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So declares Oklahoma Sen. Jim Inhofe, taking a few minutes away from a Thanksgiving retreat with his family. "Ninety-five percent of the nails were in the coffin prior to this week. Now they are all in."
If any politician might be qualified to offer last rites, it would be Mr. Inhofe. The top Republican on the Environment and Public Works Committee has spent the past decade in the thick of Washington's climate fight. He's seen the back of three cap-and-trade bills, rode herd on an overweening Environmental Protection Agency, and steadfastly insisted that global researchers were "cooking" the science behind man-made global warming.
This week he's looking prescient. The more than 3,000 emails and documents from the University of East Anglia's Climate Research Unit (CRU) that have found their way to the Internet have blown the lid off the "science" of manmade global warming. CRU is a nerve center for many of those researchers who have authored the United Nations' global warming reports and fueled the political movement to regulate carbon.
WHAT'S NEWJim Lakely - July 22, 2010
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) conceded Thursday that the comprehensive Kerry-Lieberman cap-and-tax “climate change” bill is dead ... (read more)
Fergus Hodgson - July 20, 2010
Obama administration BP cleanup fund director Kenneth Feinberg told three Louisiana town hall gatherings in one day—in Houma, Port Sulphur, and Lafitte— ... (read more)
Paul Fisher and Jim Johnston - July 20, 2010
A favorite political sport in recent years has been to use the judicial system to demonize business people for fun and profit at the polls. The treatment ... (read more)
Natasha Altamirano - July 19, 2010
At least 13 states are considering enacting taxes on plastic and paper bags used at grocery stores and carryout restaurants, but a Tax Foundation report ... (read more)
Jim Johnston - September 18, 2007
Economist Jim Johnston explains the differences between political markets, such as the one created for trading sulfur dioxide emissions, and real markets, ... (read more)
H. Sterling Burnett - July 13, 2010
Alaska state officials are objecting to the Obama administration’s decision to list more than 187,000 square miles—almost the entire U.S. polar ... (read more)
Sarah McIntosh - July 13, 2010
The town of Concord, Massachusetts has banned the sale of bottled water, effective January 2011. Concord passed the measure in response to environmental ... (read more)
Thomas Cheplick - July 13, 2010
Environmental activists are stepping up their criticism of ethanol tax breaks, claiming the subsidies provide few if any environmental benefits and needlessly ... (read more)
Alyssa Carducci - July 13, 2010
Gulf Coast states are taking the initiative in addressing the BP oil spill, as the federal government continues to do little to protect states from advancing ... (read more)
Bonner R. Cohen - July 13, 2010
The Connecticut legislature seriously considered legislation rolling back the state’s aggressive renewable power requirement, but a back-and-forth ... (read more)
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