Net Zero coercion ahead! Are we governed by the mentally ill?
TORY BACKBENCHERS FEAR THE CRIMINALISATION OF HOMEOWNERS, LANDLORDS AND BUSINESSES.
SOURCE: UK RELOADED
The following article from National Review gives you an insight into how psycho some elements within our political establishment have become and how dreadful life will become for the rest of us if we allow these subversive loons to go on dramatising their death-wish nuttiness.
Net Zero, an unworkable solution to a misdiagnosed environmental problem and non-existent emergency, provides a specious justification for an effort to crush the nation socially and economically on the part of people who appear to be seriously mentally ill.
For sure as time goes on the nation increasingly appears to have handed its governance to people who are worryingly mental.
From Net Zero to Jail
SOURCE: NATONAL REVIEW
As is obvious by now, net zeroย is, by definition, coercive. The net-zero world is one of prohibitions, bans, and restrictions. As it evolves, you will not be able to buy the type of car that you might want, or cook with the type of stove you might prefer, or, even, eat more than a sliver of the beef that you once enjoyed.
And when the state is involved in coercion, prison cells are rarely far away.
And so, via theย Daily Telegraph, a story from Britain, where the governing center-left Conservative party has been proudly setting an example to the world (as if the world cares) by its determination to shove the U.K. further down the route to net zero:
Property owners who fail to comply with newย energy efficiency rulesย could face prison under government plans that have sparked a backlash from Tory MPs.
Ministers want to grant themselves powers to create new criminal offences and increase civil penalties as part of efforts to hitย net zero targets. Under the proposals, people who fall foul of regulations to reduce their energy consumption could face up to a year in prison and fines of up to ยฃ15,000.
Tory backbenchers are set to rebel against the plans, which they fear would lead to the criminalisation of homeowners, landlords and businesses.
The proposals are contained in the Governmentโs controversial Energy Bill, which is set to come before the Commons for the first time when MPs return from their summer break on Tuesday.
It provides for โthe creation of criminal offencesโ where there is โnon-compliance with a requirement imposed by or under energy performance regulationsโ. People could also be prosecuted for โprovision of false informationโ about energy efficiency or the โobstruction ofโฆ an enforcement authorityโ.
The Bill will replace and strengthen the rules onย energy performance certificates (EPCs), which were previously based on now repealed EU law.
And strengthen.
Some Brexit supporters believed that leaving the EU would not only free the U.K. from regulation from Brussels, but would allow it to operate its own less oppressive regulatory regime. Thatโs not how itโs working out.
Theย Daily Telegraph:
A Government spokesman said: โWe have no plans to create new criminal offences, and any suggestion otherwise is untrue.
โEnergy certificate legislation originated in EU laws, and our amendments ensure landlords, businesses and tenants are provided with the information they need to make their own decisions on energy efficiency in their buildings.โ
Officials suggested the Government required such powers to amend criminal offences that already exist under the current regime.
Ministers are giving themselves broad umbrella powers to redraw and enforce the system before consulting on precisely which changes to make.
Tory MPs have expressed alarm that ministers would be able to create new offences with limited parliamentary scrutiny under the update.
Craig Mackinlay, the head of the Net Zero Scrutiny Group, has tabled an amendment to strip the โopen-ended and limitlessโ powers out of the legislation. He told The Telegraph: โThe Bill is festooned with new criminal offences. This is just unholy, frankly, that you could be creating criminal offences
โThe ones weโve found most offensive are where a business owner could face a year in prison for not having the right energy performance certificate or type of building certification.โ
Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg, a former energy secretary, said the proposed use of statutory instruments to create new offences was unacceptable, adding: โCriminal offences are an exceptional use of the stateโs power and therefore require the fullest constitutional scrutiny.
What makes these proposals even worse is the fact that the powers it confers will be available to the ministers of any governing party.
Like many parties of the contemporary center-left, the Toriesโ default mode of government is soft authoritarianism, and that (together with their quite remarkable incompetence) has been bad enough. But they face an election no later than January 2025 in which they will not only lose but be crushed.
And awful as the Conservatives have been, the Labour government that follows will be even worse, and even more inclined to turn to coercion. The Tories are now proposing to give them even more of an opportunity to do so.
Geniuses, I tell you.