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Robert Creamer

Robert Creamer

Posted: May 31, 2010 06:48 PM

The Oil Spill and the Republicans

What's Your Reaction:

The frustration and anxiety of Americans about the horrific oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico grows by the day. Those whose livelihood is tied to the Gulf -- or who live in the wetlands of Louisiana, and communities along the coast -- are justifiable demanding the deployment of war-time levels of personnel and equipment to stop the dark, deadly oil that is invading from the sea.

In times of national crisis, Americans look to the President to lead -- and to deliver. That's why President Obama was absolutely correct to make it crystal clear that he is personally responsible to deal with the oil spill crisis -- and has told his Administration to spare no effort to stop the leak, oversee the cleanup, and assure that BP completely compensates the massive number of victims.

Increasingly sharp criticism has been leveled at the President because BP has so far been unable to stop the leak. The problem, of course, is that most of the critics have few suggestions about what the Administration might do that it isn't doing.

And it is down right remarkable that the critics, include Republicans like Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal, who less that two years ago were joining Republican oil industry "expert" Sarah Palin in the juvenile Republican convention chant "Drill Baby Drill!"

"Drill Baby Drill!" was not just intended to promote more offshore oil drilling. It was intended to mock Democratic concerns for the environmental impact of offshore drilling. It was intended to dismiss their opposition to drilling as stupid, "tree-hugging," anti-growth, "elite" concerns. It was intended to mock those who feared that offshore drilling would despoil our natural resources. It was intended to label them -- in the words of the late Republican Vice-President Spiro Agnew -- as "effete, nattering nabobs of negativism" -- part of the "chablis and brie" set that is completely disconnected from the lives of ordinary Americans who drink beer, work hard and get their hands dirty producing the products and the food we need in our everyday lives.

Of course things haven't turned out that way. The victims of the BP oil disaster are the shrimpers and the oystermen -- the people who own the mom and pop restaurants and coffee shops -- the folks who drive their pickup trucks to a job in the tourist industry along the Mississippi coast. The real victims are the fathers who want to take their sons hunting in the Louisiana wetlands the way their father took them.

And the real beneficiaries of the Bush-Cheney-Republican energy policy have not been ordinary Americans -- they are the giant oil companies that have become economic behemoths by encouraging the world's addiction to oil and preventing the development of energy alternatives that would end our dependence.

The fact is that while Big Oil has been polluting the Gulf with what now appears to be 12,000 to 19,000 barrels of oil -- or more -- each day since April, it has been polluting our politics with millions of dollars in campaign contributions for decades.

In the last three and a half years, the oil industry has given over $35 million dollars to the Republicans. Big Oil paid for "drill baby drill" just as surely as United Airlines paid for the naming rights of the United Center in Chicago.

There are two underlying causes for this disaster:

First and foremost is our failure to invest in development of clean, renewable energy sources to replace hydrocarbons that are rapidly running out and are increasingly expensive and dangerous to recover. For decades it has been obvious that this was a critical national -- worldwide -- necessity. We have failed to do so for one reason: the enormous political power of big oil.

The big oil companies own huge oil reserves that appreciate in value every time the price of oil rises. The scarcer oil gets, the more valuable those reserves become. They have every reason to promote the world's addiction to oil and to ransom the remaining supplies of hydrocarbon-based energy at higher and higher prices.

The interest of the private players in the energy market are simply different than the interest of ordinary Americans. It is up to the government to act to assure that our society develops cheap, clean abundant alternatives to fossil fuels. Left to their own devices, the big energy companies ain't gonna do it.

The Republicans -- who are virtually a wholly-owned subsidiary of the big oil companies -- are doing everything they can to block clean energy legislation that redirects our national energy policy down a road to renewables -- that puts the United States in the forefront of creating a new generation of clean energy jobs -- and that ends our political and military dependence on foreign oil.

Just last Friday, America crossed the one trillion dollar mark in spending for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that happened primarily because our dependence on oil from the Middle East. Even the attack by Al Qaeda. that spawned our involvement in Afghanistan had its roots in our involvement in Saudi Arabia that resulted entirely from U.S. dependence on foreign oil. And of course, every dollar we spend on oil and gasoline goes to support many of the world's regimes that are most committed to doing America harm.

Second, the BP oil spill resulted from the outrageously cozy "non-regulatory" attitude of the Interior Department's Minerals Management Service (MMS). That's the outfit that was the subject of the Inspector General's report that found MMS employees literally sleeping and doing drugs with the oil company executives they were suppose to regulate.

