bcspace wrote:Spalding’s comments, made at the Beyond Pesticides’ 30th National Pesticide Forum March 30-31, mirror those made by then candidate Obama in 2008. In which he explained that under his cap and trade system coal would suffer.
“
f somebody wants to build a coal-powered plant, they can,” the president said while campaigning. “It’s just that it will bankrupt them because they’re going to be charged a huge sum for all that greenhouse gas that’s being emitted. That will also generate billions of dollars that we can invest in solar, wind, biodiesel, and other alternative energy approaches.”
http://dailycaller.com/2012/06/04/region-1-epa-administrator-obama-coal-rules-painful-every-step-of-the-way/
Knowing they will be bankrupt for so doing, who would build such a plant? The [liberal-led] government? And if a plant is not built, where will the "billions of dollars" in "greenhouse gas" charges come from?

There are at least several reasons for your confusion.
First, you didn’t listen to what Obama said in context.
Second, you didn’t listen to what Curt Spalding (the EPA administer who spoke at Yale) said in context.
Third, you have no understanding of the economic rationale of cap and trade (if you did understand cap and trade, you’d understand why it is fundamentally a conservative solution that uses free-markets to encourage companies take responsibility for the harm they cause the environment in their pursuit of profits for themselves).
Forth, you don’t understand the Clean Air Act (signed by George H. W. Bush in 1990) which the EPA is enforcing.
President Bush signing the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990. Standing left to right are EPA Administrator William K. Reilly, Energy Secretary James Watkins, and Vice President Dan Quayle. The Clean Air Act requires the EPA to set increasingly high standards of pollution requirements for power plants. In compliance with that law, the new standards dictate that new power plants need to be at least as clean as a modern power plant that burns natural gas. Industry is totally free to make new coal power plants, provided the new coal plants are as least as clean as natural gas plants.
This has nothing to do with so-called “liberal logic.” It’s the EPA doing its best to follow the laws that congress passed.