Gorski's arguments are as old as the hills, or at least as old as the
arguments that were being used in the '70's when I was in the mining
business.  At the time, copper mining was being shut down in the US in favor
of the richer and less regulated deposits in Chile.  Many US miners were put
out of work.  Butte, MT, the copper capital of the early 20th century,
turned into a shadow of itself.  But all can't be blamed on environmental
regulations.  Ghost towns from exhausted ore bodies litter the West.
(Actually, it is interesting litter.)  The richest ore had already been
extracted from Butte and other copper deposits in the US. 

 

Despite the grumbling assertions of the article, many new mineral deposits
have been developed in the US since my day in the industry; for example, the
massive Carlin gold district in Nevada.  I was personally involved with the
multi-billion dollar McLaughlin gold mine in California.

 

Chris 

 

 

  _____  

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, July 21, 2010 11:27 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [RC] America's Fast Track to the Third World.....

 

Well, while the article is correct about the problem of rare earths, and
while

I have no empathy with the hard core Left, this is something I'd pin on the
effects

of supply side economics and free trade / laissez faire ideology.

 

After all, according to the logic of the laissez faire crowd , if it can be
produced

more cheaply elsewhere, that is the Golden Rule. Ichan is king, in other
words,

and hundreds of "little Ichans" are the dukes and senechals of the system, 

all motivated by the bottom line, and screw the objective good of the USA.

 

Hence massive technology transfer and massive outsourcing.

About which the Left had little to do  --except for some of the

tech transfer under Clinton.

 

I manifestly DO NOT think that laissez faire is anything but a formula for

national suicide, give away the store if, in the process, a small group of

fat cats gets fatter.  Robber Barons are far and away the main cause

and guess who most supports laissez faire.

 

Sure, especially since the Clinton era, you can name plenty of Democrats,

but they still are junior leaguers compared to the finance crowd in the GOP.

 

This is how things are. With the usual caveat about exceptions, the
Republicans

have the best major party social morality, but when it comes to econ, and

not saying that a lot of stuff the Dems do isn't virtually criminal, but

it remains a fact that the Right is the most wedded to laissez faire.

 

Billy

 

=========================================================

 

 

 

 

In a message dated 7/21/2010 9:16:24 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,
[email protected] writes:

Article received from another list. 

David

If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed, if you do read the
newspaper you are misinformed.--Mark Twain 

 



July 21, 2010 


America's Fast Track to the Third World


By  <http://www.americanthinker.com/dan_gorski/> Dan Gorski

The Department of Defense has sounded an alarm about our access to a
strategically vital group of metals called the rare earth elements. A
<http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d10617r.pdf> report on the problem prepared by
the GAO is not pretty. It concludes that the Chinese now control the
production, processing, and manufacture of final products of these vital
metals and now own the patents for many of these processes. 

 

The worries of the DoD are well-justified; missile guidance systems, smart
bombs, night vision gear, unmanned aircraft, and much more are dependent on
the rare earth elements in some way. Without these metals, our weapons
technology would be approximately that of the Korean War. Battery-powered
tools, hybrid vehicles, the environmentalists' precious windmills, and
almost everything else electric cannot get by without them. 

 

Rare earth elements have been described as the vitamins of modern
technology. It took Beijing approximately twenty years to strip this
<http://www.rightsidevalue.com/2009/03/china-builds-rare-earth-metal-monopol
y.html> technology from its birthplace in the United States and move it to
China.

 

China's success in capturing the entire production and manufacturing cycle
for the rare earth elements is only the beginning. Their long-term strategy
seems to be to repeat their rare earth coup in other sectors of mining and
manufacturing. Awash in cash, they are on a gigantic worldwide
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/16/AR200903160
3293.html> shopping trip for resources of all kinds. Copper, lead, zinc, and
iron are on their list, to name a few. Their reserves of U.S. dollars are
being converted to hard assets. Anyone with experience with the Chinese
knows that they are in the game to win. Their objective is world domination
by whatever means necessary. Aided by our intellectually and morally
challenged elites, they stand a good chance of accomplishing it without
firing a shot. 

