Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Conservatives Work Harder than Liberals


At least, that's how it appears when comparing the lazy, liberal bastards at Truthout.org and Crooks&Liars with uber-Right-Wing Glenn Reynolds at Instapundit.

Oh, don't get me wrong, I vastly prefer the editorial content at Truth and at Crooks to that offered at Instapundit, there just isn't as much of it. The two former generally begin posting HOURS after Instapundit and knock off hours earlier. Instapundit posts as much as Truth and Crooks combined.

My impression? Being Liberals, the folks at Truthout and Crooks, they probably stayed up late burning bowls and can't roll out of the rack until close to noon. Instapundit, being an uptight conservative, he's up early with his coffee, slamming out Right-wing hyperbole twice as early and twice as long as our Liberal boys.

I understand Crooks&Liars is bankrolled by Greek tycoon George Soros, and supporting the liberal cause, the man ought to get his money's worth. So, I have an offer for Mr. Soros: Fire your boy, John Amato, and hire me. I promise to outblog Instapundit and carry our Liberal banner farther on a daily basis.

Saturday, February 25, 2006

If Bush has Lost Buckley, He's Lost Everybody with a Brain (even Republicans)

Unfortunately, Bush is Too Stupid to Know It

In 1968, following the Tet Offensive in Vietnam, Walter Cronkite advocated during a broadcast of the CBS Evening News that it was time to admit defeat. Lyndon Johnson famously remarked, ""If I've lost Cronkite," replied President Lyndon Johnson, "I've lost middle America." Later that same year, President Johnson would refuse the Democratic nomination and watch Richard Nixon defeat Hubert Humphrey to claim the White House.

Well, George Bush is not running again (though, given his contempt for the Constitution, I suppose the amendment limiting him to two terms is suspect), but despite all that, his Iraq invasion and occuption plan has essentially jumped the couch just like Johnson's Vietnam. The boat didn't float. The dog won't hunt. We failed. Now, it's a matter of, to paraphrase John Kerry, how many more men and women will be asked to die for a mistake before we can get them home. And, also, about how many more billions of dollars of American treasure we'll piss away across the sands of Iraq before we say "Enough."


As Iraq now begins its final descent into civil war, into the completed form of misery and despair, any aspirations and illusions of "Freedom being on the March" or "America Standing Down as Iraqis Stand Up" [Factoid: today, the Pentagon announced that the number of Iraqi battalions capable of operating independently of US forces decreased from one to zero] can now be understood as what they were: naively shallow sloganeering at best, outright lies and dishonesty at worst.

Yes, we failed, but don't take my word for it. I'm a Democrat. And, as anyone now realizes, it's impossible for any Democrat to find fault in the policies of George W. Bush without being accused of partisan politics and hysterical posturing. The Left is simply not allowed to comment on the actions of the ruling Right.

No, I won't call it the goat-fuck it is. Let the intellgentsia of the Republican Right say it. Which brings us to the Cronkite reference. William F. Buckley is the definitive voice of conservative politics, is throwing in the towel, the Right's Cronkite, the most trusted man in conservative politics.


This just in: Buckley's calling the spade a spade and saying Iraq, the project, didn't work. And so, effectively, it's over. Because if George W. Bush has lost William F. Buckley, he's lost everybody but the Wingnuts and Bedwetters.

Iraq, mr friends, is now incontrovertibly DONE.


IT DIDN'T WORK
By William F. Buckley
The National Review
Friday 24 February 2006

"I can tell you the main reason behind all our woes - it is America." The New York Times reporter is quoting the complaint of a clothing merchant in a Sunni stronghold in Iraq. "Everything that is going on between Sunni and Shiites, the troublemaker in the middle is America."

One can't doubt that the American objective in Iraq has failed. The same edition of the paper quotes a fellow of the American Enterprise Institute. Mr. Reuel Marc Gerecht backed the American intervention. He now speaks of the bombing of the especially sacred Shiite mosque in Samara and what that has precipitated in the way of revenge. He concludes that "The bombing has completely demolished" what was being attempted - to bring Sunnis into the defense and interior ministries.

Our mission has failed because Iraqi animosities have proved uncontainable by an invading army of 130,000 Americans. The great human reserves that call for civil life haven't proved strong enough. No doubt they are latently there, but they have not been able to contend against the ice men who move about in the shadows with bombs and grenades and pistols.

The Iraqis we hear about are first indignant, and then infuriated, that Americans aren't on the scene to protect them and to punish the aggressors. And so they join the clothing merchant who says that everything is the fault of the Americans.

The Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, elucidates on the complaint against Americans. It is not only that the invaders are American, it is that they are "Zionists." It would not be surprising to learn from an anonymously cited American soldier that he can understand why Saddam Hussein was needed to keep the Sunnis and the Shiites from each others' throats.

A problem for American policymakers - for President Bush, ultimately - is to cope with the postulates and decide how to proceed.

One of these postulates, from the beginning, was that the Iraqi people, whatever their tribal differences, would suspend internal divisions in order to get on with life in a political structure that guaranteed them religious freedom.

The accompanying postulate was that the invading American army would succeed in training Iraqi soldiers and policymkers to cope with insurgents bent on violence.

This last did not happen. And the administration has, now, to cope with failure. It can defend itself historically, standing by the inherent reasonableness of the postulates. After all, they govern our policies in Latin America, in Africa, and in much of Asia. The failure in Iraq does not force us to generalize that violence and antidemocratic movements always prevail. It does call on us to adjust to the question, What do we do when we see that the postulates do not prevail - in the absence of interventionist measures (we used these against Hirohito and Hitler) which we simply are not prepared to take? It is healthier for the disillusioned American to concede that in one theater in the Mideast, the postulates didn't work. The alternative would be to abandon the postulates. To do that would be to register a kind of philosophical despair. The killer insurgents are not entitled to blow up the shrine of American idealism.

Mr. Bush has a very difficult internal problem here because to make the kind of concession that is strategically appropriate requires a mitigation of policies he has several times affirmed in high-flown pronouncements. His challenge is to persuade himself that he can submit to a historical reality without forswearing basic commitments in foreign policy.

He will certainly face the current development as military leaders are expected to do: They are called upon to acknowledge a tactical setback, but to insist on the survival of strategic policies.

Yes, but within their own counsels, different plans have to be made. And the kernel here is the acknowledgment of defeat.

Friday, February 24, 2006

Hey, If you play Magic . . .


This is the card to get:

FOX News Asks: All Out Civil War: Is It a Good Thing?

Gotta Hand it to the Right Wing: They're nothing if not relentlessly positive, regardless how tragic an event might be. In fact, when London was bombed last year, Fox News' Brian Kilmeade mused about whether this might be a good thing for the West. Yes, for the folks at FOX, more than 50 dead Britons and 700 more injured and maimed is cause to celebrate the bonding of the West.

Now, the Foxies are debating whether Iraq's drawing towards civil war is a good thing.

Let's check the definition first, shall we?

A civil war is a war in which the parties within the same country struggle for national control of state power. As in any war, the conflict may be over other matters such as religion, ethnicity, or distribution of wealth. Some civil wars are also categorized as revolutions when major societal restructuring is a possible outcome of the conflict.

