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And then he said that thing that he always says again!

Press struggles to write something interesting about vacuous Bush speech

Posted by David Roberts at 2:33 PM on 28 Sep 2007

Read more about: George Bush | climate | politics

Well, Bush gave a speech on climate change today, in conjunction with his Major Economies Meeting. "What I'm telling you is, we've got a strategy,'' the man said.

That's one way of putting it.

As expected, Bush said nothing new, just some banalities about how we all recognize the problem and we all have to do something about it, as long as whatever it is doesn't slow economic growth or otherwise inconvenience us. He once again rejected mandatory caps on emissions, saying that each country should set its own voluntary policy for how and how much it wants to reduce emissions.

All told, a big fat nothing.

Given the predictable vacuity, journalists face something of a challenge. How to spin nothing? The New York Times went with the unenlightening "Bush outlines proposal," leaving skepticism way down in the tenth paragraph. Bloomberg says Bush is "urging green technology," but moves the skepticism up to 'graph three. AP said Bush is seeking a "new image" and buries skepticism in 'graph nine. AFX is more upfront, headlining the story that Bush "renews opposition to mandatory caps." Reuters notes that Bush is "isolated," while AFP finds him "on attack."

VOA gets perhaps closest to the heart of the matter when they say that "Bush says fight against global warming must not hinder economies." Or maybe that distinction goes to BusinessWeek for "talk, but no action."

Over in Germany, Deutsche Welle notes that the speech "disappointed Europeans." The BBC is more delicate, noting that Bush is after "flexible CO2 targets." The Times UK is not as circumspect, stating bluntly that "Bush rejects binding cuts." In Canada, the sympathetic National Journal says "voluntary cuts enough to slash emissions," while Digital Journal rounds up the reactions from critics.

And so on, blah blah blah, as the world waits impatiently for 2009 ...

Climate Treasury Fund

The most troubling aspect to me was that Bush wanted his Treasury Secretary to set up some kind of "climate change technology fund" (my words) from which new ... stuff ... would evolve.  

This sounds similar to administration claims that it spent $2.5B on 'clean coal' and another whopping amount on ethanol subsidies, both rather failed and shortsighted strategies.

Yeah, like I need a car that runs on a mixture of ethanol-diesel.

Some German observers were quick to point out that meh, the Bush Administration will be milquetoast in less than 18 months and they look forward to dealing with a new group in Washington that has something more substantiative to say ... can't wait for the scathing writeup in the Economist!
-sammie

Onward through the fog

Running out the clock.

Just like he is doing with Iraq. It would not be so horrible, if only I had any confidence that the likely successors were really going to do something about the issue. But on both climate change and Iraq they all have that deer in the headlights look about them. That is what causes me to stare at the ceiling at 2:30 in the morning.

I am preparing myself for a Great Disappointment in 2009. People think a new prez (please god in heaven it is a dem) will (a) start getting us out of Iraq and (b)start doing something about global warming. What do we do if by the fall we realize that our saviour is going to do nothing of the sort on either issue.

That is something we need to be prepared for.

Randy Cunningham

Randy Cunningham

My favourite headline...

...was a subtitle in the Guardian:

President claims he can lead world on emissions

I couldn't find anywhere he used those exact words...but it would be great if he did.

If I share initials with 'Global Warming', is that a sign?

Present obvious

He also likes to use what we used to refer to as the "present obvious" tense. For example, his comments on the Jena protests:

"All of us in America want there to be, you know, fairness when it comes to justice."

Sigh.

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