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By Jeff Blackwell
Sunday, Aug 17 2008, 07:39 AM
It's too patently Rovian not to consider it.
If
anyone has heard any plausible explanation as to why Georgia decided to
provoke the Russian bear during the opening ceremonies of the Olympic
games, please let me know.
I am sure that
most Americans were too mesmerized by the Olympic events to pay any attention
when tiny Georgia - a staunch U.S. ally with very close ties to John
McCain - attacked Russian loyalists in South Ossetia.
If
you get all of your news from TV, you could be excused for thinking
that it was Russia who is the aggressor. Of course the Russians, for
their own political and economic purposes, are happy to oblige by
pinning Georgia to the mat, and seizing the real opportunity of taking
it back into their borders.
What on earth
would make the Georgians think that their actions would result in
anything other than a swift and brutal defeat by the Russian army?
Branding
himself as the battle-hardened warrior with the military pedigree and
labeling Obama as "not ready for the 3 AM phone call", it would seem
that every second of video of Russian tanks rolling across Georgia
is a campaign commercial for McCain. As we know, when faced with the
reality that his "experienced warrior" image was being roundly rejected
by Americans in favor of Obama's "change" brand, John McCain made a
conscious decision, if hidden from the public eye, to sign up Karl
Rove and subscribe to his philosophy that there is nothing off limits when it comes to winning an election. Nothing.
(Rove himself, being
widely recognized as the PR shill for the gang that foisted the war on
Iraq on us, outed a CIA agent, and innumerable other atrocities, is far too toxic to have an official position with the
McCain campaign. He plays a journalist on FOX TV. But his cronies are
on board, and his slimy fingerprints are all over McCain's new wave of
smear tactics.)
SO, the question stands:
Why did the Georgians attack the Russian enclave in South Ossetia now,
a mere 100 days before the U.S. presidential election?
Did
Bush/McCain give Georgian leadership false assurances that they would
receive military support from the Bush administration, or perhaps even
coerce them into attacking the Russians?
If
it strikes you as incredible that Bush and McCain would knowingly and
deliberately sacrifice the lives of thousands of innocent Georgians and
throw one of our allies to the Russian bear for political gain,
remember that soldiers never decide who lives and who dies in wars. The
politicians do.
That's the way war works, my friends.
Filed under: Bush, McCain, election, Iraq, Cold War, war, petrolium, Conservative media, republicans, journalism, news, neocons, occupation, Cheney, FOX, Russia, Georgia
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By Jeff Blackwell
Sunday, Jul 20 2008, 09:02 AM
The endorsement by Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki of Senator Barack
Obama's proposed 16-month timeline for the withdrawal of the bulk of
American troops has significance well beyond its positive effect on his
campaign. Obviously, it demonstrates that Obama's instincts and advisers are more than a match for the vaunted foreign policy expertise of John McCain.
The
call by the Iraqi Prime Minister for a specific timeline for American
troop withdrawal was more than a huge blow to the credibility of George
Bush and McCain - it may be the last nail in the coffin of the
neo-conservative movement, headed up by Vice President *** Cheney.
The
plan, of course - as articulated in a rare moment of candor by John
McCain - was to stay in Iraq indefinitely. In the negotiations of a
Status of Forces agreement, the U.S. had originally demanded more than
50 permanent bases on Iraqi soil, immunity for all U.S. soldiers and
contractors, and the ability to use those forces unilaterally against
Iraqi citizens. (And presumably, against Iran.)
This
permanent occupation of Iraq was the primary objective of the war, and
now it has turned to sand. A "free and democratic" Iraq was to be the
home base for American military power in the Mid East. From Iraq, we
could control the flow of oil, assuring that American companies would
receive royalties for every gallon.
The Iraqis may be divided by religion, but the one thing that they all agree on is that they want their country back.
The
endorsement of Obama's proposal blows wide open the Bush/McCain
illusion that American occupation was at the request of a free Iraq.
Both have said in the past that if the Iraqi government asked us to
leave, we would.
Well, we have been asked.
Now, how we will reconcile our further occupation? Will McCain now advocate staying in Iraq against the will
of the Iraqis? Assuming that we
cannot simply walk away from our "investment" in Iraqi oil and
strategic control of their forces, how long will the Iraqis tolerate
our presence?
