THE TRUTH ABOUT "ABOUT OIL"
Why does it seem as if I spend most of my time these days trying to provide a liberal counterpoint to the increasingly Right leaning columnists inundating our local news sources? It started with Travis Armstrong at the The Santa Barbara News-Press. Then came The Daily Sound with its slow thinking Conservative Turtle. And now we have Noozhawk ... Over the last couple of weeks, local resident Harris Sherline has written two columns about our current oil crisis, arguing that the root of all evil is those pesky environmentalists and that the poor oil companies are really the victims in all this. Please read them yourself here and here to see what I'm saying.
I knew we were in trouble when Mr. Sherline started out his first column with the following:
Congressman Steve King recently observed that The Heritage Foundation has convincing empirical data "that the people that are advancing this cap and trade want to slow our economy down, want to reverse our economy, and they know that if they shut down energy, they back the economy off, and they are doing it all because they worship Mother Nature" (Glenn Beck, "Anwr or Bust!" May 21).
Here's some advice: If you want to provide a "fair and balanced" argument about energy, don't start off by quoting The (right wing think tank) Heritage Foundation and Glenn Beck. That would kind of be like me starting off a column on energy by quoting MoveOn.org and Michael Moore. I may generally agree with these two entities, but you get my point? And likewise with Glenn Beck: I mean, this is the guy who said the following to Keith Ellison, the first Muslim ever elected to Congress:
I have been nervous about this interview with you, because what I feel like saying is, 'Sir, prove to me that you are not working with our enemies ... I'm not accusing you of being an enemy, but that's the way I feel, and I think a lot of Americans will feel that way.
Well, THIS American does not feel that way! Anyway, there are two major themes that Harris and others on the Right are trying to push lately regarding the oil crisis. First, there is this absurd idea that oil companies are not really making money. Here are a couple of statements that he points to:
» For American companies to compete successfully in the world’s oil market, they must be financially strong enough to carry out huge, complex energy projects that require enormous long-term investments. Exxon Mobil, for example, spends around $1 billion a day just for day-to-day operations and to make the necessary capital investments required to stay in business.
» "Since 2002 the U.S. oil and natural gas industry has earned about 8.1 cents per dollar of sales — exactly the same as all U.S. manufacturing, excluding autos. Not much of a windfall," the editorial said.
This so reminds me of pharmaceutical companies that try to convince us they are really broke due to the fact that they have to spend so much on R&D. Here's my counter: If that was the case, they wouldn't be called PROFITS now would they? The fact is that Exxon Mobile made like $11 billion in profits last quarter. And do you think they spent all that money looking for new oil sources or whatever? No, Exxon Mobil actually bought back about $8 billion of its own stock in the first quarter of 2008. Now, I'm not going to sit here and pretend like I completely understand the oil business, because I don't. But please don't patronize me with this argument that oil companies don't really make money.
The second major point made by Mr. Sherline is that the reason we're paying so much at the pump is due to the fact that bird loving, tree hugging, hippy environmentalists are preventing poor Exxon from drilling on more U.S. land. Here's another excerpt:
» "The Interior Department notes that most of the oil and 40 percent of the natural gas under public lands is off-limits to drilling. That’s about 19 billion barrels of oil and trillions of cubic feet of natural gas," the editorial said.
One wonders what the people who want to prevent us from developing our own energy resources are trying to accomplish. My guess is that, like so many other matters that are critical to the economic well-being of our nation, such decisions are made on the basis of politics, rather than what’s right or is best for all Americans.
As someone correctly pointed out in the comments section of this column, "First of all more than half of the oil leases given to the oil companies have not been developed. It is not due to environment constraint but because the oil companies have chosen to do so on their own accord." That's exactly right, and Joe Biden made the same point on Meet The Press last week. The commentor goes on to say, "the deregulation of the energy companies by the Bush Administration. (The Ken Lay Admendment). Has directly contributed to the futures trading speculation that has raised oil prices way beyond the level that supply and demand would dictate." Well said.
As I stated before, I don't pretend to be an expert in all things oil. But please don't try to sell us this false bill of goods. The reality is that we need to get off (what Bush called) our addiction to oil. And the solution to an addiction is not to get more of what you're addicted to from someone else. Plus, even John McCain's own experts say that opening more land to offshore drilling (for example) wouldn't even help gas prices for about a decade, if at all. No, what's definitely "best for all Americans" is for us to start focusing on conservation and alternative energy ... and we need to start now.
In his columns, Mr. Sherline likes to talk a lot about conspiracies. Well, if you saw the movie Who Killed The Electric Car?, you would know that there actually has been a conspiracy by the oil companies, auto companies, and some government officials to keep alternative fuels off the road.
But, in this case, the conspiracy is real.
Labels: harris sherline, noozhawk, oil
2 Comments:
Hello t.l.,
I wouldn't be too concerned. The neo-conz have run this country into the ground in every possible way. Now they want to blame the "hippies" for any problems. How pathetic.
"CNN allowed the well-known fantast Glenn Beck to do just this on June 18, when he falsely claimed on his show that drilling in Alaska “would yield 100 million barrels a day.” As Media Matters noted, that exaggerates the figure by oh … 7,000 percent."
Just one of my fantastic lines in a piece by Eric Alterman and George Zornick on this topic--go read it all.
Post a Comment
<< Home