There is no doubt that MMS should have been overhauled more rapidly when the Democratic Administration took office. But the "non-regulatory" culture that allowed many oil companies to write their own inspection reports was enshrined by the Bush Adminstration's culture of "private industry knows best." And it was easy for the so-called regulators to justify giving environmental waivers to BP for the Deepwater Horizon well since Congress had mandated that applications for drilling permits must be acted on within thirty days - never enough time for a serious environmental review.

Right now it appears that at least some oil will leak from the Deepwater Horizon well until August, when a relief well is completed and can permanently close off the blowout. But the Canadian Government requires that when oil companies drill in the environmentally sensitive Canadian Artic, a relief well must be drilled at the same time as the original well. If that were required in the Gulf, the spill would have ended shortly after the original blowout over a month ago.

The oil industry would argue that that would impose an enormous cost burden for deep water drilling. But all you need is one disaster to generate massively more cost than that of the relief well. BP's liability could rise to be hundreds of billions of dollars and it should be forced to pay every penny even if it were ultimately to mean bankruptcy.

Of course oil flacks like Republican Senator James Inhofe of Oklahoma would argue that imposing additional costs and exposing oil companies to uncapped liability would "discourage" this kind of drilling. Precisely. We need to require polluters to base their economic decisions on the actual costs of their activities to everyone - including the ones they normally try to externalize to the rest of us.

The oil companies - like Wall Street - want to privatize the profits and socialize the risks. And those risks turned out to be massive. As the New York Times reported on Monday, "The failure of the most recent effort - known as a top kill..... has underlined the gaps in knowledge and science about the spill and its potential remedies." No matter, the upsides were so great that absent rigorous regulation, BP was perfectly willing to ignore them. After all Big Oil and Wall Street both planned to take all of the upsides for themselves and lay the downsides off to the taxpayers.

And that is exactly what they will do every time if they are not subject both to tough, continuous regulatory oversight and to uncapped economic liability if their risky bets go south. Their Republican enablers have done everything in their power to prevent both tough regulation and uncapped economic liability for Big Oil.

It turns out that -- in practice -- the Republican convention chant, "drill baby drill" really meant "spill baby spill." Many rank and file Republicans may not have intended it that way, but that's exactly the way it turned out.

Robert Creamer is a long-time political organizer and strategist, and author of the recent book: Stand Up Straight: How Progressives Can Win, available on Amazon.com.

 
 
 
The frustration and anxiety of Americans about the horrific oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico grows by the day. Those whose livelihood is tied to the Gulf -- or who live in the wetlands of Louisian...
The frustration and anxiety of Americans about the horrific oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico grows by the day. Those whose livelihood is tied to the Gulf -- or who live in the wetlands of Louisian...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MarkInIrvine
fuzzy-headed knee-jerk liberal and proud of it
05:43 PM on 06/02/2010
"uncapped liability"? Who among us enjoys "capped liability"?
08:50 PM on 06/01/2010
I am sure the masters of the show won't let this crisis go to waste, or the next crisis, or the one after that..... Many of you need to think more "globally". You are still down at the bottom worrying about Republicans vs. Democrats when you should be discussing the masters who manipulate us all and what their plans are. Sorry to inform you of this but the same strings are being pulled for all your party favorites.
10:52 AM on 06/02/2010
Meanwhile the rest of the world is laughing at the republicans, and at people like Sarah Palin, Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, the Tea Partiers and the rest of the GOP morons.
12:32 PM on 06/05/2010
True...there is acute coporate corruption within our government on both sides. But unlike "your" party, and albiet it was over 70 years ago, "my party" has proven that it is able to reform itself (FDR). Leading to the most prosperous middle class in the history of the world. That was until it was dismanteled by the republican party starting with its patron saint, St. Ronnie Reagan So, if I want a war a deep economic and emotional depression and to fear and hate my fellow men I will vote republican.

Now we get to add global ecological catastrphe to that list of results to Republican championed disasterous policies. But like lots of other independents it was what happened in Florida in 2000 that truly scared me and premanently put my vote in the democratic column. So save your "it's all out of our hands.." positioning for the 1200 tea-baggers.. A RE-reformed democratic party is everyman's best hope to deal with the republican global menace on all its greedy,malicious, hate and war monger fronts.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MarkInEugene
A blasphemy a day keeps the deities away.
08:29 PM on 06/01/2010
This article was so on target that the obstructionist, do-nothing, anti-environment right has been responding on this thread with the most ignorant, angry posts I've seen in a while. I think you hit a nerve Mr. Creamer.

If it weren't so pathetic that we have so many people who believe we are stuck with oil, I would feel more like we're going to get ourselves out of this mess. There is no choice but to address the problems associated with increased populations and using the environment as a limitless dumping ground. We can't continue on like this. We must make the transition to alternative energies that have a low impact on our environment. Oil and Coal are the worst energy sources on so many levels!!!!

