Watching PR traffic from selected sources

Thursday, October 20, 2005

JINSA Report #524 "Scale Down the Human Project"?

JINSA
1779 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Suite 515
Washington, DC 20036

202-667-3900
202-667-0601 Fax
October 20, 2005

JINSA Report #524

"Scale Down the Human Project"?

A drive up I-95 from Washington to New Jersey confirmed what the
petroleum industry tells us – high gas prices have not proven an
impediment to American drivers. U.S. gasoline consumption is down only
about three percent since Hurricane Katrina, and only four percent in
comparison with September 2004.

So let's be honest. Americans have competing values. We say we believe
in conservation but don't conserve. We say we don't want to support
Saudi Arabia and Iran with our oil purchases, but we don't make the
investment in energy infrastructure to avoid it. We want America and its
coastline to look like the 19th Century, but want the material and
economic benefits of the 20th. We want 21st Century energy solutions
without difficult choices. But choices are all we get.

JINSA believes in alternative fuels including biofuels. JINSA believes
in nuclear energy, wind and solar power. We believe in hybrid cars,
hydrogen cars and mass transit. And we believe the United States must
drill for American oil in Alaska's ANWR – and build refineries outside
the Gulf of Mexico, build power generating plants that do not hold the
entire eastern seaboard hostage to a wire in Ohio, and build liquefied
natural gas (LNG) terminals to support imports from the vast fields
abroad (yes, imports of anything increase our vulnerability, but the
sources of LNG are widely distributed).

Not to take steps to ensure wider energy choices and lessened dependence
on imported oil is to fall back on the failed bargain of "cheap" oil for
"stability" in the Arab world and in South America. It is to throw in
the towel on breaking the links between oil money and terrorism, and
between oil money and instability in our own hemisphere.

ANWR will not solve our energy problems, but it may signal the end of
our national chimera of not having to choose. ANWR should be only one
step in proving that Americans understand that our standard of living
now and in the future will depend on making energy available from
sources less subject to the whims of dictators and nature.

There is another choice. Richard Heinberg, author of The Party's Over,
believes energy should be seen, "in the larger context of... population
pressure, resource depletion, habitat destruction. The only way to solve
that ultimately is to scale down the human project... reduce the per
capita rate of consumption of resources and reduce the population." His
model: Cuba. "There are a lot of lessons for the U.S. in the experience
of Cuba. As dysfunctional as planned economies can be, and socialist
governments can be, there was an advantage in this instance in that they
were able to make decisions quickly and change their modes of
agricultural production rapidly... The U.S. government is not likely to
learn many lessons from Cuba... I wish it were otherwise."

We don't want or need economics lessons from Cuba. BRAVO to the Senate
Energy Committee (including two Democrats, minus one Republican) for
voting to attach the ANWR leasing provision to the Budget Bill. We hope,
rather than "scaling down the human project", the Senate has begun a
realistic march toward advancing it.

To view this JINSA Report online click on the link below.
http://www.jinsa.org/JINSAReports/3195

___________________________________________________
To unsubscribe from JINSA Reports, visit:
http://www.jinsa.org/lists/unsubscribe.html

And to subscribe to any JINSA mailing-list:
http://www.jinsa.org/lists/subscribe.html

Access past JINSA Reports at: http://www.jinsa.org/

Comments? Send e-mail to info@jinsa.org

No comments: