say hello to the congresswoman, or on some whim after attending mass, as reports Saturday suggested. That storyline was fueled by Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik, who said “because [Roll] knows Gabrielle very well, [he] came around the corner to say hi. Unfortunately he was in the wrong place at the wrong time.”

By contrast, FBI agent Tony Taylor argues that Roll was at the event to talk to Giffords about ongoing problems related to a surge in the federal judicial caseload in Arizona-a problem which the judge has attributed to a boost in the number of federal agents sent to the area to address immigration and border-related crime.

Under federal law, the murder or attempted murder of a U.S. official, such as a judge, is only considered a federal crime if committed “while such officer or employee is engaged in or on account of the performance of official duties.” In other words, if Roll simply stopped by the event to greet Giffords, who he’s said to have been friendly with, or due to idle curiosity about what was happening there, his killing probably wouldn’t be a federal offense.

This is exactly right. And, as Josh noted last night, even President Obama’s words last night in Tucson militated in favor or Judge Roll not being particularly “in the course and scope” of his judicial duties when shot and killed. I only knew Judge Roll professionally from appearing in front of him (decent man and very good judge), going back to when he was on Division Two of the Arizona Court of Appeals, but the word on the ground here, from those that did know him well personally (as well as Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik), is that Roll did know about the Giffords event, but was simply on his way back home, which is near the Safeway Store at Ina and Oracle roads, where the shooting occurred, from Saturday Mass downtown and decided to stop by the store and say hi to Giffords.

There may well have been no big mission to talk to Giffords about the overcrowding of the Arizona District docket. Perhaps Roll may have mentioned that as small talk chit chat with someone while standing there, but it is quite possible, perhaps actually likely, the Fed story that Roll was on substantive judicial business when killed is manufactured extrapolation to create Federal jurisdiction where it may not lie.

There is another problem with the “Judge Roll was on official judicial business” meme being pitched by Federal authorities. It doesn’t make sense. Think about it, what real “business” could John Roll have had with Gabby Giffords on the court docket overcrowding issue? She is in the House of Representatives, not the Senate - she cannot help get desperately needed judges confirmed faster. Even in the House, Giffords is not on the Judiciary Committee. Gabby and Judge Roll were friends, and I am sure she was supportive of his quest on easing the docket, but there was simply not that much, if anything, she could directly do about it. The story that this was a big judicial mission by Judge Roll, on a Saturday morning after church, not only does not comport with what people who should know say, it does not make sense politically. Not at all.

So that is a substantial issue on Judge Burns’ plate from day one. And it is an important one because the Feds only have jurisdiction to prosecute for the five crimes/victims with a federal nexus, and one of those, of course, is Judge John Roll. And of those five, Judge Roll is the top line count that is their greatest motivation; excising Judge Roll from the case would put a serious rain on their parade.

Which, of course, begets the question as to why the Federal government has so aggressively seized primary prosecutorial position, when the State of Arizona, which has just as onerous (death penalty/life in prison) penalties as the Federal government (and is much more fluent in using them), and has jurisdiction to prosecute Loughner for offenses against ALL the victims, was available and ready to take the lead. A question the DOJ really ought to answer in this unique case.

Related posts:

  1. Durham Torture Tape Case Dies, US Duplicity in Geneva & The Press Snoozes
  2. As Expected, Judge Bates Punts on Rule of Law
  3. Prop 8 Judge Tells H8ters to Get Lost; Denies Motion to Disqualify


Emptywheel

Giffords opens her eyes for the first time since the shooting

Posted by admin | Posted in The Capitol | Posted on 13-01-2011

Tags: , , , , , ,

0

Tuscon, Arizona (CNN) - When President Barack Obama said Wednesday night that Rep. Gabrielle Giffords had opened her eyes for the first time since being shot on Saturday, an overflow crowd of nearly 30,000 people at a memorial event erupted into cheers that the congresswoman may have heard in her hospital room.

