By Larry Thornberry on 6.30.08 @ 12:07AM
Will the real John McCain (if there is one), please...
John McCain feels very strongly both ways. No surprise here.
This is often the case with politicians.
When regular walking around Americans hold two contradictory
ideas or positions at the same time, we drag out fancy
psychological terms like cognitive dissonance (and sometimes even a
prescription pad), or just assume that the guy doesn't pack the
I.Q. to see the inconsistencies.
When politicians ride off in two directions at once it can be
the case that the guy (or gal) is just a dim bulb. But more often
the politician is cynically dialing for votes by trying to
simultaneously please different groups of people who want different
things. The second is likely what's going on now with McCain and
the moving targets he has made of his energy policies. Perhaps
moving targets are no problem for an old fighter jock. But the rest
of us are having a hard time locking on.
McCain has tried to work both sides of various policy streets,
as most politicians do from time to time. But never so blatantly as
his current switch-hitting on energy and oil drilling. His energy
positions are not only contradictory, but they change faster than
the Living Constitution changes. Miss a news cycle and you won't
know which McCain energy positions are now inoperative. (Where's
Ron Ziegler when you need him?) His policies on energy have so many
twists they would give a snake a backache. I'm not sure Talmudic
scholars could parse them.
A LITTLE REVIEW:
In spite of the fact that the demand for energy in America and
the world is rapidly increasing, McCain has consistently opposed
drilling for the large oil deposits in ANWR. In taking this
eccentric (to put it charitably) position he aligns himself with
those Lexus liberals who care more about the comfort of caribou and
polar bears than they do about widows on fixed incomes trying not
to freeze to death during New England winters. (Not that a few
modern oil wells in ANWR would inconvenience Alaska's four-legged
citizens in the least.)
McCain's stated reason for not drilling in a micro-patch of one
of the most desolate spots on the planet is that ANWR is
"pristine." Well, yes. ANWR is pristine -- in much the same way
that the surface of Jupiter is pristine. And they look about the
same. (ANWR is not the end of the world -- but you can see the end
of the world from ANWR. And the end of the world looks better.)
This insane solicitousness of the comfort of obscure animals and
abstractions excites the erogenous zones of environmentalists. But
it's increasingly irritating to American voters paying $4 per
gallon for gasoline and fearing that the ride to the top price is
nowhere near over.
So whether or not McCain has seen the light, he at least has
felt the heat. While still clinging to his no ANWR position, he
announced on June 17 that he was in favor of drilling off the
nation's coasts for oil, most of whose considerable reserves
politicians have put off limits in order to cater to
environmentalists and tourism interests unreasonably concerned
about possible damage to beaches in the event of an oil spill.
(Some of these folks still have nightmares of the oil spill off
Santa Barbara, California, which took place in 1969 with 1950s and
1940s drilling and cleanup technology in place. Environmentalists
encourage these nightmares.)
But even here McCain tries to have it both ways. He said we
should recover offshore oil because the need for energy relief
borders on a national emergency. But then says state officials
should be allowed to decide whether or not drilling should take
place off their states' shores.
For those of you puzzling over this, let me reassure you that
you haven't missed a connection. This is a political, not a logical
syllogism. McCain is actually saying that energy supplies are in
crisis mode and we need to recover our offshore oil for the sake of
the entire nation. But he would leave it up to state officials
whether or not we can do this.
This is peculiar leadership.
MCCAIN'S CALL FOR MORE offshore drilling resulted in a predictable
fertilizer storm from environmentalists, who began to call and
write elected officials and editorial writers directly from their
fainting couches. National and state-level Democrats ridiculed the
idea that actually recovering more oil could have anything to do
with the nation's energy supply. In Florida even numerous
Republicans, including the incoming state House Speaker, remain
opposed to offshore drilling.
In a priceless, but also sobering moment, one state Republican
representative was quoted by the Tampa Tribune as saying,
"The escalating rates, I have been told, are not due to the
scarcity of oil, but to demand." If the Trib. reporter got
this quote right, it certainly raises intriguing questions about
the future of self-government. And makes you wonder who dresses
this guy in the morning.
This kerfuffle didn't go unnoticed at McCain HQ. Engaging in a
Republican specialty, the free-style retreat, McCain showed his
energy resolve and his iron leadership Wednesday by putting it out
through his campaign advisers that he really wants the
prohibitions, passed two years ago, that keep most of the eastern
Gulf of Mexico off limits to drilling, to stay in force.
So there you have it. John McCain is four-square for recovering
our offshore oil resources because we need them so badly, except
that he wants the ban against recovering them to continue. In any
case, he'll defer to state legislators, some of whom don't realize
that scarcity and demand are related.
While we're pondering all this, I'll remind readers that
offshore drilling may become moot if McCain succeeds in getting his
insane cap and trade system for limiting carbon dioxide emissions
through Congress and signs it into law. If, God forbid, this should
ever happen, federal energy commissars would not let us use the
offshore oil we've finally had the sense to recover.
Boy, it sure takes a lot of energy sometimes to understand
energy policy.
topics:
Trade, John McCain, Environment, Constitution, Law, Energy, Alaska, Oil