From many right wing responses, it's clear they don't believe that the true cost of oil is probably hundreds of dollars a barrel! We pay for it in wars, in infrustruction, roads, ports, and we subsidize the entire industry through our taxes.

Our dependency on oil from countries that are either politically unstable or at odds with the U.S. subjects the American economy to occasional supply disruptions, price hikes, and loss of wealth, which, according to a study commissioned by the U.S. Department of Energy, have cost us more than $7 trillion present value dollars over the last 30 years.

The cost of securing our access to Middle East oil is estimated at $50 billion per year to the American taxpayer.
09:05 PM on 06/01/2010
MarkinEugene wants us to "address the problems associated with increased populations" because we aren't being killed off fast enough with drugs and cancer and tobacco and abortions and wars. Maybe he could suggest a faster method, but of course not one that would include him dying off...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ShinjiIkari
Do you understand how stupid it is to be afraid?
11:09 PM on 06/01/2010
Okay, we know you've mastered the non sequitur. Maybe now you can put your awesome intellect to work on alternative energies, which was the point of the posting in the first place.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MarkInEugene
A blasphemy a day keeps the deities away.
10:19 PM on 06/02/2010
Not true. I would sincerely welcome death with dignity or euthanasia at the moment of my chosing. Unfortuntely, the right wing in this country keeps that from becoming a right as well.
08:24 PM on 06/01/2010
Mr. Creamer has wither a short memory or poor research skills. The "drill baby drill" or "drill here, drill now" campaign in 2008 promoted domestic drilling, not offshore drilling. At the time, Democrats were criticized (perhaps unfairly) for promoting dependence on offshore oil.

Here is a supporting article: http://www.rte.ie/news/2008/0916/drilling.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ShinjiIkari
Do you understand how stupid it is to be afraid?
11:14 PM on 06/01/2010
(A) The linked article notes that the Democratic Party was in fact pushed to consider offshore oiling by the GOP's "drill baby drill" mantra.

(B) You had to go to Radio-TV Ireland for a supporting article? Couldn't find one local?
03:39 AM on 06/02/2010
The 'where' shouldn't matter; either stop drilling or make sure when you do, that you have enough heart, soul and critical thinking skills to ask the simple question that starts with "What if ?" What good is the engineering design genius of an offshore drill if you don't have the common sense to engineer how to plug the well up if it springs a leak? Every plumber knows that. If you create something with that much significance, without considering the consequences...well, just ask Dr. Frankenstein what can happen, or the CEO of BP who, I hear, wants his life back.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ipanemagirl
progressive
05:45 PM on 06/01/2010
We definitely need a bold government, new laws and subsidies (NOT for oil companies) to initiate the change from oil addiction to other new cleaner safer energy sources!
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Brian Ross
Managing Editor of Truth-2-Power.com
05:39 PM on 06/01/2010
My take on all of this is here at HuffPo:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/brian-ross/gop-spews-hypocrisies-as_b_594856.html
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
1088
05:18 PM on 06/01/2010
Excuse me, they will never be held accountable, because the corporate media already but all the blame on President Obama. Not one word on Halliburton nor Cheney oil policy.
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john frodo
armchair expert
04:26 PM on 06/01/2010
Obama will prosecute them to the full extent of the law. Is that not the problem the law? What are the chances of a 5 to 4 overturn of any conviction. Bush will use a retroactive pardon.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
justoverit333
make art not war
04:12 PM on 06/01/2010
How true. Libs are tree-huggers and concerned about our
natural resources. Now if the Repubs are all about religion,
aren't they concerned about "God's" natural resources?
Shouldn't they care and try to protect them?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ipanemagirl
progressive
05:55 PM on 06/01/2010
yes, it should be seen as an insult to God, to destroy what he has so meticulously created !!!...in just 7 days!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Fi
A Gluten-Free life!
03:49 PM on 06/01/2010
What really worries me, is BP looking for a judge that is sympathetic to the oil industry, do all criminals have this right to choose across there?
If I was the in the DOJ, I would be looking for any reason/excuse to get them into a British court.
03:48 PM on 06/01/2010
There is much in this article that is accurate, yet it doesn't seem to result in much truth. The best example is Creamer's claim that one of the causes of this disaster is:

"...our failure to invest in development of clean, renewable energy sources to replace hydrocarbons that are rapidly running out and are increasingly expensive and dangerous to recover. For decades it has been obvious that this was a critical national -- worldwide -- necessity. We have failed to do so for one reason: the enormous political power of big oil."