This conundrum proves the bankruptcy of the neo-conservative dream of American empire, and
exposes the myth of McCain's so-called expertise in foreign policy.
Filed under: Obama, Bush, McCain, election, Iraq, War on Terror, Barack, war, conservatism, change, human rights, oil, petrolium, Iran, Conservative media, propaganda, republicans, neocons, Israel, occupation, Cheney
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By Jeff Blackwell
Sunday, Jul 20 2008, 07:33 AM
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Democratic Presidential candidate Barack Obama,
currently in Afghanistan as part of a tour of Europe and the Middle
East, is working hard to separate himself from the Bush/McCain war
policies, and at the same time demonstrate that he can muster some
enthusiasm for those same policies.
Obviously,
he is trying to inoculate himself from charges by the right that he is
not tough enough on our enemies. He has to make aggressive noises and
strike warrior poses, mimicking the brainless militarism of
Bush/McCain, or risk being called weak.
It
is tragic that this is necessary. Obama's resistance to the invasion of
Iraq was, of course, a huge factor in his early support by grassroots
Democrats. But apparently this country, post 9-11, is not ready for an
anti-war candidate.
The utter futility of
fighting a "war on terror" should be obvious by now. Of course, there
never were any "terrorists" in Iraq, other than the ruling junta.
Still, it is considered the front line in this "war".
After
a million deaths in Iraq, and 5-6 million Iraqis displaced, the
depletion of America's military forces, and the resulting ravages on
the value of the dollar and unimaginable increases in oil prices, the
Iraqi people live in a fiercely sectarian society with rampant
lawlessness and without electricity. While there are hopeful signs that
sectarian self-segregation will keep violence down, there is precious
little evidence that a liberal, secular, self-standing society will
emerge anytime soon. There are major issues that are hopelessly
deadlocked in sectarian positions, and the nation of Iraq could still
degenerate into civil war if someone (say Al-Queda) were to actively
foment more sectarian violence by perpetrating atrocities on civilian
targets.
One thing is certain. The Iraqis
want us out. I take this as a positive sign, but doubt that our
"investment" in Iraqi oil will allow this, regardless of who is our
next president.
Obama is calling for
additional troops in Afghanistan to highlight the difference between
himself and Bush/McCain, claiming that they lost focus on the real
front in the "war on terror". This is pandering, pure and simple. The
very last thing that Afghanistan needs is more American/NATO troops
creating resentment in the population and acting as bait for terrorist
attacks, which inevitably kill more Afghanis than soldiers.
Must we repeat the same damn war all over again? Do we expect any different result?
What
both Iraq and Afghanistan need is international help in creating a
functional infrastructure including water systems, highways, electrical
grid, health care and schools. The money we have wasted on a military
campaign could have paid for these things, easily.
It
is very disappointing to see Obama pick up the sabre, but I sincerely
hope that he is merely posing for the camera, and will begin to turn
American foreign policy in a more humanitarian direction if he is
elected.
Filed under: Obama, Bush, McCain, election, Iraq, Afghanistan, War on Terror, vote, Barack, war, change, human rights, oil, petrolium, economy, propaganda, occupation, terrorist
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By Jeff Blackwell
Saturday, Jul 19 2008, 09:21 AM
A recent comment deserves a comprehensive response.
From SG 134:
Do you believe terrorist want to destroy us and our great country? Especially Jews and Christians? Do you believe Mahmoud Ahmadinejad wants to make nukes and then use them to destroy Israel?
SG134,
Your questions demonstrate a critical lack of understanding of the world around you. “Terrorism” is the tactical use of violence against civilians to achieve a strategic goal, whether political, economic, religious or ideological. A terrorist is someone who practices terrorism or advocates that practice.
No terrorist believes that they can literally destroy an entire country. The psychological effect – terror – is the real goal. If the act of terrorism provokes a violent response, then the mission has been successful. If there is not a violent response, the mission has failed.
Perpetuating a cycle of violence is a tactic that is designed to ultimately provoke a military response. This military response depletes the resources of the victim state, costs many lives, and is doomed to fail, because the original perpetrators are replaced by recruits motivated by the military action itself.
