02/14/10
From American Thinker

Cambridge Politburo
Auto of a Cambridge Superior Person
Life in the People's Republic of Cambridge
Green Police Aren't Just in Super Bowl Ads
By Peter Wilson
If you've been watching the daily scandals destroy the credibility of the U.N.
IPCC, then you might not realize that Cambridge, Massachusetts is in a state of
climate emergency. This is not hyperbole, but an official policy order, passed
by the City Council in May 2009, "recogniz[ing] that there is a climate
emergency" and requesting the City Manager "to direct the appropriate city
departments to increase the City's responses to a scale proportionate to the
emergency."
In true bureaucratic fashion, the mayor responded by calling a meeting and
bringing together a coalition of government and concerned citizens, dubbed the
Cambridge Climate Emergency Congress. The City recently released "Climate
Congress Notes 12-12-09," 89 pages of minutes from its first meeting. The
suggestions were distilled into a "Proposal for Climate Emergency Response" for
the second Congress. Some of the radical ideas make for humorous reading -- that
is, unless you ever plan to live or work in Cambridge.
To get an idea of the thinking of our climate first responders, consider this
bullet point:
"Need to change community norms and expectations such that it is all right to
tell your neighbors what they can and cannot do in the realm of climate
change‐related behavior." (Notes 11.)
Behavior modification will not be limited to busybody neighbors; the Climate
Emergency Congress is an official government body that includes the mayor and
the entire city council, with the support of seven former mayors. Its Proposal
#1 is to create a Climate Emergency Response Board (CERB), a further expansion
of legislative authority over the minutia of our private lives.
The reports frequently use the word "encourage" to describe their actions,
suggesting a spirit of voluntary cooperation. Many CEC delegates, however, truly
believe that climate armageddon is imminent; one proposal is that Cambridge
"develop [a] relationship with an inland sister city to prepare for relocation
away from coasts when sea level rises." (Notes 15.) Two hundred years from now,
we read, "all that's left is spore and viruses. The world uninhabitable for
people." Given this belief that urgent action is needed, once laws and
enforcement mechanisms are in place, "encouragement" will give way to
"mandates," as in "[s]chools and hospitals could be mandated to serve only local
foods." (Notes 78.)
Local food is a big agenda item: "no apples from New Zealand." Delegates,
however, "expressed concern that green food options must be made affordable."
(Notes 77.) How would that work? Price controls? Resident discounts subsidized
by taxes?
Vegetarianism is also "encouraged." Under "personal behavior change," we find:
"Diet changes like eating no (or less) meat and sourcing locally..." (Notes 4.)
Or "[a]sking/mandating that local restaurants and schools institute 'Meatless or
Vegan Mondays.'" (Proposal 18.)
In somewhat of a contradiction, there's also a proposal to designate "[c]ity
owned watershed lands" as "pastureland ... to provide the city with grass fed
meat." (Proposal 15-6.)
The veneration of all things "local" continues: "Cambridge should move in the
direction of economic change, creating a locally based economy." (Notes 8.) We
might "[c]onsider a local currency." (Notes 76.) And "[e]ncourage businesses to
hire local people who will not have to commute." (Notes 77.) Wow, trade barriers
with Somerville?
Since automobiles generate greenhouse gases, numerous ideas were put forth to
limit or eliminate cars from Cambridge. My favorite is the dictum: "Cars should
be shared rather than privately owned." (Notes 75.) Pol Pot would be on board
with that one.
Elsewhere we read: "Eliminate streetside parking in the city." (Proposal 15.)
And: "To decrease the number of Cambridge residents or employees who depend on
cars, we could decrease the number of on‐street parking spaces." (Notes 76.)
Got that? If you depend on your car to buy groceries, then the city will solve
your dependence problem by taking away your on-street parking. If you're elderly
or have teenage sons who drink milk by the half-gallon, then the problem would
be solved by immediately moving to Belmont -- that is, if you could still sell a
house without a driveway in mid-Cambridge.
How about this one: "Transform neighborhoods so that they share cars, food
production, childcare, and the costs of neighborhood windmills or solar panels."
(Notes 76.) Food production? As in creating a Ward 9 People's Agricultural
Collective? Yes, that's precisely the idea: "Meals could be made by a central
group from local produce and delivered on bicycle." (Notes 77.) I love the
bicycle part.
This creepy collectivism continues: "There is a need for plentiful heated public
spaces to allow people to reduce their energy consumption." (Notes 15.) I'm
trying to envision this -- people will stop heating their homes and spend their
days in heated public spaces? It's sort of like living at the Youth Hostel where
you have to leave from ten to four.
New budget items and fees:
"More funding for farmer's markets." (Notes 39.) (Why does a farmer selling
lettuce need funding?)
"Provide free or subsidized public transportation, especially for city
employees." (Proposal 15.) (Our city payroll includes 231 employees who earn
over $100,000 with lavish benefits.)
"Parks, intentional community forums, festivals, and so on provide the social
infrastructure to do green things." (Notes 6.)
"Sponsor regular trips for residents and school groups to our recycling and yard
waste composting facilities and our landfills." (Proposal 17.) Free dump tours!
"Demand that polluters pay reparations." (Notes 77.) (Great idea, until Biogen
and Genentech move to Florida.)
"[We] should use congestion charging or performance parking ... and drastically
increase resident permit parking prices." (Notes 12.)
Implement pay‐as‐you‐throw billing to incentivize a reduction in household
trash. (Notes 6.)
Finally, one suggestion that my editor might support: "Subsidize a good local
newspaper." (Notes 85.) I'm not sure how this affects the climate, but if we
subsidize local food, why not local newspapers?
We left moonbat territory many miles back on our way to the insane asylum.
Peter Wilson is editor of the Cambridge Chronicle's Right View column. His blog
is walkingdogcapitalist.
Page Printed from:
http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/02/green_police_arent_just_in_sup.html
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Posted by: EnemyoftheState
Feb 10, 12:25 PM
I was born and raised in the People's Republic of Cambridge. I was fortunate to
have Catholic schooling from kindergarten through college, so I had an education
rather than an indoctrination. Thanks to Vietnam, I escaped from Cambridge in
1967, and have returned over the years only for visits to family members who
were unable to escape. They were too close to the situation to see the slow but
constant evolution of Cambridge, but each visit was a shock to me, a "you've
gotta be kiddin' me" moment that slowly resolved into realization that Cambridge
had once again outdone itself. FWIW, Cambridge was founded in 1630 and was
originally named "Newtowne". Its inhabitants were people who didn't fit in with
their more conventional/conservative neighbors in Boston. So, maybe Cambridge
has always been a haven for weird people.
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Many other interesting comments to the original article. One notes that MIT, one of the nation's foremost engineering schools, may be the only redeeming value of Cambridge.

Harvard Square people
Unidentified (probable) people