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Gas prices: Bush’s rebound fuel (Dick Morris)
The Hill ^ | April 26, 2006 | Dick Morris

Posted on 04/26/2006 5:19:18 PM PDT by RWR8189

As anyone remotely into New Age voodoo knows, the Chinese symbol for crisis is said to consist of the words “danger” and “opportunity.”

Not conversant with Chinese, we must accept this derived wisdom on faith. But if that is indeed the symbol, it applies perfectly to the situation the Bush administration faces in the rapid escalation of gas prices.

A less elegant way of putting it is that the best cure for a headache may be a broken foot. In the pain in one’s lower extremity, one forgets the discomfort up above.

Bush is never going to solve the massive negatives he is suffering as a result of the war in Iraq. His best shot is to distract Americans with a stellar performance in a new crisis, and the rise in gas prices comes along at just the right time.

The key is to seize the day. The president’s pathetically weak warning that we are facing a long, hot summer and that gas prices might rise even more sounds helpless and removed. Instead of lamenting high prices, he should pounce on the opportunity to lead America away from an oil-dependent economy.

Using the sense of danger and vulnerability Americans feel as prices drive their family budgets out of whack, he can energize and lead the nation in the way that he did so successfully after Sept. 11.

He should address the nation on television and call on Congress to act quickly on massive new investments to increase the production of alcohol-based fuels and cars that can accommodate them. He should plunge ahead in the development of hydrogen-fueled cars and the conversion of gas stations to provide hydrogen. He should call for major new facilities to produce hydrogen and the rapid production of vehicles that can run on it.

Where private-sector investment is needed — as in the production of the cars — he should incentivize it through tax policy and require it through regulation. Where public investment is involved, he should build up our infrastructure rapidly with a massive outlay of funds.

We live in one of those times when a major public investment is needed. It is time for the same sort of commitment to infrastructure change as animated the canals and railroads of the 19th century and the superhighways and fiber-optic networks of the 20th.

The current slow pace of expansion of alcohol-based fuels will take decades before we are fully converted away from oil. But the science is there and the technology is being refined to make the production of alcohol fuels ever more efficient. And hydrogen is not far behind.

The feds need to blaze a path in using natural gas, electrolysis and biomass (including landfill gas) to make hydrogen. Washington should pay gas stations to convert their facilities to make possible the widespread use of alcohol and hydrogen fuels.

In the last analysis, Bush invaded Afghanistan and Iraq after Sept. 11 because the energy and focus that horrible day made it possible to do what had needed doing for decades: to clean out those two cesspools of terror and repression. Now a crisis has again awakened the nation, and the president should seize the moment to lead America toward a solution.

If there is one conclusion all Americans can embrace, it is that only by converting from oil dependency can we hope to tame Middle East terrorism. We must stop paying terrorists at the pump even as we pay to repress them with our taxes. If the logic of global climate change leaves this president unmoved, then at least the dire economics of gas-price inflation and the global realities of petro-politics should push him in the right direction.

Bush will never win on Iraq. That is not to say he will never win in Iraq. There is probably a pretty good chance that U.S. casualties will drop and that we will be able to withdraw substantial forces. There is even some chance that in the coming years violence will abate in that torn nation. Possibly even democracy can take hold. But Bush’s presidency will not live to see that outcome, and Iraq will still look like a mess on television even if Americans are less and less directly threatened.

But to stop his administration from dissolving into irrelevance and to hold majorities in the ’06 election he must act to create a second-term cause. He’s tried Social Security and immigration and run into a wall on each. But the field is pretty clear, should he decide to launch a bold energy initiative.

If it is truly bold and all encompassing, he may yet salvage his second term. Right now he looks like a one-term president in his second four-year stint.

Morris, a former political adviser to Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.) and President Bill Clinton, is the author of Condi vs. Hillary: The Next Great Presidential Race.


TOPICS: Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bush; dickmorris; energy; gasprices; rebound; term2
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1 posted on 04/26/2006 5:19:22 PM PDT by RWR8189
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To: RWR8189
the rise in gas prices comes along at just the right time.

Wishful thinking - even $20/gallon fuel would have less of an impact then the loss of sovereignty.
2 posted on 04/26/2006 5:22:48 PM PDT by ARCADIA (Abuse of power comes as no surprise)
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To: RWR8189
He’s tried Social Security and immigration and run into a wall on each.
Correction: He's paid lip service to Social Security reform and spent his political capital on amnesty for illegal aliens.

 

3 posted on 04/26/2006 5:26:43 PM PDT by peyton randolph (Time for an electoral revolution where the ballot box is the guillotine)
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To: peyton randolph

Damned disappointing.


4 posted on 04/26/2006 5:28:33 PM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks (BTUs are my Beat.)
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To: Eric in the Ozarks

An Executive order opening up ANWR and other drilling prospects would go a long way..


5 posted on 04/26/2006 5:30:30 PM PDT by cardinal4 (Kerry-Mcarthy in 2008!)
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Comment #6 Removed by Moderator

To: RWR8189
Earth to Morris - Hydrogen isn't going anywhere soon. Ethanol in the short run is good as there is a fairly large fleet of vehicles out there that can use it. Try bioDiesel for the near and intermediate time. There are quite a few light duty, Diesel engined trucks out there that could use it for most of the year.

Energy independence is the best way to disengage from the ME and to send them back to the stone age.

