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The Necessity of the People

Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison has written a great op-ed on why the ethanol mandates passed by Congress were a mistake and why the United States should accelerate all forms of domestic energy production – including the drilling for crude oil.

In her article, the Senator explains how ethanol mandates are leading to higher costs of food at home and the food riots that have been breaking out abroad. Something I didn’t know, she also claims the demand for biofuels is leading to global deforestation as parts of the Amazon basin are being cleared to make room for biofuel production.

The key, Ms. Hutchison says, is increasing energy supply. She is exactly right. What she doesn’t say, but something that is every bit as important, is that a Democratically-controlled Congress will not pass the legislation needed to correct our energy woes unless they hear overwhelmingly from the American people.

If you are an American, this is your problem, too. Write your congressman and insist on a solution, especially if your representative is a Democrat.  

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Earth Out of Balance

Happy Earth Day!

Founded in 1970 by then U.S. Senator Gaylord Nelson, Earth Day has sought for nearly four decades to increase awareness of the many environmental issues facing our planet. Also created the same year was the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Efforts to make the earth a cleaner, healthier place for the sake of its inhabitants should be applauded, and there is little doubt remarkable progress has been made over the last 38 years.

We are in an era, however, in which the pendulum has swung the other way. The major problems facing our world today are not the result of environmental pollution. Rather, they are being caused by the attempted solutions thereto. 

Take, for instance, the hot-button topic of the day: global warming. (You might have heard it referred to more recently as “climate change,” for studies have shown that the Earth has, in fact, been in a cooling period for the last decade. Ironically, back in the early ‘70s when Earth Day began, scientists feared a looming ice-age for the Earth appeared to be getting cooler then, too.) 

Nevertheless, some still believe global warming is a greater threat than terrorism. As a result, environmental extremists have put pressure on our politicians to obstruct attempts to increase domestic drilling for crude oil.  (Environmentalists are also the primary reason there has not been a refinery built in the United States since 1983.) 

What happens when we restrict supply to the global oil market? Prices go up. Every politician running for national office the last few years has said, “We need to curb our addiction to foreign oil.” Unfortunately, by this, few actually mean drilling for more domestic oil. Instead, they mean developing alternative energy sources – which is great, by the way. We’re just not there yet – these sources of energy are not yet profitable.

Profit or not, when has that ever stopped the government? Not this time, either, as our politicians are now mandating the use of Ethanol, which is made from corn – the same corn used to feed cattle.

What happens when we increase demand for corn on the open market? Food prices rise. And the result of this is the current world hunger crisis – for which you can thank your friendly environmentalist.

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