The middle east problem, simply explained.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8EDW88CBo-8&app=desktop
The U.S. does not need to fight these oil wars. Make Washington stop. Now.
http://instituteforenergyresearch.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/North-American-Oil-v-World.jpeg
“North America is blessed with enough energy supplies to promote and sustain economic growth for many generations. The government’s own reports detail this, and Congress was advised of our energy wealth when the Congressional Research Service of the Library of Congress released a report showing that the United States’ combined recoverable oil, natural gas, and coal endowment is the largest on Earth. The amount of oil that is technically recoverable in the United States is more than 1.4 trillion barrels, with the largest deposits located offshore, in portions of Alaska, and in shale in the Rocky Mountain West. When combined with resources from Canada and Mexico, total recoverable oil in North America exceeds 1.7 trillion barrels. That is more than the world has used since the first oil well was drilled over 150 years ago in Titusville, Pennsylvania. To put this in context, Saudi Arabia has about 260 billion barrels of oil in proved reserves. For comparative purposes, the technically recoverable oil in North America could fuel the present needs in the United states of seven billion barrels per year for around 250 years.”
Take the situation with Islam, for example. If, as some of us believe, Islam is an inherently violent and oppressive ideology, then pretending otherwise is a dangerous delusion — one that may have cost the lives of literally hundreds of thousands either dead or dying at the hands of Islamic supremacists.
Closer to home, look at the tragedy of our broken urban sub-culture. More than 70% of black children are born out of wedlock into fatherless households. A black man is seven times more likely to commit murder than a man who isn’t black. The once strong black family has been in decay for forty years, its healthy culture replaced by crime, dysfunction, and hopelessness.
We should be talking about that. We shouldn’t pretend that the tired old race-hustlers, the Jacksons and Sharptons and Wrights and Obamas, have the answers to this problem. Their creed of endless victimhood and resentment has made things worse, not better — has doomed generations of young black men to ignorance, joblessness, and crime.
We can watch what’s going on in Ferguson and pretend that the problem is still, in some mysterious way, the white man’s foot on the throat of the black — this at a time when our black president enjoys his second term in office.
Or we can admit that the systems we created ostensibly to help the predominantly black urban family have had the opposite effect, and that it’s time to stop hurting and start undoing the damage our irresponsible experiments in social engineering have achieved.
But we can’t get there if we keep pretending that the only important question is whether or not the man in Ferguson really needed to be shot. Something very bad is happening in our cities, and we have to start talking about it.
“He was tortured, beaten to death, strangled and then set on fire,” Laura Wilkerson said earlier this month in McAllen, Texas. She was recalling her beloved 18-year-old son Josh, who was brutally murdered by illegal alien Hermilio Moralez in November 2010.
The details of Josh Wilkerson’s murder are gruesome: Moralez, in the United States illegally from Belize, violently kicked Wilkerson in the stomach, slicing both his liver and spine and rupturing his spleen. The illegal alien then proceeded to beat Wilkerson over the head with a closet rod with such force that the rod ultimately shattered in four pieces. With Wilkerson defenseless and motionless, Moralez then took two dollars from Wilkerson’s wallet, purchased gasoline, and set Wilkerson’s motionless body aflame. Hismugshot reveals a young man smiling smugly. Later, at Moralez’s trial, the illegal alien would speak from the stand about how he was a “trained killer” and that his “killing instincts” had taken over. There was no remorse.
Young Josh Wilkerson is just another life lost and another cost paid in a long list of lives lost and costs paid because Washington, D.C. policymakers continue to fail to do what logic and all sensibility dictate should have been done decades ago: Securing the United States border with Mexico so that illegals are not afforded illegal access to the United States.
The U.S. federal government’s multi-decade failure to secure its 1,989-mile border with Mexico might well stand as the most glaring example of both parties’ ongoing refusal to be responsive to the American people’s overwhelming belief that American border security (as Josh Wilkerson’s murder demonstrated) is now perhaps the most critical issue facing the nation, presenting increasingly grave economic, security and other threats.
It’s worth asking the obvious question: With more than 35,000 illegals monthly now crossing the border into the U.S., why exactly has this border not been sealed? Laughingly, the Obama administration hassaid that the border with Mexico is more secure than it has ever been. It’s a sentiment shared by Congressional Democrats. “The border is secure,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid absurdly stated last month. Other policymakers acknowledge the obvious, but obfuscate the issue, speaking wrongly of supposedly insurmountable challenges associated with keeping illegals from entering the country illegally.
