September 22, 2009 11:10 AM

An Energy Mess Brought To You By Congress

By
CBSNews
(National Review Online)  This column was written by Thomas E. Nugent.
Everyone complains about high gas prices, yet viable solutions to today's energy crisis get tabled by the very people who do the complaining. Certain Californians come to mind - folks who philosophically luxuriate in a moratorium on offshore drilling only to boil over on Wilshire Boulevard when faced with gas at $5.50 a gallon.

Then there's Congress.

Some proposed solutions to the gas-price crisis, such as a windfall profits tax on oil companies, would merely take us back to the good old days of the gas line. Incentives matter. So do disincentives. When you penalize companies for bringing gas to market, less gas (at higher prices) will come to market.

But Congress has been getting energy wrong for quite a few years now. When President Bush launched a viable energy plan in 2001, Democrats submarined it. They said a strategy for increased drilling would take too long to have an effect - maybe eight to ten years. So why bother?

And here we are again. In the midst of the 2008 energy crisis, Democrats say any new drilling allowances in the present will take at least eight to ten years to bear fruit. It's a line of reasoning that will never produce a solution, even though solutions were what the Democrats promised.

Recall that the current crop of congressional Democrats ran in 2006 on a platform of lower gasoline prices. It was a hollow promise; congressional inaction has predictably led to higher prices, and several more negatives. America today is growing poorer as wealth shifts to the oil-rich Middle East as well as to oil-endowed Russia. At the same time, Democratic solutions to the energy dilemma emphasize the same failed strategies once advocated by Jimmy Carter: Stay home, don't drive, and put on a sweater if you're cold. In other words, watch your standard of living plummet.

The Democrats want to raise taxes on oil companies, prohibit drilling offshore and in Alaska, and generally eliminate many sources of alternative fuel production. On the one hand they force us to use corn-based ethanol, which serves to push energy and food prices higher while arguably contributing to world food shortages. On the other hand they limit the importation of sugar-based ethanol from Brazil, a source of energy that does not deplete our food stock.

John McCain offered a breath of fresh air when he proposed a $300 million prize for the invention of an advanced battery-powered car. Of all the government energy solutions being proffered, this is the one that offers incentives to get the job done. Americans in the 1960s were challenged by President John Kennedy in much the same way. The result was that the U.S. got men on the moon before the Soviets.

There is a clear delineation between the parties on how to solve our energy crisis and manage our economy in general. The Democrats prefer the lower-your-standard-of-living approach, the centerpiece of which is punishing free markets. The Republicans - at least those in the Reagan wing of the party - want to offer free markets greater incentives to find the solutions to our energy problems, an approach that has proven to lead to problems solved and higher standards of living.

The big question is whether or not voters will recognize this divide in such clear terms. According to the polls, they just might. Congressional approval ratings, as per PollingReport.com, were in the low 30s when the Democrats took over in early 2007. Those ratings recently plunged to 13 percent. For the sake of comparison, President Bush's ratings were in the mid-thirties in 2007 and now are in the high twenties, almost double the congressional tally.

The mainstream media, of course, tell a much different story. Actually, they tell half a story. They inform us repeatedly about the president's historically low approval ratings and rarely if ever mention the lower congressional numbers. But the media's agenda has a way of falling short.

A brief story, if I may: Old timers will remember that the U.S. invaded the Dominican Republic in 1965 based on fears that Castro would extend his communist reach to that nation. I was in the D.R. at the time as an army interrogation officer attached to the 82nd Airborne. Early on my mission was to ascertain whether detainees were rebels or loyalists, which had me asking among other things, "Who do you want to be the president of your country?" There were two choices: Juan Bosch on the Left, and Joaquin Balaguer on the Right. The mainstream press on the mainland had Bosch pegged as the shoe-in, and they never even mentioned Balaguer's name. The detainees, however, almost unanimously agreed on Balaguer. The winner the following year? Joaquin Balaguer.

