You Can't Fuel All of the People All of the Time
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You Can't Fuel All of the People All of the Time
Annie speaks....
You Can't Fuel All of the People All of the Time
by Ann Coulter
Posted: 06/25/2008 Print This
Liberals dismiss studies that show a link between abortion and breast cancer, claiming they are biased because the people promoting the studies are "anti-choice."
For the same reason, no one should believe the Democrats' "energy" policies.
Democrats couldn't care less about high gas prices. The consistent policy of the Democratic Party, going back at least to Jimmy Carter, has been to jack up gas prices so we can all start pedaling around on tricycles.
Environmentalists are constantly clamoring for higher gas taxes as the cure-all to their insane global warming theory. Clinton proposed a 26-cent tax on gas. John Kerry said it should be 50 cents. Gore endorsed the Malthusian proposal of Paul and Anne Ehrlich in "The Population Explosion" that gas taxes be raised gradually to match prices in Europe and Japan.
The result is consumers now pay about 46 cents per gallon in gasoline taxes. That's not including taxes paid directly to the government by the oil companies and passed onto consumers. As the inestimable economist John Lott has pointed out, in the past 25 years oil companies have paid more than three times in taxes what they have made in profits.
B. Hussein Obama's response to soaring gas prices is to have the oil companies collect even more money from us at the pump, proposing a "windfall profits tax" on oil companies. "Corporate taxes" sound like taxes on rich people, but all they do is force corporations to collect taxes on behalf of the government.
Democrats have worked hard to ensure that Americans pay as much for gas as Europeans do. After a quarter-century of gas tax hikes, a ban on drilling for oil and a complete destruction of the nuclear power industry in America, I guess liberals can declare: Mission accomplished!
In response to skyrocketing gas prices, liberals say, practically in unison, "We can't drill our way out of this crisis."
What does that mean? This is like telling a starving man, "You can't eat your way out of being hungry!" "You can't water your way out of drought!" "You can't sleep your way out of tiredness!" "You can't drink yourself out of dehydration!"
Seriously, what does it mean? Finding more oil isn't going to increase the supply of oil?
It is the typical Democratic strategy to babble meaningless slogans, as if they have a plan. Their plan is: the permanent twilight of the human race. It's the only solution they can think of to deal with the beastly traffic on the LIE (Long Island Expressway).
How do liberals propose we acquire the energy required for the economic activity and production that results in light appearing when they flick a switch? The larger enterprise involved in producing that little miracle eludes them.
Liberals complain that -- as B. Hussein Obama put it -- there's "no way that allowing offshore drilling would lower gas prices right now. At best you are looking at five years or more down the road."
This is as opposed to airplanes that run on woodchips, which should be up and running any moment now.
Moreover, what was going on five years ago? Why didn't anyone propose drilling back then?
Say, you know what we need? We need a class of people paid to anticipate national crises and plan solutions in advance. It would be such an important job, the taxpayers would pay them salaries so they wouldn't have to worry about making a living and could just sit around anticipating crises.
If only we had had such a group -- let's call them "elected representatives" -- they could have proposed drilling five years ago!
But of course we do pay people to anticipate national problems and propose solutions. Some of them -- we'll call them Republicans -- did anticipate high gas prices and propose solutions.
Six long years ago President Bush had the foresight to demand that Congress allow drilling in a minuscule portion of the Alaska's barren, uninhabitable Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). In 2002, Bush, Tom DeLay and the entire Republican Party were screaming from the rooftops: Drill! Drill! Drill!
We'd be gushing oil now -- except the Democrats stopped us from drilling.
Drilling on only 0.01 percent of ANWR's 19 million acres was projected to produce about 10 billion barrels of oil. From all domestic sources combined, we currently produce about 1.8 billion barrels of oil per year. To a layperson like myself, 10 billion barrels seems like a lot of oil.
The other party -- plus John McCain -- ferociously opposed drilling in ANWR, drilling offshore or drilling anyplace else. Instead of Drill! Drill! Drill!, their motto could be: Kill! Kill! Kill!
They refuse to believe our abortion studies? I refuse to believe they care about Americans having to pay high gas prices.
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Ann Coulter is Legal Affairs Correspondent for HUMAN EVENTS and author of "High Crimes and Misdemeanors," "Slander," ""How to Talk to a Liberal (If You Must)," "Godless," and most recently, "If Democrats Had Any Brains, They'd Be Republicans."
http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=27207
Re: You Can't Fuel All of the People All of the Time
The key for households, Warren maintains, is not how much it costs to buy 1000 gallons, but how much it costs to buy the gas required to drive their typical annual miles. Using 15,000 as an average driving miles per year per person, he gets the result above. So, while I too think paying $4 for gas is not my favorite way to dispose of my income, in terms of average household pain created, gas prices are quite far from their historic highs.
http://ellisonchair.blogspot.com/2008/07/better-benchmark-for-gas-prices.html