Now, last I checked, war was hell. I mean, it may be called a Civil War, but frankly there's nothing civil about it. It's nasty intercine strife. Bombs and bullets and blood and horror, people losing limbs, love ones and their lives. It is an altogether nasty thing that would see, in Iraq, tens of thousands if not hundreds of thousands of Iraqi men, women and children die.

But at FOX, they debate whether or not a bunch of innocents being killed is a good thing. Wow. That's not journalism. That's sociopathology.

You say potatoe, I say . . . Ghoulish.

Thursday, February 23, 2006

Wealthy Vampires Drain Life from Poor


No wonder people, when surveyed, don't feel rosey about the Hollow Economy. They make less than they did five years ago. At least, regular folks do.

At one end of the economic scale, the poorest 10% saw their net-worth fall from NEUTRAL to, on average, owing Da Man $1,400 per family.

On the other end? The richest 10% saw their net assets, after debts are subtracted, rise 6% to an average of $448,000 per family.

Yeah. So, see, the way I see it, the RICH FOLKS STOLE from the POOR. Stole, siphoned, transferred, use whatever term you like, but all the same, WE WUZ ROBBED.

I like the image of cold, undead vampires sinking their fangs into the necks of the poor to feed their greedy, ravenous appetites for wealth.

But I've got a warning for you rich folks. Either get the problem fixed and start sharing with others, or you get the French Revolution and The Terror. But you can't keep us down forever. No, because we're coming for you. Soon. We're coming with knives and we're coming with guns and we're coming with The Revolution at our backs.

Yo, Rich Bastard? Work with us to fix the problem or we're coming.

Survey Says Average U.S. Family Income Declines
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 6:28 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- After the booming 1990s when incomes and stock prices were soaring, this decade has been less of a thrill ride for most American families.

Average incomes after adjusting for inflation actually fell from 2001 to 2004, and the growth in net worth was the weakest in a decade, the Federal Reserve reported Thursday.

Many families were struggling in the aftermath of the 2001 recession and the bursting of the stock market bubble in 2000, the Fed's latest ''Survey of Consumer Finances'' showed. The comprehensive look at household balance sheets comes every three years.

Average family incomes, after adjusting for inflation, fell to $70,700 in 2004, a drop of 2.3 percent when compared with 2001. That was the weakest showing since a decline of 11.3 percent from 1989 to 1992, a period that also covered a recession.

The average incomes had soared by 17.3 percent in the 1998-2001 period and 12.3 percent from 1995 to 1998 as the country enjoyed the longest economic expansion in history.

The median family income, the point where half the families made more and half made less, rose a tiny 1.6 percent to $43,200 in 2004 compared with 2001.

Economists said the weakness in the most recent period was understandable given the loss of 2.7 million jobs from early 2001 through August of 2003, when the country was struggling with sizable layoffs caused by the recession, the terrorist attacks and corporate accounting scandals.

The weak income and the stock market decline in the early part of the decade, which wiped out $7 trillion of paper wealth, had an adverse impact on family balance sheets.

Net worth, the difference between assets and liabilities such as loans, rose by 6.3 percent in the 2001-2004 period to an average of $448,200. That gain was far below the huge increases of 25.6 percent from 1995 to 1998 and 28.7 percent from 1998 to 2001, increases that were fueled by soaring stock prices.

The 2001-2004 performance was the worst since net worth actually declined by 9.9 percent in the 1989-1992 period.

The report showed that the slowdown in the accumulation of net worth would have been even more sizable except for the fact that homeowners have enjoyed big gains in the value of their homes in recent years.

The gap between the very wealthy and other income groups widened during the period.

The top 10 percent of households saw their net worth rise by 6.1 percent to an average of $3.11 million while the bottom 10 percent suffered a decline from a net worth in which their assets equaled their liabilities in 2001 to owing $1,400 more than their total assets in 2004.

''This is the continuing story of the rich getting richer,'' said David Wyss, chief economist at Standard & Poor's in New York. ''Clearly, the gains in wealth are going to the top end.''

Democrats used the new report to blast President Bush's economic policies, contending it would be wrong to make permanent his tax cuts which primarily benefited the wealthy.

''These statistics show why, even though GDP is rising, most people do not feel better off,'' said Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.

The Fed survey found that the percentage of Americans who owned stocks, either directly or through a mutual fund, fell by 3.3 percentage points to 48.6 percent in 2004, down from 51.9 percent in 2001. Analysts said this was an indication that investors burned by plunging stock prices in the decade's early years have been leery about getting back into the market.

The share of Americans' financial assets invested in stocks dipped to 17.6 percent in 2004, down from 21.7 percent in 2001. But reflecting the housing boom, the share of assets made up by home ownership rose to 50.3 percent in 2004, compared with 46.9 percent in 2001.

The Fed survey found that debts as a percent of total assets rose to 15 percent in 2004, up from 12.1 percent in 2001. Mortgages to finance home purchases were by far the biggest share of total debt at 75.2 percent in 2004, unchanged from the 2001 level.

There was concern that families may start to feel even more squeezed as the cost of financing their debts increases along with rising interest rates.

While surging home values have supported consumer spending in recent years, analysts worry about the economic impact if, as expected, the home price surge begins to slow this year.

''This report shows a race between factors boosting net worth such as home ownership and factors pushing the other way such as weak wage growth,'' said Jared Bernstein, senior economist at the liberal Economic Policy Institute, a Washington think tank. ''Unless we start to see better income growth from jobs and wages, it is hard to see major gains in net worth for the typical family.''

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

ISLAMOPHOBIA?

ISLAMOPHOBIA?

That's the headline on the conservative DrudgeReport.com.

Here's my corresponding headline:

ARE YOU ON CRACK?

Why, Drudge, you insolent little prick!

For four years, you and George Bush and the Far-Right of the Republican party have whipped us into a frenzy, beating us over the fricking head with Orange Alerts and ShoeBomb scares and mysterious Anthrax packages, Arabs with WMDs (they never had), phantom crop-dusters set to spray us with killer bio-weapons . . .

Damn straight we've got a case of the Islamo-jitters. The jits are the result of FOUR YEARS of GOVERNMENT-INDUCED PARANOIA.

Health Care Fiasco

Within 10 years, it's estimated that in the US economy, 20% will be spent on health care. This needs needs needs to be fixed.

Did you know . . .

That America ranks 37 in infant mortality rates, behind Cuba and even Aruba?

That America ranks 36 in life-expectancy behind Jordan and Cyprus?

That in the American HMO health-care system, 31 cents of every dollar paid out goes to cover "administrative" costs? This is the voice-mail jail system you go through when calling to get a doctor visit covered, the multiple denial letters the HMO send out, trying not to pay, the paperwork between the pharmacy and the HMO and the PROFIT, big profit, of the HMOs. This number is almost twice Canada's number of 16.7%.

That in 2002, the United States spent $5,267 per capita on health care—53 percent more than Switzerland, the next-highest-spending country.

This is something every American, Republican, Democrat and Independent alike, should know: the System isn't working and it needs to get fixed and get fixed NOW!

GET LOCAL! GET VOCAL! GET LOUD!

Health spending rises at blistering pace
By Julie Appleby, USA TODAY

Within a decade $1 out of every $5 spent in the U.S. economy will go for health care, with annual spending consistently growing faster than the overall economy, the federal government said Tuesday.

Increased spending on hospital care, home health services, drugs and public health programs will help push total health care spending from its current 16.2% of the economy to 20% in 2015, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services projects.

