From the Institute for Energy Research:

Senator John Kerry, the lead author of the legislation, told the Senate Finance Committee that “the reason” we need to pass his cap-and-trade energy tax is that “over the last eight years, emissions in the United States of America in greenhouse gases went up four times faster than in the 1990s.”  Also not true.  In fact, he’s off by a factor of 32.

As the video shows, greenhouse gas emissions increased far slower in the 2000s than the 1990s. According todata from the Energy Information Administration,[1] U.S. carbon dioxide emissions increased by 15.14% between 1990 and 1999, but from 2001 to 2008 carbon dioxide emissions only increased by 1.88%. If Senator Kerry were correct, U.S. carbon dioxide emissions would have increased by 60.5% over the last 8 years, but they only increased by 1.88%.  Senator Kerry overestimated U.S. emissions by a factor of 32.

These are the authors of the Kerry-Boxer cap-and-trade energy tax legislation.  If our leaders can’t stick to the basic facts to support their argument for a national energy tax, and the lead author of the bill is this far off the mark on “the reason” Congress needs to pass it, Americans might reasonably question the validity of their estimates on how much the bill will cost them and our nation’s already-struggling economy.

Even more troubling, Senator Lindsey Graham is now working with Senator Kerry on a “compromise” in which Senators’ would accept the cap-and-trade plan in exchange for “opening new areas for offshore drilling.”  This would have been a bad compromise last year, but given the fact that the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) is now open—and has been since Congress allowed its ban on offshore drilling to expire on October 1, 2008—it appears to be an even worse compromise this year.

If the compromise is anything like the “Gang of 10” plan offered last year in the months before the Congressional ban on drilling in 85 percent of the OCS was set to expire, the only thing we’d be compromising is the progress we’ve already made. That’s because the Gang of 10 plan would have created a permanent ban on drilling in 78 percent of our offshore areas—areas that are now open.

But at the end of the day, it doesn’t matter what the compromise may be.  The long-term costs cap-and-trade legislation would inflict on our economy and our way of life would be so devastating, that no compromise – offshore drilling or anything else – would justify its passage.

How can Kerry and Boxer come up with the “bunk” that our current batch of representatives create and expect Americans to swallow it?

What guarantee do we have that other nations will conform to any degree of reductions of carbon emmissions (specifically China and India)?

If we can’t depend on worldwide support then the only people who will bear the brunt of this self-imposed, economy destroying tax burden is America.

No thank you.

Why Is Energy the Enemy?

Before President Obama took office, he made it clear that he did not like companies that produce energy.  One example includes a 2008 statement he made about coal companies:

President Obama declared war on oil and natural gas at the United Nations global warming summit and he made the same pitch to the G20 meeting in Pittsburgh.

Obama told the UN, “I will work with my colleagues at the G20 to phase out fossil fuel subsidies so that we can better address our climate challenge.”

On September 10, Buddy Kleemeir, chairman of the Independent Petroleum Association of America told a Senate Finance Committee that “The Obama administration’s budget request would strip essential capital from new American natural gas and oil investment by radically raising taxes on American production.”

One website related to picking stocks, StockPickr.com, created a separate list of Obama’s corporate enemies, with a breakdown of why they would not be good stock picks.  Excerpts from the site:

Arch Coal Inc, Massey Energy Co., and Peabody Energy Co are not good investments because:

There’s another big C on which Obama has trained his sights, and that’s carbon. If a business emits CO2 – think steelmakers, utilities and coal companies – it could be in trouble. The only reason Cramer didn’t recommend selling Arch Coal (ACI), Peabody Energy (BTU) and Massey Energy (MEE) is because Chinese demand is great enough to sustain them, even if Obama gets his cap-and-trade plan, which all but amounts to a carbon tax.

US Steel, Nucor and Southern are not good investments because:

Cramer also advised against owning steelmakers that produce with coke, or the coal used to make steel. Better to switch out of US Steel (X) and into Nucor (NUE), which uses less coal in its production. The same goes for utilities that use oil or coal. Southern Company (SO), with its 71% concentration of fossil fuels, is a sell.

Folks, President Obama is against nuclear power, he is against oil exploration, and he is against coal, yet there are not enough windmills or solar panels to power our present energy needs much less our future energy needs.

enemylistnumber15