"Some friends of mine, online,
attempting to estimate a per-gallon cost of gas from this source
discovered that the per-barrel price of oil has never been as low as
eight dollars -- the estimated cost of oil made by the company performing
the thermal depolymerization. It was at least double that amount when I
started college, cigarettes cost 35 cents, and gas was 23 cents a gallon.
Thermal depolymerization means that Americans can have all the fuel they
want, and watch the landfills gradually disappear. And in an age where
automotive exhaust consists of very little besides carbon dioxide (very
good for the plant life) and water (very ditto), any environmentalist who
fails to endorse this new technology enthusiastically is a bald-faced
lying hypocrite."
One Dollar Gas
by L. Neil Smith
[email protected]
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
Prepared for the Libertarian Party
Of Larimer County (Colorado)
Monday evening, August 21, 2006
Ladies and gentlemen, honesty compels me to admit, right at the beginning
of this presentation, that the title "One Dollar Gas" is
misleading.
The fact is, under the "system" of unfettered individual
liberty that we all advocate, and to which many of us have dedicated
their lives, the price of gasoline should be considerably lower
than a dollar a gallon. The exciting news is that, if libertarians make
this clear to voters who are increasingly outraged at the current price
of gasoline, it could represent a new beginning for the Libertarian
Party.
When people ask you how one dollar gas is possible, begin with the easy
and familiar. There are special excise taxes on fuel that do not apply to
other commodities: 18.4 cents per gallon federal, 40.4 cents per gallon
here in the state of Colorado, an average of 2 cents per gallon at the
local level, for an approximate total of 61 cents per gallon. The first,
most obvious thing to be done about this mess is to remove these taxes
from the price of gas. There should have been some sort of emergency
trigger to accomplish this automatically a long time ago.
However to work properly, to get the price of gas down to a dollar a
gallon -- or less -- you have to go further than the price at the pump.
At the beginning of the Ed Clark campaign in 1979, his handlers floated a
trial balloon involving the removal of all taxes from every stage of the
production, processing, transportation, distribution, and sale of
food, figuring that no one who claimed to be humanitarian --
liberal or conservative -- could say a word against it. Someone must have
said something, because the finger-in-the-wind boys soon dropped the idea
like a hot potato and that was the last that anyone heard of it.
Too bad, because it was a great idea.
A libertarian gas program must encompass the entire chain of fuel
production, from the bottom of the well to the tip of the nozzle. A
libertarian president could declare a state of emergency to accomplish
that, and then "jawbone" other jurisdictions into following
suit. If our enemies didn't care for that use of presidential emergency
powers, they could pass legislation to revoke them and libertarians would
win, anyway.
There are those who may accuse us of favoring the special interest of the
gas companies. So I would go even further, removing all taxes from all
the necessities of life, including food, clothing, shelter,
transportation, and self-defense. Add de-taxing anything protected by the
Bill of Rights, you have a splendid program for the LP or anybody else.
One of my earliest speeches to libertarian groups described an eight-fold
multiplier that will manifest itself in the absence of government
interference with the lives of individuals. On average, each of us pays
out half of his or her income to one government or another. Remove those
taxes, and it will immediately double your real wealth. You'll have twice
as much money to spend, on anything you like.
And in terms of purchasing power, the relative price (not the
absolute price -- we'll get to that) of gasoline drops from $3.00 to
$1.50.
Before we even get to special excise taxes, the people who provide the
goods and services we rely on pay out half their income to the
government, as well -- only they don't pay it, of course, we do. Get rid
of their taxes, and the price of goods and services -- including gasoline
-- gets halved again, and, in terms of purchasing power, in terms of real
wealth, we're now effectively paying a mere 75 cents a gallon.
But, as Ron Popeil always tells us, there's more! I had long estimated --
and writers like Dixy Lee Ray later confirmed -- that the cost of
complying with government regulations doubles the price of goods and
services. Without those regulations and those who force compliance with
them, the price of everything we buy would get halved again.
And now gas is costing us 37 1/2 cents per gallon.
"Q" as the saying goes, "ED".
For those who won't listen to that argument, I have another.
Thermal depolymerization.
Thermal depolymerization is a relatively new method by which every
possible kind of garbage, from the results of turkey processing, to
mountains of cast-off tires, to old computer cabinets, can be turned into
"artificial" gasoline at an ultimate cost of just eight dollars
a barrel.
The only trouble with this technology is that it gores just about every
ox presently blundering around our sorry political and economic
landscape. The current fuel crisis isn't really so much about oil --
there's plenty of that, and it will never run out, as you'll see in a
moment -- it's about what sources of oil we'll be allowed to use by our
political and corporate masters, as opposed to new sources they
desperately want to shut down as soon and as completely as possible.
