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View Full Version : Arianna's column March 23, 2005


Lib
03-28-2005, 09:21 PM
Paying The Price For Bush’s Retro Energy Policy

By Arianna Huffington

March 23, 2005


The new sales pitch for President Bush is that he’s a forward-thinking visionary, right? His policies in the Middle East were, it turns out, not about the bloody debacle in Iraq today but about democracy spreading throughout the region in a glorious future. And his plan to fix Social Security is not at all about privatizing the jewel of the New Deal but simply about ensuring a safe and secure system well past 2052.

But when it comes to dealing with the many energy-related crises we’re facing, can the Bushies really go on pretending that their policies are any more forward-looking than a rerun of “That ’70s Show”?

Exhibit A is the president’s bizarre and long-standing obsession with drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, which just got Senate approval last week. I mean, how retro can you get? Instead of pushing to increase fuel efficiency standards that could save millions of barrels of oil each day and calling for a national commitment to investing in renewable sources of energy, he’s after one more fix of dinosaur byproducts from one of the world’s last pristine places.

Which might be understandable if making an Exxon Mobil theme park out of the refuge would actually reduce our dependence on foreign oil. But it won’t. At best, there’s only enough oil there to satisfy U.S. demand for about six months. And it won’t be available for at least a decade — which is the only forward-looking aspect to Bush’s ANWR dream.

The consequences of Bush’s head-in-the-tundra policies are already all around us — starting with the record prices Americans are paying to gas up their cars. The national average just raced past $2.10 a gallon — up 21 percent from last year. The U.S. remains the world’s largest oil consumer, but with growing countries like China and India demanding more and more oil, and the world’s refineries already close to maxed out, things are only going to get worse. How long will it be before filling stations are asking: “Cash, Credit or Home Equity Loan?”

In response to this mounting economic calamity, President Bush summoned all his authority as leader of the free world and, uh, well, sent an official complaint to OPEC ministers meeting in Iran. I’m sure it was very strongly worded. In any case, most experts agree that even OPEC can’t pump enough additional oil to make a long-term difference.

Meanwhile, the president’s old oil company pals are raking in record profits. Exxon Mobil, for instance, more than doubled its cash flow last year, ending 2004 with $23.1 billion in its bulging coffers. In fact, every time the price of a barrel of oil goes up a dollar, Exxon’s accountants chalk up another $550 million in after-tax profits. Indeed, the Wall Street Journal reported last week that oil companies are actually having a hard time figuring out what to do with all that cash.

The president’s outdated energy policies are also pushing us to the brink of an economic and ecological catastrophe brought about by global warming. Temperatures are climbing, sea levels are rising, Antarctica is thawing — and these are just the tip of the rapidly melting iceberg. The winter ice cap at the North Pole has shrunk 20 percent in the past two decades, and all that disappearing ice is going to reappear in the form of rising seas threatening coastal areas from New York to New Orleans.

Our MBA president’s energy plan is designed to coddle corporations, of course. But the most surprising aspect of the scheme is how bad it has been for business (non-oil business, that is). Oh, those unintended consequences.

Just look at the head-on collision at General Motors, which, along with the rest of the industry, has enjoyed one fuel economy loophole after another. The company bet the farm on hulking gas-guzzlers and engines whose basic designs date to the 1950s. Now, with gas prices heading through the sunroof, demand for SUVs has tumbled — and with it, GM’s fortunes. Despite rebates as high as $6,000, sales of models including the Hummer H2 have dropped by double digits. As a result, GM has taken a $4 billion cash flow hit and laid off thousands of workers — yet losses are still expected to reach $850 million in the first quarter of 2005 alone.

At the same time, Toyota and Honda, companies that have shown a commitment to higher fuel efficiency and fuel-saving hybrid technology, are running away with Detroit’s market share. In true Neanderthal fashion, GM has responded to its troubles by redoubling its focus — and its multibillion-dollar advertising budget — on hawking the upcoming models of its SUVs. They just don’t get it — and for that they are paying a heavy price.

And our leaders in Washington — their pockets stuffed with oil, gas and auto-industry donations — have been willing accomplices in this financial fiasco. By keeping mileage standards for SUVs lower than for cars, allowing unconscionable fuel efficiency loopholes that exempt monster trucks like the Hummer H2, and giving a special tax break allowing write-offs up to $100,000 on luxury SUVs, they helped create an artificial market for gas guzzlers — and helped lead GM to the corporate ICU.

Bush and company call themselves free marketers, but by indulging Detroit they’ve discouraged innovation and made it much easier for companies like GM to slowly destroy themselves — and their workers. It’s assisted suicide, Beltway-style.

