so how's that non-coerced conservation working out so far?
6/17/2008 3:12:53 PM
THis is an issue McCain can win easily. American public support is all for drilling. Obama can't take that stance because of his party's environmental backing.McCain can definitely win this if he has the balls to do it, which it seems he does.
6/17/2008 3:19:18 PM
he has proven that he'll say whatever is popular at the moment.
6/17/2008 3:26:23 PM
lol yes because that's what McCain's known for... Mr Maverick caving into pressure.[Edited on June 17, 2008 at 3:27 PM. Reason : .]
6/17/2008 3:27:27 PM
From an environmental standpoint there isn't even much of a beef about offshore drilling as there is from home owners who think they are going to be staring at oil rigs in their backyards. Drilling in Wildlife Refuges is another matter.
6/17/2008 3:28:06 PM
^ yes, that has ZERO human impact and we don't drill there... retarded.
6/17/2008 3:30:24 PM
6/17/2008 3:30:43 PM
^^ I am not sure I understand what you are saying but just because Wildlife Refuges don't impact humans (as you say) does not detract from their greater importance of biodiversity preservation.
6/17/2008 3:34:53 PM
6/17/2008 3:36:48 PM
6/17/2008 3:37:44 PM
6/17/2008 3:42:31 PM
I have. He really hasn't flip-flopped on many issues, despite what the Dems have said.Like that whole smear campaign about his stance on torture. What a crock of shit. He's done more to oppose Bush on torture than any other congressman, Republican or Democrat. [Edited on June 17, 2008 at 3:57 PM. Reason : 2]
6/17/2008 3:55:32 PM
yea I'm kind of wondering everything he's saying "just to get elected." If anything, he pisses his base off every other day.
6/17/2008 3:57:35 PM
[cue the ThinkProgress talking points][Edited on June 17, 2008 at 3:59 PM. Reason : 2]
6/17/2008 3:58:41 PM
Prawn Star has a point ^x6, HockeyRoman. You really do come across like you care more about animals than people. And if I actually thought for a second drilling in ANWR would pollute the area and kill or irreparably harm the wildlife there, I wouldn't support it. I honestly don't believe that the drilling will do any of that--and there are facts to support my position.Try not to freak about the source and just absorb the material, okay? If you have information disputing these points, I'll read it:
6/17/2008 4:00:21 PM
6/17/2008 4:01:45 PM
how about bush's tax cuts during a time of war?
6/17/2008 4:07:23 PM
You know what, even if we start training the next generation of doctors right this second it will still take another 8 years ( sometimes 10 ) for them to complete their education. Its too long, we need to find another way to get healthcare. Training more doctors just ignores the gaping hole in the chest of US medicine. We don't need more doctors. We need to learn to go to the doctor less. Then we'll all have enough doctors.
6/17/2008 4:07:43 PM
^ LOL
6/17/2008 4:08:44 PM
^^^We're at a precipice now. It is perfectly justifiable to oppose raising taxes at a time when we are in danger of falling into a very nasty recession.Likewise, it was certainly understandable for him to oppose those tax cuts in the first place, at a time when Bush was beating the drums for war. A lot can, and does, change in 7 years.[Edited on June 17, 2008 at 4:11 PM. Reason : 2]
6/17/2008 4:09:33 PM
So, how about the gas tax holiday, which will amount to a piffling amount of savings and drain the highway fund? Tell me that isn't naked pandering.
6/17/2008 4:12:31 PM
It's either pandering or he's foolish enough to believe that it will give motorists a break at the pump. No doubt about it. Either way it's somewhat disturbing.I liken it to Obama's call for a windfall profits tax on oil companies. Pandering to his base.[Edited on June 17, 2008 at 4:16 PM. Reason : 2]
6/17/2008 4:16:18 PM
You'll hardly find me to be someone who thinks Obama is any better on the matter, or for that matter, anything but a cipher who picks easy battles to look "principled."But Obama isn't the point, here - it's McCain's "rock-hard" principled consistency.
6/17/2008 4:18:43 PM
Fair enough. I don't believe that McCain has sold his soul to become President the way Dems paint him, but he does pander at times.