You are a victim, and at the same time a perpetrator of terrorism. Intellectually, you may understand that your chances of being killed in an act of terror are minuscule, yet you are obviously terrified. By being terrified and responding by supporting state sanctioned violence, and by virally spreading fear and hate, people like you are aiding in the mission of the terrorist.
Does that make you a terrorist? If you actively support a military solution, then you are playing into the hands of the terrorist. Without the reaction of terrified people like you, the tactic of terror is useless.
I frequently use the word “terrorism” in a somewhat broader sense. I believe that when a government uses propaganda to raise the same kind of fear, hate and nationalism that terrorist violence breeds, in order to manipulate the behavior and attitudes of its citizens, that is also terrorism. The psychological effect is the same – the acceptance of violence as a tool of policy.
There really should be a name for people who are the unwitting accomplices of terrorists, and one for state-sponsored, psychological terrorists.
I assume, SG134, that when you use the word “terrorists” you mean Islamic fundamentalists. The fact is that fundamentalists of all faiths, including Islam, Christianity, and Judaism have used terror to “defend” their faith.
There certainly are Muslim fundamentalists who believe that our way of life is decadent and immoral. (This is a legitimate argument, if you follow the Christian doctrine, or the Jewish one.) Fortunately, the percentage of religious fundamentalists of any faith is very small. The absolute numbers of those willing to use violence is tiny.
Let’s also acknowledge that not all terrorism is religiously motivated.
The Muslim fundamentalists willing to use violence may think that they are fighting a religious war, but we are not. Although it is sometimes portrayed in cultural terms for the propaganda value, the so-called “War on Terror” is about politics and economics.
As for Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, I fully understand his obsession with obtaining nuclear weapons. The United States has made no attempt to disguise our aggressive intentions toward that nation. The unprovoked invasion of their neighbor Iraq has terrorized a large percentage of their population and inflamed the Mullahs. They want a nuke to keep us out.
The only way out of the box we are in is to elect a President who does not see a military resolution to every international issue.
A perpetual state of war is what Bush has achieved, and John McCain is exactly the right man to keep that cycle of violence turning.
Filed under: Obama, Bush, McCain, election, Iraq, War on Terror, vote, Barack, war, oil, petrolium, Iran, Muslim, church, religion, propaganda, Christian, Christianity, neocons, Israel, negotiate, Cheney, terrorist
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By Jeff Blackwell
Saturday, Jun 21 2008, 07:26 AM
It’s obvious that Republican candidate John McCain either does not have a good grasp of the facts from moment to moment, or he simply chooses to ignore them.
Last week the Republican’s campaign theme was energy, and he
was on the road trying to capitalize on Americans’ pain at the pump.
(Meanwhile McCain stands shoulder-to-shoulder with George Bush in threatening military action against Iran, which would be another windfall for the major oil companies.)
McCain also demonstrated in his speeches that he has learned the lessons of Karl Rove, and freely misstated the positions of Barack Obama’s energy proposals. It just doesn’t seem to matter what the facts are to McCain, and the press rarely calls him on it.
Factcheck.org, a nonpartisan project
of the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania, yesterday
published a report titled “McCain's Power Outage - Contradictions and
misstatements short-circuit McCain's energy policy pronouncements.”
Follow the link for the details, but a here are the
highlights:
- He said that ending a moratorium on offshore oil drilling "would be very helpful in the short term in resolving our energy crisis." But according to a government report, offshore oil wouldn't have much of an impact on supply or prices until 2030.
- McCain tried to paint Obama as an opponent of nuclear power, yet
Obama has said he is open to nuclear energy being part of the solution and
has supported bills that contained nuclear subsidies.
- He has soft-pedaled the "cap" portion of his cap-and-trade proposal for greenhouse gases, even denying that it would be a mandate. The cap is a mandatory limit, however, and McCain even says so on his Web site.
- McCain's new ad, running this week, rightly says that he bucked his party in supporting action on climate change years ago. But its images of windmills and solar panels are misleading in that he supports subsidies for nuclear power, which isn't pictured, and opposes them for wind and solar energy.
- McCain continues to say that a suspension of the federal gas tax will lower prices for consumers, though hundreds of economists say he is wrong.
John McCain apparently has little use for the facts, which is a disturbing trait in a man who would be president.
