Great Moments in Unintended Consequences: Black Liquor Fuel, Billboard Bans, Gender Pay Gap (Vol. 4)
Good intentions, bad results.
HD DownloadEven more of Reason's "great moments in unintended consequences"—stories of when something that sounds like a terrific idea goes horribly wrong.
Watch the whole series.
Black Liquor Bonanza
The Year: 2005
The Problem: Fossil fuel consumption is too high, and biodiesel consumption is too low!
The Solution: Create a generous tax credit for companies that blend fossil fuel with environmentally friendly biofuel.
Sounds like a great idea with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
Turns out paper companies were already using a pure biofuel known as black liquor, which is produced during the paper-making process. It's a super convenient energy source to use in paper plants and mills, but only blended fuels were eligible for the tax credit.
So paper companies bought fossil fuel they didn't need, added it to the biofuel they were already using, and instantly qualified for very generous "blended alternative fuel" credits. Exactly the opposite of the tax credits' intent, but sometimes it all boils down to paper.
Billboard Bans
The year: 1968
The Problem: Billboards are cluttering the scenic vistas of Vermont.
The Solution: Ban Billboards.
Sounds like a great idea with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
As the billboards came down, something new popped up: a 12-foot gorilla holding up a Volkswagen. A giant squirrel in a striped bathing suit. A 19-foot genie holding a carpet.
"A veritable zoo of Gargantuan concrete sculpture" all in the name of public art.
It all seems a bit cute until a development dispute with the local bureaucracy results in a 700-pound middle finger on a 16-foot pole.
Enjoy the view, Vermont!
Equal Pay in Colorado
The Year: 2019
The Problem: the gender pay gap.
The Solution: the Colorado Equal Pay for Equal Work Act—a bevy of new regulations on employers, including a requirement that all forms of compensation be disclosed as part of every job listing, and a ban on asking job candidates about their salary history.
Sounds like a great idea with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
Not only does the law open up companies to new legal liabilities and administrative burdens, but it also hinders employer flexibility when it comes to hiring. As a result, some companies like Samsung, Century 21, Cigna, IBM, Nike, and even People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) have simply excluded Colorado from their remote job listings.
Can't have a pay gap if you don't have a paycheck! Mission accomplished, Colorado!
Written and produced by Meredith and Austin Bragg; narrated by Austin Bragg
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Reason even back in 2018 was still calling Polis a libertarian. The definition has shifted.
Did not know about the paper plants and blended fuels. Knew about billboards bans and roadside statuary, but hadn't connected the two. And of course the Colorado one was recent enough to remember.
Good work by all hands, including the governments involved.
We must always do as our betters say.
VTers are pleased about the billboards being gone, but seem to love the stupid whales' tails sculpture on I89 near S Burlington. The middle finger is a thing of greatness if public art that makes no sense is okay, but billboards are not.
Check out the blue horse Mustang or Blucifer, the Demon horse of the Denver airport. Brings to mind how the Democrats run their police force in Denver, with the typical abuse we get from blue cities. That statue even killed the sculptor who created it.
I wonder, is that public art, or public abuse? Making taxpayers pay for it is abuse IMHO. At least billboards and ad statue owners don't force taxpayers to pay for them.
Everyone knows that the horse is an apocalyptic symbol of the Illuminati who have constructed secret bunkers under the airport for the elite when the end days arrive.
Those were NOT good intentions.
In each and every case, the goal was to remove individual freedoms/property rights, and create additional government bureaucracies. And in each and every case, the goal was achieved.
Those were NOT good intentions.
In each and every case, the goal was to remove individual freedoms/property rights, and create additional government bureaucracies. And in each and every case, the goal was achieved.
Hey! this is the NEW Reason you're talking to--if it's good for....what does that sqirrelsy retard call it? Oh yeah, Government Almighty.
If it's good for Government Almighty, it's good to the 'libertarians' that write for reason.
Well, some people think those things are good.
The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
Dude, he's not being honest. Remember that Reason is a far-left publication, evidenced by their being mean to Trump. That means that when they do these "Good intentions bad results" bits, they're really saying "Government is great! Woo hoo, more government!" because they're a far-left rag that was mean to Trump.
In unrelated news, fuck YouTube/Google for protecting the Chinese government against 'cyberbullying and harassment':
https://www.reuters.com/technology/exclusive-youtube-takes-down-xinjiang-videos-forces-rights-group-seek-2021-06-25/
I just got a three-day ban on Facebook for bullying the Chinese Communist Party. I had no idea that I was so powerful.
I'll give you a freebie Reason.
1962 Write a book based on bad science leading to the ban of an insecticide. Resulting in illness and death to millions from the insects that resulted from that ban.
I'll give you a freebie. See that search box up there? The magnifying glass? Type "Silent Spring" into it.
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Rising crime due to defunding police.
Oh I forgot, this is Reason Magazine. Sorry, unintended consequences doesn't exist for libertarian policy. It's illegal.
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