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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1366456)7/12/2022 6:22:29 PM
From: Doren  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573924
 
Then I guess I'm NOT a "libtard"... I've been complaining about the gas tax here and bureaucrats... I'm a Libertarian though, I believe in less government not NO government.

Republicans are BIG BIG Government... in your pants, more prisons, more military, more money to foreign governments like Israel.

Libertarians have a saying: "Republicans have one hand down your pants, and the other in your back pocket."



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1366456)7/12/2022 7:09:29 PM
From: Wharf Rat2 Recommendations

Recommended By
Doren
sylvester80

  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 1573924
 
"People all across the country are pissed off at paying 'just' $5/gallon for gas"
You know who aren't pissed? The people with EVs.

--

"California's plan is indeed the 'Ten meme.'"

Simple memes from a simple mind.


55 years ago, Gov. Raygun and Nixon let us set our own mileage standards, stricter than the EPA's, in order to clean up the air. 50 years ago, Rat was paying 25 cents/gallon. 49 years ago, he was paying over a buck, cuz of the oil embargo. That got Raygun to establish the California Energy Commission, after vetoing it the first time around. Those 2 bodies have been setting efficiency standards to reduce energy consumption ever since. In '06, Arnold passed the climate change bill, and they started focusing on getting to zero carbon. I think the closest they get to a Ten meme is requiring farmers to capture and use the methane in cow shit.

California Climate Policy Dashboard

For more detail, view CLEE’s California Climate Policy Fact Sheets here.

Our California Climate Policy Dashboard seeks to provide a concise, easy-to-use overview of some of the major California climate laws and programs and introduce readers to some of the state regulators responsible for implementing them. Readers can find detailed information on these efforts by following links to full statutory text, agencies’ program pages, and CLEE reports on these laws and programs.

By compiling and regularly updating information on certain key state policies and actors, we hope to provide both casual readers and researchers with straightforward access to the full scope of California’s ambitious climate change programs and goals.

For further insight and analysis of California and federal climate policies, visit climatepolicysolutions.org(opens in a new tab) or our climate change page on Legal Planet(opens in a new tab).

law.berkeley.edu