You'd have to couple the carbon tax* with tariffs, no?
*As a conservative I'm going with carbon "fee," on the assumption that the monies collected won't go to government coffers.
You'd have to couple the carbon tax* with tariffs, no?
I don't see that happening. The open border policy and outsourcing/automation of work will not be union friendly other than for government contracts that require US based labor. And those automated delivery fleets will one day become a reality.i see this as a big boon to unionized labor not to churners of cheap commodities.
huh? automatic delivery fleets are going to build windmills, retrofit buildings, rig solar panels, expand rural broadband?Campitor wrote: ↑Mon Nov 23, 2020 6:24 pmi see this as a big boon to unionized l ... mmodities.
I don't see that happening. The open border policy and outsourcing/automation of work will not be union friendly other than for government contracts that require US based labor. And those automated delivery fleets will one day become a reality.
https://joebiden.com/clean-energy/#We need millions of construction, skilled trades, and engineering workers to build a new American infrastructure and clean energy economy. These jobs will create pathways for young people and for older workers shifting to new professions, and for people from all backgrounds and all communities. Their work will improve air quality for our children, increase the comfort of our homes, and make our businesses more competitive. The investments will make sure the communities who have suffered the most from pollution are first to benefit — including low-income rural and urban communities, communities of color, and Native communities. And, Biden’s plan will empower workers to organize unions and bargain collectively with their employers as they rebuild the middle class and a more sustainable future. Biden will make a $2 trillion accelerated investment, with a plan to deploy those resources over his first term, setting us on an irreversible course to meet the ambitious climate progress that science demands.
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/share ... 2020-01-22Alphaville wrote: ↑Mon Nov 23, 2020 6:43 pmhuh? automatic delivery fleets are going to build windmills, retrofit buildings, rig solar panels?
not in this generation. maybe 40 years from now?
meanwhile the biden plan states the money will go to union jobs:
sure, there are unintended consequences to every policy and legislation, but unions are a major force in the democratic party and won’t write this against themselves.
mitch might sabotage on behalf of his donors, but that’s a different story.
and again, let’ not argue from paranoia. just because something sounds dystopian, it doesn’t follow that it’s true.
“we’ll see how that needle moves” is right. first we’ll need the infrastructure legislation of course.Campitor wrote: ↑Mon Nov 23, 2020 7:09 pmhttps://www.marketwatch.com/story/share ... 2020-01-22
https://theintercept.com/2020/01/31/joe ... on-lawyers
Unions have been in decline for a while now despite all the presidential promises of increasing unions. And any plan Biden wants to make will need to pass the house/senate. It's not going to be suddenly sunshine and rainbows for unions under Biden similar to how it wasn't under Clinton and Obama. Maybe I'm wrong. We'll see how that needle moves in the next 4 to 8 years.
- “ Dark Ecology: For a Logic of Future Coexistence” - Timothy MortonThe darkness of ecological awareness is the darkness of noir, which is a strange loop: the detective is a criminal. In a strong version of noir the narrator is implicated in the story: two levels which normally don’t cross, that some believe structurally can’t cross. We civilized people we Mesopotamians, are the narrators of our destiny. Ecological awareness is that moment at which these narrators find out that they are the tragic criminal.