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McCain Said It, Why Don't We?
John McCain said it. Right out loud in the third debate.
"Obviously, we had to take Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait or it would've threatened the Middle Eastern oil supply."
The first gulf war was about defending access to oil after all. McCain reiterated the theme later on, as he has in past debates, when he said that we need to "eliminate our dependence on the places in the world that harm our national security."
What he didn't say out loud is that the current war, the one in Iraq, is also about defending access to oil and other energy resources. This war has cost us $656 billion and counting. Our country has a long history of using military intervention to secure energy resources.
Indeed, according the latest report by the National Priorities Project (NPP), the US will spend around $100 billion of our defense budget this year alone defending access to fossil fuels worldwide. That figure does not include what is spent on the Iraq War, which, when included, will add an additional $100 billion.
That's $200 billion dollars that could be spent, in one year alone, on alternative energy resources and infrastructure, on renewable energy subsidies that will help create green collar jobs for working America.
Yet we spend just a couple of billion dollars each year on renewable energy and conservation. This number needs to be increased dramatically, and neither candidate has gone into detail about how to do that.
However, in response to Bob Sheiffer's question last night about what should be cut from the budget, McCain said, "We have presided over the largest increase in government since the Great Society."
What he didn't say was that the military budget has increased by over 100% since 2000, and we now spend more than the rest of the world combined. But McCain did say he'd cut spending on defense. "I know how to save billions of dollars in defense spending," he said. "I know how to eliminate programs." He said it, although he didn't name the programs.
Let us offer some suggestions. Foreign Policy in Focus, in its Unified Security Budget for the United States, FY 2009, has identified reasonable ways of eliminating $61 billion worth of unnecessary weapons programs and waste in one year. Add to that the total amount of money NPP estimates the US spends defending oil in one year, and we are well on our way to a renewed investment in energy that is clean and efficient, and to eliminating these global conflicts over energy resources.
In the New Yorker in early September, Sarah Palin was quoted as saying, about the Iraq War, "it better not have to do with oil and dependence on foreign energy". She has a son there, after all.
The fact is, our economic and military policies are intertwined. Energy is the life-blood of our economy, and our energy policy is, to this point, inextricably tied to our foreign policy. Let's bring this issue, and our soldiers, home.
In this post-debate environment, let's forget about performance, forget about facial expressions, forget about Joe the Plumber. Let's get to the most important issue of our time - energy and its connection to war. McCain said it. Sarah Palin said it. We need to be fearless and continue saying it. Right out loud.
- Posted in




33 Comments so far
Show AllIt was a lie. Kuwait was drilling into Iraq's territory. Bush Sr. told Hussein it would be OK to go into Kuwait and then used it as an excuse to intervene. Over a decade of bombing and sanctions against Iraq resulted which served to cut the supply of oil and keep the price up. Prior to that we were buying Iraqi oil. The whole criminal enterprise is about control of oil and it's price from the start. How many lives lost for the greedy plans of market manipulators? Well over 2 million -- mostly children.
Oiligarchy rule.
If only hemp were legal, we wouldn't be fighting resource wars for oil already.
Using corn for feedstock will produce about 25 gallons of ethanol per acre. Using hemp for feedstock will produce about 250 gallons of ethanol per acre. Smoking commercial hemp will get one about as intoxicated as smoking corn silk.
-- EKATON --
Corn silk, you say? Do they sell it by the Z?
LOL
-- EKATON --
Many of us do say it out loud every day. Too bad nobody listens. Too bad the corporate media barely touches the subject. Too bad the propagandists are promoting the fascist takeover of our country.
I thought I was the only one who heard he say that comment. It really was a telling statement. Why have more people not picked up this?
Auferre, trucidare, rapere, falsis nominibus imperium; atque, ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.
“To ravage, to slaughter, to usurp under false titles, they call empire; and where they make a desert, they call it peace.”