The moral is that the people sometimes get what they want, regardless of what the media say. If voters can connect gas prices at the pump with inaction by Congress, and energy solutions with free-market incentives, the media won't know what hit them this November.
By Thomas E. Nugent
Reprinted with permission from National Review Online

National Review Online
Add a Comment See all 41 Comments
by chatmandu002 July 18, 2008 6:50 PM EDT
The country fails while Nancy and Harry fiddle.
Reply to this comment
by joyous88 July 18, 2008 3:16 PM EDT
An energy mess brought to you by Ronald Reagan,

President Carter set our country on the road to energy independence, look it up, onlt to have the entire effort dismantled by the criminal Reagan,
(by the way, do you know how much we spent on this clownbs funeral?)

The conservatives greed driven agenda set back our efforts by hundreds of years
Reply to this comment
by joyous88 July 16, 2008 2:12 PM EDT
''An energy mess brought to by mass media lying propaganda, like the NRO, and conservative greed''

the mindless christian vote, bribed by the faith based initiative, and oure greed brought us the war in iraq, bush, mcsame, and conservative republicon government,

that is why we had 5 dollar a gallon fuel,

time to end the conservative war against humanity and the nightmare of republicon rule
Reply to this comment
by joyous88 July 16, 2008 2:06 PM EDT
what a crock!, the republicons created this mess, you might think that an "OILMAN" president might have some knowledge of keeping oil prices down,

but the fact is McBushSame and Bush and cheney are nothing but a cabal of very wealthy rich boys, and their only
real concern is profit, that is the defination of = FASCIST
Reply to this comment
by pisdoff July 14, 2008 7:11 PM EDT
Why does the media and politicians keep saying it will take ten years to get oil from new wells when drillers say it will only take about one year. Start drilling now and when the first well comes in the price of oil will drop and the speculators will get caught with thier pants down. It''s time to quit Bush bashing and get something done before we turn into a third world country.
Reply to this comment
by noloyalisti July 14, 2008 6:21 PM EDT
This article is SOOOO pandering to the ignorant right wing mentality of free markets and blaming the government for everything. The real problem is the National *** Organization is also so transparent.

The government was formed for the good of the people and to protect the common good. The right wing wacko privatization freaks, pandering to the fascist oil companies, are the problem. After the conservatives have demonstrated their absolute failures in governing, it is just like a right winger to try to blame the government. Time to evolve and come out of the water.
Reply to this comment
by ioweign July 14, 2008 4:07 PM EDT
"John McCain offered a breath of fresh air when he proposed a $300 million prize for the invention of an advanced battery-powered car"


Offering a prize is a vialbe incentive to get into an area of research that is not being investigated. Great example was the X-prize for a civilian space craft.

What is utterly useless is offering a prize in an area that EVERY single car manufacturer is already spending BILLIONS on research. It''''s called PANDERING.

Posted by taddles3 at 11:47 AM : Jul 14, 2008

"John McCain offered a breath of fresh air when he proposed a $300 million prize for the invention of an advanced battery-powered car"


Leave it to a Republican thinking that throwing taxpayers money at a problem will solve it...
Reply to this comment
by terrapin78 July 14, 2008 3:07 PM EDT
Revoke the Enron Loophole (as championed by Phil Grahm, McCain''s lobbyist) and it is predicted that this alone would bring oil costs down by 50% in 30 days.

The Enron Loophole is courtesy of the REPUG Controlled Congress.
Reply to this comment
by taddles3 July 14, 2008 2:58 PM EDT
"With 70% of the worlds oil in our country, why don''''t congress want us to drill for it?

Posted by tksk53 at 11:32 AM : Jul 14, 2008"


We don''t have 70% of the worlds oil, we have 3-5%. We have over 500,000 oil wells in the US, the production of those wells topped out in 1970 and has been on decline ever since. Saudi Arabia produces over twice the Us production of oil on 1500 wells. Drilling more wells won''t help, we simply don''t have the oil.
Reply to this comment
by taddles3 July 14, 2008 2:47 PM EDT
"John McCain offered a breath of fresh air when he proposed a $300 million prize for the invention of an advanced battery-powered car"


Offering a prize is a vialbe incentive to get into an area of research that is not being investigated. Great example was the X-prize for a civilian space craft.

What is utterly useless is offering a prize in an area that EVERY single car manufacturer is already spending BILLIONS on research. It''s called PANDERING.
Reply to this comment
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