Halloween is over. The “scary”
costumes are packed away. The monster/slasher movie extravaganza has concluded.
All that remains are several weeks of sugar highs.
But as winter sets in, America faces
real monsters: federal-government regulations that stifle energy production,
increase energy prices, kill jobs, squeeze family and business incomes, and
threaten living standards and productivity.
Millions of poor, black, Latino and
elderly Americans will bear the brunt of rising energy costs. Even middle class
families will have to decide whether to heat their homes or buy groceries or
medicine.
A recent USA Today story
revealed how our sluggish economy has impacted families and communities.
“Across the nation, the middle class share of the nation’s income is
shrinking,” the article stated. “The vast middle class has less of the pie than
it had before,” it continued, quoting Pew Research Center Executive Vice
President Paul Taylor.
In Reno, Nevada, the paper noted,
unemployment jumped from 4 percent in 2006 to 14 percent last year. Empty
storefronts and rows of home-for-sale signs are commonplace.
USA Today also mentioned New Bern, North Carolina, where most
middle class residents are retirees living on investments and fixed incomes.
Plummeting portfolio values have forced many of them to look for work in an
market where the trucking and boat and appliance manufacturing base has been
battered.
What USA Today did not do was
analyze the depressing problem.
In the case of Nevada, it could have
observed that the federal government owns 85 percent of the state. Once managed
under “multiple use” principles that allow mining, drilling, timber cutting,
and even grazing, snowmobiles and vehicles in many areas, it is now ruled with
little but environmental preservation in mind. Multiple use activities are
highly restricted or banned, and few business and employment opportunities
remain.
President Obama didn’t help either
state when he said, “When times are tough, you don’t blow a bunch of cash on
Vegas. You don’t go buying a boat.” In the wake of that remark, many singles,
families and companies took their vacations and conventions somewhere other
than Nevada, further increasing unemployment. Combined with his stated
intention to raise taxes on wealthy (boat and appliance buying) families, the
President didn’t help New Bern, either.
The ongoing legislative and
regulatory binge has kept businesses and investors on the sidelines, stifling
economic recovery. Actions on energy have been especially damaging, because
reliable, affordable energy is the key to living standards, jobs, and
everything we make, ship, eat and do.
Yet, the Interior Department and
Environmental Protection Agency are locking up more oil, gas and coal
prospects; delaying or denying onshore and offshore drilling permits; and
imposing countless costly regulations on electricity generation that is the
backbone of affordable energy for factories, workers and families. Despite the Solyndra,
SunPower and Fisker scandals, the Energy Department spent billions more to
subsidize expensive, intermittent green energy.
When the Democrat-controlled senate
wouldn’t pass cap-tax-and-trade, President Obama said he would go around
Congress and impose more rules on his own. EPA then decreed that carbon dioxide
is a dangerous, climate altering pollutant. However, CO2 is
essential to life on Earth: we exhale it and plants absorb it. The decision
will adversely affect factories, power plants, refineries and numerous other
facilities, costing hundreds of billions of dollars annually.
EPA’s ultra-expensive ozone rules
could affect 85% of all US counties. Its Maximum Achievable Control Technology
rules for power plants, cement kilns and other facilities will cost still more
jobs.
EPA insists its rules will improve health
and environmental quality. But as a report posted at www.AffordablePowerAlliance.com explains, there
is no medical or scientific basis for most of these claims. The agency needs to
consider how its policies will affect energy and reliability, business and
family energy bills, jobs, and people’s health and welfare.
EPA and other agencies recently
postponed some of their most costly regulations. After the 2012 elections,
however, many will likely be back. Going down this road will bring to America
what “green” energy policies, mandates, taxes and tariffs have inflicted on Britain.
Energy prices in the UK have
skyrocketed. One-fifth of all British households are in “fuel poverty,” spending
over 10 percent of their total incomes on gasoline and heating. Millions of
workers have lost their jobs, or will soon, as energy-intensive companies lay
people off, close their doors or outsource operations to China and India. A
recent government-commissioned report concluded that 2,700 people will die this
winter, because they cannot afford to heat their homes properly.
Poor and middle-class Americans
deserve a better future.
The federal government must stop
transferring money from productive sectors to green theory capitalists – and
fostering excessive legislation, taxation, regulation and litigation. It must
promulgate sensible laws and regulations, to protect citizens, consumers and
our environment from the unscrupulous, while allowing businesses and markets to
operate more freely and profitably.
“Going green” must turn the corner
from a marketing philosophy that does not carry its own weight, to a process
that involves real data and considers the impact on poor and minority
families.
That is how we can transform a
monstrous “green” federal government into a facilitator of sustainable jobs,
growth and revenue.
The
Rational Argumentator