Obama said he learned of the eye-opening from Giffords’ husband, astronaut Mark Kelly.

“She knows we’re here, and she knows we love her,and she knows that we will be rooting for her throughout what will be a difficult journey,” the president said at a memorial in Tucson to honor the victims of the shooting.

Giffords is still listed in critical condition at the University of Arizona’s University Medical Center. Suspect Jared Loughner allegedly fired at her first, striking her in the head.

As soon as Obama finished his remarks, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-New York, let it be known that she, Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Florida, and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-California, were in the room at the time, along with Kelly and Giffords’ parents.

“It was like witnessing a miracle,” Gillibrand told CNN.

“Debbie and I were telling her how much she was inspiring the nation with her courage, her strength, and we were talking about the things we wanted to do as soon as she was better,” the senator said. “I said, ‘We’ll have another night out for beer and pizza with your husband.’ And Debbie started talking to her about their house in New Hampshire, just talking about all the things we wanted to do, and all of a sudden she started to struggle to open her eyes. “

“So Mark saw that and said, “Open your eyes, Gabby, open your eyes.’ She kept struggling and struggling and Mark just kept encouraging her. And within a
moment she literally opened her eyes.”

“The doctors couldn’t believe it,” Wasserman Schultz said.

“Mark started encouraging her, saying ‘Gabby, give me a thumbs up if you can see, if you can see me, touch my ring, touch my wedding ring.’ She started doing that,” she said. “We just kept talking to her and talking to her about the fun we’ve had with her, and so then she opened her eyes more. She went from opening her eyes really just in slits to opening them nearly fully. It wasn’t very long, and then they closed again. But it was just absolutely - it was the most incredible, aside from my kids, the most incredible experience.”

Giffords kept her eyes open “for a moment,” Gillibrand said - “maybe 30 seconds, maybe 60 seconds.”

“You could see she was focusing and Mark said, ‘Gabby if you can see me, give me the thumbs up,’ and not only did she give the thumbs up, she literally raised her entire hand,” Gillibrand later told CNN.

Doctors sent them out of the room shortly after that, Gillibrand said, because Giffords needed to rest.


CNN Political Ticker

Giffords opens her eyes for the first time since the shooting

Posted by admin | Posted in The Capitol | Posted on 13-01-2011

Tags: , , , , , ,

0

Tuscon, Arizona (CNN) - When President Barack Obama said Wednesday night that Rep. Gabrielle Giffords had opened her eyes for the first time since being shot on Saturday, an overflow crowd of nearly 30,000 people at a memorial event erupted into cheers that the congresswoman may have heard in her hospital room.

Obama said he learned of the eye-opening from Giffords’ husband, astronaut Mark Kelly.

“She knows we’re here, and she knows we love her,and she knows that we will be rooting for her throughout what will be a difficult journey,” the president said at a memorial in Tucson to honor the victims of the shooting.

Giffords is still listed in critical condition at the University of Arizona’s University Medical Center. Suspect Jared Loughner allegedly fired at her first, striking her in the head.

As soon as Obama finished his remarks, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-New York, let it be known that she, Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Florida, and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-California, were in the room at the time, along with Kelly and Giffords’ parents.

“It was like witnessing a miracle,” Gillibrand told CNN.

“Debbie and I were telling her how much she was inspiring the nation with her courage, her strength, and we were talking about the things we wanted to do as soon as she was better,” the senator said. “I said, ‘We’ll have another night out for beer and pizza with your husband.’ And Debbie started talking to her about their house in New Hampshire, just talking about all the things we wanted to do, and all of a sudden she started to struggle to open her eyes. “

“So Mark saw that and said, “Open your eyes, Gabby, open your eyes.’ She kept struggling and struggling and Mark just kept encouraging her. And within a
moment she literally opened her eyes.”

“The doctors couldn’t believe it,” Wasserman Schultz said.