--Tacitus
It was about oil in Kuwait, it was about oil in Iraq, it is about oil in Georgia, it is about oil in Iran, it is about oil in Afghanistan... It will be about oil with Barack Obama, too.
Kuwait is a gas station not a country.
Hoa binh
Cheney said it, PNAC said it, AEI said it, O'Neil said it, Greenspan said it, Wolfowitz said it, Nader said it, Paul said it, 10 million in the streets said it - twice, the Pentagon said it (and still says it,) and tons of others have said it loud and clear and over and over again.
This author refuses to accept the obvious truth: we Americans KNOW why we're illegally occupying Iraq, and we simply do not f**king care as long as our "lifestyle" is maintained.
The fact that so many refuse to admit that they know it is a different question...
I just want cheap gas, a new SUV, a big screen HDTV, football on Sundays, good TV shows during the week and a full rice bowl. Isn't that what we all want?
-- EKATON --
And Uncle Sam just wants to send your sons and daughters on a little trip overseas.... to make sure you get that cheap gas, new SUV, big screen... etc. etc.
Yes. I've pretty much given up hope. I don't think we can stop the fascist militarist juggernaut. I don't think we can stop global warming. I despair, and I slip into sarcasm and cynicism. It just seems so hopeless.
-- EKATON --
I am shocked — shocked! — to hear that oil could possibly be at the root of the glorious occupa ... uh, "war" against Evildoers in the Middle East.
i remember the day Bush first invaded Iraq. i told this guy i had just recently met that it was all about oil. he was shocked and offended. he grew angry and cursed and claimed that i was anti-american, among other actual insults that aren't important. but he wasn't any different than the others. this was after 9/11, when everyone was gungho about getting revenge and doing what was "right."
my point is that these days, with gas prices being so high (which i think is illegal in its own right), everyone seems to know that war is all about gaining natural resources, and that right now it's oil. times are just different.
what happens when a majority of americans have dealt with this conclusion for so long that it has become business as usual, and they no longer have any moral scruples about going to war for cheaper gasoline?
what if, in the future, the government doesn't have to worry about pleasing the public's conscience before attacking a sovereign nation?
Sioux Rose
Given that I pursue a study of the revolving nature of celestial bodies, it's quite clear to me that sooner or later ALL things come full circle. In applying that Truth to the Iraqi for-oil debacle, how tragic that the price has now come down to pretty much where it was before the whole massacre got underway. For all the bodies turned into a premature gravesite, this parabolic manipulation of oil prices is a further travesty. It could have been gotten on the cheap without the carnage. Tragic, to the Nth degree!
Stargazer: I can remember a great conjunction of many planets in the South Western sky about twenty years ago. There was a comet in the North Western sky at about the same time. Were the Gods conspiring to destroy America by driving the first Bush/Cheney cabal mad?
They goaded Iraq into Gulf War 1 (GWI), now every 'terrorist' is seen in any smokey mirror.
We could have bought the oil from Iraq cheaper than intervening with an ugly war, but that would not allow for the profits that big oil desired to make. Whose pockets were to be lined was the reason for our invasion. We didn't want to line Saddam's even though fewer people would die. Greed rules over sanity apparently.
The U.S. had its reputation deeply sullied by this oil grab. The reputation was a little tainted already; killing native Americans for their land, moving along to the Phillipinos for theirs, and now murdering people around the world for oil so we can live this great and ugly lifestyle of consumption! What a wonderful nation we are! Excuse me, perhaps "were" is to be in order soon.
Well, we certainly invaded Iraq to steal their oil - and so GWB could avenge his Daddy. But the real reason, according to the neo-cons as recorded in ther PNAC doc
regarding US military strategy for the 21st century, was because we wanted to bulid a bunch of permanent, forward military bases in the middle east in order to continue our ultimate goal, as the sole remaining superpower, of spreading US hegemony across the globe.
The oil corps are in the process of stealing the oil, and the bases have been built.
