Drilling for common sense in Congress
- From: Jerry@xxxxxxxxx (Jerry)
- Date: Thu, 03 Jul 2008 23:30:40 GMT
http://www.thedestinlog.com/opinion/going_5340___article.html/journal_politicians.html
RON HART: Drilling for common sense in Congress
July 3, 2008 - 11:56AM
With gas over $4 a gallon and politicians trying to blame each other
for not having done anything, let me apply some reason and fresh focus
to what is going on here.
It has gotten so bad that Al Gore had to turn down the heater on his
private residence pool, which he never uses, from 83 to 81 degrees. He
is even thinking about swimming a lap in it one day, if he were ever
home resting up from saving the environment and the world and such.
The front page of the Atlanta Journal Constitution, (AJC or ?Al
Jazeera Constitution? as locals call it) led with a piece about
off-shore drilling by saying, ?Opponents contend that developing new
oil sources would take too long to have much effect on current fuel
prices.?
Like all the major monopoly papers that are leftist echo chambers, the
AJC takes its talking points from ?Nanny? Pelosi, who said that any
new drilling will take three years to help us. You know the same thing
that she said three years ago.
Just how short-term has our thinking become in this ADD country?
Our energy solution procrastination reminds me of a story about an old
farmer who had a leak in his barn. One day, when someone asked the
farmer why he had never gotten up there to fix the roof, he said,
?Well, when it rains it leaks, and I cannot get up there to fix it.
And when it ain?t raining, it don?t leak and it don?t need fixing.?
That old story sums up our aloof politicians? attitude toward any
difficult, long-term problem that we face. It has been hard to fix our
energy situation with all the dipsticks in Washington D.C.
It?s not like we should believe that they have a fix. We know the
solution is letting businesses provide the supply to feed the growing
worldwide demand for oil. It is just that politicians get in the way
of solutions by making ever-more complex rules and regulations which
drive oil companies overseas to produce oil.
All the while, the oil producing thugs of the world laugh at us for
not opening up off-shore drilling or ANWR.
The Democrats, who are invested in defeat in Iraq, are also happy to
do nothing about the high cost of gas, since it mostly hurts the GOP
voters. Red state suburbanites who drive to work each day, and do not
regulate their carbon footprint like the libs would like, find no
sympathy in Democrat policies.
Most blue states contain major cities with fewer cars and more public
transportation. Along with the environmental extremists, the Dems seem
to sadistically enjoy $4.20 gas and the pain it is causing their
detested ?average Americans? who ?cling? to their car ? the cars they
drive to work so they can pay taxes and support their families.
I am certainly for efficient mass transit and use the rail as a
practical way to get around big cities. I would use the buses more,
too, if they just did not make stops before they got to my
destination.
I do pick up trash and actually jump on idiots who throw cigarettes or
trash out of their car windows.
But I am not posturing as ?environmentally friendly.? In fact, I am
not friendly at all ? just ask anyone.
And yes, I do buy into the dismissive line that we need to invest in
alternative fuels ? having first heard it from Jimmy Carter in 1976.
It is a great political one-liner that seeks to dismiss any questions
on the matter. No doubt we should invest in wind power, so as not to
be as dependent on foreign wind. Yadda yadda ? but if there were
economically viable solutions, the free market would have produced
them by now.
I know the conspiracy theorists say oil companies and Bush have hidden
the technology to build a car that runs on water. That, I know for
sure, is not true; it implies intelligent planning and forethought by
the Bush administration, and, as we sadly have come to find out, that
is not plausible.
McCain has had the only real idea for an energy solution: a $300
million prize for the inventor of a battery-powered car.
At least he has the wisdom to say, in essence, that we in government
have proven that we have no idea what to do, so we are going to get
out of the way and farm out the good idea-making to the private sector
to let entrepreneurs work on this.
Wow. Now there?s a novel thought!
.
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