merrie says: [continued] substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect on the market, supply, price or distribution of oil, natural gas or other petroleum product in the United States." Er, OK. But, before we start suing distant sheikhs in exotic lands for violating the NOPEC act, why don't we start by suing Congress? After all, who "limits the production or distribution of oil" right here in the United States by declaring that there'll be no drilling in the Gulf of Florida or the Arctic National Mosquito Refuge? As Rep. Wasserman Schultz herself told Neil Cavuto on Fox News, "We can't drill our way out of this problem." Well, maybe not. But maybe we could drill our way back to $3.25 a gallon. More to the point, if the House of Representatives has now declared it "illegal" for the government of Saudi Arabia to restrict oil production, why is it still legal for the government of the United States to restrict oil production? [i] In fact, the government of the United States restricts pretty much every form of energy production other than the bizarre fetish du jour of federally mandated ethanol production. Nuclear energy? Whoa, no, remember Three Mile Island? (OK, nobody does, but kids and anyone under late middle age, you can look it up in your grandparents' school books.) Coal? Whoa, no, man, there go our carbon credits. OK, how about if we all go back to the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe, and start criss-crossing the country on wood-fired trains? Are you nuts? Think of the clear-cutting. We can't have logging in environmentally sensitive areas such as forests. Frum is right. Change is a constant.[/i... But, before we start suing distant sheikhs in exotic lands for violating the NOPEC act, why don't we start by suing Congress? After all, who "limits the production or distribution of oil" right here in the United States by declaring that there'll be no drilling in the Gulf of Florida or the Arctic National Mosquito Refuge?That's what I've been saying. That's what I've been saying.Government is such a jungle of confusion, where do we start with the class-action lawsuits? Pelosi, Reid et al. are the worst of the air-heads. It's just beyond frustrating! Even McCain was telling Hannity that ANWR is such a pristine region! Steyn is so good at stating the obvious and making it plain. Thanks for posting this merrie. I don't think our Congressmen have a problem with the price of gasoline, heating/cooling their homes, air-travel, or the prices at the grocery store. |
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