Tom DeLay and Bill Frist should immediately call another midnight session of Congress to look into this. And someone needs to wake up President Bush before his habit of looking in the rear view mirror when it comes to energy policy leads us even further off the road to energy independence — and straight over a cliff.

© 2005 ARIANNA HUFFINGTON.

DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

© 2004 Christabella, Inc. All rights reserved.

Find this article at:
http://www.ariannaonline.com/columns/column.php?id=764

andylev
08-02-2005, 06:08 PM
Social Security may have been "the jewel of the New deal", but now it is just a rusty nail compared to what has been given to the public sector:retirement at 41 to 55, 60 to 100% pensions after 30 years, free health care after retiremnt, long term care for parents, grandparents, brothers and sisters, home loan deals(thriught their retirement systems)...and complete and total exemption from social security for 5 million elite government workers...

andylev
08-02-2005, 06:11 PM
Arianna,

Every corporation you listed is busy churning out retirement dollars for government workers, via their government run pension systems which have $2.1 trillion invested in stock, bonds, and real estate. Do you want to harm government retirees?

Robert Kroff
11-07-2005, 08:31 PM
On this old column by Lib back in March mentioned GM committing slow suicide belt way style. Well it is a funny simile. You see there is a big difference between the two. Tax dollars will always come for the government, but running a company into the ground because executives are sleeping with each other; making decisions from below the waist, and putting adds on TV every other second that they can not afford; trying to give their junk cars away at wholesale prices that most would not be cought dead driving, and Toyota just waiting to see how low GM can go before it is scooped up by the real auto professionals at Toyota in Tokyo is no comparison to President Cimp. So Bush may be a chimp, but he is no GM executive incomp. chip; we would be lower than Mexico by now!

weli37
11-18-2005, 07:40 PM
It's convieniet to blame the president for high gas prices. Fuel demand is driven by growth in demand from the far east (China and India) and has zero to do with the administration's policies. Ah, more nonsense from the radical left. WAIT! The prez controls the weather from his phone in the oval office! How can he consciounably allow the catosphre to destroy the poor in New Orleans! What a bastard!!!

By Arianna Huffington

March 23, 2005


The new sales pitch for President Bush is that he’s a forward-thinking visionary, right? His policies in the Middle East were, it turns out, not about the bloody debacle in Iraq today but about democracy spreading throughout the region in a glorious future. And his plan to fix Social Security is not at all about privatizing the jewel of the New Deal but simply about ensuring a safe and secure system well past 2052.

But when it comes to dealing with the many energy-related crises we’re facing, can the Bushies really go on pretending that their policies are any more forward-looking than a rerun of “That ’70s Show”?

Exhibit A is the president’s bizarre and long-standing obsession with drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, which just got Senate approval last week. I mean, how retro can you get? Instead of pushing to increase fuel efficiency standards that could save millions of barrels of oil each day and calling for a national commitment to investing in renewable sources of energy, he’s after one more fix of dinosaur byproducts from one of the world’s last pristine places.

Which might be understandable if making an Exxon Mobil theme park out of the refuge would actually reduce our dependence on foreign oil. But it won’t. At best, there’s only enough oil there to satisfy U.S. demand for about six months. And it won’t be available for at least a decade — which is the only forward-looking aspect to Bush’s ANWR dream.

The consequences of Bush’s head-in-the-tundra policies are already all around us — starting with the record prices Americans are paying to gas up their cars. The national average just raced past $2.10 a gallon — up 21 percent from last year. The U.S. remains the world’s largest oil consumer, but with growing countries like China and India demanding more and more oil, and the world’s refineries already close to maxed out, things are only going to get worse. How long will it be before filling stations are asking: “Cash, Credit or Home Equity Loan?”

In response to this mounting economic calamity, President Bush summoned all his authority as leader of the free world and, uh, well, sent an official complaint to OPEC ministers meeting in Iran. I’m sure it was very strongly worded. In any case, most experts agree that even OPEC can’t pump enough additional oil to make a long-term difference.

Meanwhile, the president’s old oil company pals are raking in record profits. Exxon Mobil, for instance, more than doubled its cash flow last year, ending 2004 with $23.1 billion in its bulging coffers. In fact, every time the price of a barrel of oil goes up a dollar, Exxon’s accountants chalk up another $550 million in after-tax profits. Indeed, the Wall Street Journal reported last week that oil companies are actually having a hard time figuring out what to do with all that cash.

