| on May 19, 2008, 01:20 PM E.S.T.
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There is always a point in time when reality
steps up to remind everyone that bad ideas come with a price to pay.
The long history of environmental bad ideas are now beginning to cause
food riots around the world with its campaign for biofuels and against
the energy that powers great economies and feeds the world.
On
May 14, Earthworks, one of the many environmental organizations
zealously trying to leave America and the rest of the world cold and
hungry released the text of a letter its attorney, Bruce Baizel, wrote
to Red Cavaney, the president of the American Petroleum Institute.
It
called upon API to “stop its multi-million dollar, multi-year
self-promotion campaign aimed at polishing its image during a time of
record high energy prices.” Earthworks told API it should take the
money devoted to its PR campaign and invest it in “clean energy
alternatives.”
The alternatives are solar and wind energy,
industries that exist primarily because of the subsidies granted to it
in the form of a hidden tax paid by everyone who is dependent on coal,
natural gas, and oil. Take away the subsidies and these alternative
forms of energy would fade away, as much for their inability to
significantly contribute to the nation’s energy needs, as for the way
they requires vast tracks of land to exist. Together, they represent
barely one percent of our current energy needs.
Earthworks is
about to initiate its own “No Dirty Energy” campaign “to alert the
public to the climate, ecosystem and community risks associated with
mining and burning the world’s dirtiest fuel sources…”
Labeling
coal and oil “dirty” is pure PR and ignores the fact that coal, a cheap
and abundant energy sources, provides just over fifty percent of
America’s electricity, an energy without which the entire nation would
cease to function. It ignores the way the Green’s campaign against oil
has for four decades thwarted the right of American’s to access and use
its national oil and natural gas reserves yet to be found and extracted
from 85% of our coastlines or the well-known fact that billions of
barrels of oil remain untapped in ANWR.
Take away these energy
sources and you cripple that nation’s agricultural community that
requires power to till the land, fertilizers to insure greater crop
yield, the ability to feed the livestock to feed a nation, and the
means to deliver food from the field to the table.
Even the
global warming-obsessed New York Times has recently editorialized in
favor of ending subsidies to the ethanol industry, but the real answer
is to end the massive biofuel—ethanol—industry that is entirely the
creation of a Congress that is just beginning to realize that its
massive mandates for this fuel additive is partially to blame for the
imbalance in the worldwide agricultural marketplace, affecting grains
other than corn.
The American Petroleum Institute is engaged in
a costly campaign to educate the public to the role that oil plays in
the maintenance of the nation’s economy. The vast majority of the oil
in the world is controlled by nations, many of whom would love to see
America fail so that they could expand their control over captive
populations in Africa, Asia, Russia, and elsewhere.
Only the
United States and a few Western, industrialized nations stand against
the expansion of communism and militant Islam. Europe is almost
entirely dependent on the importation of oil and natural gas. The
United States has restricted access to its own reserves of these energy
sources. We spend billions of dollars to insure that the sea lanes that
deliver these resources to ourselves and the rest of the world remain
open. We have invested blood and treasure to liberate Iraq, a nation
that sits atop one of the world’s great reserves of oil. We protect
Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states from the hegemonic ambitions of Iran.
But
Earthworks wants API to be silent about these harsh realities while
nations like Venezuela and Russia literally steal the assets and
abrogate agreements with the handful of investor-owned oil companies
that are capable of exploring and discovering these vital sources of
energy.
The Greens who want to reduce the Earth’s population and
its consumption of food and energy are silent about the anticipated
increase in worldwide population to an estimated eight billion, up from
today’s 6.4 billion, by 2050. We will need twice as much food and feed
to avoid massive famines that will make today’s food riots seem tame by
then. Instead, they insist on turning corn, soy, and other food crops
into ethanol. They insist on “clean” energy sources that are totally
inadequate to meet our present and future needs.
If we permit
Earthworks and the other environmental organizations to succeed, we
will be—as we already are—their victims, guaranteed to suffer famines
and the loss of the energy we need to be the beacon of freedom to the
world. Source
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