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Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Carrie Lukas :: Townhall.com Columnist
Strong Arm Tactics Won't Help Consumers At the Pump
by Carrie Lukas
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Other than being over age 25 and a resident and citizen of the state, there are no qualifications to be a Member of Congress. If you can get the votes, you can become a Member. Yet anyone listening to recent discussions on Capitol Hill about gasoline prices can be forgiven for assuming hubris and economic ignorance are also required.

A headline-making exchange between Representative Maxine Waters and John Hofmeister, president of Shell Oil Company is just the latest and most egregious example. During questioning, Rep. Waters asked the oil executive to “guarantee” that the price of oil will go down if oil companies are granted authority to drill off U.S. shores. When Mr. Hofmeister failed to offer such a guarantee, Representative Waters issued a threat: “And guess what this liberal would be all about? This liberal would be all about socialize…basically taking over and the government running all of your companies.”

It’s a breathtaking moment of honesty from a member of Congress. So much for concerns about the limits of government authority; so much for respect for private property and free enterprise. Rep. Waters shares the worldview of most of the world’s dictators: if industry can’t produce the desired results, then government should simply seize their property.

Beyond the totalitarian impulse, the exchange reveals Ms. Waters’s ignorance about the role prices play in the economy. In a free market, prices help ensure that supply meets demand. The demand for energy has been growing, not just here in the United States but around the world. Unless supply keeps pace with demand, prices must rise. Rising prices send important signals to both consumers and producers: high prices offer producers an incentive to invest in producing more supply, while consumers are encouraged to buy only what is necessary, preventing shortages. The oil executive cannot promise that the prices will be lower in the future because he cannot know exactly how much demand will increase compared to supply.

Rep. Waters may think that if the federal government seized control of the energy industry, prices would fall, but she’d quickly learn (as did the Soviet bloc) that the laws of supply and demand are tough to escape.

Many will dismiss this exchange, made by one of the more radical, leftist Members, as out of step with the rest of the Majority. Yet the actual legislation that has been offered and passed in the name of bringing down oil prices reflects the same economic ignorance, and even shades of the same authoritarian impulse.

The “Gas Price Relief for Consumers Act,” for example, has a nice sounding title, but actually will do little to advance the cause of lowering gas prices. The legislation would empower the U.S. government to sue foreign governments under U.S. antitrust laws. Of course, the government would have a tough time enforcing any decisions rendered against OPEC countries. Such action would be more likely to encourage retaliation then to actually encourage an increase in oil production. Continued...

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About The Author

Carrie Lukas is the vice president for policy and economics at the Independent Women’s Forum and author of The Politically Incorrect Guide to Women, Sex, and Feminism.

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Subject: New Slave owners
Do you know why there is a reluctance to become indendent of foreign oil? Like all good crooks, we get a kickback from the oil we buy from all the oil producing Arabs except Iran and Iraq and it is applied to our national debt.
Regard less of what you think the oil cartel has an agenda and that is to control the world through oil. Now if you don't believe that look at what the high price gas and fuel oil has done to your budget. They have increased, mostly through necessity, all other products because of freight and transportation. Food is higher and all manner of plastics made from oil by products.
Forget this law of supply and demand. We have an oil well on Gull Island in Alaska that has enough oil and natural gas in it to supply the United States for 200 years and it's been classified ever since it came in the 70's by our wonderful secret holding government.
There were two eyewitnesses of importance who watched the well come in. One, an Executive of ARCO and the other whom I won't name as he has been threatened because he spilled the beans.
Sound like a spy movie? It's real folks, but try and get your Representatives to look into it. They are scared to death! I wrote one of mine and told him. His answer danced all around the issue.
Slavery didn't end with the emancipation of proclamation (which was in real life unconstitutional) it still exists. Instead of the South you now have the Oil cartel.

Energy solution
If congress suddenly gained wisdom, they could abandon talk of windfall profits taxes and offer a windfall profits free-for-all. That would get cheaper gasoline out in no time - to the limits of the market (which is overly regulated). Of course, you cannot refine what you don't drill - but the market would react quickly to the production of gasoline.
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