Stupak's stand  

http://www.metrotimes.com/news/story.asp?id=13094
 
By Jack Lessenberry

The sophisticated finance boys on Wall Street are making fun of Bart
Stupak, the congressman from the Upper Peninsula who is so much of a
hick he cares about poor people who are having trouble affording
gasoline.

What really bothers them is that he is now in a position where he may
be able to do something about it. Thanks to the Democratic takeover of
Congress, he is now chairman of the House Commerce Committee's special
subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations. He's been holding hearings
into the oil-price situation, and has introduced new legislation to
tighten regulatory loopholes and force the government to enforce
regulations that are already on the books.

"Speculation is OK, I understand that," Stupak told me in his
distinctive Yooper accent. "You're always gonna have speculation. But
excessive speculation by those who have nothing to do with the oil
industry is driving up energy costs for families and crippling our
economy."

He's certainly got the numbers on his side. Oil was hovering around
$140 a barrel as I write this. Last year at this time, it was about $70
a barrel. Ten years ago, it was $10.92 a barrel. Is your income 12 times
what it was in 1998?

You can blame the oil producers for some of this. You can blame
inflation and the fact that the price may have been too low before, for
some more. But not for most of it. Eight years ago, before the stolen
election of 2000, speculators who had no ties to the oil and gas
industry accounted for just over one-third of energy trading. As of this
April, they accounted for 71 per cent, and rising.

The high price of gas may affect Stupak's constituents even more than
most people. His district is one the largest, in terms of square miles,
east of the Mississippi River. It includes the entire UP and a huge
swath of the eastern Lower Peninsula, down to near Bay City. Most of his
voters aren't rich, and some, especially north of the bridge, have to
drive immense distances.

Stupak may also be able to relate to average people better than most
congressmen. The youngest member of Michigan's Democratic congressional
delegation, he was a policeman and state trooper for years, until an
injury on the job ended that career in 1984. So he put himself through
law school (Cooley) and served in the state Legislature before winning
what usually has been a GOP-held seat in Congress in 1992. Angry
Republicans have made several serious attempts to beat him, but have
always failed. (If their nominee this time, Tom Casperson, were a light
bulb, he would be one of considerably low and flickering wattage.)

Last week I asked Stupak - realistically, what should the price of oil
be? "The experts before my committee say $60 - maybe $65 a barrel." They
also told him that while there are regulatory safeguards in place, the
Bush government either grants anyone who wants to violate them an
exemption, or just looks the other way. That's why Stupak is trying to
tighten them.

"I actually think my bill would lower the price of oil. I don't know if
I can get it all the way back, but I think we could roll the price back
maybe 30 percent," which would put it under $100 a barrel. That would be
nice, for those of us who have to both drive and work for a living.

Whether his bill can get through Congress, much less be signed by
oilman G.W. Bush, is a huge question. And naturally, those who make a
living manipulating money have denounced what Stupak is trying to do as
the rankest kind of populism. One senior writer for Fortune defended the
speculators: "By providing a mechanism for locking in prices," this
creature pompously declared, "the futures market makes it easier for oil
companies to make costly investments in new production." That, not
regulations, Jon Birger argued, "is the key to lowering prices at the
pump."

Yeah, right. Or as any good Texas oilman would say, "Sheeeeeit." So
explain why there hasn't been one new oil refinery built in this nation
since 1976. Between this kind of behavior and attempting to ship every
last manufacturing job overseas, today's capitalists seem determined to
behave in a manner designed to prove Karl Marx's predictions true at
last.

And the way things are going now, they may just manage to succeed.

New Yorker mischief: This may be old news now, but the world was
consumed with outrage, controversy and general conniption fits last week
over the now-infamous New Yorker cover showing Barack Obama as a Muslim
and his wife as an AK-47-totin' terrorist in the Oval Office, complete
with an American flag burning in the fireplace and a framed portrait of
Osama.

What, everybody wanted to know, were they thinking? "Have they sold out
to the far right or are they just trying to sell magazines?" somebody
asked me.

The answer is certainly not the first, and probably not even the
second. What I suspect strongly is this: The New Yorker staff is
probably kinda like most of the people in my social circle in Ann Arbor.
Nobody knows anybody who isn't for Obama (although there are rumors that
this one guy's uncle is a Republican).

They thought the cover was clever satire, when in fact it almost
certainly will be used by the slick haters who want to tap into our deep
fears that maybe the first black nominee just can't be trusted after
all.

What the New Yorker should have done was put a little scroll at the
top, saying "The Politics of the Paranoid," or words to that effect.
Instead, they managed to leave a wrong impression and create an
unnecessary fuss, which could easily have been avoided had editor David
Remnick spent a few hours talking to white voters at some place like K-9
pet supply in Warren.

The cover was, however, brilliantly satirized by David Horsey, the
cartoonist for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. His version was a
National Review cover with a drooling John McCain in a wheelchair,
mumbling "bomb-bomb-bomb, bomb-bomb Iran." His wife Cindy, wearing a
glazed-over expression, is showering him with pills. "Here, John, take
some of my meds to get you through the inaugural parade!" In this
version, Dick Cheney's portrait is over the mantel and the Constitution
is burning in the fireplace.

"Know what the difference is?" an editor said to me. "This one is
actually funny," because it is easier to imagine it as being true.

Just asking: The Republicans now in power have ruined the economy and
lied us into an endless war that continues for no reason at all. They
have nominated a candidate who loves the war, has many health problems
and who would be the oldest new president in history.

So - does anyone really think that McCain would have any chance of even
carrying any states other than a few backwaters like Utah, Wyoming,
Alabama and Idaho, if the Democratic nominee didn't happen to be black?

Jack Lessenberry opines weekly for Metro Times. Contact him at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]





This message has been scanned for malware by SurfControl plc. 
www.surfcontrol.com
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to