Friday, May 28, 2010

Beuller?....Beuller?

I really miss Win Ben Stein's Money and I've always loved his commentary in The American Spectator. From todays's Spectator.org

Ben Stein's Diary
Oil of Today

Wednesday

I am so busy I cannot believe I am still alive. I feel as if this stress and fatigue should kill me if there were any sense in the world. Today, I had a recording of a commentary for CBS, then a mad rush out to Malibu for more photos for "Ben Stein's Los Angeles," a magazine feature I'm involved in. It was so beautiful in Malibu it was hard to believe. Just perfect. Really, truly perfect. Crisp, warm, breezy, rich blue sky. Just glorious.

But I had to rush right back to be on Larry King to talk about the oil spill with a Democrat congressman named Alan Grayson.

A few thoughts on the oil spill:

1. No one, obviously, is sorrier about it than the oil producer, BP, and the rig operator, Trans-Ocean. If the heads of those companies could go back in time and have it never happen, they would do anything to do so.

2. It was ambitious to operate in such deep water, with no safety net, but the world and the nation were clamoring for oil. The government said, "Go for it," and BP and Trans-Ocean went for it. Did they ignore warning signs that a giant event was bubbling below the surface? Maybe. If so, they will grievously answer for their ambition.

3. If mistakes were made, they were made by a few dozen people at BP and Trans-Ocean and a few bureaucrats. The energy business employs several million men and women. They have done nothing wrong at all. No point in blaming them for anything at all. They are just doing what we want them to do: getting us oil and gas. The stockholders of BP and Trans-Ocean have done nothing wrong. They had no clue what was going on under that drilling platform. It seems wrong to punish people who merely wanted to provide for their retirement for a seismic hydrocarbon event that may have been so drastic that it constitutes an act of God.

4. Finger pointing does no good whatsoever. No one wants to get this thing capped and stopped more than BP and Trans-Ocean. Let's encourage them and not distract and torment them. There will be plenty of time for lawsuits. What we need now is action on the seabed, and that is not a job for lawyers.

5. This is not Mr. Obama's fault. I am not a fan of his, but he isn't Superman. He cannot be expected to swim down to the leak and seal it with his Superpowers. If he's smart, he will be part of the effort to fix it, not part of the effort to drag out the tumbrils and guillotines.

There.


Ben, agreed, it's not B Hussein Obama's fault. He didn't put in the regulations that force us to look for oil 60 plus miles out and over a mile deep as opposed to getting it in a simplier fashion on shore or closer to the shore. And yes, we have to find out what happened. That will not come from a "bipartisan commission" or Congressional hearings.

What is his fault is stopping our exploration when we are in desperate need for oil...and his claim that "the federal government has been in charge of the response effort..." The Commandant of the Coast Guard openly said BP was the leader in the efforts to stop the leak. And even after his first press conference in ten months, he cannot bring himself to thank the thousands of people who busted their asses on this problem. Don’t you just hate it when facts are so inconvenient?

But don't worry...they have their boot on BPs neck.

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