OPINION: Don't fall for new GOP lies. In reality, deadly Texas freeze is a plea for a Green New Deal
"Where we are now in
Indeed. The once-in-a-lifetime freeze that has enveloped all of America's second-most-populous state (and its southernmost of the continental 48) is on the brink of becoming one of the nation's public health crises of a new millennium that has already seen far too many disasters -- both natural and man-made, but usually blending both. The frigid suffering of millions without electricity, water, or food, and the mounting death toll, is the kind of tragedy that should transcend our bitterly divided politics -- but you shouldn't be shocked to learn that the polar opposite has happened.
The icicles from thousands of burst water pipes had barely started to grow when the state's overwhelmingly Republican political leadership took to social media and the friendly airwaves of
"This shows how the Green New Deal would be a deadly deal for
None of this has any grounding in reality. Although the growth of wind power in
The truth is that frozen equipment or supply problems at power plants that rely on thermal sources -- primarily fossil fuels such as natural gas and goal but also nuclear -- have been the source of the majority of the
The underlying problem is not any kind of Green New Deal-related socialism but rather
"When you have a more deregulated, market-based system, it's not clear whose responsibility it is when it fails,"
It seems ridiculous to even have to write this but of course the Green New Deal -- a progressive idea that's been "vilified" by rabid right-wingers much more than coal or oil ever has -- didn't cause the blackouts in
For one thing, spending trillions to create the necessary post-carbon energy regime in America would surely include money for weatherizing wind turbines and other clean energy sources -- essential as our ongoing climate crisis keeps creating new weather extremes. More importantly, as Cohen noted in our interview, a Green New Deal would mean spending on long overdue infrastructure like new transmission lines that would make for a more reliable national grid. It's imperative that the new Biden administration avoid the mistakes and timidity of the Obama government, which backed away from a proposed grid overhaul because of concerns over issues such as jurisdiction.
Cohen said the federal government can offer incentives to neighbors of new transmission lines -- such as free heat pumps, which was used as a carrot for a project in
Indeed, the irony of attacking the Green New Deal for the crisis in
Politically, what's so disheartening about this whole episode is that it comes so closely on the heels of the vast majority of the
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