The reality, of course, is the very opposite. The U.S. border with Mexico is consciously not secure because (for decades now) both parties have seen a political self-interest in ensuring it is left unsecured. Democrats, envisioning ultimately granting citizenship to these illegals, see the influx as politically advantageous: Millions of largely government and benefit-dependent illegals who, once afforded amnesty, will (Democrats believe) represent a groundswell of additional votes for their party and its candidates, possibly ushering in generations of Democrat victories in national and regional elections. Similarly, some Republicans, influenced by the desire of some private sector forces to attract cheap, illegal and sometimes sub-minimum wage labor resources, see the influx as a means to breaking organized labor and serving as a deflationary force in the largely blue collar and labor positions these illegals are likely to assume. Never stated openly, the reality is that the U.S. does have a policy on the border, and it is–scandalously–to keep it open.
In many respects, it is exactly this sort of unresponsiveness of elected officials to the concerns of the American people that gave birth to America’s Tea Party movement in 2009. Five years later, the practical reality of Washington’s unresponsiveness is such that this crisis may now well be left to the Tea Party movement to solve. Should the Tea Party embrace this cause, as it must, the movement likely will be largely shunned by Washington elites, but they will have an ally in the American people, who see the seriousness of it, resoundingly support logical conclusions and importantly believe this administration has been at least complicit and possibly even a force behind the latest influx of illegals that now threatens the nation.
Support for border security and opposition to amnesty is broadly popular. In a Rasmussen Poll taken last month, on July 17, a clear majority of likely voters (59 percent) were clear: They want those who have entered this country illegally to be returned to their home countries. And the American people are under no illusions about who holds the blame for the current border crisis: Another Rasmussen poll, also taken last month, found that nearly half of likely voters (46 percent) believe the Obama administration, through its policies and statements, has contributed to the crisis. An overwhelming majority of Americans (58 percent, according to the same poll) believe the top priority in the crisis is for the U.S. to gain control of its border.
The arguments for urgently securing the border with Mexico and opposing Washington’s amnesty initiatives are extensive and they strike at the very heart of the issues that most concern Americans:
1.) National security. The American people have patiently undergone extensive and intrusive governmental measures since the September 11, 2011 attacks, ostensibly designed to protect the country against an al-Qaeda or al-Qaeda-aligned terrorist attack. They can be forgiven for asking a reasonable question: What point exists in prohibiting American citizens from boarding U.S. airlines with, say, 3.5 ounces of non-flammable liquid, as opposed to the mandated 3.4 ounces, when literally any non-citizen–including the bloodiest of terrorists–can simply walk across our southern border?
As it is today, our government cannot answer basic questions about the flood of illegals across our border. How many illegals exactly have crossed the border and are in this country? There are only estimates (more than 12 million and as many as 20 million). Where in the U.S. are these illegals located exactly? Answer: Just about everywhere, but no government agency can say exactly. And how many of these millions have crossed the border illegally with malicious intentions for this country? We do know that they have included members of a broad range of global terrorist movements, violent gangs (including arguably the most violent, MS-13) and felony criminals, including murderers, violent criminals, rapists, and sexual offenders. And even when (by good fortune alone) they have been detained, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) have released thousands of these illegal felons into the general U.S. population. As evidence of the utter lack of border security to criminals and potential terrorists, videographer James O’Keefe last week released video of him crossing the Rio Grande from Mexico into the U.S. dressed as Osama bin Laden. What barriers did O’Keefe encounter in entering the U.S. dressed as the infamous al-Qaeda terror leader? None.
2.) Jobs. America’s job crisis is vastly worse than what one might gather from the numbers released monthly by the Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics, which systematically exclude the many millions of Americans who comprise the long-term unemployed and those who have simply given up looking for work. Including these, there are roughly 102 million working-age Americans without jobs as of August 2014, an all-time high and growing. A stunning study released by the Center for Immigration Studies this past June found that all of the net gain in American jobs created since 2000 has gone to illegal and legal immigrants—that is, there has been no job growth for 14 years for native U.S. citizens.
It is absurd that we must state the obvious: Basic supply and demand economics indicate that granting amnesty to the estimated 12 to 20 million illegals now in this country will only further exacerbate the U.S. employment crisis, both adding to the existing number of jobless Americans and also contributing to wage deflation (lower pay) as a greater number of Americans compete for a fewer number of existing jobs. As such, it should not prove surprising that sealing the border and opposing amnesty are agenda items very high on the agenda of traditionally progressive constituencies, including labor unions and African-Americans, both of whom correctly see amnesty and a failure to secure the border as a recipe for higher unemployment and wage deflation, especially in traditional blue collar and lower wage occupations.
