The Road to Energy Serfdom in 648…No, 932…Make That 1,092…Better Yet 1,201…I Meant 1,428 Short Pages
July 14, 2009· 4 Comments
During the debate in the House or Representatives over the Waxman-Markey energy tax, there was some confusion about the final amendments to the bill. It appeared that few in the House had the opportunity to read the several hundred pages that were submitted by the bill’s author, Representative Henry Waxman, at 3 a.m. the morning of the House vote.
No matter.
The American people can finally read the bill Waxman-Markey bill in its entirety, thanks to the Government Printing Office’s recent release of the final 1,428 page roadmap to higher energy prices.
When the Waxman-Markey energy tax was publically unveiled as a discussion draft, it was a mere 648 pages long. The bill then grew to 932 pages when Representatives Waxman and Markey introduced the bill. In order to smooth passage out of the Energy and Commerce Committee, additional pork and special set-asides swelled the bill to 1,092 pages. But 1,092 pages weren’t enough to grease the bill through the House. Representative Waxman included even more energy regulations and mandates, first expanding the bill to 1,201 pages when it was reported out of the Rules Committee, and then adding a 309-page “manager’s amendment” at 3 in the morning, bringing the final bill to a whopping 1,428 pages.
Not content with regulating 85 percent of our energy (making all energy from natural gas, coal, and oil more expensive), the House bill regulates everything from artwork light fixtures to standards for real estate appraisers. The bill also provides billions in subsidies to a multitude of groups including an additional $50 billion for auto makers and subsidies for people who get pink slips if they can prove they lost their job because the bill’s onerous and expensive regulations and mandates.
Because of the rush to pass the bill before the voters (and most House members) had the chance to read it, it is not clear what the total cost this bill will have on our pocketbooks, but there is little doubt it will weaken the economy and reduce American jobs.



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July 20th, 2009 at 5:07 am
[...] Unfortunately, the Senate is using Waxman-Markey as its launching point for crafting their own legislation. As Steve Hayward jokes, given that Waxman-Markey gives away 85% of the emission permits, and given that the Senate hasn’t started its own horse-trading and buy-offs yet, by the time this is all done, the government might give away 150% of the the available permits. But there is nothing funny about a 1,428-page bill that has been likened to an energy road to serfdom. [...]
July 21st, 2009 at 11:00 pm
[...] there is even the spectre of Big Brotherism in this energy road to serfdom. Remember Jimmy Carter’s winter/summer thermostat regulations? Perhaps civil libertarian Nat [...]
August 6th, 2009 at 11:03 pm
[...] of climate alarmism have very serious arguments that could avoid what nobody wants: an energy road to serfdom. I personally fear the effect of government intervention in the name of climate-change for the [...]
August 24th, 2009 at 11:02 pm
[...] “skeptics” of climate alarmism have very serious arguments that could avoid what nobody wants: an energy road to serfdom. (Remember Jimmy Carter’s thermostat regulations? Beware of the carbon police!) I personally fear [...]