Joe Biden took action to please constituencies prefer scarcity rather than scarcity, ordering a list of federal rules that limit consumer choice. [emphasis, links added]
Given that Donald Trump began on the exhaustive White House agenda when he took office on January 20, it would be no surprise if he waited to relax Biden's regulatory knot.
But it is commendable that Trump has also continued.
Trump ignored the left’s “we we’ve exhausted everything” and restored “shower freedom” earlier this month through executive orders to “end the Obama-Bidan’s water pressure war.”
The new rules revoke “the overly complex federal rules that redefine 'Showerhead' under Obama and Biden,” The government said.
Previous rules define “shower” by burning 13,000 words, limiting the multi-nose mouth shower to 2.5 gallons of water per minute. The new rules allow each nozzle in the shower to pump 2.5 gallons of water per minute.
This is the second time Trump has changed the rules. The first time was in 2020. Of course, Biden gave up the order after taking office, and the administration restored Obama's restrictions.
Trump's change makes sense. The Democratic Party has no limitations.
Obviously, when the water flow is limited, people will have to take longer showers, because when each flow in the toilet is in the flow, they often need multiple flushing work to get the job done. In the end, nothing was saved.
This is also a matter of freedom. The government has no business telling Americans what bathroom fixtures they can't have and what bathrooms they have to have.
Trump is also restoring consumers' freedom to buy stoves, washing machines, stoves, dishwashers and toilets, rather than stoves imposed by left-wing Nabobs.
The president also has a chance to stop Biden’s remaining regulations from deciding which bulbs we can buy, forcing us to move forward from an average cost of $2.98 to an estimated $5.68 bulb.
Meanwhile, the Republican Senate approved a joint resolution that repealed the Biden-era energy sector rules that “put unnecessary energy efficiency restrictions on consumer water heaters.”
Top photo of Caleb Wright
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