3.) Public resources. It is perhaps the greatest irony of all that progressives who clamor for vastly greater federal and state funding for health care, education, transportation and other public services are also those spearheading the opposition to border security initiatives and amnesty support. The influx of millions of illegals has only made all of these mounting problems worse as illegals consume these resources (and, of course, pay no offsetting federal or state taxes in exchange for them).
4.) Fairness. Many millions of foreigners from all over the world are, right now, legally seeking U.S. citizenship. The legal process to obtain U.S. citizenship is largely cumbersome, bureaucratic and lengthy, but many follow this process exactly and patiently as required. Under amnesty proposals, however, these foreigners, those we might call “legal immigrants,” continue waiting in their foreign lands as those who crossed our southern border in violation of U.S. federal law are rewarded with U.S. residency, access to many of our country’s public benefits and infrastructure, and ultimately citizenship. These illegals will enjoy the backing of an entire U.S. political lobby that (motivated almost exclusively by its own selfish political and economic agendas) seeks to reward their lawless entry with the same highly-coveted U.S. citizenship denied those now following the process legally.
5.) Will of the American people. There are few issues on which Americans are more united than the fact that the borders of the country should be secure and that those who enter this country illegally in violation of U.S. federal law should not, in turn, be rewarded. The American people remain understandably compassionate towards those fleeing tyranny, but they are united in their logical, on-target conclusion that open borders and amnesty are harming the U.S. in multiple ways. Indeed, perhaps never before in the modern history of the conservative movement, has there been such an enticing opportunity for conservatives (and now the Tea Party movement) to build political alliances with unions, minorities and low-wage workers than there is right now in supporting an urgent securing of the U.S. border and opposing amnesty, showing that the Tea Party and conservative movements stand with working Americans and the rule of law.
Of course, all of these are facts lost on most Washington policymakers who are increasingly disengaged from the sentiments and concerns of the American people they purport to represent. Americans in 2014 are hurting. Failing to secure the border and granting amnesty to millions of illegals stands to further inflame these problems: damaging the already anemic U.S. job market, increasing crime and the demand on public resources, and perhaps even opening the door for what Americans have feared most since September 11, 2001: a coordinated terrorist attack on the U.S. mainland. These are deadly serious problems. But a political movement that can, right now, understand and communicate these facts with the urgency they require is likely to find broad support among the American people.
The big question that is never asked of “We the People” by politicians is: are you willing to fight (and possibly die) and kill people in other countries in order to maintain your standard of living? I call this The Imperial Question. These non-stop regime change wars Arab Springs and colors are rarely if ever debated for what they really are and Congress never declares war as duty requires. Presidents and Congresses will not ask the question because they already know the answer and the oligarchy that elected them don’t like the inevitable answer.
If the Imperial Question were freely debated, if Congress had to declare war as required in the U.S. Constitution, then the American people would wake up and demand that our government retract itself from these wars, no longer be the world’s police force, bring home its military, become energy independent, and stop meddling in the affairs of other countries. As the world’s most powerful military withdraws from its many military bases and entanglements and instead builts a strong homeland defense, unfortunately, peace will not ensue immediately. We have done too much damage. And, in addition, there are forces who believe their mission is world domination and they have held that belief since before the U.S. existed. We will need a strong defense and the ability to discriminate/judge right from wrong and good from bad; we have lost these and restoring them must be one of our first steps.
The country cannot defend itself if we have an open border. Many enemy are already inside.
America and NATO are conducting petrodollar wars and we have been fighting these wars for 30 years, while claiming the need for regime change for humanitarian reasons, the favorite whipping boy of tyrants, and outright fear mongering by politicians and public media. If the U.S. dollar is no longer used to trade oil in international markets, then the value of the dollar will decline. We will suffer, but bankers and the oligarchy will suffer more. Petrodollar wars sustain the price of oil and the value of the hundreds of trillions of U.S. dollars reserves held in the central banks of every nation, The World Bank and the IMF. (Note that a few weeks ago the BRICS countries began to move away from the U.S. dollar, the World Bank and the IMF by establishing their own banking system.) If the foreign exchange value of the U.S. dollar declines rapidly, that is, if demand for our fiat U.S. dollar declines, then since most goods sold in U.S. are imported, the price of those goods sold in the U.S. would increase significantly, and U.S. living standards would decline. This is directly in front of us. We can manage it or else let chaos take its course.
