When you’re told that windmills and solar panels will reduce our
dependence on foreign sources of oil — because, apparently, we get
electricity from oil, or else drive wind- and solar-powered cars,
not sure — you ought to smell a rat.
When a president accelerates his anti-energy campaign with the
supposedly protective gauze of rhetoric about still fully
supporting nuclear power — words, rather contrary to
actions, like canceling the one place we had built to store spent
material, after 15 years and $13 billion energy-tax dollars — you
ought to demand he stop playing you for a fool.
Japan’s problems largely arose from on-site storage of spent
fuel. Actual support for nuclear power here would involve
immediately recognizing we shouldn’t be doing that here any longer,
and promptly reversing the effort to kill Yucca Mountain. After
all, 61 of our 104 nuclear facilities are full up. No more room at
the inn.
But nope. Words are enough. There’s a
war on energy to conduct, after all.
So when someone claims a desire for energy security while waging
war on 250 years of domestic coal supply, you ought to say hold,
enough.
But, finally, when the reason for an agenda keeps changing,
there’s probably no good reason supporting it. At least, not
one its promoters think the governed will consent to.
First we were told we had to allow the state to coerce and even
force us off of energy sources that work in favor of those that do
not in the name of ‘climate change’ (as a proxy for all of the
ever-changing variations therein which were employed).
Then it was ‘jobs’. Until the examples of supposed success
stories all were destroyed under scrutiny.
Then ‘energy of the future!’, except of course wind and solar
powered electricity are just as old as coal-fired (all developed in
the 1880s). The former are just losers, reduced to pleading for
support schemes because they’re, ahem, ‘nascent’.
Now, with today’s speech by President Obama it is the even less
plausible (and therefore, fourth-tier) claim of ‘energy
security!’.
Here’s a problem with that. It’s been clear all along the agenda
is one that greatly weakens a nation’s security, both energy and
overall: nuclear is scary, coal dirty, gas not clean enough.
We’ll just rely on electricity, instead!
Or, as green activists argued in
advance of a G8 summit:
“World leaders must not allow concern for energy
security to distract them from taking promised action on global
warming”.
One is inconsistent with the other. Got it. And yet, today,
Obama takes the stage at Georgetown to claim black is white, day is
night, and mortgaging our energy future on that which has
throughout history failed — which even greens saw as ultimately
vulnerable for reasons of the incredible energy insecurity they
guarantee — must be done in the name of enhancing our security.
We’ve always been at war with EastAsia, Winston.
The ‘Say Anything’ president.
Wretched.