YOUR Beer with Obama

Probably no heavy policy debate going on with his companion here, but what would you talk about if you had the time it takes to down a beer with the President?Unless you spent last week celebrating Apollo 11′s fortieth anniversary cut off from the world in your backyard model of the lunar module, you are no doubt familiar with the story of Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr.’s arrest two weeks ago, the “race in America” sturm and drang that surrounded the story last week, and the headline-grabbing role President Obama stumbled into at the end of his prime time presser.

An “American” story of race and class, the arrest and aftermath narrative now seems to have settled comfortably into a hackneyed old gender stereotype; namely, that there is no better way for three “guys” to sort things out than over a beer. We know what the chatter will be about, and Cambridge’s local reports that it will be conducted over Blue Moon if Sergeant Crowley does the choosing, which leads me to ask:

What’s on the agenda for your beer with Obama?

I’ll post my top three items below, but I’m most interested in your comments. You can tell me what you would be drinking if you like, but I’m more interested in your talking points. What are the two or three key messages you would deliver to the White House on energy and environmental policy?

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Comments

  1. Joe Walsh says:

    For me, he's a busy guy, so I would keep it short and sweet (sweet? Maybe

    Blueberry Ale?). My key points are:

    1. The Electric Grid – A smart grid with enhanced demand-side management

    tools, broader distributed generation, and large-scale integration of the

    cleanest and most widely-available domestic renewables are all great goals.

    BUT, we need to offload all of these coal plants now. Push for better

    integration of large-scale hydro power, even that imported from Canada. The

    rest is going to take time, but hydro can be the Trojan Horse. And, if

    utilities and others want to invest in new nuclear capacity, make it happen.

    2. Green Spending – Spend less on incentives for customers, and subsidies for

    emerging technologies You want

    to make "clean energy the profitable kind of energy," use policy to change

    the standards that consumers and industry must meet. With that will

    necessarily come technological change, which is the "egg" to a real renewable

    energy economy's "chicken." For example, if fuel efficiency and emissions

    standards rise appreciably, companies that want to sell cars will make them

    cleaner, eventually the market will make less use of oil, consumers will

    have little need for it, and you have used policy to foment organic change. If the investment can be diverted from feed-in tariffs and pie-in-the-sky clean coal pilots to research and development in closing the cost gap for wind and solar through commerical storage, it gets pumped into the economy in a more productive short-term use with greater potential ROI over the long run.

    3. Copenhagen – Don't be fooled by the "none of it means anything without

    China and India buying-in" rhetoric. To arrive in Copenhagen with the

    expectation that the emerging economies are going to agree to anything that

    remotely resembles comprehensive climate change reform is folly. Negotiating

    from a realistic – instead of from a hopeful – position, we should be able

    to leave with something that is evidence of US leadership and commitment to

    the issue, and that has more teeth than Kyoto.

  2. kevin harrington says:

    The best brew in America is Sierra Nevada's Torpedo Ale from Chico, California.

    I'd hesitate to recommend this so-called "Extra IPA" to anyone nowadays, since our local distributors find it almost impossible to obtain.

    But, if you can get some, you'll find out why I love it so much. I've tasted dozens of hop-heavy microbrews over the past few years… and Torpedo Ale is definitely the best.

    Maybe, if Mr. Obama would serve it at the White House picnic table fest, it would convince the brewery in Chico to start producing more of their golden nectar. So then, I'd be able to buy some here in Pennsylvania!

    Kevin Harrington

    Bausman, PA

    Kharrin@earthlink.com

  3. BB says:

    hey – have a great birthday!!

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