Gasoline prices are soaring and the American people are
angry.
http://www.house.gov/paul/tst/tst2006/tst073106.htm
What Congress Can Do About Higher Gas Prices
July 31, 2006
Gasoline prices are soaring and the American people are
angry. They want something done about it—now!
$100 rebate checks to American motorists won’t cut it,
nor will mandatory mileage requirements for new
vehicles. Taxing oil profits will only force prices
higher. But there are some very important things we can
do immediately to help.
First: We must reassess our foreign policy and announce
some changes. One of the reasons we went into Iraq was
to secure oil. Before the Iraq war oil was less than $30
per barrel; today it is over $70. The sooner we get out
of Iraq and allow the Iraqis to solve their own problems
the better. Since 2002 oil production in Iraq has
dropped 50%. Pipeline sabotage and fires are routine; we
have been unable to prevent them. Soaring gasoline
prices are a giant unintended consequence of our
invasion, pure and simple.
Second: We must end our obsession for a military
confrontation with Iran. Iran does not have a nuclear
weapon, and according to our own CIA is nowhere near
getting one. Yet the drumbeat grows louder for attacking
certain sites in Iran, either by conventional or even
nuclear means. An attack on Iran, coupled with our
continued presence in Iraq, could hike gas prices to $5
or $6 per gallon here at home. By contrast, a sensible
approach toward Iran could quickly lower oil prices by
$20 per barrel.
Third: We must remember that prices of all things go up
because of inflation. Inflation by definition is an
increase in the money supply. The money supply is
controlled by the Federal Reserve Bank, and responds to
the deficits Congress creates. When deficits are
excessive, as they are today, the Fed creates new
dollars out of thin air to buy Treasury bills and keep
interest rates artificially low. But when new money is
created out of nothing, the money already in circulation
loses value. Once this is recognized, prices rise-- some
more rapidly than others. That’s what we see today with
the cost of energy.
Exploding deficits, due to runaway entitlement spending
and the cost of overseas engagements, create pressure
for the Fed to inflate the money supply. This
contributes greatly to the higher prices we’re all
paying at the pump.
If we want to do something about gas prices, Congress
should greatly reduce federal spending, balance the
budget, and eliminate regulations that interfere with
the market development of alternative fuels. All
subsidies and special benefits to energy companies
should be ended. And in the meantime let’s eliminate
federal gas taxes at the pump.
Oil prices are at a level where consumers reduce
consumption voluntarily. The market will work if we let
it. But as great as the market economy is, it cannot
overcome a foreign policy that is destined to disrupt
oil supplies and threaten the world with an expanded and
dangerous conflict in the Middle East.
http://www.house.gov/paul/legis.shtml
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"The Randi Roads Show"
....Bush Policy, "Kill Them All...."
AUDIO:
http://server2.whiterosesociety.org/content/rhodes/RhodesShow-(1-8-2006).mp3
Aaron Russo After Movie
http://youtube.com/watch?v=2N5TIM62nwY
What Americans do not realize however, is the extent of
media deception and information control that is official
Israeli policy. Yes, by policy and with the total
agreement and cooperation of all the Israeli TV news
media, Israeli military censors have the final say on
every single Israeli military operation that is covered
by their media. Every single news item that is viewed by
Israeli citizens on their own media in their own so
called democracy is government censored.
http://tvnewslies.org/html/the_israel_you_don_t_see_on_th.html