Filed under: Obama, Bush, McCain, election, Iraq, Barack, oil, energy, petrolium, Iran, economy, Conservative media, environment, republicans, global warming
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By Jeff Blackwell
Thursday, Jun 19 2008, 05:35 PM
With a fire sale frenzy, the Big Oil Boys are falling all over themselves to mop up what’s left of your cash and secure their place in your wallet and your national parks before the Bush/Cheney store closes down.
John McCain is trying his best to assure them that the U.S. government will stay open for business if they help him make the down payment on the White House.
Bush and Cheney, BOBs themselves, have of course given their Oily Buddies everything they possibly could; even letting them write our guaranteed oil dependency into our national energy policy.
Not satisfied that the laws written to allow Enron to speculate that Enron would raise energy prices, which has led to the current situation where oil companies can bid up prices for their own products on the commodities market in a never-ending cycle of increasing profits, the Oil Boys now want to grab every square inch of drillable land in both the U.S. and colonial Iraq, while they can still write their own deals.
Ironically, their overall strategy to break the will of the American people is to screw the hell out of them at the neighborhood gas pump. Eye-popping, budget-busting gas prices are supposed to convince you and me that whatever the Oil Boys want, the Oil Boys should get, everything else be damned.
That war in Iraq that was never about oil? Well, it is now Bunky. Even if the Iraqis can’t agree on how to split up their share, the Big Oil Boys have already colluded to decide who gets to “assist” the Iraqis in which oil fields. As long as it’s even, boys.
And who’s right there next to Bush shilling for Big Oil? Why it’s that environmental maverick, John McCain! With his flip on offshore drilling and his “gas tax holiday” proposal, McCain is letting the Boys know that he will be happy to continue business as usual if he’s running the store.
"Boys. Just imagine what a war in Iran would do for your bottom line..."
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By Jeff Blackwell
Wednesday, Jun 11 2008, 09:13 AM
Rep. Dennis Kucinch of Ohio introduced a bill containing thirty-five
articles of impeachment to the House of Representatives late Monday evening.
It is no surprise that there has been virtually no corporate
media coverage of this historic event. The only thing more disgraceful than the media silence is the
near-complete failure of Democrats in the House of Representatives to
co-sponsor the bill. For the record, the exception is Congressman Robert Wexler
(District 19, FL), who stated “The Articles present a stunning narrative of
offenses that go well beyond previous crimes committed by any U.S. chief
executive. In fact, no President or Vice President in history has done
more to undermine our constitution.”
The crimes of this administration, specifically President George
Bush and Vice President Richard Cheney, in spite of their conspiracy to avoid
documentation and considerable efforts to destroy the evidence, are well
documented.
The lack of will to prosecute the crimes of these men can be
traced back to the massive campaign of misinformation that was flooded into the
media after the attacks of 9-11. Millions of Americans still believe that
Saddam was a planner of those attacks. Millions of Americans also believe that
we attacked Iraq based on “bad intelligence” regarding their weapons
capability.
The facts are clear, and were clear, that Iraq had no role
in 9-11, had no significant relationship with the people who did, and had obliterated
their nuclear weapons program several years before our invasion.
The administration suppressed, obfuscated, and outright lied
in order to start this war, and then launched a straw man “war on terror” to
justify illegal activities across the board, ranging from unconstitutional spying
on American citizens to sweetheart contracts giving multi-billion dollar
payoffs to their business associates.
The media, having pumped up the hysterical 9-11 rhetoric, having
served as the propaganda arm of the administration in the “run-up” to the Iraq war,
and having marketed the “war on terror” as a brand, is of course burying the
truth rather than acknowledge that war and terror are good for their business.
The Democrats, having utterly failed to execute their duty
to represent the interests of their constituents, want to see Bush and Cheney
slither out of office, perpetuating the
myth that they themselves were innocent victims, rather than passive
participants in this shameful era of American history.
In time, it is inevitable that the facts will overwhelm the
myths, and no one will be able to deny that these wars were unnecessary – that as
many as a million Iraqis were murdered, that 4-5 million were turned into
refugees, thousands of Americans died, that the economy of our country was
mortgaged and wasted, and that the motive for the “war on terror” was profit,
pure and simple.
Bush and Cheney should be held accountable for their crimes
before they leave office.
This may be the only way to prevent them from
covering their tracks by starting another war. [UPDATE] from rawstory.com: "The House of Representatives voted Wednesday to send articles of impeachment against President Bush to the Judiciary Committee for review.
