Wednesday, May 03, 2006
Don't Buy Gas?
From Buzzflash, this is something you can send in reply to all of your e-mail buddies who are fwding 'Don't Buy Gas' emails.
Check out the obscene gas prices on the cartoon: this was from 2003.
It's hard to recall, what with historical amnesia and all, and what with National Propaganda Radio telling us how cheap gas is today compared to the 1970s, so I looked it up:
We were crying about $18-$19 dollar a barrel for oil in 2000.
Now, it's almost four times that price. Did your paycheck increase anywhere NEAR as substantially during that period? Is your future pension, social security check, financial plan MORE secure? Did an Exxon executive just get a $400 million bonus?
Job Well Done, Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney.
Just not for 95 percent of Americans.
Yes, we are addicted to oil, that is the life we were born into.
And we know who supplies our fix.
Where is a cop when you need one?
Copy & Paste:
Response to 'Don't Buy Gas' Emails
by Woody Hastings
Dear Friends,
A few thoughts about the email circulating regarding a strategy for reducing gasoline prices ...
We in the U.S. have always paid artificially low prices for gasoline. If U.S. government subsidies were removed and externalized costs included, we would be paying well over $10 per gallon for gas at the pump. This does not even take into account costs that cannot be translated into dollars such as the loss of life and limb in oil wars, disastrous damage to the global climate, and destruction of communities and the natural environment where oil is extracted.
People pay dearly for oil, but not U.S. consumers who pay a price per gallon way below the value of what is being consumed. We should be willing to pay the true cost of oil, but to address these damages, not to line the pockets of oil barrens.
I agree that we shouldn't buy gas from ExxonMobil; they are certainly among the worst oil companies in the world. And I agree that oil companies should not be permitted to reap obscene profits. But I do not agree with a strategy of avoiding particular brands of gasoline in an attempt to make gas prices go down. Low gas prices just trigger increased usage and waste of gas. Better for us to reduce our gas usage altogether.
There's at least one benefit to gas prices being higher for U.S. consumers. It provides an incentive to curb use of gas and makes alternatives more economically attractive. Not all alternatives are good, but many good non-petroleum-based alternatives exist and it is merely a matter of political will to redirect our nation’s resources to implement them.
Another factor that cannot be ignored is that the world is at or near the global oil extraction peak. Soon production will not be able to meet demand no matter how fast we pump, no matter how many countries the U.S. bombs. Other than a few insignificant ups and downs, gas prices will only rise from here on out.
So what to do?
Walk, ride a bike, use public transit, and if you must drive, drive a fuel efficient vehicle and carpool. If you want to do even more, investigate non-petroleum alternatives.
If and when you must buy gas, I suggest that you buy it from CITGO, Venezuela's state oil company. They re-direct most profits away from the multinationals to social programs that benefit the people of Venezuela, nearby countries, and even some low income communities in the U.S.
I propose that email-organized collective mass actions be focused on creating the political will to redirect our nation’s resources to implementing non-petroleum-based alternatives.
I offer the following links that you can use to research some of the points I made above.
For info about the true cost of gasoline start with:
www.ucsusa.org/clean_vehicles/fuel_economy/subsidizing-big-oil.html
Union of Concerned Scientists
For info about global peak oil extraction start with:
www.peakoil.net Association for the Study of Peak Oil & Gas
For info regarding alternative fuels and vehicles start with:
www.eere.energy.gov/afdc/ US Dept of Energy – Alternative Fuels Data Center
For info about the scientific consensus regarding global climate change start with:
www.ipcc.ch Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
Sincerely,
Woody Hastings
California
April 21, 2006
A BUZZFLASH READER CONTRIBUTION
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1 comment:
I agree that low gas prices are not beneficial. Until Americans wake up and understand the huge role their addiction to oil is playing in the destruction of the Earth only high gas prices will force them to make changes. Conservation and use of alternatives to gas and oil, like biodiesel, will not become acceptable to everyday people until it becomes a pocketbook issue. Only then will filling your car with recycled McDonald's fryer oil become admirable rather than laughable. I am happy to pay over $3 a gallon (at Citgo) if it will force America to change its bad habits.
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