7 posted on 04/26/2006 5:33:31 PM PDT by Paladin2 (If the political indictment's from Fitz, the jury always acquits.)
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To: RWR8189

Dick is a left of center moderate who mistakenly believes that that is where the rest ofthe country is as well.


8 posted on 04/26/2006 5:34:30 PM PDT by Prysson
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To: RWR8189

Yeahhhhh... more research on hydrogen-powered fuels -- that's something that everyone can get excited about that will get the price of gas down this summer.

Duhh?


9 posted on 04/26/2006 5:35:31 PM PDT by mhx
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To: RWR8189

"As anyone remotely into New Age voodoo knows, the Chinese symbol for crisis is said to consist of the words “danger” and “opportunity.”"

Oh geez. What does new age have to do with foreign language semantics.


10 posted on 04/26/2006 5:47:57 PM PDT by Rennes Templar ("The future ain't what it used to be".........Yogi Berra)
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To: Rennes Templar

It means Morris can take a new slant on things...


11 posted on 04/26/2006 5:57:47 PM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks (BTUs are my Beat.)
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To: Eric in the Ozarks
It means Morris can take a new slant on things...

It sound like you are saying he has been bought, paid for, and full of it.
12 posted on 04/26/2006 6:00:07 PM PDT by ARCADIA (Abuse of power comes as no surprise)
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To: RWR8189
He should ... act quickly on massive new investments ... increase ... production of alcohol-based fuels ... plunge ahead ... hydrogen-fueled cars ... call for major new facilities ...

Dick Morris has officially lost his mind.

13 posted on 04/26/2006 6:22:52 PM PDT by Grim
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To: RWR8189
Dick Morris is a punditry joke, and has been for a long time. He's on one side then another then another...his analysis is always a crap shoot. In this piece we're supposed to believe he's an expert on alternative energy sources? Does he still drive a car with an internal combustion engine? I thought so.

He also ignores a basic fact: the reason so many Democrats are ripping the President is because they HATE CAPITALISM. The American people are upset over gas prices, but by and large the VOTING public--the investor class---can understand (if explained to them)why prices are so high.

The anti-capitalist/socialists and the general public right now are in general agreement: high gas prices aren't a good thing. But that agreement stems from DIFFERENT GOALS.

The Chuck Schumers of the world want to give control of the commodity to a government bureaucracy...the people want to get more gas at a cheaper price so they can spend more money at WAL-MART.

The challenge for conservatism is to make this an opportunity to educate our fellow citizens about how important it is to get more oil from our own resources, cut government's "take" on our energy resources (EPA regulations and taxes), and get new viable sources of energy moving again: clean coal and nuclear power, for instance.

14 posted on 04/26/2006 6:44:42 PM PDT by Recovering_Democrat ((I am SO glad to no longer be associated with the party of Dependence on Government!))
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To: Recovering_Democrat

Bush has ben leading on this isse for six years. But the stupid DNC warroom has emphasized supposed secrecy of Cheney task force instead of substance. I think the American people are being sold short by all this demagogery from pols, media, and pundits. We don't need all this hype.


15 posted on 04/26/2006 6:54:52 PM PDT by ClaireSolt (.)
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To: RWR8189

So where does Morris think all this hydrogen is going to come from???

A more realistic solution is start drilling here at home.

And start building more nuke plants.


16 posted on 04/26/2006 7:30:31 PM PDT by DB (©)
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To: DB; RWR8189
"So where does Morris think all this hydrogen is going to come from??? "

Hmm. Hey! Don't we have a whole bunch of Hydrogen Bombs that we aren't likely to use?

We can tap the Hydrogen from them ... < /sarcasm >

17 posted on 04/26/2006 8:27:17 PM PDT by NicknamedBob (I don't want a World with empty dreams ... Dump the 1967 Outer Space Treaty Now!...Farm Mars!)
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To: ARCADIA
Unfortunately, loss of sovereignty isn't even on the media radar. It's not part of the game plan. Only the American citizens care about it and Bush and his droids stupidly try to tell them it's a good thing. If Bush succeeds in this scheme, history will, hopefully, revile his memory.
18 posted on 04/26/2006 8:39:34 PM PDT by isrul
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To: Recovering_Democrat
#14 is excellent. Add to that the left worldwide, but including those here in the US, and the Islamists want Bush defeated and out of office as soon as possible. They also control much of the world's supply of oil. Is it just coincidence that oil prices are sky rocketing just before the 2006 elections? Control of Congress would allow the Democrats to get sweet revenge and impeach Bush and maybe Cheney to. Then who is President? The new Democrat Speaker of the House.

Then the coup de tete is a fait accompli.
19 posted on 04/26/2006 8:46:41 PM PDT by Mind-numbed Robot (Not all that needs to be done, needs to be done by the government.)
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To: RWR8189
I don't speak or read Chinese, but I have a copy of Langenscheidt's Pocket Dictionary: Chinese-English, English-Chinese. According to that, the word for crisis in Chinese is weiji (with long marks over the E and the second I, indicating that both are "first tone" [high, level]).

The same character for wei by itself means "danger."

The same character for ji means "opportunity" (or "machine" or "airplane").

According to another dictionary, by James C. Quo (1960), which uses the Wade-Giles system, the Chinese word is wei chi in the Wade-Giles transcription. Quo has wei shown as second tone.

So the common report appears to be correct.

20 posted on 04/26/2006 9:29:39 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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