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Wednesday, June 16, 2021

Switzerland: "Climate" Referendum: "When the issue got presented with specific costs attached, the Swiss people were sensible enough to say no: 51.6% to 48.4%.

Note:  U.S. surveys about climate change find a large percentage of people say there is a problem. Not necessarily a serious problem. Certainly not an "emergency".  The big story today is about Switzerland, whose CO2 emissions are a rounding error within the global total.  

The Swiss people came very close to approving a $1,100 "tax" on the average family to "fight" climate change. Here in the US, surveys show that "fighting" climate change is mainly virtue signalling talk ... just don't ask people for money. I always sum up those surveys by saying 'in the US the support for "fighting" climate change is one mile wide, but only one inch deep'.

When surveys ask people how much money they would contribute to "fight" climate change, the answers are just "on paper", and hopefully anonymous. The number stated is not ACTUAL spending  -- so a survey is an opportunity to virtue signal, and pretend you are very serious about "fighting" climate change with your own money! Meaning there is likely to be a bias toward overstating the dollars. In spite of that likely bias, US respondents say they would spend very little money to "fight" climate change. 

In Switzerland, citizens can vote by referendum to reject a statute passed by their parliament. From this point on, imagine that the US voters had the same opportunity to reject a law passed by Congress.
 
Switzerland (real): 
A statute to "fight" climate change was claimed to cost $1,100 annually, per family. Every "official" Swiss organization supported it. The Swiss people rejected the climate change statute, but it lost by only 3.2 percentage points. So if just over 1.6% of the people changed their vote next time, the statute would not be rejected.
 
United States (just my imagination): 
Based on US surveys, I'd expect US voters would reject such a climate change statute with a large majority. Then the government would lower their cost estimate for the next vote, whether true or not. And launch a better 'get out the vote' public relations campaign, with famous entertainers and children asking their parents to save the planet. Based on the 2020 US election, I'm confident election fraud would ramp up for the next climate change vote. If a vote had been close in the US, as it was in Switzerland, 'flipping' just 1.6% of the votes would be an easy job. Perhaps the Swiss could use a few lessons from US Democrats on how to 'manage' the 'most honest election in history'.   Ye Editor

Source:

... " The headline at Reuters is “Swiss reject law to help country meet Paris carbon emissions goal.”

It seems that the Swiss parliament, after multiple years of considering and debating various proposals, had finally passed a package of measures intended to “save the planet,”

or at least to push the Swiss people into achieving a Paris agreement goal of 50% emissions reduction (from 1990 levels) by 2030.

As usual with these things, the entire strategy consisted of forcing the Swiss people to atone for their sins of prosperity by becoming poorer,

in the form of higher prices for fossil fuels and airline tickets and forced restrictions on building heat and automobiles.

Here is a list of the main provisions of the proposed law from swissinfo.ch:

    a levy of between CHF30 and CHF120 ($32-$129) on airline tickets, for flights taking off from Switzerland

    an obligation for car importers to sell more energy-efficient vehicles

    an increase of the surcharge on diesel and petrol from CHF0.05 to CHF0.12 per litre, to be levied by fuel importers

    an increase of the tax on CO2 levied on diesel from CHF120 to CHF210 per tonne

    CO2 emissions limits for buildings

Opponents estimated a cost to the average Swiss family in the range of CHF 1,000 (about $1,100) per year.

That seems highly optimistic to me, but remember that this law was only part of the plan to get the first 50% reduction in emissions.

The big money is in the second 50%.

The Swiss system contains big chunks of “direct democracy,” by which, among other things, the people can by referendum reject a statute passed by the parliament.

To initiate the referendum, proponents needed to collect 50,000 signatures within 100 days.

Here, some 110,000 were collected within 100 days.

The Swiss contribute something around 0.1% of world carbon emissions.

Why would such a people consider impoverishing themselves even a little to reduce their tiny and insignificant portion of world emissions,

when places like China, India and Africa — together having several hundred times the population of Switzerland — are on a crash campaign to build more coal power plants to bring electricity to their masses?

(I can) tell you who in Switzerland supported this completely futile carbon-restriction legislation.

... the legislature ... passed the proposed law.

Which political parties in the legislature supported this?

From swissinfo.ch:
 In parliament, all parties backed the law except for the right-wing People’s Party.

They don’t have a two-party system in Switzerland like our system.

A Wikipedia entry here lists some twelve political parties having representatives in the parliament.

... it was eleven of twelve in support of self-impoverishment for no noticeable benefit.

... the People’s Party is the largest of the twelve, with about 25% of the members.

Also among the law’s supporters were essentially all of the major institutions of Swiss society. Again, from swissinfo.ch:

[I]n favour of the law [was] a campaign committee representing business, energy providers, the construction sector, banks, and insurance companies,

as well as the Swiss Business Federation,

the Swiss Climate Alliance,

environmental groups like Greenpeace,

and various local sections of the Climate Strike movement.

And don’t forget academia,

plus essentially all established media and newspapers.

According to this post-election piece at swissinfo.ch, the vote was close — 51.6% to 48.4%.

There was a sharp urban/rural divide in the voting, with supporters of the law running up substantial majorities in the cities of Zurich, Geneva and Basel,

while the opponents swept the rest of the country, with bigger majorities in the most rural areas.

The bottom line:
after some 30 or more years of unrelenting propaganda about the supposed climate crisis, when the issue got presented with specific costs attached, the Swiss people were sensible enough to say no.

This isn’t over .... The left never gives up.

The rejection of this one law by the referendum process will not prevent the parliament from passing the next law,

probably tweaked just enough to seem to be different, and perhaps with the costs a little better hidden.

At which point the people will be forced to go through this process again.

... the point remains that no amount of unrelenting propaganda can make pointless self-sacrifice popular when the public can be made aware of the costs."