“Mark started encouraging her, saying ‘Gabby, give me a thumbs up if you can see, if you can see me, touch my ring, touch my wedding ring.’ She started doing that,” she said. “We just kept talking to her and talking to her about the fun we’ve had with her, and so then she opened her eyes more. She went from opening her eyes really just in slits to opening them nearly fully. It wasn’t very long, and then they closed again. But it was just absolutely - it was the most incredible, aside from my kids, the most incredible experience.”

Giffords kept her eyes open “for a moment,” Gillibrand said - “maybe 30 seconds, maybe 60 seconds.”

“You could see she was focusing and Mark said, ‘Gabby if you can see me, give me the thumbs up,’ and not only did she give the thumbs up, she literally raised her entire hand,” Gillibrand later told CNN.

Doctors sent them out of the room shortly after that, Gillibrand said, because Giffords needed to rest.


CNN Political Ticker

Female Lawmakers Describe How Their Friend, Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, Opened Her Eyes for First Time Since Shooting

Posted by admin | Posted in The Capitol | Posted on 13-01-2011

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

0

ABC News’ Karen Travers reports: On the return trip from Tucson on Air Force One, Sen. Kirstin Gillibrand and Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz recounted to reporters their experience at the hospital earlier last night when Rep. Gabrielle Giffords opened her…



Email this Article
Add to Twitter
Add to Facebook
Add to digg
Add to Reddit
Add to StumbleUpon




Political Punch

“It Was a Miracle to Witness:” Senator Gillibrand Describes Giffords Opening Her Eyes

Posted by admin | Posted in The Capitol | Posted on 12-01-2011

Tags: , , , , , , ,

0

When Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-AZ, opened her eyes in the hospital room tonight for the first time since Saturday’s shooting, a trio of Congressional Democrats were in the room with her, a Congressional source said.



Email this Article
Add to Twitter
Add to Facebook
Add to digg
Add to Reddit
Add to StumbleUpon



Political Punch

Jim and Sarah Brady sound optimistic on Giffords

Posted by admin | Posted in The Capitol | Posted on 12-01-2011

Tags: , , , ,

0

Rehoboth Beach, Delaware (CNN) - Nearly 30 years after he was shot in the head during the attempted assassination of President Ronald Reagan, former White House Press Secretary Jim Brady knows what U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords is going through.

“Been there. Know that,” Jim Brady said. “Sounds like she’s got a great support group that’s right there with her and that means a lot,” he said.


Brady and his wife, Sarah, are keeping a close eye on Giffords’ progress, noting the congresswoman’s remarkable recovery so far. Jim Brady also showed signs of rapid improvement in the days after he was wounded.

“We know for her it’s going to be a long haul. But I know she’s a fighter and she’s going to be great,” Sarah Brady said.

There are other parallels between Brady’s shooting and the attack on Giffords. In the hours after the attempt on President Reagan’s life, several news outlets mistakenly reported Brady had died. The same happened with Giffords as several media outlets, including CNN, reported she had been killed. Brady was 40 years old at the time of the shooting, the same age as Giffords.

Reagan’s attempted assassin, John Hinkley was found not guilty by reason of insanity. By most accounts, alleged Tucson gunman Jared Lee Loughner has suffered from mental health issues.

The Bradys have spent decades lobbying Congress to pass tougher gun control legislation. Their biggest successes came in the 1990s with the passage of the Brady Bill and the Assault Weapons Ban. The Brady Bill originally called for a five-day waiting period before Americans could buy guns, a precursor to the FBI background checks conducted at gun shops today.

Noting that the Assault Weapons Ban once outlawed the extended magazine clips that were allegedly used in the Tucson shooting, the Bradys argue new gun laws are now needed.

“We just haven’t had and we’ve got to have the political courage to take that step,” Sarah Brady said.

With the influence of the National Rifle Association on Capitol Hill, many members of Congress in both parties are reluctant to pass new gun laws.

“I think there are some wimps up there,” Sarah Brady said.

