Prepping for the Republican Debate

David Thornton

David Thornton is a freelance writer and professional pilot who has also lived in Georgia, Florida, Kentucky, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas. He is a graduate of the University of Georgia and Emmanuel College. He is Christian conservative/libertarian who was fortunate enough to have seen Ronald Reagan in person during his formative years. A former contributor to The Resurgent, David now writes for the Racket News with fellow Resurgent alum, Steve Berman, and his personal blog, CaptainKudzu. He currently lives with his wife and daughter near Columbus, Georgia. His son is serving in the US Air Force. You can find him on Twitter @CaptainKudzu and Facebook.

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19 Responses

  1. Pinky says:

    I think Trump, DeSantis, Scott, Haley, and Christie have a shot at the nomination. Haley might have the most to lose tonight. If she comes off as a Trump ad, she’ll lose any chance of nomination, and she should know better than to think that Trump will be loyal to her when he chooses a running mate. Christie or Scott would need a good night to build to become the voters’ backup plan. DeSantis still is that backup plan, but hasn’t made the jump to contender. He doesn’t need a good night. People want him to step up, but there’s nothing wrong with being a solid, consistent conservative in the GOP, and there’s nothing he could do in one night to overtake Trump, so he may be better off slow and steady.

    I’d like to see DeSantis get the nomination, but would vote for Scott, Haley, or Christie in the general.Report

  2. Michael Cain says:

    I admit to some curiosity about what Burgum will do. He may be on a billionaire vanity campaign. My suspicion, though, is that he’s doing what Jay Inslee did in 2020. Inslee was a one-issue candidate. His presence on the stage forced the moderators to ask at least a couple of climate change questions, and the other candidates to make some “I’ll decarbonize the grid faster than Jay” statements. Burgum has tried a number of things to force states neighboring North Dakota to continue burning coal, oil, and natural gas. He may simply be trying to force that becoming an “official” Republican national policy by getting everyone else on the stage to endorse it.Report

    • Pinky in reply to Michael Cain says:

      He may not be in the debate. Breaking news about a sports injury and being in the ER.Report

      • Michael Cain in reply to Pinky says:

        USA Today is quoting him to the effect of anyone who wants to be President ought to be willing to stand on one leg for a couple of hours. He has apparently walked through the facility to verify he can manage it with crutches and a boot.Report

    • DavidTC in reply to Michael Cain says:

      Burgum has tried a number of things to force states neighboring North Dakota to continue burning coal, oil, and natural gas.

      So, this was such a weird statement I had to google it, and it turns out he has managed to somehow settle on the absolute stupidest policy position: He says we should continue burning fossil fuels, but as climate change is real, we should _also_ somehow do things to pull CO2 out of the air, despite this not actually being something that even vaguely can impact anything yet. Right now, approximately 0.1% of CO2 is sequestered, and to actually implement this, we’d basically have to do the entire renewable energy push again, starting over with this tech instead, and also somehow start _making_ people pay to sequester.

      And also…we do need to start doing this _anyway_, as much as we can. We do need to develop the tech, but not to counter out new emissions, but to remove the CO2 we already put there! Continuing to put CO2 there while we do this is utter nonsense, especially since this technology is going to take decades to get built, and, again, there’s no actual funding source for it. (Unless we implement a carbon tax, but, good luck getting Republicans on board with that.)

      ‘Yes, this truck is accelerating towards a cliff, and my solution is not stop accelerating, it is counter the acceleration with hard braking. And try to sue anyone who suggests we stop accelerating, because, again, our brakes are good enough to stop us…or, at least, they will be good enough to stop us before we go over the cliff, even if right now they aren’t working very well. Given time they’ll be good enough.’

