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Green Disaster Hitting United States Hard Bad energy policy is starving America in the midst of plenty We have fossil fuels to last centuries, but environmental policy makes it useless A March 24, 2008 CNN News story makes a chilling point:
'You're working for gas now'
A new study
from the Oil Price Information Service, a research firm that tracks data Steve Hargreaves, CNNMoney.com staff
writer, put a human face on the frightening statistic. He interviewed Camden residents,
including Corey Carter, who spends a quarter of his
paycheck on gas. Blame environmental groups that won't
let us tap the vast supplies of oil, gas, and coal right here in America.
They push prices higher and higher by imposing artificial scarcity and
increasing imports. Camden's folks will hunt and fish no matter what the economy's doing. The local bait and tackle shop just had a big year. With many out of work, they don't have anything else to do - and they need the food. Hargreaves went to Uncle Redd's, a barbeque joint on the way out of town, and interviewed owner Andrea Finklea. She used to get over 100 people a day coming in for the chicken, ribs, and mac n' cheese. Now, they get 65 on a good day. Finklea told the CNN writer, "We're planning on cutting back on employees hours, that's a bad thing." Camden has a lot of bad things. William Malone, head of the
local Chamber of Commerce, told Hargreaves, "People are cutting back any way they can."
Malone also runs a local insurance company, where he's seen people buying
insurance with less coverage and
higher deductibles. That's bad enough without considering home heating prices. They bring a new problem: LIHEAP, the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, a government welfare handout, is already infested with non-profit groups like the Campaign for Home Energy Assistance, lobbying for more tax money to give to the poor instead of lobbying for more energy to make it affordable for proud people with low incomes. The group's name sounds noble until you realize it's just perpetuating poverty, not solving it. What will the politicians do? Go get American energy from American soil? Build energy supplies to lower energy prices? Not a chance. They'll put poor people on welfare, make them beggars, turn them into energy slaves - and buy their votes forever. Until the whole economy collapses. What will environmental groups do? Help increase our oil, gas and coal production? Not a chance. They'll get in the way, stop what production we have now, and smash anyone who opposes them. It's time for America to stand up to these bullies. Read the two books that are now alerting the public to these threats: Ron Arnold's Freezing in the Dark: Money, Power, Politics and The Vast Left Wing Conspiracy foresaw in 2007 the events affecting Camden, Alabama in 2008. This powerful 420-page exposé of the American Left is rapidly becoming a classic in political investigative reporting. Its final chapter, "The Energy Gap," lays bare the inner workings of the environmental movement and its utopian plans to convert the nation to renewable fuels that don't exist in useful amounts, and won't for decades. With his straightforward Energy Reality chart, Ron Arnold showed that 85% of all the energy America uses now comes from fossil fuels, the target of the global warming lobby. If we outlaw 85% of our energy - or drive up its price through artificial scarcity so no one can afford it - we will plunge our nation into an Energy Gap that could be fatal. and Energy Keepers Energy Killers: The New Civil Rights Battle by Roy Innis, chairman of the Congress of Racial Equality, makes the compelling point that access to abundant, affordable energy is essential to making our hard-won legal civil rights into real, living civil rights. This eloquent 120-page statement builds on the fundamental principle that energy is the "master resource" which makes all other resources usable. Without energy, all rights are meaningless. Roy Innis condemns the environmental elitists and politicians who want to cripple the fossil fuel economy with cap-and-trade schemes and other unworkable restraints, which will devastate low income families and minorities first and worst - and then, everybody. Boldly striking back at the Energy Killers, Roy Innis makes a convincing case that power must be wrested from them through non-violent civil rights action. Calling for an Energy Keepers movement to take on the Energy Killers, Roy Innis provides a clear roadmap to the steps needed to assure America's economic civil rights. RETURN TO CENTER FOR THE DEFENSE OF FREE ENTERPRISE HOME PAGE |