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Thu Aug 07 2008
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Columns
Molly Ivins
The trouble with deregulation
August 27, 2005
AUSTIN, Texas -- The trouble with deregulation is that it always takes some disaster like Enron before we realize there was a reason for the regulation to begin with.
We are about to repeat one of the huge mistakes of the 1920s and '30s because we have forgotten why PUHCA (pronounced Pooka) was instituted in the first place. PUHCA is the Public Utility Holding Company Act, passed in 1935, which prevents concentration of ownership of power plants. Both the House and Senate versions of the energy bill contain a repeal of PUHCA.
As Kelpie Wilson pointed out in article for Truthout, "For 50 years we have had reliable, cheap electric power that has allowed strong economic growth, and no PUHCA-regulated energy holding company has ever gone broke."
PUHCA was partially repealed in the '90s, and even that much deregulation was part of what led to Enron, Westar and other slight mishaps.
PUHCA puts utilities under strict regulation by both state and federal governments. It restricts ownership of utilities to public or private companies that are in the business of producing power.
The most likely candidates to take over power companies are the big oil companies, now awash in cash. There goes the electrical grid: Why fix it when you can charge more for doing nothing?
Lynn Hargis, an attorney who spent 10 years at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and is now with Public Citizen, says repeal means a repeat of the same dreary mistakes. In the 1920s, three huge companies owned half of the nation's power plants and built them into speculative power-holding companies that used the reliable money from utilities for flights of fancy in the stock market.
When you are paying your electric bill to ExxonMobil, Halliburton or some Chinese firm, you will see why this is a monumentally bad idea. (Speaking of the veep's former home company, according to HalliburtonWatch.org, the company is employing its workers in Iraq through its subsidiary in the Cayman Islands. This means Halliburton won't have to pay unemployment benefits for the workers when they return home.)
CROW EATEN HERE: This is a horror. In a column written June 28, I asserted that more Iraqis (civilians) had now been killed in this war than had been killed by Saddam Hussein over his 24-year rule. WRONG. Really, really wrong.
The only problem is figuring out by how large a factor I was wrong. I had been keeping an eye on civilian deaths in Iraq for a couple of months, waiting for the most conservative estimates to creep over 20,000, which I had fixed in my mind as the number of Iraqi civilians Saddam had killed.
The high-end estimate of Iraqi civilian deaths in this war is 100,000, according to a Johns Hopkins University study published in the British medical journal The Lancet last October, but I was sticking to the low-end, most conservative estimates because I didn't want to be accused of exaggeration.
Ha! I could hardly have been more wrong, no matter how you count Saddam's killing of civilians. According to Human Rights Watch, Hussein killed several hundred thousand of his fellow citizens. The massacre of the Kurdish Barzani tribe in 1983 killed at least 8,000; the infamous gas attack on the Kurdish village of Halabja killed 5,000 in 1988; and seized documents from Iraqi security organizations show 182,000 were murdered during the Anfal ethnic cleansing campaign against Kurds, also in 1988.
In 1991, following the first Gulf War, both the Kurds and the Shiites rebelled. The allied forces did not intervene, and Saddam brutally suppressed both uprisings and drained the southern marshes that had been home to a local population for more than 5,000 years.
Saddam's regime left 271 mass graves, with more still being discovered. That figure alone was the source for my original mistaken estimate of 20,000. Saddam's widespread use of systematic torture, including rape, has been verified by the U.N. Committee on Human Rights and other human rights groups over the years.
There are wildly varying estimates of the number of civilians, especially babies and young children, who died as a result of the sanctions that followed the Gulf War. While it is true that the ill-advised sanctions were put in place by the United Nations, I do not see that that lessens Hussein's moral culpability, whatever blame attaches to the sanctions themselves -- particularly since Saddam promptly corrupted the Oil for Food Program put in place to mitigate the effects of the sanctions, and used the proceeds to build more palaces, etc.
There have been estimates as high as 1 million civilians killed by Saddam, though most agree on the 300,000 to 400,000 range, making my comparison to 20,000 civilian dead in this war pathetically wrong.
I was certainly under no illusions regarding Saddam Hussein, whom I have opposed through human rights work for decades. My sincere apologies. It is unforgivable of me not have checked. I am so sorry.
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 2005 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.
