Sunday, October 30, 2011

Global Warming RIP?

This is a key paragraph from an article by Victor Davis Hanson in the National Review Online entitled Global Warming – RIP?:

While the Obama administration was subsidizing failed or inefficient green industries, radical breakthroughs in domestic fossil-fuel exploration and recovery — especially horizontal drilling and fracking — have vastly increased the known American reserves of gas and oil. Modern efficient engines have meant that both can be consumed with little, if any, pollution — at a time when a struggling U.S. economy is paying nearly half-a-trillion dollars for imported fossil fuels. The public apparently would prefer developing more of our own gas, oil, shale, tar sands, and coal as an alternative to going broke by either importing more fuels from abroad or subsidizing more inefficient windmills and solar panels at home.
Entire article:    http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/281392/global-warming-rip-victor-davis-hanson

The current price of gasoline in Saudi Arabie is 91 cents per gallon.  In Kuwait it's 78 cents.  Just recently it was 23 and 16 cents.  As Casey Stengel always used to say, "Ya can look it up" - on the Internet.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

President Bush

To:      Laura Ingraham

From:  Jack West
               Fairfield, NJ

Dear Laura,

Is it any wonder that more people are blaming Bush than Obama for this sad economy when not even conservative talk show hosts can ever find anything creditable to say about President Bush?  Does everyone forget about the 54 months of economic growth and the Dow Jones Average steadily climbing toward the 14000 mark after the Bush tax cuts took effect?  For the biggest part of the time President Bush was in office the unemployment rate was five percent and lower.  And doesn’t anyone ever give any thought to the effect the assault by the OPEC countries had on our economy when they gradually brought the price of their oil to the peak of $147 a barrel in 2008?  This was the thing that had the most direct effect on bringing about the downturn and no one ever says anything about it.  The cost of energy for every household and industry and most directly transportation costs wrecked everyone’s budget.

 Obama has been allowed to get away with making the false claim over and over again that he inherited a down economy.  He came into his “inheritance” two years before he took office as a result of the 2006 elections when the Democrats gained vetoproof control of the purse strings.  The economy was humming along well at that time in spite of the Middle East War.  The Internet indicates the unemployment rate to have been at 4.6% at that time and in 2008 it was 5.8%.

And who do we have to thank for not letting us be energy independent as we could be?  We have as much natural gas in this country as Saudi Arabia has oil.  We have enough oil not only in Alaska and offshore but in many parts of the “lower 48” – enough for our own needs as well as being competitors on the world market.  The revenue that would generate would give us all the capital we would need for research and development of renewable sources of energy.  We don’t have to live like paupers while we wait to be served by green energy.

 I’d like to see an end to this constant talk about Bush being as bad as Obama.  On the contrary, those who know how much the country is indebted to him know that that is a false claim.  It’s not going to help to unseat our Apologizer-in-Chief in 2012 by being fearful of saying anything complimentary about President Bush.  

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Oil and the Department of Energy

This is one of several dozen statements in an e-letter entitled Walmart and the Morons that was forwarded to me: 

g.. The Department of Energy was created in 1977 to lessen our dependence on foreign oil. It has ballooned to 16,000 employees with a budget of $24 billion a year and we import more oil than ever before.

We use oil whether radical environmentalists like it or not and we don't have to rely on foreign hostile countries for our needs.  We not only have enough for ourselves right here but enough to make us competitive on the world market.   The current price for gasoline in Saudi Arabia, according to the Internet,  is 22 cents a gallon.  In Kuwait it's 16 cernts.  The prosperity we would enjoy by using our own energy supplies of oil and natural gas would provide all the capital needed for research and development of renewable sources of energy.