Economists differ on whether that is money well spent. But dollars spent on health care are not being spent in other sectors of the economy.

"In the near term, it's a plus ... a steady source of jobs and income," says Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com. "In the longer term, it's an increasing amount of economic resources going to a part of the economy that may not enhance underlying productivity."

By comparison, all of manufacturing equals about 20% of the economy now, Zandi says.
Rising health care spending can also push more people into the ranks of the uninsured, says economist Paul Ginsburg of the Center for Studying Health System Change.

"The more expensive our system becomes the bigger the gap between the health care haves and have-nots," Ginsburg says.

And there are few cost-control measures likely to change that trend. Even health savings accounts, which President Bush has made the centerpiece of his health reform proposals in the budget, are not likely to make much of a dent. "The net impact (of the accounts and disease-management programs) on cost containment is likely to be far smaller than that seen from the massive shift toward managed care during the mid-1990s," the report says.

Findings in the annual report, published today on the website of the journal Health Affairs, include:

•The nation will spend $4 trillion on health care — or about $12,320 per person annually — by 2015.

•Hurricanes Rita and Katrina sharply increased government spending on public health. Federal public health program spending rose 24.3% to $11.3 billion in 2005, compared with 5.7% in 2004, with disaster relief the primary cause.

•The federal government's share of prescription drug spending will rise sharply, from 2% last year to 27% this year as the new Medicare drug program takes over payments from state Medicaid programs and from seniors who formerly bought their own.

•Private insurance premiums rose 6.8% in 2005, well below the most recent peak in 2002, when premiums shot up 11.5%. That slowdown is expected to end by 2007, when premiums will rise faster.

Friday, February 17, 2006

Word of the Day: Boondoggle

Boondoggle
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Boondoggle: is a North American term which has come to refer to the performance of useless or trivial tasks whilst appearing to be doing something important. In the United States, the key feature of this "art" is the waste of time and/or money involved. In Canada, however, the term has come to mean, more specifically, a government scandal involving the wasting or misallocation of public funds causing a project to be well over-budget, frequently more than double or triple the original cost.


As Bush lobbies Congress for 65 BILLION dollars more for this year's Iraq and Afghanistan projects (on top of the 50 billion requested in December) for a total of 115 billion for this year alone, I think the Canadian definition of the word BOONDOGGLE really does fit as a description. Especially when coupled with the following report of Iraq collapsing below even the years of Saddam Hussein's mismanagement.



Iraq Economy Falls Below Pre-War Levels
By Guy Dinmore
The Financial Times
Thursday 16 February 2006

The Bush administration on Thursday conceded that key sectors of the Iraqi economy had fallen below pre-war levels because of the insurgency, but insisted it was making enough progress on the political and security fronts to press ahead with reductions in US forces.
Condoleezza Rice, the secretary of state, told the Senate budget committee that production of crude oil and electricity was down from three years ago. Attacks had also hit oil exports.
According to latest statistics - which Ms Rice did not mention - crude oil production this month is running at 1.7m barrels a day, down from a post-invasion peak of 2.5m in September 2004 that was close to prewar levels.
Ms Rice initially asserted that "many more Iraqis" were now getting potable water and sewerage services. However, under intense questioning from Kent Conrad, a North Dakota Democrat, she conceded that although "capacity" had increased, fewer Iraqis were actually receiving those services.
Senator Conrad, citing the special inspector general, said almost all economic indices showed Iraq was better off before the US had invaded. Republicans, too, are skeptical of administration claims of progress. Senator Chuck Hagel told Ms Rice on Wednesday he believed the situation was getting worse.
Donald Rumsfeld, the defense secretary, told a separate House budget hearing on Thursday that political and economic progress was being made. "For the most part, the country is functioning," he said. It was not "a pretty picture", but not everything was horrible. "We're not there to do nation-building. It's going to be an Iraqi solution ultimately," he said.
The insurgents were being "marginalized", Mr. Rumsfeld said, noting that the US had turned over to Iraqis or closed some 30 military bases.
However, a veteran US official, speaking to the FT on condition of anonymity, questioned these assertions. He spoke of growing concerns in the administration that the US and the UK were becoming embroiled in a civil war, and that the Shia-dominated government they were supporting, particularly the interior ministry, was fuelling that war through its use of death squads and secret prisons.
"We are enhancing their ability to be more lethal, but we are not instilling a sense of national identity," the official said. He cited Basra, under British control, as the worst example of a region under the control of sectarian militia.
The administration on Thursday was due to present to Congress its supplemental 2006 budget for Iraq and Afghanistan of $65bn (€54.5bn, £37.4bn).
On building up Iraq's security forces, Ms Rice said the US had corrected its "mistake" in having focused on numbers instead of quality. Now, she said, there were 227,000 "quality" Iraqi forces.
"As Iraqi security forces stand up in their security task, there is no doubt in my mind that American security forces will be less and less needed and less and less relevant to the task," she said.
The US has about 138,000 troops in Iraq. It refuses to fix a timetable for withdrawal, but there is a general understanding in Congress and among Washington think-tanks that the Pentagon aims to have about 100,000 troops by the end of this year.
Questioned on a recent Pentagon-commissioned report that concluded the US could not sustain the number of troops required to defeat the insurgency, Mr. Rumsfeld replied: "The Iraqi insurgency will be defeated by Iraqis... So the question posed is an inaccurate question."

End of the Dollar Party?

Republican Ron Paul of Texas gave a speech before the house yesterday that serves as a chilling and brilliant analysis of the nexus between US economic and dollar policy and the use of the military. Read it and you, like me, will be rushing to buy gold.

HON. RON PAUL OF TEXAS
Before the U.S. House of Representatives February 15, 2006
The End of Dollar Hegemony

A hundred years ago it was called “dollar diplomacy.” After World War II, and especially after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1989, that policy evolved into “dollar hegemony.” But after all these many years of great success, our dollar dominance is coming to an end.

It has been said, rightly, that he who holds the gold makes the rules. In earlier times it was readily accepted that fair and honest trade required an exchange for something of real value.

First it was simply barter of goods. Then it was discovered that gold held a universal attraction, and was a convenient substitute for more cumbersome barter transactions. Not only did gold facilitate exchange of goods and services, it served as a store of value for those who wanted to save for a rainy day.

Though money developed naturally in the marketplace, as governments grew in power they assumed monopoly control over money. Sometimes governments succeeded in guaranteeing the quality and purity of gold, but in time governments learned to outspend their revenues. New or higher taxes always incurred the disapproval of the people, so it wasn’t long before Kings and Caesars learned how to inflate their currencies by reducing the amount of gold in each coin-- always hoping their subjects wouldn’t discover the fraud. But the people always did, and they strenuously objected.

This helped pressure leaders to seek more gold by conquering other nations. The people became accustomed to living beyond their means, and enjoyed the circuses and bread. Financing extravagances by conquering foreign lands seemed a logical alternative to working harder and producing more. Besides, conquering nations not only brought home gold, they brought home slaves as well. Taxing the people in conquered territories also provided an incentive to build empires. This system of government worked well for a while, but the moral decline of the people led to an unwillingness to produce for themselves. There was a limit to the number of countries that could be sacked for their wealth, and this always brought empires to an end. When gold no longer could be obtained, their military might crumbled. In those days those who held the gold truly wrote the rules and lived well.