6/17/2008 4:21:03 PM
6/17/2008 4:27:18 PM
6/17/2008 4:33:48 PM
6/17/2008 4:34:36 PM
^^ Unless you can find information to the contrary the highest order of sea animal in terms of brain functionality (which is what I meant so stop being obtuse) would be dolphins or perhaps whales.^
6/17/2008 4:36:21 PM
^off topicthis is getting good, btw.
6/17/2008 4:38:39 PM
6/17/2008 5:34:02 PM
6/17/2008 5:40:14 PM
I don't believe otherwise, but I think there are those out there who feel that we'll just consume all of the ANWAR oil domestically, bringing it back down into the $1.50 range, which wouldn't happen without significant government involvement.But that is also assuming that the rather inelastic demand curve doesn't continue shifting to the right with the increasing urbanization of China. Car ownership in China increased 32% last year for a total of ~57m cars in China. With a population of 1.4B, that is only 4% market penetration. A similar jump in 2008 would increase the total number of cars in China to ~75m. Now, 75m is paltry compared to the 243,023,485 cars estimated to be on the road in the United States, but if car ownership in China grows by only 25% a year, they'll have surpassed us in less than 8 years and still be at less than 20% penetration. In the US penetration is 60%.I'm not arguing against ANWAR drilling, it might very well have its place, but I am arguing against those who feel that it would be a placebo which would allow us to keep our heads in the sand for another 50 years of cheap oil.]
6/17/2008 6:05:56 PM
we need the debates between McCain and Obama to start
6/17/2008 6:58:46 PM
6/17/2008 7:24:07 PM
^Speculators had been anticipating that move for weeks. In fact, the rumor was that Saudi Arabia was gonna boost production by 500,000 barrels per day.An "unexpected" increase in supply, such as a giant oil field being discovered and/or developed, would have a significant impact on oil prices.
6/17/2008 7:31:57 PM
Which is why I have little issue when it comes to offshore drilling but no one seems to want that kind of compromise.
6/17/2008 7:42:31 PM
John McCain does
6/17/2008 8:37:02 PM
I would feel more comfortable if he said something to the effect of "My friends, as president will pursue a course with Congress to lift the moratorium on offshore drilling in exchange for making the Alaskan National Wildlife Refuge a national monument thus closing it for future oil speculation." He'd almost assuredly get my vote.
6/17/2008 8:51:34 PM
http://youtube.com/watch?v=0PY7N4iRgLQ
6/17/2008 9:47:54 PM
If you go to http://www.eia.doe.gov, Energy Information Administration - EIA - Official Energy Statistics from the U.S. Government, you can find all of the info you want on U.S. oil production, OPEC imports, and non-OPEC imports. In March 2008 (its latest data), the U.S. produced 5.1 million barrels of oil per day, 1.8 million of which were exported. So we export a third of our domestically-produced oil.From OPEC, we imported 5.9 million barrels per day, with the main countries being the Saudis (1.5 million/day), Nigeria (1.2 million/day), Venezuela (1.0 million/day), and Iraq (773k/day). From non-OPEC, we imported 6.6 million barrels per day, with the main countries being Canada (2.5 million/day), Mexico (1.4 million/day), and Russia (400k/day). So our grand total for imported oil in March 2008 12.5 million barrels per day. It has data going back to 1973 for the monthly imports. We've been in the range for 12-15 million barrels per day fluctuating both ways since December 2003. You can also see our oil production since 1920. Domestically, we peaked at 10 million/day in November 1970. We touched 9 million in 1986 and it's been downhill from there, and we're only 60% of that 1986 level today. First, all those derricks that produced oil in the 1970s and 1980s are still there and still approved, why aren't their owners opening them up and producing oil from them? This is being done in Los Angeles County of all places, I read an article in the USA Today a month ago on it. Why isn't it going on elsewhere?Second, OPEC I think is made more of a scapegoat by domestic economists. The only people we get big oil from there are the Saudis (who we're "friends" with), Nigeria, Chavez (who we're decreasing our receipts from him looking at historical data), and Iraq (who we're "newly friends" with). A majority of our oil is non-OPEC, and we receive more oil from Canada than we do the Saudis and Mexico is about the same as the Saudis. Heck, we receive more oil from the U.S. Virgin Islands than Kuwait, and we went to war for them! Third, at the same site, our refinery utilization and capacity in March was 83.2%. That was our lowest refinery utilization since 2005 and the normal level is 92-95% from previous data. So we have 10% less refined gasoline than normal conditions. I understand maintenance and breakdowns and all that, but you'd think at higher prices it would be higher, why isn't it? So we could have 100 trillion barrels of oil, if it can't be refined, the price of gas doesn't come down any. The obvious answer is to build a refinery. But existing refineries and oil companies are not interested in one being built, why not? Because the existing refineries enjoy their oligarchy and are therefore not interested in further refineries being built.And before anyone says "words", God forbid someone bring in stated facts in the middle of your pointless pissing contest dumbsh*t arguments.[Edited on June 17, 2008 at 10:27 PM. Reason : .]