The president’s outdated energy policies are also pushing us to the brink of an economic and ecological catastrophe brought about by global warming. Temperatures are climbing, sea levels are rising, Antarctica is thawing — and these are just the tip of the rapidly melting iceberg. The winter ice cap at the North Pole has shrunk 20 percent in the past two decades, and all that disappearing ice is going to reappear in the form of rising seas threatening coastal areas from New York to New Orleans.

Our MBA president’s energy plan is designed to coddle corporations, of course. But the most surprising aspect of the scheme is how bad it has been for business (non-oil business, that is). Oh, those unintended consequences.

Just look at the head-on collision at General Motors, which, along with the rest of the industry, has enjoyed one fuel economy loophole after another. The company bet the farm on hulking gas-guzzlers and engines whose basic designs date to the 1950s. Now, with gas prices heading through the sunroof, demand for SUVs has tumbled — and with it, GM’s fortunes. Despite rebates as high as $6,000, sales of models including the Hummer H2 have dropped by double digits. As a result, GM has taken a $4 billion cash flow hit and laid off thousands of workers — yet losses are still expected to reach $850 million in the first quarter of 2005 alone.

At the same time, Toyota and Honda, companies that have shown a commitment to higher fuel efficiency and fuel-saving hybrid technology, are running away with Detroit’s market share. In true Neanderthal fashion, GM has responded to its troubles by redoubling its focus — and its multibillion-dollar advertising budget — on hawking the upcoming models of its SUVs. They just don’t get it — and for that they are paying a heavy price.

And our leaders in Washington — their pockets stuffed with oil, gas and auto-industry donations — have been willing accomplices in this financial fiasco. By keeping mileage standards for SUVs lower than for cars, allowing unconscionable fuel efficiency loopholes that exempt monster trucks like the Hummer H2, and giving a special tax break allowing write-offs up to $100,000 on luxury SUVs, they helped create an artificial market for gas guzzlers — and helped lead GM to the corporate ICU.

Bush and company call themselves free marketers, but by indulging Detroit they’ve discouraged innovation and made it much easier for companies like GM to slowly destroy themselves — and their workers. It’s assisted suicide, Beltway-style.

Tom DeLay and Bill Frist should immediately call another midnight session of Congress to look into this. And someone needs to wake up President Bush before his habit of looking in the rear view mirror when it comes to energy policy leads us even further off the road to energy independence — and straight over a cliff.

© 2005 ARIANNA HUFFINGTON.

DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

© 2004 Christabella, Inc. All rights reserved.

Find this article at:
http://www.ariannaonline.com/columns/column.php?id=764[/QUOTE]
arial

Alexx
02-28-2006, 03:02 PM
Bush and company call themselves free marketers, but by indulging Detroit they’ve discouraged innovation and made it much easier for companies like GM to slowly destroy themselves — and their workers. It’s assisted suicide, Beltway-style.

Tom DeLay and Bill Frist should immediately call another midnight session of Congress to look into this....

An Awesome quote, but congress can't look into the matter because they caused it!

The latest update is Amercians are hooked on oil.

Or perhaps, Mr. Bush and friends are hooked on oil profits.

gramps
07-02-2006, 07:00 AM
Anthropomorphic Machinery

When I was ten my father had a car that he named Big Bertha after the famous German railroad gun. It was a large blue Hudson sedan that took the family to the lake on weekends and we loved it. I still keep repairing an old automobile long after it should be traded in because I have become attached to it. The computer I am writing this on is three years old and even though the price of computers has come down I keep hauling it in for more memory or an upgrade. On the Actors Studio Robin Williams had a hilarious bit where the global positioning unit on his car tells him in a deep German guttural: “ Take a left!” and when I am playing English scrabble on my computer, and it comes up with a word describing a Hungarian monetary unit, I spit out “That’s not English!” but the machine is the boss. We tend to anthropomorphize machinery and we even have the temerity to say God made us in his image. We are a manual species who create with our hands and see nothing odd about the ruler of the universe getting down in the mud and fabricating Adam and making Eve out of one of Adam’s ribs.

The mechanical construct known as The Corporation has been literally anthropomorphized to the point where we have allowed it to take over our culture, our government, our military, and are even letting Wakenhut run some of our prisons. It has been given legal personhood by the same Supreme Court that decided the slave Dred Scott was not a human being but property to be returned to its master. It hires the lobbyists who sit in congress and make the legislation that our elected representatives sign without reading. General Motors decided to do away with the non-polluting electric street railways that made urban living a joy. put us in gas guzzling SUV’s that cause us to take two hours to get to and from our job and are causing global warming with their pollution. The corporation’s media has appropriated ownership of the public airways and with hundreds of television channels that the CEO’s fill with inane commercials and have even made the absurd declaration, “We know drama!” Their idea of drama is idealizing war, crime, and people jumping through plate glass windows, and they are rapidly slipping into hard pornography. Freedom of the press means that they have the freedom to throw their five pound Sunday newspaper on my lawn that contains ninety nine percent advertising and one percent news.