The impeachment resolution’s sponsor, Rep. Dennis Kucinich, requested a recorded vote on the motion around 3 p.m. Wednesday, and 24 Republicans joined nearly all Democrats in voting to send the impeachment measure to the committee.
The motion passed 251-166."
Filed under: Bush, Iraq, War on Terror, war, oil, petrolium, Iran, propaganda, republicans, journalism, neocons, Cheney, impeach
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By Jeff Blackwell
Thursday, Jun 5 2008, 11:22 AM
It has long been obvious that the U.S. is not fighting Al Queda
on Iraqi soil, but the Iraqis themselves, at the cost of as many as a
million of their citizens and of course, control of their government
and their economy. We are about to see the
confiscation of Iraq's national sovereignty by the Bush neocons
formalized in a "security agreement" between the Bush/Cheney cabal and
their puppet Iraq regime. The details of
the the so-called "strategic alliance", which have been leaked to
Patrick Cockburn of the British newspaper The Independent, essentially
sign control of the nation of Iraq over to the United States. This
quasi-legal and open-ended occupation of Iraq will, quite predictably
be sold to the U.S. citizens as a "victory" over the forces of terror,
and a vindication of the Bush/Cheney doctrine of preventative warfare. From The Independent; "Under the terms of the new treaty, the Americans would retain the
long-term use of more than 50 bases in Iraq. American negotiators are
also demanding immunity from Iraqi law for US troops and contractors,
and a free hand to carry out arrests and conduct military activities in
Iraq without consulting the Baghdad government." "Washington also wants control of Iraqi airspace below 29,000ft and the
right to pursue its "war on terror" in Iraq, giving it the authority to
arrest anybody it wants and to launch military campaigns without
consultation." This
"agreement " will not be put to a referendum of the Iraqi people for
obvious reasons. It will subjugate them to American rule indefinitely
and condemn them to an ongoing violent struggle to regain their status
as an independent nation, and turn their country into a U.S. base for a
war with Iran. Now you know what we have been fighting for.
Filed under: Bush, McCain, election, Iraq, War on Terror, war, oil, energy, petrolium, Iran, republicans, neocons, occupation
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By Jeff Blackwell
Tuesday, May 20 2008, 07:13 PM
A report on Israeli Army Radio claimed that George Bush and
Vice President Cheney disclosed to the Israeli government last week that they
are planning to attack Iran before they leave office next January.
Of course, the White House denies the report.
According to the unidentified source, described as a “top
official in Jerusalem”, a “senior member” of the Bush Administration (a label
frequently used to describe the Vice President) stated in a closed meeting that
military action against Iran is forthcoming.
The report also said that Bush and Cheney were only holding
fire due to "the hesitancy of Defense Secretary Robert
Gates and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice". One can imagine that
Secretary Gates actually gives a damn about his troops. Who knows what the hell
Condi is thinking?
The White House responded, saying, “…Our
preference and our actions for dealing with this matter remain through peaceful
diplomatic means. Nothing has changed in that regard."
That’s a little difficult to imagine.
Because even talking about talking to the Iranians is a sign of naiveté,
according John McCain, or worse, appeasement according to the Commander in
Chief. I think we all know what Cheney is thinking.
It seems certain that the attack will be an
air strike of suspected nuclear facilities, rather than a ground invasion. (The
exhausted state of our military makes that impossible.) In effect, it won’t
matter, as the Iranians can be depended upon to launch a spirited defense of
their homeland, and will send human waves of troops across the border into
Iraq. (During their almost nine year war with Sadaam Hussein they took millions
of casualties.)
Any large-scale movement of Iranian troops
would of course expose them to highly efficient aerial attacks, with horrific
loss of life. One can only imagine the carnage of an all-out Iranian invasion
of Iraq, with 140,000 U.S. troops caught between the Iranian army and the Sunni
insurgency.
I am guessing that the bombs will not fly
before November 2, so Happy Thanksgiving.
Get ready for a whole new war.