      Now, I understand that the fossil fuel industry likes this idea because they think they can continue misleading the world into using fossil fuels, but I find myself wondering what _voters_ like this idea? I mean, I’m sure there’s some very small amount of people who operate in the fossil fuel industry but also know climate change is real, but the right has spend decades convincing their own people it isn’t, and trying to flip to ‘It is real, but we can keep burning coal’ is…very silly. The right has no actual attachment to burning gas, except in the sense it pwns the libs about their lie of climate change.Report

      • Measure Twice in reply to DavidTC says:

        2020-2022, and there’s no indication that we even stopped the global economy. What does that say to you about anthropogenic global warming?
        Every contiguous trendline save one says that the Medieval Warm Period was warmer than now.
        The most accurate temperature readings show no increase in temperature at all (granted, this is a shorter timescale than Mann’s “edited” graphs that he won’t distribute the data for.)

        Many people stand to make money/status by convincing us to go on the “Road to Zero” — do you really think it’ll do any good if we don’t fix China? Latest nobel prize winner in physics is saying that the IPCC itself says that all the risk on its models is downward (toward less warming, not more) because they themselves admit that clouds are the most uncertain bit of their analysis.

        Are you really supporting Russia’s “Go Green, burn more Natural Gas” Initiatives, where they have suborned and bought out entire parties in Europe? (ETA: If you don’t understand why “go green” means more natural gas burnt, then you really ought to read about 4th power wind, and our total lack of batteries to store “unreliable green energy.” Nobody’s talking hydropower, which is actually a proven workable technology).Report

        • DavidTC in reply to Measure Twice says:

          2020-2022, and there’s no indication that we even stopped the global economy. What does that say to you about anthropogenic global warming?

          That anthropogenic global warming is due to CO2 in the air, which is something that ‘the economy’ that we ‘stopped’ has very little impact on…we still ran power plants and shipped goods, and despite what you might claim, we barely stopped any level of production. Oil use dropped by only _9%_ during the pandemic.

          Also, we know global warming accelerated during those years due to adding particulate emission controls on ships, as evidenced by the fact it has _continued_ to do so. Ad drop that should have been visible would have been hidden because of that, a thing, I must point out, we knew and predicted in advance.

          Every contiguous trendline save one says that the Medieval Warm Period was warmer than now.

          That talking point was true a year ago, but no longer.

          Are you really supporting Russia’s “Go Green, burn more Natural Gas” Initiatives, where they have suborned and bought out entire parties in Europe?

          Yes, this is a logical thing to say to me, a person who just made the post you are replying to.Report

        • giovanni da procida in reply to Measure Twice says:

          I’m genuinely curious about your sources for your statements. For example, have you checked to see if Mann’s data really is unavailable?

          Because I found it! Here it is, located at: https://web.sas.upenn.edu/mannresearchgroup/publication-supplements/

          It’s actually been available for decades.

          If you didn’t know that, where did you get the idea that it wasn’t available?

          Does learning that something you have read or heard about this topic is wrong make you reassess the rest of your understanding? If not, why not?Report

      • Philip H in reply to DavidTC says:

        Lots of GOP voters in Texas, Louisiana, the Dakotas, and even Washington state make their livings in the oil patch or because of it. Roughly 10.3 million Americans owe their jobs to oil and gas. Coal mining is down to just over 55 thousand. For decades it was a way to a middle class lifestyle on a highschool diploma. For them, continuing to burn fossil fuels means economic security. Even in areas beginning to move to offshore wind (like the Gulf of Mexico) there is real palpable fear of change.

        So the GOP is not wrong to emphasize it as an economic issue. I’ll grant you they GOP does so from a place of fear mongering, and completely ignoring the pernicious and growing economic impacts from the global climate crisis.Report

        • DavidTC in reply to Philip H says:

          Roughly 10.3 million Americans owe their jobs to oil and gas.

          No they don’t. The oil companies just claim that. They actually employ 2 million people.

          And even that number is flatly ridiculous to use to argue to continue to burn fossil fuels.