Who knows what's next?
And, Malthus, I really think the general population of the US would much rather pay for the oil or the other resources our Government sees the need to steal with armed invasions or CIA covert ops. The government represents the interests of the global corps and the global financial cabal - not Americans.
Yes, but the reason behind the bases is, again, the oil and gas pipelines. It was the Unocal pipeline through the Caucasus and into Afghanistan, over which the U.S. had worked out a deal with the Taliban until they reneged, that initiated the U.S. invasion of that country.
Unfortunately, I think back to the line in "Three Days of the Condor" when the Redford character finally confronts the head of the "shadow" government working within the U.S. intelligence community and Redford is aghast that a dozen people were killed over a secret plan to use military power to control dwindling oil reserves and he is told (I'm paraphrasing here) "What do you think the American people are gonna say when they can't heat their homes or drive their cars? They're gonna want us to get the oil for them, and they won't care how. They won't be interested in how we get it; just that we go get it."
I'm afraid nothing has changed. Listen to the robotic cheers when Caribou Barbie starts the "Drill Here! Drill Now!" chant, and claims that Americans DON'T have to change the way they've lived for the past half a century, and feeds the myth of American exceptionalism.
This country really does suck, and I think "what a shame." We had such potential, such promise.
You know, people can live in harmony and equilibrium with their environment. Hell, we did it for millenia. It wasn't until we made the shift to monotheistic patriarchy, abandoning the nearly-universal "Mother Goddess", that our troubles began. Before then, women held power as holders of the secrets: reproduction, planting and harvesting, lunar cycles, etc. In the mystical and biological realms, it was women who knew the secrets and passed them down generation to generation. Then along came a spider, and voila! "Hey! Let's grow MORE than we need, and trade it for jewelry." Now they had to protect the surplus AND the jewels, which elevated less important (I say useless) masculine pastimes such as hunting to a venerated social service and elevated the hunter to the new warrior. Woman's fate was sealed. Women lost control over their bodies, the temples, the very tone and structure of civilization. The battle continued through the Middle Ages, when who knows how many (I've read upwards of 20 to 30 million; see www.cs.unc.edu/~plaisted/estimates.doc) women were executed; these were midwives, herbalists, healers - those still connected to the past and to nature, bypassing the Church fathers. You see, nature is to be dominated! Access to god is ONLY through HIS representative on earth, the male priest. And on and on. With a tip of my hat to Linda Ellerbee: And so it goes.
I'm rambling here. Sorry. These are merely "thought leaves" falling this autumn as I consider how much America is the culmination of 10,000 years of brutal warfare waged by greedy, patriarchal, power-addicted and warrior-worshipping MEN against women, the weak, other species, indeed the planet.
"no gods, no masters" --m. sanger
Yes, we all know the war was about oil. However there was a more immediate desire for the war. It was to get Bush re-elected. Remember his pre-election comment about using the opportunity to invade as the means to insure his candidacy as a war president?
http://davedubya.com
I remember it. His neo-con friemds said that that was the "greatst power a CIC could achieve > To be a war persident".
barf here.
Yeah, and that's McCain's wet dream, too!!!!
For OIL ; for Re-election ; and for the benefit of the Bush-friendly weapons makers and military contractors.
And as a final act, the bankers get money shovelled at them.
Yes, there is not much doubt that the US election sweepstakes winners have ways to pay their supporters and business associates. The Elites have a darn good thing going, and if this is a meritocracy, then they deserve it all simply because they pulled it off.
Thats one way to view America, but it doesn't inspire average people to be patriotic [at least I hope not, or they would be very foolish]. Nor does it defend the deaths of all those soldiers and citizens.
A truly inspiring vision was hinted at in the article:
"That's $200 billion dollars that could be spent, in one year alone, on alternative energy resources and infrastructure, on renewable energy subsidies that will help create green collar jobs for working America."