At one point in our history kings, emperors, and popes were accepted as God’s representatives on earth. Today we have given sovereignty to corporation machines. The technology that was initiated by an early chimpanzee when he picked up a broken tree branch with a point on it and called it a spear led to our opting out of the evolution that created every other biotic entity and changed the chimp family group into the tribe. Tribal warfare over hunting grounds initiated the giant brains that we have because smart warriors survived and the mutations responsible led to more technology until Eve gave Adam the fruit from the tree of knowledge and we were kicked out of our natural Eden. The name of the fruit was “agriculture”. We became civilized and our brains stayed the same for ten thousand years because modern warriors do not have to think but follow the orders of generals.

The part of our thinking that took up most of our brain is now being handled by computers. As factories became automated the spinning wheel disappeared and assembly lines run without the touch of a human hand. Our garages and landfills have become stuffed with junk and giant seines scrape the oceans for the last fish. Reactionary but highly paid scientists deny global warming, televangelists are removing the barrier between church and state, and the corporation WTO, NAFTA, GAAT, World Bank, and CAFTA override any regulations or laws enacted by governments. Fascism was destroyed as a rational solver of problems by WWII but it has come back and the F word has been proscribed like the F word for sexual intercourse. But if we take the word of the inventor of fascism--Benito Mussolini, “Fascism should properly be called corporatism because it is the marriage of corporate power with state power” then it is not hyperbole to aver that we are living in a fascist world.

How have we allowed ourselves to come to this pass? There are a number of reasons, the main one being that from the shoes on our feet to the roof over our head; we buy everything from corporations. Our food is mass produced in giant corporation farms and our children are drinking milk loaded with hormones and antibiotics. Polio and tuberculosis have been eliminated by antibiotics, but antibiotics are failing to keep up with the ability of microbes to evolve. Cancer was once a rather rare disease but it has become commonplace as a result of the PCBs and other poisons that have penetrated our environment. It seems as though there is nothing we can do. Greed has been declared “good” and institutionalized. We are faced with an enemy. The only way that we can defeat this enemy is by recognizing that it is the enemy and not some human being that has been corrupted. Humans are mortal and have a short life span but the corporations that bought Hitler’s Brown Shirts are still here and making atomic weapons.

Let us have a new political spectrum with humans on one side and corporations on the other. The old one going from left to right ranges from people of conscience to people who have accepted the corporation’s bottom line ethic - greed. Let us put humanity on one side and the corporation on the other. The traditional prey of the corporation was the workers and the consumers but it has added a new victim. . . The investor. The fall of Enron took down all three. On Black Monday in 1929 no corporations took dives from high buildings; and accountants, as lawyers stood in soup lines while doctors made house calls for a chicken or a dozen eggs. The Roosevelt administration saved us from revolution and it also saved Wall Street. The only thing that unglutted the consumer marketplace that was plugged up by the overproduction and under consumption of the corporation was a world war. When I got out of the army in 1945 I couldn’t buy my wife a car or a washing machine. For four years hardly anything was produced except bombs and planes and battleships that could be blown up or rapidly become obsolete. In five years the market was glutted again and it was time for another war. You know the rest, Korea, Vietnam, Granada, Panama, and South America, and now Afghanistan and Iraq . . . War Keynesianism.


What can we do about it? The very first thing we can do is include the one who hired the hit man as co-murderer. The generals and a well paid military do the killing but the merchant of death corporations provide the money. It is not enough to put Tom Delay or Jack Abramoff in prison and let the “legal persons” who hired them go about their business. Take to the streets and demand that campaign contributions by corporations are bribery and that from Nancy Pelosi to Hillary Clinton congress critters who solicit corporations do not get your vote. It is a tough job because Congress as well as The Administration and The Supreme Court are all owned by the corporations. Take to the streets like the Latinos did and demand an end to the war in Iraq and Afghanistan. Over sixty percent of your tax money is going to a handful of “defense“ contractors. Demand that they turn the Pentagon into a roller skating rink. Either elect honest politicians or overthrow a government that is the property of the mechanical constructs we call corporations.

Put corporations in the ash can of history that contains Kings and Emperors. No one owns them so take them and give them to the workers who use the tools of production. The new cooperatives will be social organizations and not predatory robots. Let the airwaves and the studios be run by artists and not accountants.

Death to the corporations!

1408 Words