I like to think that Republicans
are
having
fun. They're such cards. What a wheeze, what a
jape. Talking about
energy
independence in the State of the Union Address!
President Bush said,
"America is addicted to oil" and, we will "break this
addiction." Oh
what a
good trick to see if anyone thought he actually
meant it!
I'm not going to embarrass the perennial
suckers who fell
for it
by identifying them, but I assure you they include
some well-known
names in
journalism. Boy, I bet they feel like fools, having
written those
optimistic
columns pointing to how Bush had made a fine
proposal -- cut oil
imports
from the Middle East by 75 percent by 2025 -- and
people should take it
seriously and stop dissing him.
Of course, the next day the administration
trotted out
Energy
Secretary Sam Bodman and Alan Hubbard,
director of the president's
National
Economic Council, to assure us the president didn't
mean it. Bodman
explained, "That was purely an example." A 'for
instance.' Like, we
could set a goal like that. Actually, we could
do that
without breaking a sweat: set fuel efficiency
standards at 40 miles per
gallon in 10 years (hybrids already get higher
mileage now), and you
save
2.5 million barrels a day, just what we import now
from the Mideast.
According to Knight Ridder, "Asked why the
president used
the
words 'the Middle East' when he didn't really mean
them, one
administration
official said Bush wanted to dramatize the issue in
a way that 'every
American sitting out there listening to the speech
understands.' The
official spoke only on condition of anonymity
because he feared that
his
remarks might get him into trouble."
Aw. Let's see, Bush lied so "every American
sitting out
there
listening to the speech understands." It's our fault.
We're so dumb, if
he
doesn't lie, we don't get it. Of course, those
sophisticates who pay
attention to stuff like the budget, where they decide
how to spend the
money, were already aware that the $150 million
(a truly pitiful amount
by
Washington standards) Bush promised would go to
making biofuels more
competitive is $50 million less than what was in
last year's budget for
that
purpose.
But, you are not to assume that Bush has
given up on the
Dick
Cheney plan to drill our way to energy
independence just because he
didn't
mention it in his speech. Last month, the
Department of Interior
released a
plan that will open 590,000 acres in Alaska's
Western Arctic Reserve
for
drilling. The land has been protected for decades.
The head of the Natural Resources Defense
Council's Alaska
Project, Chuck Clusen, said: "Scientists, sportsmen
and conservation
groups
all agree we should protect the last 13 percent of
the most sensitive
habitat in the Western Arctic's Northeast area.
Eighty-seven percent
was
already open. The Bureau of Land Management
decided to hand all of it
over
to the oil companies. ... We can drill every last acre
of wilderness,
and it
won't make us any more secure. We only have 3
percent of the world's
oil,
and the Middle East has 66 percent. Do the math.
We can't drill our way
to
energy independence."
What a good joke.
And this guy Boehner, John Boehner, the
new Republican
majority
leader, elected because of Tom DeLay's
unfortunate indictment, what a
gagster this guy is, what a zany madcap. He ran as
a reform candidate!
Har,
har, har, har! This is a guy who's up to his neck in
the K Street
Project,
in which conservative lobbyists and politicians
walk hand-in-hand.
Boehner
has such a highly developed sense of ethics, he
once distributed checks
from
the tobacco lobby on the floor of the House of
Representatives.
But now that he's been elected, it's time to
get serious,
and
Boehner has already backed away from Speaker
Dennis Hastert's proposal
to
actually ban (gasp!) gifts and trips from lobbyists.
Boehner figures
it's
enough just to report them. That'll take care of
everything.
I tell you, this bunch of cut-ups just keeps the
fun
coming.
Just a few weeks ago, the House of
Representatives cut $16 billion from
Medicaid over 10 years, which means states will
increase co-payments on
poor
people and drop preventive care -- which will cost
more in the long
run, but
what the hey? They also cut $12.7 billion in student
aid and loan
programs
over five years, because who needs that? And cut
another $1.5 billion
in
child support enforcement in the next year, which is
positively
brilliant
and will result in a drop of at least $8.4 billion in
child support
collected over the next 10 years. Oh, and a measly
cut of $577 million
in
foster care over five years, making it harder to take
care of neglected
and
abused children, who probably did something to
deserve it in the first
place.
Now here's a little howler: Bush proposes
cutting $36
billion
from Medicare over the next five years only ... wait
for it ... he's
not
cutting the money, he's saving
it! A $36 billion Medicare savings. That's so clever.
Molly Ivins is the former editor of the liberal monthly The Texas Observer. She is the bestselling author of several books including Who Let the Dogs In?
© 2006 Creators Syndicate
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