There's no profit for George Bush and his petropals in recycling old
tires.
That's almost certainly why the first thermal depolymerization plant
built to full-scale and located in Carthage, Missouri, right next to the
Butterball Turkey plant was found to have 5000 defective welds in its
maze of piping before it could begin operation. It's almost certainly why
the Butterball plant suddenly raised the price of its garbage so that the
cost of converting it would be prohibitive. And it's almost certainly why
the governor of Missouri ordered the thermal depolymerization plant shut
down, claiming it was "too smelly".
Ever smell a turkey processing plant?
Some friends of mine, online, attempting to estimate a per-gallon cost of
gas from this source discovered that the per-barrel price of oil has
never been as low as eight dollars -- the estimated cost of oil made by
the company performing the thermal depolymerization. It was at least
double that amount when I started college, cigarettes cost 35 cents, and
gas was 23 cents a gallon. Thermal depolymerization means that Americans
can have all the fuel they want, and watch the landfills gradually
disappear. And in an age where automotive exhaust consists of very little
besides carbon dioxide (very good for the plant life) and water (very
ditto), any environmentalist who fails to endorse this new technology
enthusiastically is a bald-faced lying hypocrite.
But, if you can't get people to share in the hope of cheap energy from
garbage, you can tell them about a fantastic discovery that was actually
made several decades ago, one with demonstrated predictive qualities, but
which is only now becoming a matter of general public knowledge: renewal
from deep below, of oil reserves long thought to be depleted.
Understand, to begin with, that most petroleum -- perhaps even all of it
-- has a non-biological origin. It's not made of dead dinosaurs, or of
dead plants. It was made -- it is still being made -- by the same
processes from which the Earth arose from dust and gas condensed by their
mutual gravitic attraction. Water, methane, and a few other substances,
subjected to high pressure and temperature, become raw petroleum.
The fact was predicted by astronomer Fred Hoyle in the 1950s, used by the
Russians who went from oil importers to the third largest oil producer on
the planet. It was explained and explored by Thomas Gold, author of
The Hot, Deep Biosphere, and word was spread by George
Crispin.
Crispin provides a typical example:
"Eugene Island is an underwater mountain located about 80 miles off
the coast of Louisiana in the Gulf of Mexico. In 1973 oil was struck and
off-shore platform Eugene 330 erected. The field began production at
15,000 barrels a day, then gradually fell off, as is normal, to 4,000
barrels a day in 1989, Then came the surprise; it reversed itself and
increased production to 13,000 barrels a day. Probable reserves have been
increased to 400 million barrels from 60 million. The field appears to be
filling from below and the crude coming up today is from a geological age
different from the original crude, which leads to the speculation that
the world has limitless supplies of petroleum. . .
"Similar occurrences have been seen at other Gulf Of Mexico fields,
at the Cook Inlet oil field, at oil fields in Uzbekistan, and it is
possible this accounts for the longevity of the Saudi Arabian fields
where few new finds have been made, yet reserves have doubled while the
fields have been exploited mercilessly for 50 years."
None of this should be very surprising. There have been clues to the
non-biological origin of petroleum scattered along the way for at least a
couple of hundred years. The composition of the outer planets -- the
so-called "gas giants" -- should have been a dead giveaway.
Their atmospheres contain all the ingredients, and some astronomers have
even speculated that perhaps it rains petroleum on Jupiter and Saturn.
Interstellar space is full of methane clouds and I, among others, have
suggested the possibilty of life evolving there, without a planet.
Three quarters of the asteroids in the Asteroid Belt possess water and a
substance called "kerogen"the same black gold found in oil
shale.
The price of gasoline at the pump has risen to a point that is not only
absurd, it's obscene. People are starting to look longingly at little
Eurotrashmobiles again, instead of the SUVs and trucks they truly love:
it's going to be costly this winter to stay warm enough to live.
Make no mistake: this situation is the direct responsibility of that
collection of criminals and cretins we refer to as the Bush
Administration -- although it's important to understand, and even more
important to convey to the public, that the Democrats would have done
just as badly as the Republicans if they'd only had the cojones.
In a fairly strange inversion of the historic relationship between
Franklin D. Roosevelt and Herbert Hoover, there is no offense against
individual liberty and the Bill of Rights that George W. Bush has
committed that Bill Clinton didn't attempt during his own misbegotten
term.
The task before us now is to put both wings of the "Boot On Your
Neck" party out of our misery. Gas prices could be the weapon to do
it with.
Just tell them, "One Dollar Gas -- Vote Libertarian".
But tell them loud and tell them often.
http://www.ncc-1776.org/tle2006/tle383-20060903-08.html
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