That general rule has held fast throughout the ages. When gold was used, and the rules protected honest commerce, productive nations thrived. Whenever wealthy nations-- those with powerful armies and gold-- strived only for empire and easy fortunes to support welfare at home, those nations failed.

Today the principles are the same, but the process is quite different. Gold no longer is the currency of the realm; paper is. The truth now is: “He who prints the money makes the rules”-- at least for the time being. Although gold is not used, the goals are the same: compel foreign countries to produce and subsidize the country with military superiority and control over the monetary printing presses.

Since printing paper money is nothing short of counterfeiting, the issuer of the international currency must always be the country with the military might to guarantee control over the system. This magnificent scheme seems the perfect system for obtaining perpetual wealth for the country that issues the de facto world currency. The one problem, however, is that such a system destroys the character of the counterfeiting nation’s people-- just as was the case when gold was the currency and it was obtained by conquering other nations. And this destroys the incentive to save and produce, while encouraging debt and runaway welfare.

The pressure at home to inflate the currency comes from the corporate welfare recipients, as well as those who demand handouts as compensation for their needs and perceived injuries by others. In both cases personal responsibility for one’s actions is rejected.

When paper money is rejected, or when gold runs out, wealth and political stability are lost. The country then must go from living beyond its means to living beneath its means, until the economic and political systems adjust to the new rules-- rules no longer written by those who ran the now defunct printing press.

“Dollar Diplomacy,” a policy instituted by William Howard Taft and his Secretary of State Philander C. Knox, was designed to enhance U.S. commercial investments in Latin America and the Far East. McKinley concocted a war against Spain in 1898, and (Teddy) Roosevelt’s corollary to the Monroe Doctrine preceded Taft’s aggressive approach to using the U.S. dollar and diplomatic influence to secure U.S. investments abroad. This earned the popular title of “Dollar Diplomacy.” The significance of Roosevelt’s change was that our intervention now could be justified by the mere “appearance” that a country of interest to us was politically or fiscally vulnerable to European control. Not only did we claim a right, but even an official U.S. government “obligation” to protect our commercial interests from Europeans.

This new policy came on the heels of the “gunboat” diplomacy of the late 19th century, and it meant we could buy influence before resorting to the threat of force. By the time the “dollar diplomacy” of William Howard Taft was clearly articulated, the seeds of American empire were planted. And they were destined to grow in the fertile political soil of a country that lost its love and respect for the republic bequeathed to us by the authors of the Constitution. And indeed they did. It wasn’t too long before dollar “diplomacy” became dollar “hegemony” in the second half of the 20th century.

This transition only could have occurred with a dramatic change in monetary policy and the nature of the dollar itself.

Congress created the Federal Reserve System in 1913. Between then and 1971 the principle of sound money was systematically undermined. Between 1913 and 1971, the Federal Reserve found it much easier to expand the money supply at will for financing war or manipulating the economy with little resistance from Congress-- while benefiting the special interests that influence government.

Dollar dominance got a huge boost after World War II. We were spared the destruction that so many other nations suffered, and our coffers were filled with the world’s gold. But the world chose not to return to the discipline of the gold standard, and the politicians applauded. Printing money to pay the bills was a lot more popular than taxing or restraining unnecessary spending. In spite of the short-term benefits, imbalances were institutionalized for decades to come.

The 1944 Bretton Woods agreement solidified the dollar as the preeminent world reserve currency, replacing the British pound. Due to our political and military muscle, and because we had a huge amount of physical gold, the world readily accepted our dollar (defined as 1/35th of an ounce of gold) as the world’s reserve currency. The dollar was said to be “as good as gold,” and convertible to all foreign central banks at that rate.

For American citizens, however, it remained illegal to own. This was a gold-exchange standard that from inception was doomed to fail.

The U.S. did exactly what many predicted she would do. She printed more dollars for which there was no gold backing. But the world was content to accept those dollars for more than 25 years with little question-- until the French and others in the late 1960s demanded we fulfill our promise to pay one ounce of gold for each $35 they delivered to the U.S. Treasury. This resulted in a huge gold drain that brought an end to a very poorly devised pseudo-gold standard.

It all ended on August 15, 1971, when Nixon closed the gold window and refused to pay out any of our remaining 280 million ounces of gold. In essence, we declared our insolvency and everyone recognized some other monetary system had to be devised in order to bring stability to the markets.

Amazingly, a new system was devised which allowed the U.S. to operate the printing presses for the world reserve currency with no restraints placed on it-- not even a pretense of gold convertibility, none whatsoever! Though the new policy was even more deeply flawed, it nevertheless opened the door for dollar hegemony to spread.

Realizing the world was embarking on something new and mind boggling, elite money managers, with especially strong support from U.S. authorities, struck an agreement with OPEC to price oil in U.S. dollars exclusively for all worldwide transactions. This gave the dollar a special place among world currencies and in essence “backed” the dollar with oil. In return, the U.S. promised to protect the various oil-rich kingdoms in the Persian Gulf against threat of invasion or domestic coup. This arrangement helped ignite the radical Islamic movement among those who resented our influence in the region. The arrangement gave the dollar artificial strength, with tremendous financial benefits for the United States. It allowed us to export our monetary inflation by buying oil and other goods at a great discount as dollar influence flourished.

This post-Bretton Woods system was much more fragile than the system that existed between 1945 and 1971.

Though the dollar/oil arrangement was helpful, it was not nearly as stable as the pseudo gold standard under Bretton Woods. It certainly was less stable than the gold standard of the late 19th century.

During the 1970s the dollar nearly collapsed, as oil prices surged and gold skyrocketed to $800 an ounce. By 1979 interest rates of 21% were required to rescue the system. The pressure on the dollar in the 1970s, in spite of the benefits accrued to it, reflected reckless budget deficits and monetary inflation during the 1960s.

The markets were not fooled by LBJ’s claim that we could afford both “guns and butter.”

Once again the dollar was rescued, and this ushered in the age of true dollar hegemony lasting from the early 1980s to the present. With tremendous cooperation coming from the central banks and international commercial banks, the dollar was accepted as if it were gold.

Fed Chair Alan Greenspan, on several occasions before the House Banking Committee, answered my challenges to him about his previously held favorable views on gold by claiming that he and other central bankers had gotten paper money-- i.e. the dollar system-- to respond as if it were gold. Each time I strongly disagreed, and pointed out that if they had achieved such a feat they would have defied centuries of economic history regarding the need for money to be something of real value. He smugly and confidently concurred with this.

In recent years central banks and various financial institutions, all with vested interests in maintaining a workable fiat dollar standard, were not secretive about selling and loaning large amounts of gold to the market even while decreasing gold prices raised serious questions about the wisdom of such a policy. They never admitted to gold price fixing, but the evidence is abundant that they believed if the gold price fell it would convey a sense of confidence to the market, confidence that they indeed had achieved amazing success in turning paper into gold.

Increasing gold prices historically are viewed as an indicator of distrust in paper currency. This recent effort was not a whole lot different than the U.S. Treasury selling gold at $35 an ounce in the 1960s, in an attempt to convince the world the dollar was sound and as good as gold. Even during the Depression, one of Roosevelt’s first acts was to remove free market gold pricing as an indication of a flawed monetary system by making it illegal for American citizens to own gold. Economic law eventually limited that effort, as it did in the early 1970s when our Treasury and the IMF tried to fix the price of gold by dumping tons into the market to dampen the enthusiasm of those seeking a safe haven for a falling dollar after gold ownership was re-legalized.

