100k downloads, Berman: Oil is the economy, Big Herons
robertbryce.substack.com
Power Hungry Podcast hits 100,000 downloads, new Power Brief, Art Berman talks oil, and...Great Blue Herons It’s easy to complain about travel. But the last two weeks have been a whirlwind and a joy. Last week, I was in New Orleans, Houma, and Wichita. This week, I was in Branson and Nashville. I will be on the road again for much of the next month reporting and lecturing. With all of the madness underway in Washington, there’s certainly plenty to discuss. Amid all the travel, I didn't have time to publish a column. I have several in the works, though, including one about the Democrats’ effort to ram through the Clean Electricity Performance Program, a measure that could be the most substantive change to the domestic electric grid since the passage of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935. Despite its importance, the Democratic leadership and climate activists want to push the measure through Congress without any substantive debate. It’s an outrageous example of how policymaking in Washington has been degraded and how Congress now depends on the passage of massive omnibus bills that are stuffed to the gills with favors for special interests. I am still writing the article, but
100k downloads, Berman: Oil is the economy, Big Herons
100k downloads, Berman: Oil is the economy…
100k downloads, Berman: Oil is the economy, Big Herons
Power Hungry Podcast hits 100,000 downloads, new Power Brief, Art Berman talks oil, and...Great Blue Herons It’s easy to complain about travel. But the last two weeks have been a whirlwind and a joy. Last week, I was in New Orleans, Houma, and Wichita. This week, I was in Branson and Nashville. I will be on the road again for much of the next month reporting and lecturing. With all of the madness underway in Washington, there’s certainly plenty to discuss. Amid all the travel, I didn't have time to publish a column. I have several in the works, though, including one about the Democrats’ effort to ram through the Clean Electricity Performance Program, a measure that could be the most substantive change to the domestic electric grid since the passage of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935. Despite its importance, the Democratic leadership and climate activists want to push the measure through Congress without any substantive debate. It’s an outrageous example of how policymaking in Washington has been degraded and how Congress now depends on the passage of massive omnibus bills that are stuffed to the gills with favors for special interests. I am still writing the article, but