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What if we'd started six years ago???

  1. plusaf
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NOW IT THE TIME FOR CONGRESS
TO MOVE AND GET SOMETHING DONE

Imagine an energy plan that does it all––from allowing more oil drilling to spending billions on alternative energy sources, such as wind, solar and nuclear. Well, guess what? Been there, done that. "Energy has enormous implications for our economy, our environment and our national security," President Bush said in proposing the plan.


"We cannot let another year go by without addressing these issues together in a comprehensive and balanced package."

That was in June 2001––more than seven years ago.


His words came just after he first proposed a comprehensive energy bill that included 105 separate steps the U.S. could take to boost its energy supplies. It was something he promised repeatedly while campaigning for the presidency in 2000. He kept his promise. His first plan included, among many other things:


(1) New drilling for more oil and gas and new refineries.
(2) Building of nuclear power plants.
(3) Revamping the U.S. electricity grid.
(4) $10 billion in tax breaks to help push energy efficiency and alternative energy.


The fact is, these are remarkably similar to the plans that economists, oil experts and energy wonks say need to be put in place today in order to end our oil crisis. Yet, those proposals went nowhere––not approved in 2001, not in 2002, not in 2003, not ever.

Bush tried repeatedly to get something through Congress. He pleaded. He tried to cut deals with Democrats. It didn’t work.

A New York Times headline from August 20, 2003, sums it up: "Ambitious Bush Plan Is Undone by Energy Politics." That’s an understatement. Instead, Democrats ridiculed Vice President Cheney for meeting with oil industry representatives to craft U.S. energy policy––and for insisting on finding more oil. They had no plan themselves, mind you –– apart from massively expensive global warming initiatives that would force Americans to lower their standard of living to Third World levels by spending as much as $800 billion a year to cool the Earth.

Yet, if Bush's plan had been put in place in 2001, we'd have replaced millions of barrels of oil, billions of tons of coal, and untold trillions of acre feet of natural gas with clean, safe nuclear power. We'd be pumping millions of barrels more of oil, creating thousands of American jobs, cutting prices and saving literally hundreds of billions of dollars every year ––
money that today goes to Hugo Chavez, Libyan leader-for-life Muammar Qadhafi and Vladimir Putin’s Russia.

When the Democrats took control of Congress in 2007, and oil was $50 a barrel and corn $2 a bushel, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid promised an energy plan. We’re still waiting for it. Today, crude oil is $134 and corn is $6.50. It’s pretty clear who’s to blame: Congress. In fact,

House and Senate Democrats have obstructed any progress in America’s fight to regain some semblance of energy independence.

"Now is the time for Congress to move and get something done," President Bush said all the way back in August 2003. He’s still waiting, and so are we. Bush's original energy plan, derided by the Democrats and so-called progressives as a wet-kiss to Big Oil, was in fact a visionary plan.

At the time, Reid joked that GOP now stood for "Gas, Oil and Plutonium." Funny, we don’t hear anyone laughing now.

Such puerile shenanigans, as we’ve said before, endanger our security and weaken our standard of living. Angry? You should be. Call your political representatives and tell them you want more energy, not less. If they won’t do it, tell them you’ll vote for someone who will. Then maybe you’ll really get change you can believe in. Source: Investor's Business Daily, July 17, 2008, www.investors.com

plusaf

17 responses // What if we'd started six years ago???

  •  

    It's true... lotta peeps are blaming Bush for oil prices... It's really not his fault; really.

    PLEASE NOTE: I dont like Bush. But the truth is always the truth... I think.

    tripn4days
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    Yea, that pesky democratic congress held thing up his entire 1st term......oh wait....

    Bovey
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    Yeah, Cheney meeting with oil and energy lobbyists and executives from companies like Enron, in total secrecy, and writing our energy policy and, apparently, discussing opportunities that may be opening up in Iraq was a great idea.

    The Republicans did nothing to reduce our dependency on oil, yet it is the Democrats' fault? This is a load of crap. Come on.

    recommended by Vierotchka
    Brendan_M
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    Image...

    Bush & Co are blameless? Oh, please... Bush & Co are just like Enron.

    Vierotchka
  •  

    Let this be a testament to our broken political system. When congress can't collaborate on an important issue because they're voting on party lines, everyone suffers.

    Pattyhax
  •  

    What if we had started 50, even 60 years ago? Where is the collective anger towards the private and public sector agencies and individuals who actively support American regression?

    Ian_Monet
  •  

    Never defend Bush. Never state he did anything good.

    This is the hate majority who want to Burn Bush alive and not in a holy way. He's smart enough to win both elections, whether legal or not (up in the air), start a war without being stopped, work for oil, do all kinds of things and only in the 11th hour are people finally fed up?

    Don't speak highly of him. Don't speak such like History surely will. Because it's apparent the ant can see far more of the forest than the birds and those ants know more than any bird. They know how many trees there are and they know how big the forest is.

    Don't speak well of Bush. Hate is all that they want because if you make him right in something that makes their dislike questionable and they cannot, ever, be wrong about who they hate.

    No matter if hating is disgusting thing to have.

    J_Jammer
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    Image...

    ...and they all plan to run away to where Ken now lives...

    where is Ken?

    twodee
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    @Bovey... and all of you... you said it SO well....

    Bush is totally at fault and the Republican Congress was totally to blame, and

    Pelosi's rise to the Speaker's position and the move to a Democratic-Majority Congress was Totally Responsible for ALL of the POSITIVE CHANGES that have occurred in our nation's energy policies for the past years, too...

    "--- oh, wait...." is right.

    blame goes both ways. both sides are to blame, and the sooner you quit blaming ONE side for EVERYTHING, the sooner we'll ALL have a chance at seeing some improvement.

    you think Pelosi's God's givt to everyone? she's been as ineffectual in "leading" us to solutions as she accused everyone else of before she was elected.

    enjoy your kool-aid.... maybe just a different flavor from mine, but laced with exactly the same poisons.

    plusaf
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    @Pattyhax..., re: "Let this be a testament to our broken political system. When congress can't collaborate on an important issue because they're voting on party lines, everyone suffers."

    THANK YOU.... ___YOU___ GOT IT!!!!

    plusaf
  •  

    I'm GLAD gas is $4.50 a gallon. It wakes people up. They drive less, they dump their friggin stompers, and they DEMAND better, alternative sources of energy.

    Bush's plan was crap.

    Notice his first 2 TOP demands were for OIL and NUCLEAR? (DIRTY OIL MAN CRAP)
    He's not trying to push alternative energy by perpetuating MORE oil and nuclear. That's a fact.
    That's like saying Bomb people to PEACE.

    The grants for clean energy would be stopped by the moretoriums put on solar etc (did you get that story plu?) and wouldn't happen with powerful OIL lobbyists shutting it down in the name of, get this: ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS!!!!!!?!?!?!?!!!? It's no child left behind/clear skies/Patriot Act etc etc all over again!
    Call it EXACTLY WHAT IT'S NOT...
    Complete LIES.

    Bush, you're a criminal, failed oil man, failed everything.

    Plusaf, this article reeks of oil and unsustainable dirty crap propaganda. Sorry man. It DOES.

    onechance

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