Moderator: Community Team

b.k. barunt wrote:Then you must be a pseudoatheist. If you were a real atheist Dan Brown would make your nipples hard.
Metsfanmax wrote:Typical. Complain when a policy you don't like is implemented, complain when it's revoked.
Metsfanmax wrote:Well, there's no evidence that Obama's playing politics. Only some random hack's opinion. The Business Week article seems to indicate that there's a legitimate pragmatic reason why the policy is no longer needed.
Night Strike wrote:The only reason they issued the moratorium in the first place was to appease environmental radicals, it had nothing to do with the actual danger or science regarding the drilling. Evidence? The US granted a $2 billion loan to a Brazilian drilling company (where George Soros has stock) to drill in water deeper than our deepest wells. The US also granted loans to Mexico to drill in the Gulf of Mexico, the same region where our companies were not allowed to drill yet we would be in the same danger of a spill occurs there. Redistribution of wealth at its finest.
Baron Von PWN wrote:Night Strike wrote:The only reason they issued the moratorium in the first place was to appease environmental radicals, it had nothing to do with the actual danger or science regarding the drilling. Evidence? The US granted a $2 billion loan to a Brazilian drilling company (where George Soros has stock) to drill in water deeper than our deepest wells. The US also granted loans to Mexico to drill in the Gulf of Mexico, the same region where our companies were not allowed to drill yet we would be in the same danger of a spill occurs there. Redistribution of wealth at its finest.
That isn't evidence to the safety of the wells. That is evidence to the US wanting more oil.
NAFTA was signed by President George H.W. Bush, Mexican President Salinas, and Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney in 1992.
# Promote conditions of fair competition.
# Increase investment opportunities.

Night Strike wrote:Baron Von PWN wrote:Night Strike wrote:The only reason they issued the moratorium in the first place was to appease environmental radicals, it had nothing to do with the actual danger or science regarding the drilling. Evidence? The US granted a $2 billion loan to a Brazilian drilling company (where George Soros has stock) to drill in water deeper than our deepest wells. The US also granted loans to Mexico to drill in the Gulf of Mexico, the same region where our companies were not allowed to drill yet we would be in the same danger of a spill occurs there. Redistribution of wealth at its finest.
That isn't evidence to the safety of the wells. That is evidence to the US wanting more oil.
If we wanted more oil, why aren't we the ones drilling for it? There is no arrangement that those countries will provide us with the oil, and even if there were agreements, why sacrifice the jobs for our economy?
stahrgazer wrote:
It's those investment opportunities and conditions of fair competition that bite the USA in the butt, not to mention tariff-free lesser quality goods imported in.
BigBallinStalin wrote:stahrgazer wrote:
It's those investment opportunities and conditions of fair competition that bite the USA in the butt, not to mention tariff-free lesser quality goods imported in.
They may bite certain American industries in the butt, but overall the American people don't benefit as much with such unfairness. For example, look at the subsidies given to domestic sugar "farmers." Without them, Americans would buy foreign sugar which is about 1/3 cheaper. That's not much, but when one factors how many foodstuffs have sugar in them, then one will realize how much cheaper many foodstuffs would be.
Do you want subsidized sugar (supported by your taxes)?
Or do you want cheaper foodstuffs (with your taxes going elsewhere)?
Empasis mine wrote:The Obama administration on Tuesday lifted the deep-water drilling moratorium it imposed in May after the BP oil well explosion, but drilling isn't expected to resume immediately and rig workers remain in limbo.
The damage is already done, so sad wrote:At least four deep-water rigs have left the Gulf of Mexico, and it will be years before they could return. Diamond alone has moved three rigs out of the Gulf and sent them to Congo, Egypt and Brazil.

DangerBoy wrote:I guess it's all just a coincidence that Obama is lifting the deep-water drilling ban 3 weeks before the midterm elections. Of course, the obvious answer is because he needs Landrieau's vote to get his OMB nominee through the Senate. Gibbs denies that the nomination is the reason for lifting the ban.
DangerBoy wrote: This administration is not pro-business no matter what tricks they try before the midterm elections.

Metsfanmax wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:stahrgazer wrote:
It's those investment opportunities and conditions of fair competition that bite the USA in the butt, not to mention tariff-free lesser quality goods imported in.
They may bite certain American industries in the butt, but overall the American people don't benefit as much with such unfairness. For example, look at the subsidies given to domestic sugar "farmers." Without them, Americans would buy foreign sugar which is about 1/3 cheaper. That's not much, but when one factors how many foodstuffs have sugar in them, then one will realize how much cheaper many foodstuffs would be.
Do you want subsidized sugar (supported by your taxes)?
Or do you want cheaper foodstuffs (with your taxes going elsewhere)?
Are you meaning to imply that one choice is much worse than another? I don't think that this is a question which has an easy answer.
BigBallinStalin wrote:My memory's a bit fuzzy on this, but when was the ban imposed? During Obama's presidency or before? And was it passed overwhelmingly in Congress or not really?
Night Strike wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:My memory's a bit fuzzy on this, but when was the ban imposed? During Obama's presidency or before? And was it passed overwhelmingly in Congress or not really?
Seriously? It was put in place by Obama at the beginning of the summer as a response to the oil spill. A judge lifted the ban because the ban was based on biased data. Obama put the ban back in place anyway, but lifted it a few weeks before the election. The Inspector General has now found that the ban was a political move rather than one based on science. Congress was never involved in this unilateral decision.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Why do they say it was a political move? In what way did Obama gain by imposing the ban? Was it to gain approval by some easily misled environmentalists?