Tuesday, March 25, 2008

It's Time to Demand Expensive Oil

(Friends keep forwarding schemes to "punish" the oil companies. Every year, it seems, there's another e-mail round-robin urging us to buy no gas on a certain day, to boycott this or that company, to flood Congress with petitions demanding $2/gallon gas... Here's my reply to the latest.)
Dear Sally and Friends,
Boycotting Exxon/Mobil is certainly not a bad idea. That supercorporation's perfidy is indisputable, and taking it down a peg would harm no one.
But I fear that by demanding cheap gas, we are contributing to the problem, not the solution. We Americans somehow think we are entitled to gasoline at less than the cost of its extraction, refining and delivery--- not to mention the cost of supplying arms to our clients in the Middle East, supporting a massive military, invading countries that don't toe the line, dealing with the social costs of soldiers' deaths and traumas, etc., etc..
All this is very expensive, and even at $4/gallon we would be shielded from the true cost of our desire to drive wherever we, whenever we want, without noticing the expense.
Make gas $4 a gallon. Make it $10. Make us grow up, cope and get creative. Make the added cost a foresightful tax, not further windfall profit for the oil companies. (By the way, a very heavy, permanent tax on oil windfalls would go a long way toward discouraging further oil wars.) Apply the revenue to an immediate crash program to rebuild our deliberately dismantled public transportation systems and industries; to develop REAL alternative energy systems for heating, electricity and driving (and NOT the ludicrous, polluting petroleum-based ethanol scams touted by the right); to make America truly free, safe and strong as only a self-reliant, sustainably powered nation can be.
By demanding cheap gas, we're reinforcing the never-stated but very real argument that underlay the invasion of Iraq: "To hell with 9/11, WMDs and Saddam: What's OUR oil doing under THEIR sand?"
It's time to demand EXPENSIVE gas from a government committed to energy independence, to investment in America's economy and security, to lasting peace and a healthy planet.
I thank you for reading this far, if you have, and urge you to join me in helping America grow up and take responsibility for its legitimate needs and wasteful desires. Before it's too late.
Best wishes,
Bill


--- HistoryBuff

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Pentagon: There Was No Saddam/Al Qaeda Link

The obvious has been confirmed. So, if I may quote the absolutely necessary Juan Cole, "Now who will tell the US troops who marched into Iraq in 2003 with pictures of the World Trade Towers pinned to their backpacks? Ooops, guys, sorry. You were had by Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld." But, of course, it wasn't just the troops who were had. Almost the entire American public, vociferously misinformed by a supposedly "liberal" but actually right-of-center media establishment, believed the administration's obvious lies. The rest of the developed world, not anti-American but simply better informed, was not taken. Couple this non-revelation with Alan Greenspan's admission, last fall, that "the Iraq war is largely about oil," and we are at last enabled, by the most impeccable of conservative testimony, to discuss the war and the Bush Administration for what it really is. But, of course, neither of these stories has received or will receive more than a few lines, a few moments' attention on the major networks and cable news shows, or in the campaign speeches of "realist" John McCain or "liberal" Clinton. We refuse to know what we know, so we can avoid the unpleasantness of admitting we've done what we've done...

Monday, March 10, 2008

Bill Buckley's Monster

When he died late last month, William F. Buckley Jr. had lived long enough to see -- if not to admit -- that the movement he is credited with creating, post-WWII American conservatism, had become a monster.
In 1955, when Buckley used his father's money to create the National Review, he claimed to be addressing “disciples of truth, who defend the organic moral order” through a magazine that “stands athwart history yelling Stop.”
Any thinking person might imagine that the concept of calling history to a halt should have been D.O.A.. After all, American conservatism had been utterly discredited by the Great Depression and World War II, the disastrous results of laissez-faire capitalism and a schizoid, neocolonial-isolationist foreign policy. Unmitigated capitalism, colonialism, racism, segregationism, sexism: If the Atlantic Charter, the Four Freedoms and other statements of Allied intent meant anything, then these old "isms" and many more had to be challenged. The centuries-long hegemony of wealthy white males was in retreat from Little Rock to Dien Bien Phu.
Young Buckley wasn't intimidated by the fact that conservatism's essential ideas were buried or brain-dead. In this sense, his reinvention of conservatism was similar to Victor Frankenstein's ambition: to assemble a better entity by raising assorted bits from the grave.
His first book, "God and Man at Yale" (1951), protested against the allegedly "liberal" faculty's attempt to undermine students' self-flattering theological certainties. The book's essential subtext is that Yale is where God prefers to recruit Skull and Bones men and teach them how to rule the lesser peoples of His world.
Encouraged by this book's reception, Buckley embarked on a career as a sort of Tory Oscar Wilde, wittily attacking anything that challenged the “organic moral order” he saw reflected in his mirror.

Concerning the power of presidential speech...

(From my Facebook page ...) The world is being led to the brink of nuclear war by a commander-in-chief whose idea of diplomacy is tweeti...