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Wednesday, August 20, 2008
John Stossel :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Idiocy of Energy Independence
by John Stossel
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It's amazing how ideas with no merit become popular merely because they sound good.

Most every politician and pundit says "energy independence" is a great idea. Presidents have promised it for 35 years. Wouldn't it be wonderful if we were self-sufficient, protected from high prices, supply disruptions and political machinations?

The hitch is that even if the United States were energy independent, it would be protected from none of those things. To think otherwise is to misunderstand basic economics and the global marketplace.

To be for "energy independence" is to be against trade. But trade makes us as safe. Crop destruction from this summer's floods in the Midwest should remind us of the folly of depending only on ourselves. Achieving "energy independence" would expose us to unnecessary risks -- such as storms that knock out oil refineries or droughts that create corn -- and ethanol -- shortages.

Trade also saves us money. "We import energy for a reason," says the Cato Institute's energy expert, Jerry Taylor, "It's cheaper than producing it here at home. A governmental war on energy imports will, by definition, raise energy prices".

Anyway, a "domestic energy only" policy (call it "Drain America First"?) is a fantasy. America's demand for oil is too great for us to supply ourselves. Electricity we could provide. Not with windmills and solar panels -- they are not yet close to providing enough -- but coal and nuclear power could produce America's electricity.

But cars need oil. We don't have nearly enough.

That doesn't keep the presidential candidates from preying on the public's economic ignorance.

"I have set before the American people an energy plan, the Lexington Project -- named for the town where Americans asserted their independence once before," John McCain said. "This nation will achieve strategic independence by 2025".

Barack Obama, promising to "set America on path to energy independence," is upset that we send millions to other countries. "They get our money because we need their oil". Continued...

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About The Author
John Stossel is an award-winning news correspondent and author of Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the Shovel--Why Everything You Know is Wrong.
 
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Subject: energy independence IS stupid
Herman, that is probably because you don't know anything about economics.

Autarky is a stupid idea. Energy independence is a stupid idea. Manufacturing and resource independence of any sort is a stupid idea.

Look at how well Latin and South America did in the 1950s through 1970s. Their policies were all about resource independence and they flopped hard. These ideas (dependency theory) have been thoroughly discredited.

Wanting energy independence will only make America's economy weaker and the American populus poorer. Stossel is right.

Herman - Don't know where to begin?
--
Or is it just that you don't have any basis for argument?

Stossel doesn't always write opinions that one enjoys hearing, but then neither does an oncologist.

But Stossel does his homework. If you want to take issue with his conclusions, why don't you do yours?


---
MuscleDaddy - The word "autarky" is used quite properly in this context, and is in neither intention nor effect a "Red Herring."

What else is the proposition of "energy independence" but a conscious and purposeful striving in the *DIRECTION* of autarky?




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"Autarky or economic self-sufficiency is a state of affairs where there is no foreign trade at all; every nation consumes only goods produced within its own borders. No contemporary nation is ready to admit openly that it strives toward autarky. But as every nation is anxious to restrict imports and as exports must needs fall concomitantly, we can characterize the economic policies of the last decade preceding the present war as autarkic."

-- Ludwig von Mises (1943)
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