There will be severe recession or depression until We the People fight for internal change inside America to re-install free markets in energy and in banking, and to restore the Constitution and fiscal responsibility in government. The U.S. does not need foreign oil or gas. There is plenty of oil and gas here, and plenty of technology to develop it cleanly, more than any other country. But our government has put onshore oil off limits for exploration and development and prevented building of refineries. Then there is even more oil and gas offshore in U.S. territorial waters. But our government allows only a few development rights offshore where it is more dangerous for life and the environment and more expensive. Energy supplies have been constrained, bottlenecked by the politics of greed and power.
After Americans finally stand up to their government, oil, gas and energy will become extremely expensive here for several years because it will take years to re-develop the U.S. onshore oil, gas and coal energy supply chain which our government and political environmental cronies have shut down.
Our government has constrained our supply by convincing us that coal, oil and gas are bad, that your carbon footprint is bad. We fight and die and kill to maintain access to carbon-based energy for NATO countries, while at the same time we prohibit access to that same carbon energy in the third world. Millions have died needlessly because of our U.S. and NATO imperial policy. U.S. government policies at EPA, DOE, DOI, State Department, etc. related to global warming and CO2 are a massive fraud on the American people designed to maintain the status quo and enrich cronies, those that elect them and protect with media and money, all to maintain the Petrodollar Empire. Global warming by so-called carbon pollution is a fraud designed to maintain the world’s status quo and enrich the oligarchy that runs the Petrodollar Empire via the world’s central banks. When We the People finally figure this out, there will be an upheaval. There will be a massive class action case with fraud-level damage awards. Politicians will be jailed.
Libya, Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Ukraine, Afghanistan, etc … these countries posed no existential threat to the U.S. or NATO. But we have deposed and/or caused to be murdered or imprisoned the leaders of those countries. All of that is directly linked to the trillions of fiat U.S. dollars pouring through the world’s banks, the value of which is tied to the supply of oil and confidence. It’s all a giant bubble of petrodollar debt and one way or another you are paying to sustain that bubble.
Our government killed and is killing people in all of these countries (and more) in our name, in the name of U.S. national interest, i.e. to protect the petrodollar, to protect the oligarchy. Genocide by starvation and absence of care is being committed in third world countries to maintain the standard of living in the U.S. and the highly developed countries of NATO. History will shame our last three generations because of our vicious petrodollar wars.
There is great economic pain and loss ahead as the huge debt bubble collapses, the Federal Reserve and its fiat dollar is finally shut down, and free markets and elections are finally restored in this republic. I firmly believe that Americans will pull together and shut down the Empire that we have been conned into supporting for the last 30 or 40 years.
Bud Bromley
“In fact there are no predictions by [UN] IPCC at all. And there never have been. The IPCC instead proffers “what if” projections of future climate that correspond to certain emissions scenarios. There are a number of assumptions that go into these emissions scenarios. They are intended to cover a range of possible self consistent “story lines” that then provide decision makers with information about which paths might be more desirable. But they do not consider many things like the recovery of the ozone layer, for instance, or observed trends in forcing agents. There is no estimate, even probabilistically, as to the likelihood of any emissions scenario and no best guess.”
“Even if there were, the projections are based on model results that provide differences of the future climate relative to that today. None of the models used by IPCC are initialized to the observed state and none of the climate states in the models correspond even remotely to the current observed climate. In particular, the state of the oceans, sea ice, and soil moisture has no relationship to the observed state at any recent time in any of the IPCC models.” ~ Oliver Morton on behalf of Kevin E. Trenberth.
Trenberth is part of the Climate Analysis Section at the USA National Center for Atmospheric Research. He was a lead author of the 2001 and 2007 IPCC Scientific Assessment of Climate Change and serves on the Scientific Steering Group for the Climate Variability and Predictability (CLIVAR) program. In addition, he serves on the Joint Scientific Committee of the World Climate Research Programme.
http://blogs.nature.com/climatefeedback/2007/06/predictions_of_climate.html
“Global climate alarmism has been costly to society, and it has the potential to be vastly more costly. It has also been damaging to science, as scientists adjust both data and even theory to accommodate politically correct positions. How can one escape from the Iron Triangle when it produces flawed science that is immensely influential and is forcing catastrophic public policy?…”
“There are past examples. In the U.S. in the early 20th century, the eugenics movement had coopted the science of human genetics and was driving a political agenda. The movement achieved the Immigration Restriction Act of 1923, as well as forced sterilization laws in several states. The movement became discredited by Nazi atrocities, but the American consequences survived well into the 1960s. Global Warming has become a religion. A surprisingly large number of people seem to have concluded that all that gives meaning to their lives is the belief that they are saving the planet by paying attention to their carbon footprint.”
