- Jun 12, 2001
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Originally posted by: rchiu
I thought I made it clear by bolding what you said and what she said. She never said about taking OPEC out, or breaking up the organization completely. She said taking it on, or challenging them with anti-monopoly laws and pressuring them with WTO and all the fair trade agreement within WTO. But according to you, and I quote "she's promising to take them out. "
And so what if OPEC don't product all the oil in the market? The market is still looking at their action and signal to decide on what the oil price. You should know the signal is as important and sometime more important then the actual action in a speculative market. OPEC impact this market greatly simply by giving out signals on what action they will be taking just because they are still the largest oil producing body in the world.
Split hairs all you want, her actual words speak for themselves:
"We're going to go right at OPEC," she told supporters in Merrillville, Indiana. "They can no longer be a cartel, a monopoly that get together once every couple of months in some conference room in some plush place in the world, they decide how much oil they're going to produce and what price they're going to put it at.
"That's not a market. That's a monopoly," she said, saying she would use US anti-monopoly laws as well as the World Trade Organisation to take on OPEC.
She is CLEARLY saying she is going to try to break up OPEC like Ma Bell or Standard Oil.
Let's contrast Hillary's populist rhetoric with the reasoned forward-thinking response from Obama's campaign:
It's brought up every four years. Suspending the gas tax to give families relief at the pump. It sounds good on its face, but when you get into the details, this is a band-aid on a broken leg.
Sen. Obama knows we need relief from the tyranny of foreign oil. The price of oil hit $120 a barrel today. Americans have never paid more for gas and the demand for gas has never been higher. Family budgets are being stretched every time the family car goes empty.
The gas tax holiday is not the answer. In the end you'll have saved half a gas tank's worth of money and that's if the oil companies don't raise their prices in compensation for the drop. The money from the gas tax goes into the Federal Highway Trust Fund and this tax holiday would drain money from there, putting in jeopardy not only roads and bridges in need of repair, but the good paying jobs that go along with them.
Sen. Obama knows the only way we'll pay less at the pump is if we use less. He has proposed raising fuel efficiency standards on cars, invest in alternative fuels like cellulosic ethanol, and refit our buildings to become more energy efficient. In short, there are many reasons why the recent gas-tax suspension plan floated around by Senators John McCain and Hillary Clinton is wrong for Oregon.
edit: BTW, this issue especially hits hard here in Oregon, where we have several large highway projects that need doing. Here in Portland alone, those include the Sellwood bridge, which desperately needs replacement before it fails, and the obsolete Interstate bridge, considered one of the worst bottlenecks in the entire Interstate highway system. This "holiday" means a cut in funding at a time when we desperately need it.
So if Hillary wins Indiana today with this rhetoric, she does so at the cost of losing Oregon on the 20th by an even larger margin.
