Congressman Ryan’s Plan to Fix Medicare and the Budget is Dangerous for Your Health

And this from hardly what one might call radical news media.

PAUL RYAN’S plan to replace Medicare with a system of vouchers for seniors to buy health care on the private market has only been vaguely described, as of this writing. But there is one thing about it that’s fairly clear, regardless of what’s in the details Mr Ryan will announce today: Mr Ryan’s plan ends the guarantee that all American seniors will have health insurance. The Medicare system we’ve had in place for the past 45 years promises that once you reach 65, you will be covered by a government-financed health-insurance plan. Mr Ryan’s plan promises that once you reach 65, you will receive a voucher for an amount that he thinks ought to be enough for individuals to purchase a private health-insurance plan. (Mr Ryan insists that his plan doesn’t entail a “voucher”, but there is no meaningful distinction between getting a voucher with which to pay for insurance, and having the government send a payment to the insurer you choose.) If that voucher isn’t worth enough for some particular senior to buy insurance, and that particular senior isn’t wealthy enough to top off the coverage, or is a bit forgetful and neglects to purchase insurance, there’s no guarantee that that person will be insured. It’s up to you; you carry the risk.

via Medicare reform: You put the load right on me | The Economist.

Obama Sets Low Energy Targets

We are almost meeting Obama’s goal for oil imports, or close too it.

This feels like a political energy plan for the next presidential campaign (as usual) and not for us or climate change.  Until carbon prices really rise, until we start conserving energy in building, until we quit using corn to energize our cars, until we have a good public transportation system, until we have a smart grid to distribute electricity throughout the country, until we have cleaner electricity, then this is just political window dressing.

Iowa farmers should be happy with the ethanol subsidies.  (Easy way to get ethanol is to cut the 50 cent tariff on cheap Brazilian ethanol.)

Obama calls for a one-third cut in oil imports by 2025 from 2008 levels of 11.1 million barrels a day.  But the EIA reports that net imports for have averaged 9.0 MBD for the first two months of 2011 — and 8.9 MBD over the last 6 months (h/t Oildrum)   We only need to hit 7.4 to achieve Obama’s goal!

via Climate Progress.

AT&T Wireless Asleep With The Air Traffic Controller at Reagan National?

I just experienced AT&T Wireless services at Reagan National Airport, the same night that the air traffic controller fell asleep on the job.  AT&T Wireless was as asleep as the controller–couldn’t call and phone downloading slow enough to make it worthless.

Nuclear energy is too costly

For those who think nuclear is a great solution, the evidence is that the costs of this energy are impossibly high if you include risks and dealing with the waste.

Fundamentally, we need to focus on the energy technologies and strategies that meet the combination of low cost (including all environmental and health costs), practicality, and scalability.

Nuclear fails the key tests not because Japan shows nuclear power is inherently unsafe.  Nuclear fails the test because it is wildly expensive, and Japan makes clear there is a good reason for that.

via Energy’s greatest health risk comes from fossil fuels — precisely why we need to hit the pause button on nuclear power « Climate Progress.