Republicans Target "Economic Crimes"

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Republicans Target "Economic Crimes"

by William Anderson

[Posted on Wednesday, April 26, 2006]
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Should anyone doubt that the Republicans have become the sworn enemies of the forces of supply and demand, as well as free enterprise, the following statements should change the minds of most skeptics:

Congressional GOP leaders on Monday formally called on President Bush to launch an investigation into possible price gouging by oil companies, as gas costs shot up nearly 25 cents a gallon in two weeks.

"Anyone who is trying to take advantage of this situation while American families are forced into making tough choices over whether to fill up their cars or severely cut back their budgets should be investigated and prosecuted," House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Illinois, and Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tennessee, wrote in a letter to President Bush. "Therefore, we believe that Federal law enforcement agencies and regulators should take every available step to ensure that all Federal laws protecting American consumers from price-fixing, collusion, gouging and other anti-competitive practices are vigorously enforced."

Once upon a time in that former country known as the Soviet Union, much of the law centered around the existence of what the government called "economic crimes" or "speculation" (a code word for "free enterprise"). Today, we see the top lawmakers in the United States trying to take a page out of the USSR in calling for prosecution — and, one would suppose, imprisonment — of oil company executives because gasoline prices have risen drastically at the pump.

Lest one think that Frist and Hastert are not serious, the following should remind all of us that they are serious about wanting to criminalize the latest episode of price increases:

"Anyone who is trying to unfairly profit by forcing American families to make tough choices over whether to fill the car up with gas or severely cut back on their budgets should be investigated and prosecuted," said Ron Bonjean, spokesman for Hastert.

Unfortunately, we are seeing an annual affair, although the recent statements by the Congressional leaders have served to ratchet up the rhetoric — and possible consequences both for business leaders and for consumers. Six years ago, when we had the first of what now are annual spring price spikes in gasoline prices, I pointed out that the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 were chiefly to blame for the problem.

Moreover, members of Congress, when one clears through the fog of false statements, intuitively know that they carry much of the blame. Included in the Frist-Hastert threats was the following:

Hastert and Frist asked Bush to direct the Justice Department and Federal Trade Commission to investigate the rising oil prices and also will request that certain areas be exempt from having to use a more expensive but cleaner blend of gasoline. (Emphasis mine)

If one wishes to hear an economic explanation of why we are seeing the sudden increases at the pump, such explanations are available, and, furthermore, they tend to make much more sense than the latest press release from the Frist-Hastert tag team or Sen. Charles Schumer, who, like his Republican counterpart Arlen Specter, is calling for new anti-trust legislation and the destruction of present oil firms.

What we are seeing today is nothing less than the culmination of bad policies, beginning with the US foreign excursion in Iraq and environmental policies at home, complete with political favoritism being lavished upon the corn/ethanol lobby and culminating with more political favoritism, this time for the trial lawyers lobby. Let us begin.

That the conflagration in the Middle East is affecting the price of crude oil is a no-brainer. From the war in Iraq to the current tensions involving Iran, not to mention places like Nigeria and Venezuela, it is not surprising that oil traders are nervous and are bidding up the prices of futures contracts for oil delivery. By affecting the supply of crude oil, it is hardly surprising that these real issues are being reflected at the pump by higher gasoline prices.

However, the situation with crude oil explains only part of the current puzzle, and that is where Congress and the Environmental Protection Agency are playing a key role. The Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 required gasoline refiners to include mixtures to (allegedly) enable gasoline to burn more cleanly during the warmer months. In fact, beginning with the gasoline price spikes of April, 2000, price increases at the pump have been an annual "rite" of spring, complete with statements of outrage from politicians who are convinced that all this is a nefarious plot by oil executives. Not to be outdone, Congress mandated even more ethanol mixes in the "energy bill" it passed during the summer of 2005, which has continued this economic madness.

Oil refiners have complied with congressional directives using either Methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) or ethanol. (Furthermore, MTBE has been found to leach into water tables, creating taste and odor problems, making it less desirable as an additive because of the liability involved. Congress has refused to grant oil refiners immunity from MTBE lawsuits, thus throwing a sop to the trial lawyers' lobby. Ethanol, on the other hand, cannot be moved via pipeline and, thus cannot be mixed into gasoline at the refinery, unlike MTBE.) Both additives supposedly help fuels burn more cleanly (that is, burn more completely, leaving less waste), but their effectiveness is questionable:

Oxygen helps gasoline burn more completely, reducing harmful tailpipe emissions from pre-1984 motor vehicles. In more modern vehicles, the emissions reduction is negligible.

