The Free Press: Speaking Truth to Power Sat Nov 22 2008
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Molly Ivins

Other Stuff
October 2, 2004

AUSTIN, Texas -- This column is not about the presidential debate. It's about Other Stuff. Particularly eye-catching are the updates on the price of gasoline, your overtime pay, why the company most likely to hold the mortgage on your house could go broke, why you're getting peanuts from new tax cuts just passed by Congress and how the government is kicking hundreds of thousands of kids off health insurance while promising not to. Cheer all around.

        -- The price of a barrel of oil went over $50 for the first time early this week, and the price of gassing up my vehicle, Truck Bob the Ford, is now $36 a pop. According to oil-ologists, this is on account of the unrest in oil-producing countries and rising global demand destabilizing world energy markets. Don't you love the jargon? The petro experts also say this ain't gonna get better.

        Also Not Helping -- in fact, headed in completely the wrong direction -- is U.S. energy policy under You Know Who. More than half the oil we use today is imported, much of it from such stable, democratic regimes as Iraq. The Energy Department predicts this will rise to 70 percent in 20 years.

        The Natural Resources Defense Council has just put out a new study showing that the five biggest oil companies (ExxonMobil, Total, Shell, BP and ChevronTexaco) reported a $5.5 billion, or 16 percent, increase in profits during the first half of 2004 compared with the same period last year, which was no slouch either. Both ExxonMobil and ChevronTexaco posted record second quarter profits in 2004.

        In the 1970s, we conserved our way out of an oil crisis. But consumption rose 18 percent between 1990 and 2003 because of stagnant standards of fuel efficiency. "Energy policy in Washington amounts to little more than a gift to energy companies -- weakening environmental protections, extending regulatory loopholes, lavishing mammoth tax breaks on the biggest of big guzzlers and creating new barriers to stronger fuel economy standards," says the NRDC.

        Public interest groups finally managed to get some records from Dick Cheney's energy task force. Surprise, they show that industry lobbyists not only played a pivotal role in making the policy, they wrote much of it themselves. Judicial Watch obtained maps of the Iraqi oil fields from the energy task force, along with charts, developments, project costs, etc., as well as a list of "Foreign Suitors for Iraqi Oilfield Contracts." They are dated March 2001. This is of particular interest because the staggering profits of the last three years have left the oil companies with billions of dollars they want to invest in undeveloped world reserves.

        There is a better way. Instead of subsidizing the obscenely profitable oil companies, we could put that money into researching and subsidizing new, non-polluting technologies.

        -- The 6 million of you who will lose overtime pay under the new Department of Labor regulations -- a pet cause of business groups --will not be pleased to learn that although the House of Representatives voted against the regs ('tis the season for elections), the R's are fighting against a Senate vote and Bush says he'll veto the bill even if it gets passed.

        -- When the editorial page of The Wall Street Journal and (SET ITAL) moi (END ITAL) are in perfect accord, it either means the End Times are near or it's right for once. Accounting irregularities at Fannie Mae, the nation's largest backer of home mortgages, may force a "restatement of earnings," a lovely phrase meaning, "Oops, we cheated and got caught."

        According to The New York Times, this falls "far short of the level of corporate abuse at Enron," but the company did engage in "sloppy and misleading accounting practices." In 1998, the company deferred $200 million in expenses so executives could receive their full annual bonuses. Sounds like Enron to me.

        After I wrote a column about these bad doings a few months ago, I got a call from a public relations firm offering to fly someone from Washington to Austin immediately just to explain to little ol' me why I was ever so wrong about Fannie Mae. This caused me to conclude that if these fools had spent a lot less on p.r. and lobbying, they'd be much better off.

        -- Forget the bull about "a middle class tax cut" as a pre-election gift from Congress. The Urban Institute reports the middle 20 percent of earners will get an average tax cut of $162 in 2005 -- the top fifth of earners will get an average cut of $1,317. Same old, same old.

        -- Bush promised at the Republican convention to spend $1 billion to enroll "millions of poor children" in CHIP, the federal health insurance program. Too bad, this week he's returning $1.1 billion in unspent CHIP money despite pleas from the states that they really, really need it. That would cover 750,000 uninsured children nationwide.

