Saturday, December 6, 2008

Its not like I LIKED paying $200.00 to fill up my truck...

But the falling price of a barrel of oil does concern me.

I was raised in Texas by an Oil and Gas man...It was a great life and that counts going through the 1980's when the price of a barrel of oil bottomed out. I remember friends' dads loosing their jobs and royalty checks on oil derricks that use to be in the thousands dropping to just pennies. It was a tough time, but oil and gas people are tough and Texans are even tougher....

This drop is different. There are countries out there now that NEED the price of oil to stay high - DANGEROUS countries. Countries that have shown they have no problem marching their armies onto someone else's soil. Russia.....Iran.....Venezuela. These are the big 3, but there are some smaller countries that would back these bad boys up - and bad boy not in a good way...

Oil is oil once you get it out of the ground, but is very different while its in the ground. Depending on the locale, it is EXPENSIVE to get it out of the ground - this is where Iran and Venezuela finds itself. In order to make money, they need a higher barrel price. Russia has based its entire economy on oil and we know how greedy they are - they want more - more money, more oil, more land, more control, more power.

It is not a good time in our economy to have a high gas price, but its not a good time in our National Security to have low oil prices.

What we as a country needs to do is no longer rely on foreign oil. We could do this within the next 5 years - less I bet if we were in a bind and the government backed off. Did you know that the US Military produces its own oil? How? Coal to oil. This country - the USA - has the largest coal deposits that if we turned it into oil would make our oil reserves larger than Saudi Arabia.

Imagine being able to tell OPEC to shove it....Imagine being able to fill the USA coffers with money from countries that are "friendlies". We would be able to take care of ourselves as well as offer a bit of security to Europe who fears Russia and the control they are trying to wield by threatening to turn off the spigot, so to speak.

Joe Biden has flat out said we will never use Coal for energy - making an electric coal fire plant - FINE you wiener, turn our coal to oil.... I am not a hard woman, I can compromise.

This is where I continue my harping on contacting your representatives. Tell them that producing our own oil from our own resources helps the economy by producing jobs and revenue, keeping prices low as well as protecting us a little in regards to National Security.

If gas breaks a buck, I fear for our safety....


Pray, Praise, Prepare

3 comments:

Shy Wolf said...

Aside from the Dark Lord definitely stating he's going to shut down the coal mines, I don't see the oil companies far behind. The moment some green weinie comes up with what he touts as being the cat's meow for the environment and the Dark Lord's EPA get wind of it... bye bye oil.
Russia, Argentina, Mexico, Iran- there isn't one nation on the continent that doesn't want to pump every drop of oil it can away from the 'environmentalist yanquis'. And war has never stopped them in the past, it won't in the future.
Shy

Anonymous said...

USA: A NATION IN DANGER: SAVE USA FROM CAPITALISM !!

CAPITALISM IS POVERTY, DEATH, IGNORANCE AND SLAVERY !!

http://nation-in-danger.blogspot.com/2008/08/captalism-slavery-ignorance_12.html

Capitalism is based on the concept that economics is that which examines man's needs, which are unlimited and how to satisfy these unlimited needs. The system depends upon the separation of church and state or in other words, the separation of the Creator from life's affairs. The concept of freedom plays a major role in the Capitalist ideology. Freedom is guaranteed by the state, therefore, man is totally free to satisfy his needs in any manner possible as long as he does not legally infringe on the freedom of others. One needs only to look onto the streets around us to see the devastating results of this form of system. It is because of the freedom of satisfying needs that the pornography and alcohol/drug industry are two of the biggest profit making businesses in the Capitalist system. Is this the type of society in which we want to live and raise our children?

Capitalism is also based on the theory of relative scarcity. This means that there always has to be a real or as in the majority of cases, a forces insufficiency of commodities to meet the needs of the people. This is not in keeping with the reality life. Today, there are more than enough goods and commodities to satisfy the needs of everyone, but because this in fact, contradicts the principle of relative scarcity, some people are left without the fulfillment of their basic needs of food, shelter, and clothing while others seem to have too much of one or more. This theory divides the society such that a small percentage of people hoard almost all the wealth while the rest of society struggles to have a home and food.



Capitalism Increases Poverty

We all know that world hunger and world poverty are paramount problems for our young generation to address. What could be more problematic than the systematic denial of basic needs such as food, shelter, clothing and clean drinking water? What’s irking is that these basic needs could be provided for all, yet still there are billions of people in this world who continue to suffer from poverty and malnutrition. In my talk this evening I hope to convey to you, number one, the seriousness of these problems; two, to explain from a class conscious perspective explain why these problems exist, and three, what can be done, since yes, there is a solution.



First, I’d like to elaborate on the seriousness of poverty today. Right now there are more than 3.1 billion people in the world living on less than $2 a day. Another telling fact is that the net worth of the 358 richest billionaires is equal to the combined income of the poorest 45% of the world’s population. 45% translates into 2.3 billion people! Nearly a billion people in just the Third World are landless or have too little land available to them to feed their households. In the advanced countries, 100 million people live below the poverty line, 5 million of them without homes.

Closer to home, here in the United States, the income disparity is now the widest it has been since the 1929 stock market crash and it is continuing to grow. These previous examples illustrate the unequal distribution of wealth, an irreversible symptom of the ailing capitalist system. Capitalism is characterized by perpetuated poverty that results from, among other attacks on the working class, workers’ wage cuts, an increase in the cost of living without an increase in minimum wage and layoffs, all motivated by capitalism’s drive for profit profit. Remember, the income disparity continues to grow, so it’s true that, as the old saying goes, the rich get richer while the poor get poorer.