We need to read this carefully, because if Congress is claiming that oil executives are guilty of criminal fraud and conspiracy (the favorite two sets of charges levied by federal prosecutors), then we know that Congress as a whole is a body of liars and maybe even criminals (with a few exceptions, like Rep. Ron Paul of Texas). Congress is requiring a set of expensive mixtures in gasoline in the name of environmental protection, yet researchers have found no proof that these mixtures provide that protection. Furthermore, when the consequences of these foolish policies have affected consumers, instead of admitting to the damage they have done, members of Congress, as well as the Administration, point to business executives, declare them to be criminals, and threaten to imprison them. This is the height of cynicism.

No, the purpose of this latest monstrosity from Congress (dutifully signed by President George W. Bush, and then administered by the Environmental Protection Agency) is to force motorists to pay more for fuel in order to increase the incomes of politically connected ethanol manufacturers, as well as corn farmers in the "red states" of the Midwest. As the Wall Street Journal recently editorialized:

There's been unconscionable behavior all right, most of it on Capitol Hill. A decent portion of the latest run-up in gas prices — and the entire cause of recent spot shortages — is the direct result of the energy bill Congress passed last summer. That self-serving legislation handed Congress's friends in the ethanol lobby a mandate that forces drivers to use 7.5 billion gallons annually of that oxygenate by 2012.

At the same time, Congress refused to provide liability protection to the makers of MTBE, a rival oxygenate getting hit with lawsuits. So MTBE makers are leaving the market in a rush, while overstretched ethanol producers (despite their promises) are in no way equipped to compensate for the loss of MTBE in the fuel supply. Ethanol is also difficult to ship and store outside of the Midwest, which is causing supply headaches and spot gas shortages along the East Coast and Texas.

These columns warned Republicans this would happen. As recently as last year, ethanol was selling for $1.45 a gallon. By December it had reached $2 and is now going for $2.77. So refiners are now having to buy both oil and ethanol at sky-high prices. In short, the only market manipulation has been by politicians.

So, let us trace this sorry story to its most recent beginnings. (1) Congress requires new fuel mixtures during the warm weather months which are costly and disrupt available supplies, but those mixtures do not make the air any cleaner; (2) The President and Congress decide to invade Iraq and now are making threats toward Iran, thus guaranteeing political instability and violence in the largest oil-producing region of the world; (3) Congress requires even more ethanol mixtures, despite the fact that it disrupts supplies and ethanol manufacturers cannot meet the goals; (4) gasoline prices spike, and members of Congress call for arrest and imprisonment of oil executives.

Something obviously is wrong with this picture.
Stop the insanity: $8
Not surprisingly, almost all of the anger from consumers — if editorial cartoons are an indication of the direction of the rage — is pointed toward oil companies and their executives. On the other hand, members of Congress, which created this current crisis, are calling for the near-destruction of oil companies, imprisonment of executives, as well as a whole new set of taxes that would further reduce available fuel supplies — all in the name, of course, of lowering gasoline prices.

We cannot put these things into the category of bad policies made by well-meaning people. Instead, we are seeing the attempted destruction of one of the most vital industries in our country to be carried out by incompetent, venal tyrants who have no intention of telling the truth — and we have a cynical media acting as the mouthpiece.

There is a way out of this mess — reinstitute free markets in gasoline and oil — but Congress and the President of the United States, not to mention those who are politically connected, have no intention of permitting the markets to work.

William Anderson, an adjunct scholar of the Mises Institute, teaches economics at Frostburg State University. Send him mail. See his Mises.org Articles Archive. Comment on the blog.
 
Good article.

If politicians really cared we would be hearing talk of removing gas taxes, or maybe people could write off gas costs on their taxes or an ending of stupid (sorry redundant) enviromental regs, but do we? Nooooo.....it is big bad business that is out to suck us dry.

We can count on the heroic politicians to save us or so the pols say in their press releases.

I have no proof of the following but what if the idea is to raise gas prices to make us less mobile? Keep people confined to their local area? Combine gas prices with the horrors of modern air travel and people don't want to travel much anymore. Maybe in a decade or so add in Soviet style internal passports (Real ID?) and you can keep people from physicaly aggregating and thus becoming a threat.

It would be like raising the price of guns and ammo by various schemes to cause a drop off in gun purchases and use. Thus ensuring a less well armed populace. And a populace not interested enough in firearms to prevent their wholesale banning at some future point.

So if you were a tyrant you could do worse than---Disarm people, keep them confined, force them to use medical services you madate, regulate how they can build, what they can grow, what they can talk about (Hellooooo McCain! +hate speech), what they can charge, require licences for most occupations, mandate who must be employed, mandate the working conditions in businesses, and on and on and soon you will have a population of serfs that rely on you for everything from protection from thugs, for the ability to travel, for medical care, for employment, etc......and the best part is there will be a lot of people that think it is just dandy. That you are their best friend for doing all this, and that anybody who disagrees is dangerous and must be......turned into glue? Lampshades? Perhaps just re-educated if the self-criticism circle does not work.


Of course that pesky Internet has to be dealy with but I'm sure there will be a handy anti-evilism law that will be passed that blah blah blah blah permisssion to go online....blah blah blah......strict penalties for ISPs.......blah blah blah.........per Kb or Gb taxes to pay for the Internet Police......blah blah blah blah......add your own it's fun!