        To find out more about Molly Ivins and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2004 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008

Molly Ivins

"Yup, 2004"
  December 29, 2004

"Liberals and libertarians unite! "
  December 22, 2004

"Merry Christmas!"
  December 22, 2004

"More waste from the 'reality-based community'"
  December 16, 2004

"The problem of American torture"
  December 2, 2004

"Goody, goody, gumdrop"
  November 30, 2004

"A few political developments"
  November 25, 2004

"I'm jaw-dropped, you've-got-to-be-kidding mad"
  November 23, 2004

"Look at it this way"
  November 21, 2004

"Pay some attention"
  November 21, 2004

"A long four years"
  November 17, 2004

"Awwww, Ashcroft!"
  November 11, 2004

"What Is to Be Done?"
  November 9, 2004

"Don't mourn, organize"
  November 4, 2004

"My money down: Kerry over Bush"
  October 28, 2004

"No idea how much fun and slime you are missing"
  October 27, 2004

"Sinclair Group and Mark Hyman"
  October 18, 2004

"Four more years?"
  October 18, 2004

"Bush thinks we're dumb"
  October 12, 2004

"It never occurred to him?"
  October 5, 2004

"Other Stuff"
  October 2, 2004

"Twilight Zone of Wonderland"
  September 28, 2004

"Another example of how you're being suckered"
  September 23, 2004

"Media Watch Alert"
  September 20, 2004

"When it's not a swing state"
  September 20, 2004

"Ben Barnes"
  September 11, 2004

"And so it goes..."
  September 8, 2004

"Unmitigated gall"
  September 2, 2004

"Another record"
  August 30, 2004

"One good laugh"
  August 26, 2004

"Labor Day surprise!"
  August 23, 2004

"Before the war..."
  August 19, 2004

"Nice, polite, calm..."
  August 15, 2004

""Look at Nelson Mandela""
  July 22, 2004

"Not in this lifetime for Clinton"
  July 14, 2004

"What ever happened to the Constitution?"
  July 10, 2004

"Happy birthday, America!"
  July 1, 2004

"Real beauts in the hypocrisy department"
  June 29, 2004

"Governments lie. So what?"
  June 23, 2004

"Not easily discouraged"
  June 18, 2004

"Don't you feel better now?"
  June 16, 2004

"Justifying torture"
  June 10, 2004

"Word and Deed"
  June 8, 2004

"Just the facts, ma'am"
  June 2, 2004

"What the Bush administration is really about"
  June 1, 2004

"Depressing as divorce"
  May 28, 2004

"Why did Abu Ghraib happen?"
  May 21, 2004

"Killing them for their own good"
  May 18, 2004

"Let's get real"
  May 7, 2004

"A glass half empty "
  May 4, 2004

"March for women's lives"
  April 29, 2004

"Sinners of Texas, unite!"
  April 29, 2004

"A charming little Bush thesis"
  April 22, 2004

"She is still strong and invincible "
  April 20, 2004

"Bush's primetime press conference"
  April 15, 2004

"America, an amazing country "
  April 12, 2004

"Death of democracy"
  April 8, 2004

"A mess "
  April 6, 2004

"Strange peaches"
  April 1, 2004

"Brainwashing season "
  March 31, 2004

"Beware the wrath of the birding legions "
  March 29, 2004

"A responsibility"
  March 25, 2004

" Saving us from corporate criminals "
  March 22, 2004

"Lying liars . . . "
  March 17, 2004

"Good, high-payin' jobs "
  March 15, 2004

"Sailing on the Voucher Boat "
  March 10, 2004

"Not any smarter"
  March 8, 2004

"A candidate"
  March 4, 2004

"Don't hit the hornets' nest"
  March 2, 2004

"Freddie and Fannie"
  February 25, 2004

"Either you're with us, or with the teacher's union"
  February 24, 2004

"Raising hell "
  February 11, 2004

"Sexing Up"
  February 9, 2004

"Who's the real madman? "
  February 9, 2004

"Think tank extraviganze"
  January 29, 2004

"Iowa results "
  January 22, 2004

"The union's finances"
  January 20, 2004

"Why are we going to do it again?"
  January 15, 2004

"Bush's immigration plan: same old big business blather"
  January 12, 2004

"Cheerleader Conspiracy"
  January 8, 2004

"The Hidden News "
  January 7, 2004




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