Once again the effort between 1980 and 2000 to fool the market as to the true value of the dollar proved unsuccessful. In the past 5 years the dollar has been devalued in terms of gold by more than 50%. You just can’t fool all the people all the time, even with the power of the mighty printing press and money creating system of the Federal Reserve.

Even with all the shortcomings of the fiat monetary system, dollar influence thrived. The results seemed beneficial, but gross distortions built into the system remained. And true to form, Washington politicians are only too anxious to solve the problems cropping up with window dressing, while failing to understand and deal with the underlying flawed policy. Protectionism, fixing exchange rates, punitive tariffs, politically motivated sanctions, corporate subsidies, international trade management, price controls, interest rate and wage controls, super-nationalist sentiments, threats of force, and even war are resorted to—all to solve the problems artificially created by deeply flawed monetary and economic systems.

In the short run, the issuer of a fiat reserve currency can accrue great economic benefits. In the long run, it poses a threat to the country issuing the world currency. In this case that’s the United States. As long as foreign countries take our dollars in return for real goods, we come out ahead. This is a benefit many in Congress fail to recognize, as they bash China for maintaining a positive trade balance with us. But this leads to a loss of manufacturing jobs to overseas markets, as we become more dependent on others and less self-sufficient. Foreign countries accumulate our dollars due to their high savings rates, and graciously loan them back to us at low interest rates to finance our excessive consumption.

It sounds like a great deal for everyone, except the time will come when our dollars-- due to their depreciation-- will be received less enthusiastically or even be rejected by foreign countries. That could create a whole new ballgame and force us to pay a price for living beyond our means and our production. The shift in sentiment regarding the dollar has already started, but the worst is yet to come.

The agreement with OPEC in the 1970s to price oil in dollars has provided tremendous artificial strength to the dollar as the preeminent reserve currency. This has created a universal demand for the dollar, and soaks up the huge number of new dollars generated each year. Last year alone M3 increased over $700 billion.
The artificial demand for our dollar, along with our military might, places us in the unique position to “rule” the world without productive work or savings, and without limits on consumer spending or deficits. The problem is, it can’t last.

Price inflation is raising its ugly head, and the NASDAQ bubble-- generated by easy money-- has burst. The housing bubble likewise created is deflating. Gold prices have doubled, and federal spending is out of sight with zero political will to rein it in. The trade deficit last year was over $728 billion. A $2 trillion war is raging, and plans are being laid to expand the war into Iran and possibly Syria. The only restraining force will be the world’s rejection of the dollar. It’s bound to come and create conditions worse than 1979-1980, which required 21% interest rates to correct. But everything possible will be done to protect the dollar in the meantime. We have a shared interest with those who hold our dollars to keep the whole charade going.

Greenspan, in his first speech after leaving the Fed, said that gold prices were up because of concern about terrorism, and not because of monetary concerns or because he created too many dollars during his tenure. Gold has to be discredited and the dollar propped up. Even when the dollar comes under serious attack by market forces, the central banks and the IMF surely will do everything conceivable to soak up the dollars in hope of restoring stability. Eventually they will fail.

Most importantly, the dollar/oil relationship has to be maintained to keep the dollar as a preeminent currency. Any attack on this relationship will be forcefully challenged—as it already has been.

In November 2000 Saddam Hussein demanded Euros for his oil. His arrogance was a threat to the dollar; his lack of any military might was never a threat. At the first cabinet meeting with the new administration in 2001, as reported by Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill, the major topic was how we would get rid of Saddam Hussein-- though there was no evidence whatsoever he posed a threat to us. This deep concern for Saddam Hussein surprised and shocked O’Neill.

It now is common knowledge that the immediate reaction of the administration after 9/11 revolved around how they could connect Saddam Hussein to the attacks, to justify an invasion and overthrow of his government. Even with no evidence of any connection to 9/11, or evidence of weapons of mass destruction, public and congressional support was generated through distortions and flat out misrepresentation of the facts to justify overthrowing Saddam Hussein.

There was no public talk of removing Saddam Hussein because of his attack on the integrity of the dollar as a reserve currency by selling oil in Euros. Many believe this was the real reason for our obsession with Iraq. I doubt it was the only reason, but it may well have played a significant role in our motivation to wage war.

Within a very short period after the military victory, all Iraqi oil sales were carried out in dollars. The Euro was abandoned.

In 2001, Venezuela’s ambassador to Russia spoke of Venezuela switching to the Euro for all their oil sales. Within a year there was a coup attempt against Chavez, reportedly with assistance from our CIA.

After these attempts to nudge the Euro toward replacing the dollar as the world’s reserve currency were met with resistance, the sharp fall of the dollar against the Euro was reversed. These events may well have played a significant role in maintaining dollar dominance.

It’s become clear the U.S. administration was sympathetic to those who plotted the overthrow of Chavez, and was embarrassed by its failure. The fact that Chavez was democratically elected had little influence on which side we supported.

Now, a new attempt is being made against the petrodollar system. Iran, another member of the “axis of evil,” has announced her plans to initiate an oil bourse in March of this year. Guess what, the oil sales will be priced Euros, not dollars.

Most Americans forget how our policies have systematically and needlessly antagonized the Iranians over the years. In 1953 the CIA helped overthrow a democratically elected president, Mohammed Mossadeqh, and install the authoritarian Shah, who was friendly to the U.S. The Iranians were still fuming over this when the hostages were seized in 1979. Our alliance with Saddam Hussein in his invasion of Iran in the early 1980s did not help matters, and obviously did not do much for our relationship with Saddam Hussein. The administration announcement in 2001 that Iran was part of the axis of evil didn’t do much to improve the diplomatic relationship between our two countries. Recent threats over nuclear power, while ignoring the fact that they are surrounded by countries with nuclear weapons, doesn’t seem to register with those who continue to provoke Iran. With what most Muslims perceive as our war against Islam, and this recent history, there’s little wonder why Iran might choose to harm America by undermining the dollar. Iran, like Iraq, has zero capability to attack us. But that didn’t stop us from turning Saddam Hussein into a modern day Hitler ready to take over the world. Now Iran, especially since she’s made plans for pricing oil in Euros, has been on the receiving end of a propaganda war not unlike that waged against Iraq before our invasion.

It’s not likely that maintaining dollar supremacy was the only motivating factor for the war against Iraq, nor for agitating against Iran. Though the real reasons for going to war are complex, we now know the reasons given before the war started, like the presence of weapons of mass destruction and Saddam Hussein’s connection to 9/11, were false. The dollar’s importance is obvious, but this does not diminish the influence of the distinct plans laid out years ago by the neo-conservatives to remake the Middle East. Israel’s influence, as well as that of the Christian Zionists, likewise played a role in prosecuting this war. Protecting “our” oil supplies has influenced our Middle East policy for decades.

But the truth is that paying the bills for this aggressive intervention is impossible the old fashioned way, with more taxes, more savings, and more production by the American people. Much of the expense of the Persian Gulf War in 1991 was shouldered by many of our willing allies. That’s not so today. Now, more than ever, the dollar hegemony-- it’s dominance as the world reserve currency-- is required to finance our huge war expenditures. This $2 trillion never-ending war must be paid for, one way or another. Dollar hegemony provides the vehicle to do just that.

