Renewables Revolt: Australians Refuse to Pay One Cent More for Wind & Solar

stopthesethings's avatarSTOP THESE THINGS

power-bill

Among the mantras that feature in wind industry propaganda is the line about Australians being all in favour of renewable energy.

That may well be.

However, the wind cult are having a hard time convincing the thousands of South Australians who are often left sitting freezing or boiling in the dark – whenever wind power output collapses on a routine, total and totally unpredictable basis – that its fleet of whirling wonders represents any kind of future, at all.

And now it seems that, despite the ‘love’ they are purported to have professed to pollsters, the vast majority of Australians are not prepared to pay one red cent more for that warm fuzzy feeling that is said to come from knowing that your fridge, air-conditioner and giant flatscreen TV is being run on either sunshine or breezes.

Newspoll: 45 per cent won’t pay more for energy renewables
The Australian
David…

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How Big Banks Conspire to Wreck Reliable & Affordable Energy Supplies

stopthesethings's avatarSTOP THESE THINGS

That the big end of town is keen to profit from the greatest economic and environmental fraud of all time, is no secret.

Banks have been attempting to wreck reliable and affordable power supplies, for the best part of 20 years, dressing it up as “corporate social responsibility”.

There’s nothing moral about it; it’s all about ensuring the massive subsidies to wind and solar continue to roll until kingdom come.

So, it should come as no surprise that the suits that run the finance sector are doing everything in their power to stack the odds in favour of hopelessly unreliable wind and solar, where the massive mandated subsidies guarantee over-the-market returns to rent-seeking investors.

As NSW’s Premier during the 1920s, Jack Lang quipped “Always back the horse named self-interest, son. It’ll be the only one trying.”

If this country were better governed, these characters would all be charged with treason…

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The Irishman (2019) Review

Great Books Guy's avatarGreat Books Guy

“I heard you paint houses.”

In an homage to old gangster films –like Scorsese’s own GoodfellasTheIrishman plays out like a solemn farewell to the mobster movies of yesteryear. And yet, it is also a forward looking picture with a deliberate embrace of new possibilities, like the decline of old cinemas in favor of the online streaming revolution, the biggest shift in the industry since the rise of talkies –in fact, the film was released on Netflix. With some wonderful acting, editing, score, and directing, in my view one piece of criticism is that TheIrishman is nevertheless a tediously lengthy movie clocking in at nearly four hours. It is a late career reflection upon the passing of time by one of America’s more popular living directors. It comes at a unique moment in the United States with a general widespread dissatisfaction with elites…

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A Primer on Marginal Tax Rates

Dan Mitchell's avatarInternational Liberty

Three years ago, I shared two videos explaining taxation and deadweight loss (i.e., why high tax burdens are bad for prosperity).

Today, I have one video on another important principle of taxation. To set the stage for this discussion, here are two simple definitions

  • The “average tax rate” is the share of your income taken by government. If you earn $50,000 and your total tax bill is $10,000, then your average tax rate is 20 percent.
  • The “marginal tax rate” is the amount of money the government takes if you earn more income. In other words, the additional amount government would take if your income rose from $50,000 to $51,000.

These definitions are important because we want to contemplate why and how a tax cut helps an economy.

But let’s start by explaining that a tax cut doesn’t boost growth because people have more money to spend.

I want…

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Windfall Profits For ROC Generators Running At £1 Billion A Month

Dividend Taxation in Europe and the United States

Dan Mitchell's avatarInternational Liberty

Modern tax systems tend to have three major deviations from good fiscal policy.

  1. High marginal tax rates on productive behavior like work and entrepreneurship.
  2. Multiple layers of taxation on income that is saved and invested.
  3. Distortionary loopholes that reward inefficiency and promote corruption.

Today, let’s focus on an aspect of item #2.

The Tax Foundation has just released a very interesting map (at least for wonks) showing the total tax rate on dividends in European nations, including both the corporate income tax and the double-tax on dividends.

Because it has a reasonably modest corporate income tax rate, some of you may be surprised that Ireland has the most onerous overall burden on dividends. But that’s because there are high tax rates on personal income and households have to pay those high rates on any dividends they receive (even though companies already paid tax on that income).

It’s less…

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Robert Walpole, Prime Minister of Great Britain. Part II

liamfoley63's avatarEuropean Royal History

Rise to power

Soon after Walpole returned to the Cabinet, Britain was swept by a wave of over-enthusiastic speculation which led to the South Sea Bubble. The Government had established a plan whereby the South Sea Company would assume the national debt of Great Britain in exchange for lucrative bonds. It was widely believed that the company would eventually reap an enormous profit through international trade in cloth, agricultural goods, and slaves.