 

Why the Chinese were able, at so little cost, to take away this vital sector
of our technology is a question that needs to be asked. The answer is not
hard to find. It is the natural result of a fifty-year "jihad" against
America's producers by the environmental left. This alarm signal from the
Department of Defense marks the beginning of the endgame in this struggle.
It should now be clear that there is nothing less than the survival of our
Republic at stake. Fifty years of rapine and pillage by a nihilistic,
deranged environmental movement and a government bureaucracy whose sole
mitigating feature is its incompetence has left us more and more dependent
on somebody else for the commodities and technology necessary for our
existence as a nation. A terminally ignorant public has watched with
detached indifference or has actively supported this assault on our basic
industries. Our national consciousness is in the grip of such insanity that
schoolchildren are routinely taught to hate the people and businesses that
make their way of life possible. These environmental chickens are now coming
home to roost. We are at the point where the bill for this half-century-long
economic and environmental stupor is coming due. 

 

This nation is going to have to realize that the ability to produce
resources and manufacture products defines its military capability and its
standard of living. This fact is as certain as the laws of thermodynamics.
Everything you can touch comes from the earth. It must be mined, pumped, cut
down, or grown by somebody. Somebody has to process it, refine it,
manufacture it, and deliver it. In the vital sector of basic mineral
commodities and energy, those "somebodies" need to be domestic, not foreign.
The global economy, that our rulers told us would provide all our
necessities, is turning out to be the private property of the Chinese,
bought with our former money. Our present leadership in Washington, D.C. and
most of the rest of our major institutions appear to have no concept of this
reality and do not vehemently object to it. It is no accident that the
military, our only government institution left with any grounding in
reality, is the one to sense the danger.

 

Mindless obstruction by environmental NGOs and federal regulators now make
it almost impossible to develop new or upgrade old productive facilities in
this country. Work, absent bureaucratic harassment and NGO opposition, that
would have cost hundreds of millions and taken months to complete, now needs
billions and takes decades to complete, if it ever is completed at all. We
are literally thirty years behind now, and we are rapidly losing the ability
to catch up

 

The government's solution to this existential crisis is to tax its way out
of a recession and enact energy legislation so horrendous that it will
guarantee to "fast track" us to third-world status. Environmental zealots in
the EPA are on the verge of crippling both the domestic
<http://www.fwbusinesspress.com/display.php?id=12184> shale oil/gas industry
and the
<http://blogs.chron.com/txpotomac/2010/07/the_epa_vs_the_state_of_texas.html
> Texas petrochemical complex.
<http://www.icmj.com/article.php?id=56&keywords=Rahall_Proposes_Bill_to_End_
All_Mining> Legislation is in progress that will essentially make it
uneconomic to develop any mineral resources on public land in the United
States. The fevered plan to stop Gulf oil development is their latest sortie
into the Twilight Zone. The damage now being inflicted on this country is
long-lasting and, if not reversed, fatal. If these insane initiatives are
implemented, the day will not be far off when the United States will not
have the talent, technology, or money to restart its productive sector even
if it wants to. 

 

When a country is on a social and economic course so suicidal that the
Russians are warning us about it, some introspection is called for.
Post-racial, post-industrial, postmodern, post-fossil fuel, post-common
sense America has very little time left to straighten out its priorities and
reverse its slide into what Leon Trotsky called "the dustbin of history."

 

The ironic epilogue to all this is that when the United States completes its
journey to political, economic, and military impotence, the Chinese will
walk in and buy up our vast reserves of mineral and energy resources with
our own dollars and produce them for their own use. They will not be
bothered by environmental niceties, and they will have the power to do as
they please. Environmentalists in their uncompromising, unhinged war against
our producers will have destroyed the environment they were claiming to
save. 

 

Dan Gorski is a mining geologist and CEO of a publicly traded mining
company.

 <http://comments.americanthinker.com/read/42323/637731.html> 49 Comments on
"America's Fast Track to the Third World"





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