For the most part the true victims aren’t aware of how they pay the bills. The license to create money out of thin air allows the bills to be paid through price inflation. American citizens, as well as average citizens of Japan, China, and other countries suffer from price inflation, which represents the “tax” that pays the bills for our military adventures. That is until the fraud is discovered, and the foreign producers decide not to take dollars nor hold them very long in payment for their goods. Everything possible is done to prevent the fraud of the monetary system from being exposed to the masses who suffer from it. If oil markets replace dollars with Euros, it would in time curtail our ability to continue to print, without restraint, the world’s reserve currency.

It is an unbelievable benefit to us to import valuable goods and export depreciating dollars. The exporting countries have become addicted to our purchases for their economic growth. This dependency makes them allies in continuing the fraud, and their participation keeps the dollar’s value artificially high. If this system were workable long term, American citizens would never have to work again. We too could enjoy “bread and circuses” just as the Romans did, but their gold finally ran out and the inability of Rome to continue to plunder conquered nations brought an end to her empire.

The same thing will happen to us if we don’t change our ways. Though we don’t occupy foreign countries to directly plunder, we nevertheless have spread our troops across 130 nations of the world. Our intense effort to spread our power in the oil-rich Middle East is not a coincidence. But unlike the old days, we don’t declare direct ownership of the natural resources-- we just insist that we can buy what we want and pay for it with our paper money. Any country that challenges our authority does so at great risk.

Once again Congress has bought into the war propaganda against Iran, just as it did against Iraq. Arguments are now made for attacking Iran economically, and militarily if necessary. These arguments are all based on the same false reasons given for the ill-fated and costly occupation of Iraq.

Our whole economic system depends on continuing the current monetary arrangement, which means recycling the dollar is crucial. Currently, we borrow over $700 billion every year from our gracious benefactors, who work hard and take our paper for their goods. Then we borrow all the money we need to secure the empire (DOD budget $450 billion) plus more. The military might we enjoy becomes the “backing” of our currency. There are no other countries that can challenge our military superiority, and therefore they have little choice but to accept the dollars we declare are today’s “gold.” This is why countries that challenge the system-- like Iraq, Iran and Venezuela-- become targets of our plans for regime change.

Ironically, dollar superiority depends on our strong military, and our strong military depends on the dollar.

As long as foreign recipients take our dollars for real goods and are willing to finance our extravagant consumption and militarism, the status quo will continue regardless of how huge our foreign debt and current account deficit become.

But real threats come from our political adversaries who are incapable of confronting us militarily, yet are not bashful about confronting us economically. That’s why we see the new challenge from Iran being taken so seriously. The urgent arguments about Iran posing a military threat to the security of the United States are no more plausible than the false charges levied against Iraq. Yet there is no effort to resist this march to confrontation by those who grandstand for political reasons against the Iraq war.It seems that the people and Congress are easily persuaded by the jingoism of the preemptive war promoters. It’s only after the cost in human life and dollars are tallied up that the people object to unwise militarism.

The strange thing is that the failure in Iraq is now apparent to a large majority of American people, yet they and Congress are acquiescing to the call for a needless and dangerous confrontation with Iran.

But then again, our failure to find Osama bin Laden and destroy his network did not dissuade us from taking on the Iraqis in a war totally unrelated to 9/11.

Concern for pricing oil only in dollars helps explain our willingness to drop everything and teach Saddam Hussein a lesson for his defiance in demanding Euros for oil.

And once again there’s this urgent call for sanctions and threats of force against Iran at the precise time Iran is opening a new oil exchange with all transactions in Euros.

Using force to compel people to accept money without real value can only work in the short run. It ultimately leads to economic dislocation, both domestic and international, and always ends with a price to be paid.

The economic law that honest exchange demands only things of real value as currency cannot be repealed. The chaos that one day will ensue from our 35-year experiment with worldwide fiat money will require a return to money of real value. We will know that day is approaching when oil-producing countries demand gold, or its equivalent, for their oil rather than dollars or Euros. The sooner the better.

Thursday, February 16, 2006

Cheney's Got The Power

Associated Press
February 15, 2006
Vice President Dick Cheney says he has the power to declassify government secrets, raising the possibility that he authorized his former chief of staff to pass along sensitive pre-war data on Iraq to reporters. Vice President Dick Cheney says he has the power to declassify government secrets, raising the possibility that he authorized his former chief of staff, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, to pass along sensitive pre-war data on Iraq to reporters.

DisAssociated Press
February 15, 2006
In a related story, citing falling productivity numbers, Mr. Cheney said that henceforth, Saturday has been renamed Monday Two and will be treated as a normal work day.
When questioned by a reporter about his power to rechristen Saturday as Monday Two, Mr. Cheney responded: "Because I have unlimited, unchecked power. Bwah-ha-ha. And henceforth, you are renamed . . . Toad Boy. Bwah-ha-ha. "

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

Bush Robs Peter to Pay Paul

The following two stories are so contradicting it boggles the mind:

On one hand, the Bush adminstration wants to sell 300,000 acres of National Parks land to raise 800 million dollars to, ostensibly, fund rural schools.

On the other hand, the Bush administration wants to let energy companies pump about $65 billion worth of oil and natural gas from federal territory over the next five years without paying any royalties to the government, royalties valued at about 7 billion dollars in what is one of the biggest giveaways in American history.

I have a modest suggestion: How about we keep our national park land, bill the fricking oil companies who are making RECORD PROFITS for the oil and fund the rural schools and some inner-city schools with the 7 BILLION DOLLARS that belongs to the American People?

Oh. Right. Too logical.

My bad.

Now, here are the two stories:


Bush Administration seeks to sell land
Feb. 11, 2006, 12:26AM
By JANET WILSONLos Angeles Times

The Bush administration Friday laid out plans to sell off more than $1 billion in public land during the next decade, including 85,000 acres of National Forest property in California.
Most of the proceeds would help pay for rural schools and roads, making up for a federal subsidy that has been eliminated from President Bush's 2007 budget.
Congress must approve the sales, which several experts said would amount to the largest sale of its kind since President Theodore Roosevelt established the U.S. Forest Service in 1905 and created the modern national forest system.
"This is a fire sale of public lands. It is utterly unprecedented," said Char Miller, professor of environmental history at Trinity University in San Antonio, who has written extensively about the Forest Service. "It signals that the lands and the agency that manages them are in deep trouble."
The U.S. Forest Service has earmarked more than 300,000 acres for sale in 32 states.
In a companion proposal inserted into this week's massive 2007 budget, White House officials directed the U.S. Bureau of Land Management officials to sell off at least $350 million worth of public land, with the funds to go directly to the general treasury.
Areas don't meet needs
High-ranking agriculture officials said Friday the national forest lands selected for sale are "isolated, expensive to manage, and no longer meeting forest service system needs," and do not include wilderness areas or habitat vital to wildlife.
"Is selling off Bitterroot National Forest or the Sierra National Forest or Yellowstone National Park a good idea? No, not in general," said Under Secretary Mark Rey. "But I challenge these people who are engaging in this flowery rhetoric ... to take a hard look at these specific parcels and tell me they belong in national forest ownership."
While acknowledging the proposed sale would be the largest of its kind in decades, and possibly ever, Rey said the national forest system has swelled to 193 million acres, and the amount sold would amount to less than one-tenth of a percent.
Rey added: "Education of rural school children, that's an investment in the nation's future as important as any other investment we could make. That purpose justifies the approach we're proposing."
Rey said the sales are necessary because it was impossible to find enough funds elsewhere in a declining Forest Service budget to make up for the loss of the school and road subsidies. He said the property sold would be subject to fair market appraisals.
The Forest Service's total proposed budget for 2007 is $4.1 billion, down about $160 million from 2006.
Public can force changes
The public will have 30 days to comment after maps of the acreage proposed for sale are published, which the agency expects to do by the end of the month. Some parcels might be removed after public comment if they are deemed too valuable to lose.
Several Congress members condemned the proposed sales, including Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., who called the sales "a terrible idea based on a misguided sense of priorities."
Feinstein said that while funding of rural schools and roads should continue, it should not be financed by the sale of public lands.
Sen. Larry Craig, an Idaho Republican who chairs the subcommittee that will take up the matter, was more guarded. He said that while he was "very pleased" that the president included funding for rural counties, "I do have preliminary concerns. ... Public lands are an asset that need to be managed and conserved."