Filed under: Bush, election, Iraq, War on Terror, vote, war, oil, petrolium, Iran, Muslim, Pentagon, republicans, neocons, Israel
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By Jeff Blackwell
Monday, May 19 2008, 06:40 PM
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It
has always been clear that George Bush has had little interest in the
difficult
work of his job. Now that the expectations of the American people have
been reduced to essentially zero, Bush seems fine with being rid of all
that responsibility, and riding out the rest of his term blithely
following the orders of his neocon handlers.
The
Mideast, with its many factions and tangled relationships, has clearly
been too much for the incurious Bush to deal with, and he's been happy
to just use the labels they slapped on the parties involved; "good
guys", "bad guys".
Bush's farewell tour
of the region last week may have dealt the death blow to the withered
peace process, which apparently was one of his assignments.
It appears his handlers gave Bush two objectives for the trip. First, to pour fuel on the smoldering Iranian situation and preemptively blow up possible negotiations, providing a pretext for a military strike.
While
speaking in Israel, Bush not only managed to submerge the prospects of
a peaceful resolution of the longstanding issues with the Palestinians
and poison any attempt to negotiate with the Iranians, but was so
effusive in his simple-minded praise of Israel, that nothing he said on
the remainder of his trip even mattered.
Playing directly into the strategy of the terrorists and the neocons - those anxious to shed blood - or send someone else to do it for them - Bush did his best to insure their success.
Not
surprisingly, except apparently to Bush, he was shunned during the rest
of his trip by those whom he had so glibly associated with Hitler. It
actually appeared that his feelings were hurt.
The second part of Bush's assignment didn't go as well as the first.
His
family's personal benefactors, the Royal Saudis, just chuckled when he
implored them to increase oil production to help the Republicans in the
elections.
Bush came home with his tail between his legs and his legacy as a self-absorbed fool secured.
Filed under: Bush, election, Iraq, war, human rights, oil, energy, petrolium, Iran, republicans, neocons, Israel, Palestinians
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By Jeff Blackwell
Wednesday, Apr 30 2008, 07:10 PM
President Bush had to admit today that his policies have driven the U.S. economy straight into the toilet, threatening to take the entire global economy along for the swirly ride. Oh, sorry! This just in - He blamed the Congress. You know, Congress with a one vote Democratic majority in the Senate for the last five months, for the continuing downward spiral of Americans’ standard of living, the plummet of the U.S. dollar, closure of stores and auto plants, the bankruptcy of several airlines, skyrocketing energy and food costs, the growing specter of inflation, and the unusually cold weather (what global warming?) on the Democrats. If you are fortunate enough to reside here in beautiful Lake Country, the personal damage is likely limited to the significant drop in the value of your home. I’m sure there are McMansions around here that have been foreclosed, but all in all, we’re still doing pretty well out here. I have family in Michigan and they are bitter. They are thankful to have jobs, but fearful, as so many of their unemployed neighbors have lost hope and pulled out, like the Okies heading out across the dustbowl, hoping for work in the farm fields of California. As I left work downtown this afternoon, I saw the man standing on the corner with the hand-lettered sign “I’m Homeless and Hungry. Can you help?” I avoided looking at his eyes.
Filed under: Bush, election, energy, food, hunger, petrolium, economy, jobs, Steinbeck, recession, Grapes of Wrath, Okies, depression
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By Jeff Blackwell
Tuesday, Apr 29 2008, 06:38 PM
Senator McCain’s proposal for a temporary suspension of the federal gas tax is not only a terrible idea, but shows the frightening lack of depth of his analysis of the economy.
"I'm going to be honest: I know a lot less about economics than I do about military and foreign policy issues," McCain told the Wall Street Journal in 2005. "I still need to be educated." Apparently.
Senator Clinton’s endorsement of this ridiculous scheme is further proof that she will say anything that might gain her two or three votes.
Economically, the Gas Tax Holiday would be likely to have little effect at all on prices at the pump, which are determined by the fact that demand is running ahead of increases in production. So, any savings realized by you and me would be barely noticeable, if at all.
The loss of revenue to the federal government would be $10 Billion. Gas tax revenue is dedicated to maintaining the federal highway system, including the bridge that collapsed in Minnesota recently. Does that seem like a good idea?
I have not seen an estimate of the cost of administering this off and on again tax, but it would obviously cost millions.
And the bottom line, any temporary reduction in prices would only encourage consumption, which is our real problem.
The supply side of the equation can never keep up with the ballooning demand for fuel, even if we let the oil companies run the federal government. (Oh, yeah.)