Now that government has shown that they can come up with money whenever they want to, I have to suggest, as many others have, that a huge investment in renewables would propel America into a beautifull prosperous future. But I suppose there is an end to the money pool, and it must surely be used up by now. Canada, on the other hand, didn't have to bail out any banks and so maybe Canada could invest in renewable energy and show America how great the future could be with clean cheap energy!! [renewable energy works out cheaper over a 15 year period, esp. when considering the military expenses of an oil economy].
Imagine... prices going down on everything, houses everyone could afford, and wages staying the same as they are now for those who still have jobs.
Imagine all those people, breathing clean air, driving electric cars..
Imagine the stable economy that renewable energy will provide.
Imagine what John Lennon would think of that future!!
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_eJ5l4VAZnNw/SPetWp8jo0I/AAAAAAAABXM/0ShLcEVb1IU/s1600-h/october24leaflet.gif
All I can say is that I'm glad Australia doesn't have large oil deposits or I'd be eating McDonalds and drinking Coke by now and singing God Bless America.
This article confirms what everyone knows: that America is a hegemonic rogue nation which is trying to control the whole world for its own benefit.
Fortunately it's failing. It's got too big for its boots!
FATHER, SON AND HOLY GHOST sets out the scenario that exists across the world but most particularly in America. Where can you read it?
www.dangerouscreation.com
What has energy independence has got to with subjugation and humiliation of the Muslim populations of the Middle East and elsewhere? There is more than enough oil in South America but I don't see US troops occupying Venezuela.
Oil security is just an excuse to do someone else's bidding.
Venezuela's oil is difficult to extract and is only profitable if oil stays above $50 per barrel.
"no gods, no masters" --m. sanger
Tired of oil wars? Click:
http://freepublictransit.org
It's a matter of prescience
No, not the science fiction kind
It's all about ignorance,
and greed, and miracles for the blind
the media parading, disjointed politics
founded on petrochemical plunder
and we're its hostages
If you stand to reason
you're in the game
the rules might be elusive
but our pieces are the same
and you know if one goes down we all go down as well
the balance is precarious as anyone can tell
this world's going to hell
Don't allow
this mythologic hopeful monster to exact its price
Kyoto now!
We can't do nothing and I think someone else will make it right
You might not think it matters now
But what if you are wrong
You might not think there's any wisdom in a fucked up punk rock song
But the way it is
cannot persist for long
a brutal sun is rising on a sick horizon
It's in the way
we live our lives
exactly like the double-edge of a cold familiar knife
and supremacy weighs heavy on the day
it's never really what you own but what you threw away
and how much did you pay?
In your dreams
You saw a steady state a bounty for eternity
Silent screams
but now the wisdom that sustains us is in full retreat
Don't allow
this mythologic hopeful monster isn't worth the risk
Kyoto now!
We can't have vision for the future if it can't be fixed
Alien
We need a fresh and new religion to run our lives
Hand in hand
the arid torpor of inaction will be our demise
Oh, Kyoto now!
"Kyoto Now!" Bad Religion
The song says it all.
95% of Americans don't care that both wars have been for oil and millions have died as result. But since finishing the job has taken a long time the second time, the war has become unpopular.
If Bush had killed millions of Iraqis and secured the oil fields in 4 months, he would be the most popular president in American history today.
If elected, Obama will continue the expansion of the empire. Many more will die, there's no escaping. Americans love war, it's in their blood. Especially when the mess is 10,000 miles away.
tetti_tatti October 18th, 2008 11:41 am
You are too kind. Most people would have been ok with killing all the Iraq people and stealing their oil, as well as Saudi Arabia, Kuwait etc.
Your 95% is a bit of an exaggeration 70% is more like it. There are always a few nuts like me out there who would rather not be involved in killing people especially when we can buy oil cheaper or use a different source (solar, wind...) or conserve to keep the price low.
There are also Quakers and Amish who are allowed to exist only because they don't have anything the rich want enough to kill them for it.