This is simply a crock. While I agree that the U.S. should have been more aggressive in pursuing alternative energy sources, it is undeniable that, worldwide, huge investments have been made. The problem today is that 1) there's not (yet, at least) any magic technology that can replace our carbon-based energy sources, and 2) Americans, for all their yammering, are not willing to act on their supposed desire to reduce energy consumption. How big are the flat screen TVs in your home? How many electronic devices are you charging right now? How much jet fuel did the trip to Machu Picchu consume?

"We have met the enemy, and he is us." -- Pogo
04:19 PM on 06/01/2010
Sorry, that just doesn't cut it. People as a whole will do they best they can with the time and money they have. You can't blame someone for not choosing alternatives to oil, considering we don't provide any viable alternatives (no, the Prius is not a viable alternative). Today's citizens are burdened with the full weight of cleaning up after Corporate America. They screw us on our paychecks, they screw us at the grocery store, and they screw us at the pump. Don't blame people for indulging on a big TV, or my god.. a cell phone. Consider how much our executives glean from our GDP before you judge the average "oil-guzzling" American. If we were running nuclear it wouldn't matter how energy efficient we were. If we stopped letting Big X (oil, coal, etc.) shutdown our alternatives, or make them so unaffordable that they never get off the ground, we wouldn't be in the mess we are today. There are plenty of technologies out there, but they are not currently profitable to the "right" people. Who's fault is that? What should we do... riot? I'm down if you are.
04:51 PM on 06/01/2010
Nowhere do I blame anyone for not choosing alternatives to oil -- I blame them for not making any real attempts to use less energy. It is so easy to point fingers at Big ____ -- but the bottom line is that Americans are the biggest per-capita consumers of energy in the history of civilization, and despite all the Green talk, the numbers continue to grow. What you seem to be looking for are "alternatives" that require no sacrifice on your part, and that's the crux of the issue, isn't it?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ipanemagirl
progressive
06:00 PM on 06/01/2010
Instead of wasting time with silly tea parties we should have green energy rallies!
When people see the new jobs tht this will create and the opportunities, it will catch on like wildfire...just dont listen to fox news and friends of big corps.
Actually corporations have the money to start green energy; all they need is a push and an incentive in the right direction...IOW, .that there is money to be made!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hark
05:06 PM on 06/01/2010
That is preposterous to say the world huge investments have been made. They have been utterly dwarfed by our investments in coal, oil and gas. What a ridiculous comment.

And we don't need a magic technology. The sun produces far more energy than we could ever use, and it will last for billions of years. What we have to do is harness it. We have done virtually nothing to do so when compared to what we spend to extract, refine and deliver fossil fuels.
11:32 PM on 06/01/2010
I don't at all claim that investments in alternative energy sources haven't been dwarfed by investments in fossil fuels. That's not really much of a comparison, however, since the latter provides 95% of current energy. Like it or not, but small improvements in those areas yield more immediate results. As for solar, while efficiency improvements have been achieved, they have been fairly disappointing for the investments made thus far, particularly in battery / storage technologies that are critical to its success. Solar will continue to gain more attention and dollars as the price of the fossil fuels continue to rise, but at this time, it is simply not cost-effective enough. We absolutely need some "magic" breakthroughs in that area.
03:36 PM on 06/01/2010
This oil spill is the perfect illustration of the black eye that free-market capitalism has given the United States.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hark
05:08 PM on 06/01/2010
It's only the tip of the iceberg. The rot from this disease has permeated all levels of our society and is in the process of wiping out the middle class and destroying the planet. All to make a few people obscenely rich and the rest of us increasingly poor.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
polkarde
Let freedom ring!
03:32 PM on 06/01/2010
Repugs labeling this tragedy as Obama's Katrina are so off the boil, they are clearly trying to divert attention to the role they played in deregulating the system so much that safety concerns were secondary to profits...this crisis should be used to the positive, to wean America from it's addiction to oil once and for all, by taking the opportunity to develop clean, alternative energy resources.
03:26 PM on 06/01/2010
Your right, we should just import more from the Middle East and South America.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
shadow322
03:25 PM on 06/01/2010
The Republican's "Deregulation" is what caused this, the banking crisis and so many others. It is all based on putting a rediculous amount of wealth in the hands of a few, over the interests of what is best for our country and countrymen. Every other country requires a safety/relief well be drilled along side of the intended well - every one but us. These guys started this well up knowing they were using faulty equipment and had no batterys to operate the safety tools anyway - all in violation of OUR LAWS. This decision killed 11 and polluted OUR OCEAN for decades. All so a few could make rediculous incomes by cutting corners over the interests of our countrymen.