Don’t count the Bradys among Americans who believe political rhetoric somehow played a role in the Saturday’s shootings. But Sarah Brady says the tragedy is an opportunity for national healing.

“There has been a level of discourse that I think has gotten out of hand. It’s time that we come and work together. I’ve never seen Capitol Hill quite so divided,” she said.

The Bradys say Giffords faces a lifetime of healing and recovery. At 70 and now blind, Jim Brady routinely goes to physical therapy near the couple’s home on the Delaware shore.

“Life will always be good again. It may be different. But that doesn’t mean it’s bad,” she said.


CNN Political Ticker

Obama Visits Giffords and Other Victims in the Hospital

Posted by admin | Posted in The Capitol | Posted on 12-01-2011

Tags: , , , ,

0

ABC News’ Jake Tapper and Sunlen Miller report: TUCSON – After touching down here this afternoon, President Obama went straight to the University Medical Center to see Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, R-Ariz., and several other victims of Saturday’s mass shooting at…



Email this Article
Add to Twitter
Add to Facebook
Add to digg
Add to Reddit
Add to StumbleUpon




Political Punch

NewsBusted: Did Sarah Palin Shoot Gabrielle Giffords?

Posted by admin | Posted in The Capitol | Posted on 12-01-2011

Tags: , , , , ,

0


Big Journalism

Tucson Tea Party Founder Blames Giffords For Getting Shot: ‘The Real Case Is That She Had No Security’

Posted by admin | Posted in The Capitol | Posted on 12-01-2011

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

0

In March 2010, Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ) warned that the rhetoric from the tea parties and Sarah Palin was potentially dangerous. “I can say that in the years that some of my colleagues have served — 20, 30 years — they’ve never seen it like this…when people do that, they’ve gotta realize there’s consequences to that action,” she said on MSNBC. Tuscon Tea Party co-founder Trent Humphries called Giffords’ previous concerns about violent rhetoric “political gamesmenship,” claiming that if Giffords was so concerned, then she is to blame for Saturday’s shootings because she “had no security whatsoever”:

It’s political gamesmanship. The real case is that she [Giffords] had no security whatsoever at this event. So if she lived under a constant fear of being targeted, if she lived under this constant fear of this rhetoric and hatred that was seething, why would she attend an event in full view of the public with no security whatsoever?” he said. “For all the stuff they accuse her [Palin] of, that gun poster has not done a tenth of the damage to the political discourse as what we’re hearing right now.”

Humphries also told the Guardian that Saturday’s shootings in Tuscon are “evolving into a conspiracy to destroy his organisation and silence criticism of the government.” Watch excerpts of interview here:

Incidentally, the same Tea Party rhetoric Humphries is so quick to defend is keeping him from attending the memorial service with President Obama tonight. Humphries told TPM that he received an anonymous phone call saying, “we’re going to stand against you and we’re going to use our First and Second Amendment rights to stop you” will keep him “out of public view for a while.” (HT: Reader MM)

ThinkProgress

BREAKING: Obamas will visit Giffords

Posted by admin | Posted in The Capitol | Posted on 12-01-2011

Tags: , , ,

0

(CNN) - President Barack Obama and his wife Michelle will visit Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and other survivors of last weekend’s Arizona shooting at a Tucson medical center on Wednesday afternoon, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said.


CNN Political Ticker

Invoking Giffords, Kerry Touts Windmills, Reveals Greens’ Confusion

Posted by admin | Posted in The Capitol | Posted on 12-01-2011

Tags: , , , , , , ,

0

I just had forwarded to me an email written by ThirdWay.org calling for more federal intervention in the energy markets, further supporting politically deigned winners from the pool of losers that must petition for aid in order to exist. Which of course doesn’t read all that differently than the old, First Way (post-FDR, that is). But it’s got a Blair-ite marketing panache that’s worth a try, anyway.

