CORE is a venerable old civil rights organization, I wish they'd get more publicity. Roy Innis gave a talk at the Connecticut legislature a couple of days ago - no media attended. Left wingers must get a cognitive disconnect when a black guy expresses ideas that are deemed "conservative". In this case, it's just common sense. Looks like he's giving the same talk around the country, this is all I could find on it.
Civil Rights leader charges climate change proposals hurt poor Written by Staff Tuesday, 22 April 2008
from Core: Roy Innis, long-time leader of one of America's original civil rights organizations, warned today that a new civil rights battle is brewing because of the disproportionate impact on America’s working poor of higher energy prices caused by climate change proposals and other extremist environmental schemes.
“What is under attack is the ability to tens of millions of Americans – many right here in Utah – to afford to live and prosper in this great nation and continue to climb the ladder of economic opportunity,” said Roy Innis. “The culprit of this new civil rights battle? Environmental policies and laws that increase the cost of energy and e
Innis was in Salt Lake City as part of a conference entitled, “Earth Week ’08: The Future of Utah,” hosted by the Sutherland Institute.
Innis said misdirected global warming proposals, proposals to limit public access to public lands and policies that restrict access to America’s abundant energy “are driving up the cost of energy and consumer goods.”
“These policies cause widespread layoffs, leaving unemployed workers and families struggling to survive, as the cost of everything they eat, drive, wear and do spirals out of control,” he said. “They threaten to roll back much of the civil rights progress for which civil rights revolutionaries and Dr. King struggled and died.”
Innis cited a recent study that showed the passage of the leading climate change bill in Congress would “cost Utah very dearly,”
The study, done by the highly regarded Science Applications International Corporation, found that passage of Lieberman-Warner would have these impacts:
Utah will lose 10,227 to 15,384 jobs in 2020 and 28,155 to 37,479 jobs in 2030 under this bill.
Utah would see disposable household income reduced by $919 to $2,979 per year by 2020 and $3,780 to $6,893 by 2030.
The price of gasoline in Utah would increase between 74% and 140% by 2030, while electricity prices would increase by 96% to 133%. Natural gas prices would rise by 113% and 154% by 2030.
Utah’s gross state product would drop by by between $1.1 and $1.5 billion per year by 2020 and $4 and $4.7 billion by 2030.
The impacts of this bill on the poor, who spend more of their income on energy and other goods than other income brackets, would be especially harsh. By 2020, energy costs would chew up 17% and 19% of income under this bill, compared to a projected 14% without this bill. Others on fixed incomes, such as the elderly will also suffer disproportionately.
Utah’s 1,125 schools and universities and 56 hospitals will likely experience a 20% to 24% percent increase in expenditures by 2020 and a 64% to 84% increase by 2030. For government entities, costs for services, including public transportation and vehicle fleets, such as school buses, will also rise under this bill.
After citing the results, Innis asked: “You call this progress? I don’t. And I would wager than more than 90 percent of the voting-age population of Utah would agree with me on that point. I hope each and every one of our elected officials of Utah listens and contemplates this point,” he added.
“As the well-renowned environmental leader Bjorn Lomberg himself has admitted, these elitist groups want people to feel good, rather then do good,” he said. “Doing good means helping those on the bottom rungs of the economic ladder climb ever higher. But the policies pushed by these elitists prevent any upward mobility, because they increase the cost of living for the working poor.”
“These elitists want to keep minorities and the poor impoverished and laboring at menial jobs, to deny them a seat at the energy lunch counter, to send them to the back of the economic bus,” charged Innis.
Innis cited specifically the attempt by the Southern Utah Wilderness Society to restrict the public’s access to more than nine million acres within the State of Utah as “wilderness,” a move he said will restrict the production of energy in Utah. “That will in turn cause energy prices to rise. And those price increases will hurt low-income families the most.”
“I call on every one gathered here today, and every caring, thoughtful citizen in our great nation to join with me in challenging these Energy Killers, these modern day Bull Connors and George Wallaces, who are standing in the door, trying to prevent poor Americans from achieving Martin Luther King’s dream of equal opportunity and true environmental justice,” said Innis. northdenvernews.com |