Many in the country, including Walpole himself (who sold at the top of the market and made 1,000 per cent profit), frenziedly invested in the company. By the latter part of 1720, however, the company had begun to collapse as the price of its shares plunged.In 1721 a committee investigated the scandal, finding that there was corruption on the part of many in the Cabinet.

Among those implicated were John Aislabie (the Chancellor of the Exchequer), James Craggs…

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Can Australian Green Hydrogen Replace Russian Gas?

China continues to laugh at Western “Green Energy” foolishness

oldbrew's avatarTallbloke's Talkshop


Bigger energy bills and decreasing reliability of energy supply are the only guaranteed results of climate-obsessed policies.
– – –
With an energy cost crisis now striking Europe and to a lesser extent the U.S., some cracks have begun to appear in the “net zero” utopian dreams being pursued almost universally by Western politicians, says the Manhattan Contrarian.

Nevertheless, at this writing, the rapid elimination of use of fossil fuels, supposedly to fight “climate change,” remains official government policy throughout Europe, at the federal level in the U.S., in most blue American states, and as well in Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

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Tutino and Zarazaga on why the fiscal theory of the price level is so compelling! Quantity theory struggles to explain the sudden end of hyperinflations and the failure of previous stabilisation attempts

From https://www.dallasfed.org/~/media/documents/research/eclett/2014/el1406.pdf

Totally Rotten: Dodgy Government Deal Exposes Grand-Scale Wind Industry Corruption

stopthesethings's avatarSTOP THESE THINGS

The wind industry sets the benchmark for systemic government corruption; backslapping, gladhanding and bottomless bags of cash are just the beginning.

And, when it comes to bent corporate/government dealings no Australian State does it better than Queensland. Whether it’s the constant sunshine or something in the water, who knows?

But there is absolutely no contest to the Labor government’s ability to look after its own, particularly when favours are needed to get thoroughly un-commercial wind and solar power projects off the ground.

The connections are insidious; the deals are dodgy and the players come straight out of mafia central casting.

Former lord mayor Jim Soorley was previous consultant to windfarm company that later got $150 million Queensland government power deal
ABC
Rory Callinan
11 Mar 2022

Former lobbyist Jim Soorley chaired state-owned corporation CS Energy when it agreed to purchase $150 million worth of power from a wind farm company…

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The English Revolution and the History of Majority Rule

History of Parliament's avatarThe History of Parliament

In our latest blog we’re returning to the ‘Recovering Europe’s Parliamentary Culture, 1500-1700’ project. Since autumn 2021, we have been working with the University of Oxford and the Centre for Intellectual History at the University of Oxford to put together series of blogs that explore European Parliamentary Culture. The series is focused on the Early Modern period – roughly 1500-1700 – but they have ranged more widely, seeking to bring in some scholars of the more recent past to provide different perspectives and insights that might stimulate new thinking. We’re reposting some of the blogs here, with thanks to the CIH and to our colleagues who have commissioned, edited and authored the blogs. To find out more about the exciting programme of work and conferences over the coming year, head to the CIH website.

This blog was originally posted on 13 December, written byWilliam J…

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IPCC scientists say it’s ‘now or never’ to limit warming — but such powers don’t exist?

oldbrew's avatarTallbloke's Talkshop

Summertime [image credit: BBC]
What evidence is there that such powers do exist? An air of unreality is palpable here, with talk of extreme dangers and use of decimal point temperature statements while brushing aside all uncertainties. Endless alarmism creates fatigue, not the fear they crave.
– – –
UN scientists have unveiled a plan that they believe can limit the root causes of dangerous climate change, says BBC News.

A key UN body says in a report that there must be “rapid, deep and immediate” cuts in carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions.

Global emissions of CO2 would need to peak within three years to stave off the worst impacts.

Even then, the world would also need technology to suck CO2 from the skies by mid-century.

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The Case Against Price Controls, Part III

Dan Mitchell's avatarInternational Liberty

In Part I of this series, Professor Don Boudreaux explained the folly of price controls, and Professor Antony Davies was featured in Part II.

Now let’s see some commentary from the late, great, Milton Friedman.

As Professor Friedman explained, the economics of price controls are very clear.

When politicians and bureaucrats suppress prices, you get shortages (as all students should learn in their introductory economics classes).

Sometimes that happens with price controls on specific sectors, such as rental housing in poorly governed cities.

Sometimes it happens because of economy-wide price controls, as we saw during Richard Nixon’s disastrous presidency.

In all cases, price controls are imposed by politicians who are stupid or evil. That’s blunt language, but it’s the only explanation.

Sadly, there will never be a shortage of those kinds of politicians, as can be seen from this column in the Wall Street Journal by Andy Kessler.

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Image

If skilled labour is being kept out of the workplace for unreasonable reasons then that’s an opportunity for someone else to gain that labour on the cheap. Which is exactly what Dame Steve Shirley did

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