6/17/2008 10:22:30 PM
6/17/2008 10:37:28 PM
6/17/2008 10:48:46 PM
6/17/2008 10:59:12 PM
6/17/2008 11:01:54 PM
As far as I understand, the brunt of current price increases comes from speculation that comes out with a significant demand-supply mismatch 5 years-ish from now.Oh, and Venezuela's leader being bat-shit crazy doesn't help.
6/17/2008 11:03:13 PM
^Vinod Khosla will save us all by then.
6/17/2008 11:08:09 PM
16 billion barrels of oil offshore and another 59 billion elsewhere...ok lets say we decide to use that 75 billion barrels up in 20 years...thats about 3.75 billion barrels a year or about 1/2 of what we currently per year....man i hope in that 20 years we can create nuclear fission or some bomb ass fuel cells etc etc etchttp://maps.unomaha.edu/Peterson/funda/Sidebar/OilConsumption.htmlhttp://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/18/washington/18drill.html?_r=1&ref=politics&oref=slogin[Edited on June 18, 2008 at 1:36 AM. Reason : god i hope dems let this one pass]
6/18/2008 1:35:44 AM
sarijoul, highly technical parts of the world economy tend to be hard to keep up with. Right now the experts are up in a tizzy because the oil market has never gone this way to such an extent. It appears that the world has been boosting supply for all these years by increasing the refining of light-sweet crude, which is cheap to refine and produces mostly high demand products (fuel oil, diesel, etc). However, the supply of light-sweet crude comes from only a few places on Earth whose production is collectively falling. This means that refineries which are only capable of refining light-sweet crude are having difficulty finding supplies and are shutting down, hence the seemingly low 85% refinery utilization. Meanwhile, the rest of the world tends to produce sour and heavy crudes which must be refined in specially designed, and expensive, refineries and even then produce less of the high demand products. As such, OPEC is already exporting all the light-sweet crude it can produce and has been doing so for awhile. When Saudi Arabia announces it is going to boost output it is invariably talking about heavy crude from its less desirable fields. The problem is that there is currently no way to refine this extra supply of heavy crude. Because no buyers can be found even after reportedly deep discounts, OPEC countries eager to meet their quota are parking unsaleable heavy crude on fleets of tankers just off shore. Iran, which produces almost exclusively heavy crudes, is reported to have the largest such fleet floating near Kharg Island numbering at "least 14 very large crude carriers, or VLCCs."http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aCvsbL.iegY0
6/18/2008 2:56:37 AM
mmm... Sulfur
6/18/2008 3:06:33 AM
Fuck oil. Anyone who doesn't see this as the perfect time to move away from it and instead advocates more drilling is incredibly short-sighted and stupid. There is no long term solution to our energy independence where we are powered by oil. Stop using that as an argument. We've already used most of the oil we can get domestically. The only real way to develop energy independence is to start driving cars that don't use oil, continue to develop solar power, and increasing use of nuclear energy (oh my god... yes I'm totally for that) among other things. Drilling for more oil is not the answer. The only answer is to allow for the price of oil to remain high so that we can get away from it faster. It's going to suck for awhile, but in my opinion it'll be better to do it now than it will be later. We've dug ourselves into the deepest fucking hole we could manage and now it's time for us to climb our way out. It's not impossible but it will be hard to do. We cannot continue to use oil forever.
6/18/2008 4:02:01 AM