          A huge chunk of that, literally half of that 2 million, is people working at gas stations, which would continue to exist as car refueling stations regardless of how the new cars are powered (And will be selling gasoline for at least a decade regardless of anything, as existing cars exist, so employees would have to be expecting a permanent career there to care.), and another 40,000 of that is people working in lubricating oil and grease, or asphalt creation, both of which have nothing to do with burning fossil fuels at all.

          And once you realize we’d still need to pump and ship and refine oil, just less of it, you notice the entire rest of the entire system will still exist, just scaled down somewhat, so only some of the remaining jobs would be lost.

          We are talking maybe a half of a million jobs lost, and maybe about one million people who could legitimately _think_ they could lose their job.

          I’m finding it hard to believe that this creates enough voters for Burgum to counterbalance the reflexive ‘climate change isn’t real and I’m not voting for a guy who says it is’ Republican voter…or, hell, the ‘We should actually do something about climate change’ Republican voter!Report

          • Pinky in reply to DavidTC says:

            Officer, I saw the whole thing. There was an “owe their jobs to” standing right there, and something swooped down and turned it into an “employed by”. And then it just stood there defiantly, like it expected us to pretend we didn’t notice.Report

            • DavidTC in reply to Pinky says:

              Um, if you’re going to complain about wording, maybe you want to complain about Philip’s which is factually not correct, as opposed to mine.

              There is a study from 2015 that claims that the oil and natural gas industry _supports_ 10.2 million jobs, not that those people ‘owe their jobs’ to it. Or, as the report _actually_ calls it, ‘induced’ jobs.

              The oil industry, and especially the people arguing _for_ them, likes to shorthand that into ‘owe their jobs to them’ (I.e, it’s not really Philip’s mistake) but that is not the same thing. Which I pointed out. The actual real measure is how many jobs are operated by them.

              That is because induce is an incredibly vague claim, and includes things like environmental experts. Pretty sure those jobs would still exist too.

              As would, in this specific example (Because we are not trying to figure out if that statement is true or not but how many people are risk from losing their jobs in the context of moving off oil for power), all the people who make plastics, which I think is included in this. (The study is very very vague.) We don’t care about them here, their job isn’t in danger, no one here is arguing we should stop pumping oil and making plastics from it(1), they are arguing we should stop burning it.

              What we are trying to figure out in this context is if there are sizeable mass of people whose jobs are threatened by non-oil-based power.

              1. There are people arguing that, but what we are talking about has nothing to do with that.Report

              • Pinky in reply to DavidTC says:

                I’m not complaining about wording, I’m complaining about you switching concepts. I’m not sure there’s a difference between saying that an industry supports X million jobs or that X million people owe their jobs to the industry. Saying Y million people are employed by the industry is completely different though.Report

          • Philip H in reply to DavidTC says:

            Independent estimates by the Department of Labor put the number employed by oil at gas at your 2 million figure. The rest comes from ancillary industries which participate in shipping, marketing, etc. Economically those folks owe their employment to this industry.

            Which is an answer to your question “but I find myself wondering what _voters_ like this idea?” The answer is the ones whose livelihoods are tied to it. Who seem to mostly vote for the GOP.

            Doesn’t mean they are right or he is right or I’m not really worried about the global climate crisis. Also doesn’t mean he’s just pulling this out his back side either.Report

  3. DavidTC says:

    Just a reminder with literally no bearing on anything, or any relation to what might be going on:

    The leadership of a nation planning to invade another nation, or threatening to do so, which would include bombing them or operating military vehicles in their country without permission, not in response to any aggressive actions on the part of that other nation, (aka, a ‘war of aggression’) is a war crime under customary international law and the UN Charter.

    Oh, also, another weird fact: Mexico is a _nation_. Many people don’t know that, they think it’s just, like, part of Texas, but it is, indeed, a nation.

    I honestly have no idea why I just remembered those two facts, totally disconnected from everything else.Report