The solution to our petroleum dependency, which affects all our economic well being, our foreign policies (Iraq does have a drop or two), our national security (maybe some of “them” hate us because they think we’re stealing their oil) and the looming problem of climate change is to RAISE the gas tax.
Tell me what you think of this idea. The tax at the pump would increase a penny for each 1/10th of a gallon pumped. We’d tax the first 1/10th at about .50 higher than the current level. The next tenth at .51/gallon, and so on.
This would be displayed in such a way that as you filled your tank you could feel the pain.
We need to DISCOURAGE consumption of gasoline if we are ever going to reduce its toxic effects on our lives. We waste millions of gallons of it by driving vehicles that are grossly overweight, by driving too fast, by failing to build mass transit systems. We could use the taxes to alleviate all of these problems, and actually begin to reduce the rate of consumption.
You may remember that during the gas crisis back in the seventies, a few visionary Democrats actually proposed raising gasoline taxes to discourage consumption. I wonder how much more efficient our cars would be, how much money we would NOT have sent to Saudi Arabia, how much cleaner our air would be, how much grain would now be available for feeding the world’s poorest, if we had taken our medicine back then. We should open up and swallow now. Our grandchildrens' future depends on it.
And please, I am serious; can you at least shut your engine off while you are in the coffee shop getting your morning cup? Let’s not be arrogant as well as foolish.
Filed under: McCain, election, Iraq, Clinton, change, oil, energy, food, petrolium, economy, trucks, SUVs, environment
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By Jeff Blackwell
Tuesday, Apr 22 2008, 07:49 PM
A range of factors, including the ongoing waste of everything by you and me, global warming causing droughts, and political instability as a result of centuries of imperialist policies by the “major powers” have resulted in the current run on commodities.
Everything from corn to gold is inflating in price at unprecedented rates. (Water is next.)
The speculators and even ordinary investors like you and me, via the mutual funds in our 401ks, are sucking up commodities like there was no tomorrow.
For many of our fellow humans, there may not be.
While you and I are sending our money to those who, on our behalf, are hoarding metals, oil and, most importantly, grain, millions of people around the world are facing starvation due to our “investments”.
These people will do whatever they have to in order to eat. How this will affect you is that they will hold us accountable for their children’s hunger. They will be “patriotic” to whoever distributes food to them. This is how Hammas, Iraqi militias, and al Queda gain recruits, including those anxious to become “martyrs”.
It is pathetic, but there is an obvious tendency for certain people here in the U.S. (Waukesha County) to grab what they can while it’s still available. How else to explain the gas-sucking pickups and SUVs flying down the freeway at 80 MPH? Towing four wheelers or a giant boat. One can only conclude that these individuals are determined to burn as much petroleum as they can while it’s still “affordable”.
So, get ready for the next bubble to burst. Commodity prices may continue to rise for a decade or more, as did housing prices. You and I make even make a lot of money. But the bubble will burst, just as it did in real estate.
You and I will lose money in the markets.
They will starve.
Is it too much to ask all you “Conservatives” to conserve? Just a bit?
Filed under: conservatism, change, human rights, oil, energy, racism, food, hunger, petrolium, economy, Conservative media
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By Jeff Blackwell
Thursday, Apr 10 2008, 07:56 PM
A variety of conditions, but particularly the price of petroleum and the increasing devotion of farmland to biofuel substitutes, are driving up the cost of eating all over the world. I’m not talking about the price of a fish fry and a couple of beers at your favorite local establishment. If you can afford eat in a restaurant, please do count your blessings. You may have noticed (or not) that the basics – bread and milk – at Sentry or Pick ‘n Save are costing a heck of a lot more than they did a year ago. I am talking about people so hungry that they are willing to charge a line of armed soldiers in the hope of securing something – anything - to eat. Food riots are a daily occurrence in cities around the world. Because of our insatiable, and shameful, thirst for fuel for our vehicles, a massive amount of land that formerly was used to raise basic food grains to nourish people is now being used to grow corn and soy for fueling our cars and trucks and SUVs. On every continent people trying to survive on $2 a day are desperately hungry, because your car is, literally, burning up their food. Do you think you could at least slow down a little bit, and turn off your engine when you're getting your coffee at Kwik Trip?
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