Link to original article: http://www.townhall.com/columnists/WalterEWilliams/2008/06/04/dumb_or_ill-informed
Dumb or Ill-Informed - Walter E. Williams
Wednesday, June 04, 2008
What assumptions do congressmen make about the American people? Do they
assume that we're dumb or ill-informed about the energy problems we are
experiencing? Every time there has been a huge spike in gasoline
prices, Congress hauls oil company executives before their committees
to accuse them of greed, obscene profits and price-fixing. One federal
investigation after another of supposed oil company misconduct turns up
nothing to substantiate congressional allegations. Unfortunately, the
congressional hearings make front page news and lead the evening
television news, but the results of federal investigations that follow
are only casually mentioned deep in the body of newspapers and get
little or no time on the evening television news. If news media people
had an ounce of integrity, they would highlight the federal
investigation findings that undermine congressional charges of oil
company misconduct and they would question the congressmen who made
those charges.
Americans might prefer heroes-and-villains explanations to problems to
reality-based explanations. A politically satisfying explanation for
today's $4 a gallon price, when it was less than $2 a gallon a couple
of years ago, is because oil company executives have all of a sudden
become greedy in their pursuit of "obscene" profits. As such,
congressmen, as our heroes, should call these greedy men on the carpet
and take sanctions against them in the forms of windfall profits tax,
price controls and other measures to take away their ill-gotten gains
-- never mind the effects of the 1980 windfall profits tax. According
to the Congressional Research Service, the 1980 windfall profits tax
had the effect of decreasing domestic production by 3 percent to 6
percent, thereby increasing American dependence on foreign oil sources
by 8 percent to 16 percent.
Controlling the price of anything is very difficult and it can only be
accomplished through the force of government, mostly by restricting
supply. The U.S. Congress is a major player in oil supply restriction,
and OPEC nations must be laughing all the way to the bank. Congress has
banned energy exploration in 85 percent of our coastal waters.
Ironically, China, in conjunction with Cuba, is drilling for oil nearer
to our coastline than U.S. oil companies are permitted. According to
"We don't have to take $4 gas prices -- we can drill," written by
Sterling Burnett in the Houston Chronicle (5/21/08), "It is estimated
that beneath America's coast lies enough oil to fuel 60 million cars in
the United States for 60 years and enough natural gas to heat 60
million homes for 160 years. … If allowed access to American oil
reserves in Alaska and off our coastline, American oil companies could
increase our country's reserves an estimated fivefold, taking the
United States from 11th place to fourth among the countries with proven
oil reserves."
You say, "What about the environmental impact?" Contrary to the
hysterical claims made by environmental extremists, caribou and other
wildlife have expanded and flourished in and around Alaska's Prudhoe
Bay, unaffected by the oil and gas development. What's more, Burnett
points out that the "two leading environmental groups, the Audubon
Society and the Nature Conservancy, have allowed oil and gas production
on several of their most important and unique nature preserves."
Environmentalists come to their senses when non-drilling philosophy
costs them something. It's two-faced hypocrisy. At times I've suggested
that the best way to get oil exploration in the Alaska National
Wildlife Reserve is to give the land to environmentalists. You can bet
they wouldn't sit on billions of dollars of oil and gas.
The true villain in our having to cough up $60, $70 or $80 to fill our
gas tanks is the U.S. Congress caught in the grip of environmental
extremists. But if reality is too difficult to swallow, we can continue
to blame and support the congressional attack on oil executives, turn
food into oil and think of other crackpot "solutions."
Copyright © 2008 Salem Web Network. All Rights Reserved.