February 14, 2006
U.S. Royalty Plan to Give Windfall to Oil Companies
By EDMUND L. ANDREWS
New York Times

WASHINGTON, Feb. 13 — The federal government is on the verge of one of the biggest giveaways of oil and gas in American history, worth an estimated $7 billion over five years.
New projections, buried in the Interior Department's just-published budget plan, anticipate that the government will let companies pump about $65 billion worth of oil and natural gas from federal territory over the next five years without paying any royalties to the government.
Based on the administration figures, the government will give up more than $7 billion in payments between now and 2011. The companies are expected to get the largess, known as royalty relief, even though the administration assumes that oil prices will remain above $50 a barrel throughout that period.
Administration officials say that the benefits are dictated by laws and regulations that date back to 1996, when energy prices were relatively low and Congress wanted to encourage more exploration and drilling in the high-cost, high-risk deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico.
"We need to remember the primary reason that incentives are given," said Johnnie M. Burton, director of the federal Minerals Management Service. "It's not to make more money, necessarily. It's to make more oil, more gas, because production of fuel for our nation is essential to our economy and essential to our people."
But what seemed like modest incentives 10 years ago have ballooned to levels that have alarmed even ardent supporters of the oil and gas industry, partly because of added sweeteners approved during the Clinton administration but also because of ambiguities in the law that energy companies have successfully exploited in court.
Short of imposing new taxes on the industry, there may be little Congress can do to reverse its earlier giveaways. The new projections come at a moment when President Bush and Republican leaders are on the defensive about record-high energy prices, soaring profits at major oil companies and big cuts in domestic spending.
Indeed, Mr. Bush and House Republicans are trying to kill a one-year, $5 billion windfall profits tax for oil companies that the Senate passed last fall.
Moreover, the projected largess could be just the start. Last week, Kerr-McGee Exploration and Development, a major industry player, began a brash but utterly serious court challenge that could, if it succeeds, cost the government another $28 billion in royalties over the next five years.
In what administration officials and industry executives alike view as a major test case, Kerr-McGee told the Interior Department last week that it planned to challenge one of the government's biggest limitations on royalty relief if it could not work out an acceptable deal in its favor. If Kerr-McGee is successful, administration projections indicate that about 80 percent of all oil and gas from federal waters in the Gulf of Mexico would be royalty-free.
"It's one of the greatest train robberies in the history of the world," said Representative George Miller, a California Democrat who has fought royalty concessions on oil and gas for more than a decade. "It's the gift that keeps on giving."
Republican lawmakers are also concerned about how the royalty relief program is working out.
"I don't think there is a single member of Congress who thinks you should get royalty relief at $70 a barrel" for oil, said Representative Richard W. Pombo, Republican of California and chairman of the House Resources Committee.
"It was Congress's intent," Mr. Pombo said in an interview on Friday, "that if oil was at $10 a barrel, there should be royalty relief so companies could have some kind of incentive to invest capital. But at $70 a barrel, don't expect royalty relief."
Tina Kreisher, a spokeswoman for the Interior Department, said Monday that the giveaways might turn out to be less than the basic forecasts indicate because of "certain variables."
The government does not disclose how much individual companies benefit from the incentives, and most companies refuse to disclose either how much they pay in royalties or how much they are allowed to avoid.
But the benefits are almost entirely for gas and oil produced in the Gulf of Mexico.
The biggest producers include Shell, BP, Chevron and Exxon Mobil as well as smaller independent companies like Anadarko and Devon Energy.
Executives at some companies, including Exxon Mobil, said they had already stopped claiming royalty relief because they knew market prices had exceeded the government's price triggers.
About one-quarter of all oil and gas produced in the United States comes from federal lands and federal waters in the Gulf of Mexico.
As it happens, oil and gas royalties to the government have climbed much more slowly than market prices over the last five years.
The New York Times reported last month that one major reason for the lag appeared to be a widening gap between the average sales prices that companies are reporting to the government when paying royalties and average spot market prices on the open market.
Industry executives and administration officials contend that the disparity mainly reflects different rules for defining sales prices. Administration officials also contend that the disparity is illusory, because the government's annual statistics are muddled up with big corrections from previous years.
Both House and Senate lawmakers are now investigating the issue, as is the Government Accountability Office, Congress's watchdog arm.
But the much bigger issue for the years ahead is royalty relief for deepwater drilling.
The original law, known as the Deep Water Royalty Relief Act, had bipartisan support and was intended to promote exploration and production in deep waters of the outer continental shelf.
At the time, oil and gas prices were comparatively low and few companies were interested in the high costs and high risks of drilling in water thousands of feet deep.
The law authorized the Interior Department, which leases out tens of millions of acres in the Gulf of Mexico, to forgo its normal 12 percent royalty for much of the oil and gas produced in very deep waters.
Because it take years to explore and then build the huge offshore platforms, most of the oil and gas from the new leases is just beginning to flow.
The Minerals Management Service of the Interior Department, which oversees the leases and collects the royalties, estimates that the amount of royalty-free oil will quadruple by 2011, to 112 million barrels. The volume of royalty-free natural gas is expected to climb by almost half, to about 1.2 trillion cubic feet.
Based on the government's assumptions about future prices — that oil will hover at about $50 a barrel and natural gas will average about $7 per thousand cubic feet — the total value of the free oil and gas over the next five years would be about $65 billion and the forgone royalties would total more than $7 billion.
Administration officials say the issue is out of their hands, adding that they opposed provisions in last year's energy bill that added new royalty relief for deep drilling in shallow waters.
"We did not think we needed any more legislation, because we already have incentives, but we obviously did not prevail," said Ms. Burton, director of the Minerals Management Service.
But the Bush administration did not put up a big fight. It strongly supported the overall energy bill, and merely noted its opposition to additional royalty relief in its official statement on the bill.
By contrast, the White House bluntly promised to veto the Senate's $60 billion tax cut bill because it contained a one-year tax of $5 billion on profits of major oil companies.
The House and Senate have yet to agree on a final tax bill.
The big issue going forward is whether companies should be exempted from paying royalties even when energy prices are at historic highs.
In general, the Interior Department has always insisted that companies would not be entitled to royalty relief if market prices for oil and gas climbed above certain trigger points.
Those trigger points — currently about $35 a barrel for oil and $4 per thousand cubic feet of natural gas — have been exceeded for the last several years and are likely to stay that way for the rest of the decade.
So why is the amount of royalty-free gas and oil expected to double over the next five years?
The biggest reason is that the Clinton administration, apparently worried about the continued lack of interest in new drilling, waived the price triggers for all leases awarded in 1998 and 1999.
At the same time, many oil and gas companies contend that Congress never authorized the Interior Department to set price thresholds for any deepwater leases awarded between 1996 and 2000.
The dispute has been simmering for months, with some industry executives warning the Bush administration that they would sue the government if it tried to demand royalties.
Last week, the fight broke out into the open. The Interior Department announced that 41 oil companies had improperly claimed more than $500 million in royalty relief for 2004.
Most of the companies agreed to pay up in January, but Kerr-McGee said it would fight the issue in court.
The fight is not simply about one company. Interior officials said last week that Kerr-McGee presented itself in December as a "test case" for the entire industry. It also offered a "compromise," but Interior officials rejected it and issued a formal order in January demanding that Kerr-McGee pay its back royalties.
On Feb. 6, according to administration officials, Kerr-McGee formally notified the Minerals Management Service that it would challenge its order in court.
Industry lawyers contend they have a strong case, because Congress never mentioned price thresholds when it authorized royalty relief for all deepwater leases awarded from 1996 through 2000.
"Congress offered those deepwater leases with royalty relief as an incentive," said Jonathan Hunter, a lawyer in New Orleans who represented oil companies in a similar lawsuit two years ago that knocked out another major federal restriction on royalty relief.
"The M.M.S. only has the authority that Congress gives it," Mr. Hunter said. "The legislation said that royalty relief for these leases is automatic."
If that view prevails, the government said it would lose a total of nearly $35 billion in royalties to taxpayers by 2011 — about the same amount that Mr. Bush is proposing to cut from Medicare, Medicaid and child support enforcement programs over the same period.

