Failing schools, crime and single-parent households are just a few
of the challenges facing urban communities. Now, thanks to "Club Green"
- radical environmentalists and their supporters - soaring energy
prices join the list.
Club Green fights against oil exploration in Alaska and off our
coasts. A moratorium on offshore drilling was removed from a temporary
spending bill, ending a 26-year ban on new leases at the end of
September. While a hit to Club Green, House Appropriations Committee
Chairman David Obey (D-WI) points out this boon to domestic energy
production could be fleeting. Obey told reporters, "This next election
will decide what our drilling policy is going to be."
Club Green blocks the construction of new coal-fired power plants
that produce electricity. Plans for 59 coal-based power plants were
canceled in 2007, and plans for 50 others are now being challenged.
All this leads to higher energy prices and pain in the pocketbooks of those who can least afford it.
According to the Census Bureau's 2007 American Community Survey, the
annual median black household income was $34,001 and $40,766 for
Hispanics - well below the $50,740 national median. Additionally, 24.7
percent of blacks and 20.7 percent of Hispanics lived in poverty. As
energy prices climb, they lose a higher percentage of their take-home
pay to increased energy costs - leaving less for things such as
savings, education and health care.
Seeking empathy from Club Green may be asking too much.
Al Gore, Club Green's unofficial spiritual leader, lectured in
Washington, D.C. in July about phasing out fossil fuels. Despite his
righteous talk about stopping the "catastrophic" effects of global
warming, Gore can't seem to walk the walk.
Gore flies in private planes, and his Tennessee mansion uses almost
20 times the energy of the average American home. He was chauffeured to
his July speech in a gas-guzzling motorcade of two Lincoln Town Cars
and a Chevy Suburban SUV. There's nothing wrong with enjoying one's
wealth, but it's hypocritical when Gore asks others to sacrifice their
standards of living but does not seem to do so himself.
Naturally, powerful special interests such as the Sierra Club,
Natural Resources Defense Council and Environmental Defense Fund - with
operating budgets in the tens of millions of dollars paying for
lobbying, ads and grassroots organizing - also comprise Club Green.
Celebrities such as Leonardo DiCaprio and Sheryl Crow and Al Gore's
lawmaker pals in Washington are also members.
Businesses also comprise Club Green, but often for less than
altruistic reasons. General Electric, for instance, makes wind
turbines. It's therefore no surprise that GE subsidiary NBC Universal
promoted environmental policies during its "Green Week" earlier this
year by encouraging "...viewers and fans to Go Green with green-themed
programming across all of its channels and affiliates aimed at
entertaining, informing and empowering Americans to lead greener lives."
Despite wind power hype and boasts about other renewable energy
sources, 85 percent of our nation's energy comes from fossil fuels.
Energy from renewable sources such as wind and solar only currently
provide about seven percent of our power and cannot replace fossil
fuels anytime soon.
In its September 2008 report, the federal Energy Information Agency
predicted a 25 percent rise in heating oil prices and a 17 percent rise
in natural gas prices this winter as well as a 9.5 percent projected
increase in electricity costs in 2009. Adding that gasoline still
hovers near $4 a gallon, the public demands more domestic energy
production. A recent Rasmussen poll of likely voters found that 67
percent supported new offshore fossil fuel exploration.
Our nation is blessed with an abundant supply of natural resources.
The problem is that Congress, at the demand of Club Green, blocks
access to these resources at the peril of families.
What's highly disturbing about Club Green is that, like Gore, many
of its leaders are among the elite. They are the wealthy, famous and
politically-connected people who are largely immune to the sticker
shock of high energy costs.
Something is terribly wrong, because the wealth and the political
access of a few are being used to dictate how everyone should live -
effectively denying the majority their right to "life, liberty and the
pursuit of happiness."
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