This was noteworthy for a couple of reasons, including its acknowledgment that the renewable energy mandate you will soon hear very much about, as the next ‘other way to skin the cat’ of energy rationing, is so far as your wallet is concerned the same as the very cap-and-trade scheme for which it is Plan B:

“China is about to [sic] put a price on carbon. The UK and EU are already there. So how can the U.S. begin to compete for the $ 2 trillion clean energy market? …We can help do that by establishing a national clean energy standard.”

Windmill mandate equals cap-and-trade. According to its champions. Got it.

More eye-catching was the whole $ 2 trillion thing. Because also today per Greenwire (subscription required) Sen. John Kerry continued his silly (very silly) advocacy of this agenda — if in less humorous fashion, seeking to take advantage of tragedy for political aims: “Infrastructure, clean energy can unite Congress after Tucson tragedy — Kerry” (noting that, hey, Cong. Giffords was really big on renewable energy supports, so…).

He “call[ed] for renewed support for investment in the energy economy — especially ‘green energy’ — where the United States, he said, is losing its competitive edge in a $ 6 trillion market to the rest of the world and China in particular “.

Is Sen. Kerry saying, as this reporter implies, that the renewable energy market is $ 6 trillion? Exaggeration in support of the green agenda? Quelle horreur, Sen. Kerry!

But, no. And yes. Kerry’s prepared remarks here say only that the ‘energy’ market overall, including the real kind, is $ 6 trillion. But he does still manage to mis-state the matter of ‘green energy’ (broadly defined, incidentally, including even dams), as being “projected at [sic] $ 2.3 trillion in 2020″.

First, that would mean there surely isn’t a $ 2 trillion market today. Which is true, and the claim that it is $ 2 trillion is not. But, second, no, the ‘green energy’ market isn’t “projected at” that, for then.

Sen. Kerry’s claim is unsourced but, barring remarkable coincidence, surely came from this recent, self-serving puffery by advocate for the global warming agenda, the Pew Environment Group: “Global Clean Power Sector Could Attract $ 2.3 Trillion by 2020″. Yes, many things could happen.

Pew merely conjured the “Opportunity”…if you adopt our demanded, massively increased restraints on energy sources that work and massive spikes in supports for those that don’t. Kerry’s source is an advocacy document saying if you do what I want this is what could happen. But it doesn’t say what he says.

Quickly reviewing the bidding of today’s surely co-incidental escalation of the campaign for more wealth transfers to political icons-slash-technological losers reveals that Pew is less outlandish than Kerry, who is less outlandish than ThirdWay. This appears to just be a case of one party making a puffed up hypothetical claim of a possible future world, another party trumping it up as a projection of where things will be, which is then in turn further trumped up by another.

As to the original sin, the puffery of If you do X, why then, Y could happen!, that frankly is what the windmill and solar industries have survived upon for decades and decades. Even though Y — wind (let alone the hopeless solar) as a commercially viable energy source in the absence of taxpayer wealth transfers — continues to be just around the corner, as it will always be just a few decades around the corner, just as it has been for…are you ready for this?…more than a century.

That’s right. Wind power, we are told, still needs massive per-unit subsidies because it is ‘nascent’. Now, being nascent does not in fact mean that you therefore need subsidies, so the implication is rather intellectually insulting. But they do have a point, wind-powered electricity was only first commercialized back in ‘91. 1891! Giving that ‘dinosaur’ coal-fired electricity a head start of a whole nine years.

Anyhow, the Pew projection upon which Sen. Kerry apparently relies, upon scrutiny, also makes clear there’s no $ 2 trillion renewable energy market now, as even another decade of the extant, breakneck pace of lavishing the stuff with mandates, preferences and taxpayer billions would just grow it to $ 1.7 trillion by 2020. So Sen. Kerry, ThirdWay and Pew have a lot to straighten out among themselves.

But, look, we’re talking about windmills and solar panels, the case for which longstanding flops is so desperate they are styled by the president as ‘new technology’. Chuckle. And when that’s the case, people know right off the bat you’re just saying stuff, anyway.


Big Government