[/rant]
 
No kidding I heard on fox news that the dems want a gas tax holiday and that the GOP wants to throw $100 at ya. wow

Maybe after we find Bin Laden we can do a massive manhunt to find all of those Reagen Conservatives. I'm sure they are bound and taped in a conference room somewhere in D.C. (by the McCain RINO/neocons)
 
Hastert got caught driving away from a photo-op in a hydrogen-powered car, then, two blocks away, thinking there weren't any more cameras, getting out and getting into his Suburban to drive the two blocks (!) to the Capitol.

Like Hastert couldn't use the exercise anyway!

So anything any politician says is just hot air.
 
Most of that is doubletalk and drivel.

"...members of Congress call for arrest and imprisonment of oil executives..."

No they didn't. They called for investigation and prosecution if anything is found in the way of price fixing - which has been unlawful for a long time. There are already many economic crimes prosecuted each and every day.

John
 
If they were even 1% serious, they'd open the ANWR for drilling.

Because after it took ten years to see the first drop in the market (crude from there takes an entirely different cracking process than middle eastern crude), it'd supply the US needs for about, oh...six months. :rolleyes:

I don't understand what this obsession with drilling holes in the caribou place is. Even the OIL INDUSTRY isn't particularly interested. Too much outlay, too much effort for too little return, and that not even guaranteed. At this point, it's become people just wanting to be right even if they're wrong.

It's also the magic whine that people can use when they can't offer any other real solutions...that somehow that'd solve all our problems.

It wouldn't.

Now, new-build nuclear plants all over and clean-coal tech, THAT could accomplish a lot, we have CENTURIES of coal left in the US...but you have to get the oil execs' hands out of the money pot first...and they want to keep them stuck there.

And certain politicians have a vested interest, due to personal income, in maintaining the current arrangement of being utterly beholden to Prince Bandar and the bin Laden family.
 
Yeah clean Coal tech and Nuke tech are the way to go. IMHO nothing else will come close to feeding the U.S. demand. Everything else is nice, social utopian fluff.

But getting the politicians out of the way so they dont *&#@% it up......another story.
Their emotion and illogic have delayed this process...literally ever since I was born! Yet they wonder why we have a problem??
 
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This is somewhat of a distraction from the main problems underlying high prices at the pump. One being the inflating dollar - the other is the artificial pricing and monopolized system for selling and buying oil.

Besides, so many people in the oligarchy and their cronies have or have had personal interests in the oil business that they are not about to suddenly turn on their golden goose. This is just another show for public consumption.

-----------------------------------------------

http://ussliberty.org
http://ssunitedstates.org
 
Going nuke will give the enviro-nazis a serious wedgee. Never mind it is a viable option. Speaking of nukes, I hear China has plans to build 35 nuclear power plants, 5 coming on line each year. So how many does the US have coming on line? Duke Energy is thinking about building one plant.

We are so screwed.
 
Lots of comments . . .

First off, "clean" fuel additives, ethanol or MTBE. The latter was added to the list to provide cover for mandating ethanol. The legislators most enamored of mandating increased use of ethanol just coinicidentally tend to get the largest campaign contributions from Archer-Daniels Midland, which happens to be the largest producer of fuel-grade ethanol in the USA. Hmmm . . . and they can't make/transport enough now that MTBE is out of favor, so gas supplies go down and prices rise even more, with spot shortages CAUSED by wrong-headed, politically motivated government mandates.

Second, ANWR. It's thousands of miles from nowhere - why NOT drill there? And as for only supplying US demands for 6 months . . . that MIGHT be the case if we were 100% dependent on it, AND the most pessimistic estimates of the size of the deposit were accurate. Even so, if ANWR were to supply, say 5% of our needs, it would last a lot longer.

But ANWR is just a symptom of a "drilling bad" mindset - we have a number of other places to drill (Continental Shelf & elsewhere) and thanks to the environazis, those seem to be off-limits, too.

Third, coal. Back in WWII, Germany was producing fuel from coal. It's hard to believe that with today's technology, we couldn't do the same. In fact, several decades ago, it was reported that once the price of gas reached a certain level, coal processing would become viable. The threshold was 90 cents a gallon. What happened?

What happened is my fourth point - we haven't been able to build even a basic refinery in this country for 30 years thanks to bureacratic overhead and environazis, so forget about a coal processing plant.
 
One would think that given the fact that China is going nuke (big time) and buying Gold like crazy.....we would get are %#$@ straight.

Damn 35 nuke plants...while our politicians sit and bitch and moan??? China is going towards energy independence and we are tied to a region of the world THAT WILL NEVER SEE PEACE. And we are making them rich because of our dependence????aaahhhhh.:banghead: :banghead: :banghead: :banghead:
 
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