“…This is not to diminish the importance of the efforts of some scientists to point out the internal inconsistencies. However, this is a polarized world where people are permitted to believe whatever they wish to believe. The mechanisms whereby such belief structures are altered are not well understood, but the evidence from previous cases offers hope that such peculiar belief structures do collapse.”
Richard S. Lindzen, Ph.D., was professor of atmospheric sciences, emeritus, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Contact: rlindzen@mit.edu. http://www.jpands.org/vol18no3/lindzen.pdf
Ed Hoskins gives a solid presentation (at the link below), with good graphs, on the logarithmic relationship between CO2 concentrations and its greenhouse effect. One must be aware that, in general, the experimental research was done with dry air, which does not include the dominant greenhouse gas, water vapor. High humidity of a particular region will reduce the influence of CO2 for that region. The vexing problems are feedbacks. The alarmists, and their models, predict net positive feedbacks. The main assertion is that a warming from CO2 will be amplified by an increase in water vapor. The skeptics assert that the net feedbacks are negative – increase in cloud cover. The feedback issue makes it difficult to determine the temperature effect of a doubling of CO2. With the current trend of no significant warming or cooling as CO2 emissions are increasing, nature seems to be supporting the skeptics. ~ summary by Ken Haapala, Exec Director at Science and Environment Policy Project.
Family and friends, in this 40 minute radio interview a very reputable man asks some VERY disturbing questions about the shootings at the Sandy Hook elementary school. You will want to follow this unfolding story.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6roDPt1WYYY
Before you listen to the interview, check out this man’s impressive resume.
Both of my current Senators are marching backwards in the wrong direction to the wrong drummer boy. As an example, this letter could have been in George Orwell’s “1984” but it’s not 1984’s “Newspeak” … it’s 2014 and it’s blatant support of genocide by denying funding for electric power plants in third world countries where coal is abundant.
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EDWARD J. MARKEY |
218 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING |
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United States Senate
August 15, 2014 |
Dear Clare:
Thank you for contacting me about the reauthorization of the Export-Import Bank. It was good to hear from you about this issue.
As you know, the Congress is debating whether to renew Export-Import Bank of the United States, the charter of which is set to expire on September 30 of this year. I am working with my colleagues in the Senate toward common sense legislation that will reauthorize the Export-Import Bank, protect Massachusetts small businesses and create the jobs needed to grow our nation’s economy that helps and drive commerce.
The Export-Import Bank is an independent federal government agency and the official export credit agency (ECA) of the United States. Originally authorized under an executive order by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1934, the bank is key to growing our manufacturing sector and increasing the number of good, middle-class jobs. The Export-Import Bank helps finance Massachusetts and American exports of manufactured goods and services when alternative financing is not available. Many other countries, including China and Germany, have similar agencies that are directly backed by their governments, and we need the Export-Import Bank to ensure that U.S. companies are able to complete with their foreign competitors on an even playing field. The main programs are direct loans, loan guarantees, working capital finance, and export credit insurance.
The Export-Import operates under a renewable charter, which was last renewed by Congress in 2012. Because the bank supports American business and grows American jobs, I believe the Export-Import Bank should be reauthorized.
However, it is critical that the reauthorization of the Export-Import Bank does not have any serious negative consequences for the American public or the environment. As you know, Senator Manchin of West Virginia has circulated draft legislation that includes financing provisions that would roll back the Export-Import Bank’s new policy aimed at limiting funding for carbon pollution emitting overseas coal power plants. I share your concern over these provisions and will continue to monitor this situation.
Global climate change presents one of the gravest threats to our planet’s health, and to our Commonwealth’s and the nation’s economy, national security, and public health. President Obama and EPA Administrator McCarthy put forward a historic proposal to cut heat-trapping carbon pollution from America’s existing power plants. This plan will help create jobs and cut the pollution that threatens our health, our environment, and our future. Massachusetts is already a leader in developing and deploying clean energy technology and these new rules will increase the demand for businesses in our state. I look forward to working with the administration and my colleagues to protect the President’s authority to reduce carbon pollution and take further action on climate change.
Thank you again for contacting me about this issue. If I can be of further assistance, please do not hesitate to contact me. To sign up for my newsletter, visit http://www.markey.senate.gov/newsletter. You can also follow me on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube.
Sincerely,
Edward J. Markey
United States Senator
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