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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008 
Molly Ivins
"A moral issue" December 29, 2005
"This could scarcely be clearer" December 28, 2005
"Fantasy in Iraq" December 21, 2005
"Good old constitutional crisis" December 19, 2005
"Another mission accomplished" December 15, 2005
"Pre-procrastination Christmas booklist!" December 13, 2005
"Annual Christmas book list" December 6, 2005
"Talking for God, taking for personal gain" December 1, 2005
"Let's make lemonade this Thanksgiving" November 24, 2005
"Which Bush crony will be the next Brownie?" November 17, 2005
"Are they stupid, or are they lying?" November 14, 2005
"What have we become?" November 10, 2005
"The Brownie memos" November 8, 2005
"Worst legacy of the Bush years" November 3, 2005
"Leaping lightly" November 1, 2005
"Diane Wilson, magnificent unreasonableness" October 25, 2005
"How do we fix this mess?" October 20, 2005
"Good ideas on how to fix things" October 18, 2005
"Pensions" October 14, 2005
"Outrage of the Week" October 12, 2005
"The big picture" October 6, 2005
"Bunker Time: Harriet Miers" October 6, 2005
"Ronnie Earle, partisan fanatic?" September 30, 2005
"The KatrinaRita" September 27, 2005
"A giant snit" September 22, 2005
"Project Censored 2006" September 20, 2005
"The Bankruptcy Act and New Orleans" September 17, 2005
"Dear Dubya, Your Pal, Perry" September 15, 2005
"Where to look first" September 8, 2005
"Happy Labor Day, comrades" September 4, 2005
"Real consequences" September 1, 2005
"Solidarity Forev ... ooops, make that, Solidarity Later" September 1, 2005
"Blink" August 30, 2005
"The trouble with deregulation" August 27, 2005
"John Roberts and the Federalist Society*" July 27, 2005
"The AFL-CIO, CWC, SEIU, and tough SOBs" July 26, 2005
"We're missing the point" July 19, 2005
"Karl Rove, the CIA, and the media" July 14, 2005
"Eaten alive by corruption" July 7, 2005
""Progress" through economic interest" July 1, 2005
"The liberal straw man" June 28, 2005
"Follow the money" June 23, 2005
"PBS, CPB, and Republican bias" June 19, 2005
"Bush's high office appointments" June 15, 2005
"The Hyper Rich" June 8, 2005
"Indians pay conservative lobbyists to meet with Bush" June 7, 2005
"More fun from Texas" June 2, 2005
"Catapulting the propaganda" May 30, 2005
"The irony surplus" May 26, 2005
"National Laboratory for Bad Government" May 25, 2005
"The Koran and Guantanamo" May 18, 2005
"This is a revoltin" May 18, 2005
"Meanwhile, back in Iraq" May 10, 2005
"The current state of American energy policy" May 5, 2005
"Progressive indexing? Oh, you mean cutting Social Security benefits?" May 4, 2005
"Populist lagniappe" April 28, 2005
"The nuclear option and judicial activists" April 26, 2005
"John Bolton vote delay" April 21, 2005
"I like conservatives" April 19, 2005
"The real consequences of Tax Day" April 13, 2005
"Technical violations: oh, they're all related" April 12, 2005
"Non-parent in residence" April 5, 2005
"Hypocrisy, the U.S. and the U.N." April 1, 2005
"Truly crazy: the Cheney energy policy" March 29, 2005
"The Schiavo mistake" March 21, 2005
"This guy smells like a slop jar" March 16, 2005
"Government produced "news"" March 15, 2005
"Arrogant, humorless, self-righteous and confrontational" March 10, 2005
"Go, Byrd" March 7, 2005
"Bankruptcy Bill: A gift to big bankers and credit card companies" March 3, 2005
"They're at it again" March 1, 2005
"Yeah, it's really terrible what the president of Harvard said" February 24, 2005
"Fiscal nonsense" February 22, 2005
"Tort reform: not as simple as they'd like you to think" February 16, 2005
"The President's budget" February 16, 2005
"More bad news from Bush" February 10, 2005
"A no-brainer" February 8, 2005
"Divide between Bush's rhetoric and reality" February 3, 2005
"International election black clouds" February 1, 2005
"More complicated than George W. Bush thinks it is" January 28, 2005
""Private accounts" versus "personal accounts"" January 27, 2005
"What, do you want to insult Condoleezza Rice's integrity?" January 24, 2005
"Alternate reality" January 21, 2005
"Character" January 18, 2005
"A flat out whopper" January 13, 2005
"These people are slicker than bus station chili" January 11, 2005
"Prior-roarities" January 9, 2005
"Off to a bad start" January 3, 2005
Read Articles by Year: 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000

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