Monday, February 13, 2006

Mr. Cheney Apologizes for Hunting Accident

STATEMENT FROM THE VICE-PRESIDENT
DisAssociated Press
February 13, 2006

Washington- A clearly shaken Dick Cheney addressed reporters today from the East Wing of the White House, explaining the hunting accident of this past weekend.

The Vice-President, in explaining the accident, said, "I never ever meant to shoot Mr. Whittington, who's a dear friend. I was aiming for a Democrat and missed. Frankly, those liberals are pretty fast and you don't always get off the shot you want."

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Crazy Liberals Dispute Black is White

By Angus McFinstenpooter
Right-Wing Guest Blogger to The Reasonable Rant

Okay, everybody, listen up. Those nutty Democrats are at it again. This time, they're trying to spin color! As everybody with half a brain (which is less than a quarter of all Democrats) knows, the President last week signed Executive Order # 636 stipulating that, "In accordance with the President's divine Executive Unitary powers, black will henceforth be white and up will be down."

So, duh? What's so hard to understand about that? Of course, if I only had a quarter of a brain like a Democrat then I might be puzzled but because I'm a Republican, I'm 300% smarter and I know better [Does he realize this adds up to 3/4's of a brain?-ed]. Boy, is it sweet to be Right or what?

High-Fives all around, my Right Wing brothers and sisters.

Okay, so, check it, anyway, at a presidential briefing last week, our main man Jeff Gannon put it to the super-cool, uber-press secretary Scott McClellan (my sister sooooo wants to have Scott's baby; I do too, a little bit), he asked Mr. McClellan: "How does the president deal with all the craziness of Democrats claiming black is black? And does it make your job harder?" [Wasn't Gannon banned from future White House Press briefings after it was discovered he was a phony journalist and possible Administration plant?-ed].

Well, you know how diplomatic Scott is, so he was very cool when he answered: "Well, the President understands that some people have a difficult time seeing things as they really are, but he's committed to being patient and making sure that when it comes to understanding that black is white, no Democrat is left behind. The president understands hard work is part of being Commander in Chief."

To which Jeff Gannon/Guckert said: "Cool. Can I have your baby?"

Aren't those guys the best? Wow. Makes me sooooo proud to be a Republican.

Anyway, so on this week's news shows, the Dems tried to spin it that black was really black.

Ted Kennedy whined and boo-hoo'ed on Meet The Press that the Prez (I'd love to have W's baby big-time, it'd be so neat, if only I were biologically able) that the Prez is claiming new powers that aren't in the Constitution and that he can't just turn "black into white."

Dude, what planet are you from? Black is White! It's always been white. What new powers are you claiming he has?

Democrats are soooooooo crazy, you know?

Cuckoo! Cuckoo!

So later that day, I was lounging in my UnderRoos watching Sean Hannity (if I had HIS baby, it'd be so cute!) watching him interview Jeff Sessions, that bad-ass Republican Senator from the Great Red State of Alabama (Roll Tide Roll!) and, well, read the transcript yourself:

Sean (the cutest news guy on TV): How do you talk to someone who argues with you about something as fundamental as color? Do you think there's a fatal disconnect in the Democratic Party as it applies to color?

Sessions: I do think there's a disconnect, Sean. But my Republican colleagues and I in the Senate are committed to working in a bi-partisan way with Democrats in helping them see the real-world fact that black is white. I tell ya too, Sean, that as sure as a tick sucks blood and a liberal sucks welfare dollars, if these Democrats would just understand black is white then they'd be much better at coordinating their wardrobes."

Sean: What about this 'up is up' nonsense? Up is clearly down. But that seems to be a major sticking point and I've heard rumors the Democrats want to launch an investigation, that there's some kind of shadowy conspiracy behind the simple fact that up is down, that this is some sort of deception by the president. How do you respond to talk like that?

Sessions: Well, my first reaction, Sean, is pity. See, I'm a southern man and I grew up in real tough times . . .

Sean: Didn't your father own a store?

Sessions: Yes he did, and it was hard for us as a family to keep product on the shelves to sell to sharecroppers and such because you know how those share-cropper people are about paying their bills. My point, Sean, is that as a southerner, I have a lot of compassion, conservative compassion, and my first instinct with the Democrats not realizing that up is down is to want to give them a big hug and buy them breakfast, maybe distribute some tobacco-lobbyist checks if John Boehner's got any handy, you know to just love them Democrats for how, I don't know, how misguided they are.


Wow. I mean WOW. Is that neat or what? Senator Sessions is the coolest dude, he doesn't even get angry with the liberal pansies for thinking that up is up instead of up being down. Wow.

Is it cool to be Republican or is it cool to be Republican???!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

High-Fives all around, my Right-Wing brothers and sisters.

Anyway, I gotta go right now, mom says it's bedtime and I got so excited I poo'ed in my UnderRoos, which is kinda uncool when you're a 46 year-old man, but who cares cuz I'm Republican!

Yeah! High-Fives all around, my Right Wing brothers and sisters!

Anyway, until next time, remember:

It's right to be Right!

Right On!

-Angus McFistenpooter

The thoughts expressed in this posting in no way reflect those of The Reasonable Rant.