by Pops » Sat 08 Jun 2013, 08:46:30
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oily Stuff', 'S')o everybody has a strong, serious opinion what government intervention won't look like, what WILL it look like?
As usual, like this:

I'm saying the government has always intervened. Crude cannot be exported now, product export can be stopped by executive order now, LNG export terminals and international pipes need fed approval are being withheld now, the Railroad commission of Texas each month sets the "allowable" amount of oil and natural gas to be extracted, they just happen to have set it to "meet demand" for the last 40 years but
set it they do, every month. (I know you know all that OS)
But a goodly amount of people think there is an unlimited amount of oil just inside every national park boundary, that ANWR overflowth and the treehuggers and Obama are the reason for high prices. They would be loath to admit they agree with Jimmy on anything but they are in full agreement with the Carter Doctrine and some I'm sure would extend it to the XL protestors, LOL.
Like everything else in the US we'll get a balance between what the majority wants and what the loudest minority (wealthiest contributors) allow. Usually that means the worst of both worlds but as we become more urban - for the first time 80% lived in urban areas during the last census, the balance will shift from from the open road to the carpool lane. As prices rise and kids find other things to do than cruise on Friday nights the grassroots opposition to more controls will decline – to be replaced by astroturf of course but nonetheless the opposition will wane.
The Koch boys et al will expend a lot of "speech" to loosen, avoid, ignore the rules but the inevitability of kids losing interest in driving is the writing on the wall.
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)