A
MINORITY VIEW
BY
WALTER E. WILLIAMS
RELEASE:
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 16, 2008, AND THEREAFTER
Tyranny Update
Last December,
President Bush signed an energy bill that will ban the sale of Edison's
incandescent bulb, starting with the 100-watt bulb in 2012 and ending
with the 40-watt bulb by 2014. You say, "Hey, Williams, what's wrong with
saving energy, reducing our carbon footprint and stopping global warming?"
Before you get too enthused over governmental energy-saving efforts, you might
ponder what's down
the road.
The California
Energy Commission has recently proposed amendments to its standards for energy
efficiency
(www.energy.ca.gov/2007publications/CEC-400-2007-017/CEC-400-2007-017-45DAY.PDF).
These standards include a requirement that any new or modified heating or air conditioning
system must include a programmable communicating thermostat (PCT) whose
settings can be remotely controlled by government authorities. A thermostat
czar, sitting in Sacramento, would be empowered to remotely reduce the heating or
cooling of your house during what he deems as an "emergency event."
Say you disagree
with the czar's temperature setting for your house, the California Energy
Commission is one step ahead of you with the provision: "The PCT shall not
allow
customer changes to thermostat settings during emergency events." In other
words, the thermostat must be configured in a way that doesn't allow the
customer to override the czar's decision.
Some people
might agree with this level of government control over their lives, but if these
amendments become law, you can safely bet there are other intrusive
energy-saving proposals waiting in the wing. For now California's energy Nazis
are simply testing how much intrusiveness Californians will peaceably accept. I can easily
imagine California's Energy Commission requiring remotely controlled main
circuit breaker boxes that control all of the electricity coming into your
house. That would enable the energy czar to better manage your electricity use.
Say you're preparing a big
dinner. The energy czar might decide that you don't need so much heat in the
rest of the house. Or, preparing a big dinner might mean the energy czar would
turn off the energy to your washing machine and dryer while the electric stove
is on.
There's no end
to what the energy czar could do, particularly if he enlists the aid of
California's Department of Health Services. Getting six to eight hours sleep
each night is healthy; good health lowers health costs. So why not make it
possible for the
energy czar to turn the lights off at a certain hour? California's Department
of Education knows children should do their homework after school rather than
sit playing video games or watching television. The energy czar could improve
education outcomes simply
by turning off the television, or at least turning off all non-educational
programs. Of course, there could be a generous provision whereby if an adult is
present, he could use a password to operate the television.
You say,
"Williams, you must be mad.
All that would never happen." That's the same charge one might have made
back in the '60s, when the anti-tobacco movement started, if someone predicted
that the day would come when some cities, such as Calabasas, Calif., would
outlaw smoking on public
streets. Back in the '60s, had someone predicted that there'd be bans on
restaurants serving foie gras; citations for driving without a seatbelt, that
the government said would be unnecessary if cars had airbags; and school bans
on kids having peanut butter
sandwiches in their lunchbox, I'm sure people would have said that would never
happen.
California's
Energy Commission, along with its legislature, has the power to mandate that
all existing -- as well as new -- heating and cooling devices have programmable
communicating thermostats by 2009. After all, it's never too early to start
saving energy or prepare for an "emergency event." The reason they
won't is because they would encounter too much political resistance. Their
agenda is far more achievable using
techniques dear to all tyrants: There's less resistance if liberty is taken
away a little bit at a time.
Walter E.
Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out
more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators
Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT
2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.