But, one may ask, doesn’t the government provide poor and hungry people with social programs such as welfare and health care? Yes and no. Programs exist, but they were never adequate and the capitalists cutting federal funding for these benefits and this makes many people feel hopeless and angry. Yet, their sentiment is quickly pacified when a somber and seemingly sincere politician is quoted, “that there isn’t enough in the budget to cover these benefits for the poor.”

This is entirely false. Did you know that “wealthfare” for the rich costs us about 3.5 times as much as the $130 billion we spend each year on welfare for the poor? And since the publication of that figure, the 1996 welfare “reform” bill has cut that amount of money given out for welfare dramatically. We weren’t able to end poverty before the welfare reform bill, so how does one expect the poor to feed themselves and get out of poverty when there is even less money and less social programs spent than before?

So where are the priorities of the United States, the wealthiest, and supposedly, the most benevolent and free of nations? Taking a look at where the majority of U.S. subsidies end up we can see a telling reflection of those priorities. A total of $327 billion a year is spent on the military for example. Of course the argument goes that the military provides semi-decent jobs, but let’s look at what $1 billion can do when spent on the military compared to more socially beneficial purposes. $1 billion to the military created 25,000 jobs. If that same figure were spent on social programs it could create 30,000 jobs in mass transit, 36,000 jobs in housing, 41,000 jobs in education or 47,000 jobs in health care.

U.S. military spending is far from the best solution for the Third World as well. And while countries that are made are made subordinate to the U.S. by having their cities and coutnrysides bombed and destroyed end up needing their infrastructure rebuilt, this is a very double edged sword in terms of creating jobs to say the least. But the U.S. doesn’t just utilize the weapons they make; they sell them and are in fact the largest seller of weapons in the world. These weapons are used by U.S. puppet governments in other countries to ensure the poor are kept poor, subordinate, landless and hungry.

Let me give you a good example of what I mean. During the 1950s in Nicaragua there was a cotton bonanza. Campesinos who worked the land to grow crops and feed their families were forced off their land. When they resisted, the Somoza dictatorship’s National Guard burned their homes and crops. None other than the U.S. Marines set up the Nicaraguan National Guard. Why? In order to secure a highly profitable market at the expense of land that provided Campesinos both with life giving food and some money from the corps they grew to sell. This, once again, is the nature of capitalism, folks. They compromise the meeting of basic human needs to ensure an increased profit.

Another product of capitalism that sinks countries further into poverty is the policies of the IMF and World Bank. These institutions are intended to smooth world commerce by reducing foreign exchange restrictions and tariffs, among other things. By using its funds to bail out governments that are confronting problems these bastions of capitalism ensure that trade can continue with minimum interruption. Basically, money is lent to these bankrupt countries, which are already deeply in debt, and place as conditions for these loans economic restructuring that involves cutting or eliminating food and social programs for the poor and hungry.

I hope I’ve shown that the system of capitalism is exploitative and oppressive. That only the rich benefit from this system while the poor are further trampled under its heel. From all of this we can surely deduce that it is, above all, not a democratic system. It does not represent the interests of the majority, because the majority are the poor and hungry. This is just is. According to Joseph Collins of Food First, the root cause of hunger isn’t scarcity of food or land; rather, it’s a scarcity of democracy! Democracy has everything to do with hunger because democracy carries with it the principle of accountability. Democratic structures are those in which people have a say in decisions that affect their well being. Leadership can be kept accountable to the needs of the majority. The U.S., the world’s self-appointed policeman, has lacked the fundamentals of democracy from the beginning. Alexander Hamilton, one of our founding fathers, went so far as to say “the mass of people seldom judge or determine right,” and therefore “a permanent body composed of the rich and well-born should check the imprudent of democracy.”

There are examples, though of how this unfair and unjust state of affairs has been overcome to benefit the poor and huddled masses of hungry and homeless. Here is how a revolution overcame poverty and hunger. In 1959, the Cubans defeated the U.S. backed Batista dictatorship. And afterward, they threw off the chains of capitalism with a socialist revolution. After the revolution, Cuba is still considerably less wealthy than its neighbor 90 miles north, but through a planned socialist economy, according to a Food First report, all citizens are guaranteed enough rice, pulses, oil, sugar, meat and other food to provide them with 1,900 calories a day. And this is the face of the ongoing U.S. embargo against Cuba.

I drive my tractor in pearls... said...

Marxist - congratulations on mastering the ability to copy and paste.

Capitalism is the ONLY thing that will raise people out of poverty. Freedom is the ONLY choice.

There have been many "experiments" where nations touted Marxism/Socialism and they have all FAILED or have sentenced their people to lives of poverty, starvation, lines for basics, death.

If you can give me a successful Socialist nation, be my guest. Countries where people risk DEATH to flee, not a good choice...

I have a theory about people who tout Marxism - they are too pathetic to take a chance on themselves and pin their success or failures on themselves or they are petty and jealous of those around them who HAVE risked and been rewarded.

Grow up, get a job, and dont expect those that do work to pay for your life.

And by the way, the PRIVATE sector gives MORE to charities than all the GOVTs combined...