Then
there was Demos, a New York–based left-wing group normally prominent in
attacking voter-ID laws. But in Oregon, Demos persuaded Hayes and
Kitzhaber to consider using a “genuine progress indicator” as a
substitute for traditional GDP models of growth.
Oregon governor John Kitzhaber may have announced that he will resign,
but a sweeping FBI investigation of him and his fiancée, Cylvia Hayes,
is only getting started. While the story involves personal failings,
the green-energy lobbying scandal that brought them down has national
lessons and implications. If oil companies and pharmaceutical concerns
shouldn’t exercise undue influence in government, the same is true for
green energy — which can’t yet survive in the marketplace without giant
subsidies or special tax favors.
While Hayes was living in the governor’s mansion with the self-bestowed
title of “Oregon’s First Lady,” she collected a series of consulting
contracts and “fellowship” money from people with an interest in
shaping state energy and environmental policy. She then ordered state
employees to help run her private business and take actions in accord
with the wishes of the green-energy groups that were paying her.
[Etc]
Having lived in Oregon, not much that happens there surprises me. Even back in the '70s, I remember how heavy-handed "Peace and Love" types could be when they got a little power. I remember someone commenting "Scratch a hippie, find a Fascist!"
ReplyDeleteFlog them first.
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Should they be salted after flogging or is that a waste of salt?
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ReplyDelete