Of Pine Trees and Light Bulbs

Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Mon, 21 Feb 2011 14:09:25 GMT  <== Politics ==> 

L. Neil Smith at The Libertarian Enterprise - Neil takes aim at the federal ban on incandescent light bulbs, and proposes a flag, in the spirit of the American Revolution's pine tree flag.

Today, the average household in America consumes roughly 10,000 kilowatt hours of electricity every year, most of it to generate the light and warmth which is the very essence of our civilization. The twisted, shriveled, inorgasmic, parsimonious cheese-parers among us resent that, somewhere in the cold, bleak depths of their emaciated souls, but we should simply ignore them. Fact is, we should be doing our best to increase that number, not decrease it. Energy is liberty. With every kilowatt hour we generate and consume, we are another step closer to untrammeled freedom, biological immortality, and the stars above.

Allow me to repeat myself. For many good reasons, we should all be attempting to use more electricity, not less. It will be good for the economy, and it will be good for us. It will encourage the creation of many new devices we can barely imagine now, some of which--like the personal computer--will greatly enhance our lives, liberty, and our pursuit of happiness. It will also bring economic pressure to bear on utility companies to increase the amount of electricity they generate--or it would if there weren't enormous pressure being put on them by the state, at the behest of environmental fascists not to increase it.

Truth: if there is any shortage of energy it is the result of government interference in the market. Their "solution" to the problem they created is to force everyone to drive little plastic "sippy cup" cars, as Ann Coulter calls them, turn their thermostats to SHIVER, turn off their air conditioners, and to junk their cheap, familiar, simple, reliable Edison light bulbs in favor of "compact fluorescent lights", which are expensive, have a high failure rate, and make our homes as creepy and uncomfortable as the weirdly-lighted sets in Dark City...

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