Monday, November 21, 2011

The Pipeline Sellout

From the Inimitable Charles Krauthammer and NRO:

The Pipeline Sellout
Obama puts politics over nation, again.

In 2008, the slogan was “Yes We Can.” For 2011–12, it’s “We Can’t Wait.” What happened in between? Candidate Obama, the vessel into which myriad dreams were poured, met the reality of governance.

His near–$1 trillion stimulus begat a stagnant economy with 9 percent unemployment. His attempt at Wall Street reform left in place a still too-big-to-fail financial system as vulnerable today as when he came into office. His green-energy fantasies yielded Solyndra cronyism and a cap-and-trade regime not even a Democratic Congress would pass.

And now his signature achievement, Obamacare, is headed to the Supreme Court, where it could very well be struck down, just a week after its central element was overwhelmingly repudiated (2–1) by the good burghers of Ohio.

So what do you do when you say you can, but, it turns out, you can’t? Blame the other guy. Charge the Republicans with making governing impossible. Never mind that you had control of the Congress for two-thirds of your current tenure. It’s all the fault of Republican rejectionism.

Hence: “We Can’t Wait.” We can’t wait while they obstruct. We can’t wait while they dither with my jobs bill. Write Congress today! Vote Democrat tomorrow!

We can’t wait. Except for certain exceptions, such as the 1,700-mile trans-U.S. Keystone XL pipeline, carrying Alberta oil to Texas refineries, which would have created thousands of American jobs and increased our energy independence.

For that, we can wait, it seems. President Obama decreed that any decision must wait 12 to 18 months — postponed, by amazing coincidence, until after next year’s election.

Why? Because the pipeline angered Obama’s environmental constituency. But their complaints are risible. Global warming from the extraction of the Alberta tar sands? Canada will extract the oil anyway. If it doesn’t go to us, it will go to China. Net effect on the climate if we don’t take that oil? Zero.

Danger to a major aquifer, which the pipeline traverses? It is already crisscrossed by 25,000 miles of pipeline, enough to circle the Earth. Moreover, the State Department had subjected Keystone to three years of review — the most exhaustive study of any oil pipeline in U.S. history — and twice concluded in voluminous studies that there would be no significant environmental harm.

So what happened? “The administration,” reported the New York Times, “had in recent days been exploring ways to put off the decision until after the presidential election.” Exploring ways to improve the project? Hardly. Exploring ways to get past the election.

Obama’s decision was meant to appease his environmentalists. It’s already working. The president of the National Wildlife Federation told the Washington Post (online edition, November 10) that thousands of environmentalists who were galvanized to protest the pipeline would now support Obama in 2012. Moreover, a source told the Post, Obama campaign officials had concluded that “they do not pick up one vote from approving this project.”

Sure, the pipeline would have produced thousands of truly shovel-ready jobs. Sure, delay could forfeit to China a supremely important strategic asset — a nearby, highly reliable source of energy. But approval was calculated to be a political loss for the president. Easy choice.

It’s hard to think of a more clear-cut case of putting politics over nation. This from a president whose central campaign theme is that Republicans put party over nation, sacrificing country to crass political ends.

Nor is this the first time Obama’s election calendar trumped the national interest:

  • Obama’s decision to wind down the Afghan surge in September 2012 is militarily inexplicable. It comes during the fighting season. It was recommended by none of his own military commanders. It is explicable only as a talking point for the final days of his reelection campaign.


  • At the height of the debt-ceiling debate last July, Obama pledged to veto any agreement that was not long term. Definition of long term? By another amazing coincidence, any deal large enough to get him past Election Day (and thus avoid another such crisis next year).


  • Tuesday it was revealed that last year the administration pressured Solyndra, as it was failing, to delay its planned October 28 announcement of layoffs until November 3 — the day after the midterm election.

A contemporaneous e-mail from a Solyndra investor noted: “Oddly they didn’t give a reason for that date.” The writer was clearly born yesterday. The American voter was not — and (s)he soon gets to decide who really puts party over nation and reelection above all.

We can’t wait.

Link here.

10 comments:

  1. Yup, we'll keep extracting that Alberta oil whether you buy it or not. Robert Redford must be soooooo pleased with himself.

    Hey, Obama, "hope" is not a strategy.

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  2. Fay, this decision is just the worst possible thing he could have done.

    I am actually speechless.

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  3. One question I can think of - what do the enviros think Obama will do after the election?

    I think they're figuring that he'll owe them or something, and that he can be pressured to cancel the pipeline outright - but what is they're leverage? He'll be a lame duck anyway.

    The people who he will be rewarding in his second term are not the people who got him re-elected. The people he will be rewarding are the people who will make him rich once he leaves office.

    This, more than anything, will determine if the pipeline will get built eventually.

    Ironically, the way to paint Obama here is as a DINO - just greenwashed money grubbing business as usual plutocrat wannabe - basically just as bad as the Republicans. Ignore Obama, folks... Put your time and money into something that really matters... Save the Snails, and Move On! ;)

    (See, these people are never going to vote for a Republican, period. The best conservatives can do with these folks is to demoralize them.)

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  4. See, these people are never going to vote for a Republican, period. The best conservatives can do with these folks is to demoralize them.

    Good point.

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  5. One question I can think of - what do the enviros think Obama will do after the election?

    I can answer that. They expect nirvana, just as they did in 2008, and when they don't get it, they'll go in to denial (again) and still fail to criticize Obama. For them, the "ideal" is their goal, not results. I learned all this from belonging to (and donating to) several national wildlife and environmental organizations. They are clueless. But they do find ways to raise mega funds for their political use.

    I no longer support any of them and never will again. My money now goes to local animal rescues and shelters.

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  6. So, to inject a moment of levity here...

    Mamie hurt her paw. Luckily, it is not broken, merely an infection. However, she has issues with licking and gnawing at the affected area. So she has been consigned to the Cone of Shame.

    I have not laughed so hard in months. A few minutes ago she tripped over her cone (sniffing the ground) and fell down, paws on her cone, so she had trouble standing back up.

    Bad Dog Momma here didn't help. I was too busy coughing up a lung from the laughter that resulted.

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  7. Conehead kitteh

    imgw:"http://i35.photobucket.com/albums/d170/lewy14/cimg4351.jpg"

    fails to see the humor.

    (More here)

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  8. I no longer support any of them and never will again. My money now goes to local animal rescues and shelters.

    Indeed. I don't donate to "high concept" orgs anymore either.

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  9. Airforcewife ... our "Dera" had to wear a large cone for a while due to surgery on her tail ... did NOT work out, she kept running in to walls and getting "stuck" there, kind of sad, except for the hilarity of it all. Dog getting stuck on walls where ever she turned around. We removed the cone and used a salve on the bandages that dogs don't like and won't chew or lick.

    Lewy ... "High Concept" outfits seem to have no end of funds for promotion, multiple large four color brochures, etc., all the while asking for more money (in my case, $600 plus a whack most of the time), not to mention those that are in denial about just who is causing their problems.

    Bah!

    ReplyDelete