Re: You Can't Fuel All of the People All of the Time
Did we have less disposable income in the 1980's? Must be as gas prices keep rising.
Re: You Can't Fuel All of the People All of the Time
Very interesting D'man.
Although I "get" the need for oil, as it drives our whole world...
I have come to realize these last few years that we are blatantly wasting so much of it...
And as well... like I've moaned about before.. our air quality goes to hell with that.
I watch our buses run around our city with 2 people in them. What a waste.
And endless cars with one person in them.
I'm all for high fuel prices.
It'll spur innovation, and move us back to self sufficiency regarding our fuel needs.
We've been greedy wastrels up to now.. and it's going to take something painful to make us change.
Cause I tell ya.
When I go to flick the switch to have that overhead light come on.. or have hot water to have a shower... or have refrigeration to keep my food cold...
YOu know... all those NECESSITIES of a good life... ????
I don't want to be denied that because so many others chose to live with careless disregard around supply and utilization.
The right isn't all right about keeping endless oil running... and the left isn't right about us all riding bikes.
The right place to be is in common sense resource use and sustainable living.
So how bout we stop bouncing off both extremes and start looking in the middle for our answers.
Although I "get" the need for oil, as it drives our whole world...
I have come to realize these last few years that we are blatantly wasting so much of it...
And as well... like I've moaned about before.. our air quality goes to hell with that.
I watch our buses run around our city with 2 people in them. What a waste.
And endless cars with one person in them.
I'm all for high fuel prices.
It'll spur innovation, and move us back to self sufficiency regarding our fuel needs.
We've been greedy wastrels up to now.. and it's going to take something painful to make us change.
Cause I tell ya.
When I go to flick the switch to have that overhead light come on.. or have hot water to have a shower... or have refrigeration to keep my food cold...
YOu know... all those NECESSITIES of a good life... ????
I don't want to be denied that because so many others chose to live with careless disregard around supply and utilization.
The right isn't all right about keeping endless oil running... and the left isn't right about us all riding bikes.
The right place to be is in common sense resource use and sustainable living.
So how bout we stop bouncing off both extremes and start looking in the middle for our answers.
Re: You Can't Fuel All of the People All of the Time
calmage wrote:[...]
I'm all for high fuel prices.
It'll spur innovation, and move us back to self sufficiency regarding our fuel needs.
We've been greedy wastrels up to now.. and it's going to take something painful to make us change.
[...]
I'm not sure at all just how old you are (a gentleman never asks and a lady never tells) but I don't believe you can recall the last time gas prices skyrocketed more than 30 years ago. There was lots of talk of innovation then too, and panic about how we were running out and we'd have to get used to a world with little oil and the age of the private car was over etc., etc. This is all deja-vu all over again. Here's what's going to happen: As the cost of fuel permeates the economy, prices of everything will rise. It has to happen because otherwise delivery of goods and services would virtually come to a halt. Because the prices rise, people won't be able to consume as much, and many companies will be in trouble (lots of them are already, for instance airlines) and some will fail and there will be mergers. It will be a time of stagnant economic growth. Naturally the people will demand increases in pay in order to be able to afford goods and services. You know what that adds up to - massive inflation! Last time it was up around 12% and higher, and interest rates went all the way up to 21%! After a few years everything will find its proper level and things will settle down, the outcome being that the price of fuel will be low again (in constant dollars) because inflation will have caught everything up to it.
Just like last time.
We are greedy wastrels because we are a rich and pampered society. Environuts and socialists have been doing their damndest to make us poor for decades but it hasn't worked. After a rough few years when everything settles down, we'll be wastrels again. Because we can.
Re: You Can't Fuel All of the People All of the Time
oh gawd D'man...
that's downright depressing..
Thirty years ago I did remember interest rates taking a wicked jump and people worrying about losing homes etc..
But other than that.. the only depressed times I can remember is the 10 ugly years that the NDP ran BC...
And then the Social Credit..
I just read about the layoffs at Air Canada and the drop in their stock prices...
and yeah.. I can feel the pinch at work as well..
It's like everyone is broke.
Everyone.
But hey...
This is the natural way of things.. the ebb and the flow..
And an ebb is like a deep breath where you get everything to stop momentarily and take stock of where one is headed. And to feel the pinch is to once again appreciate how great things are when we do have them..
These are just hiccups in the great money engine of the world though.
Like you said.. it was bad for a bit.. and then we grooved on 30 years of unbridled abundance. I think this is just another correction in the big scheme of things.
Like when Alberta tried to slow it's economy.. and China as well.
Rampant growth is not a good thing.
And it never hurts to have people reminded that all things are tempory and uncertain. I think it makes us all nicer to each other..

that's downright depressing..
Thirty years ago I did remember interest rates taking a wicked jump and people worrying about losing homes etc..
But other than that.. the only depressed times I can remember is the 10 ugly years that the NDP ran BC...
And then the Social Credit..
I just read about the layoffs at Air Canada and the drop in their stock prices...
and yeah.. I can feel the pinch at work as well..
It's like everyone is broke.
Everyone.
But hey...
This is the natural way of things.. the ebb and the flow..
And an ebb is like a deep breath where you get everything to stop momentarily and take stock of where one is headed. And to feel the pinch is to once again appreciate how great things are when we do have them..
These are just hiccups in the great money engine of the world though.
Like you said.. it was bad for a bit.. and then we grooved on 30 years of unbridled abundance. I think this is just another correction in the big scheme of things.
Like when Alberta tried to slow it's economy.. and China as well.
Rampant growth is not a good thing.
And it never hurts to have people reminded that all things are tempory and uncertain. I think it makes us all nicer to each other..


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