MFGx Blog : July 23, 2008

Previous Next

0

Follow Up On The Oil Speculators

Posted by aj Jul 23, 2008

A few weeks back, I wrote about the open letter/e-mail sent from the 12 principals of the major U.S. airlines sharing their take that speculation and futures trading has had most to do with rising oil costs.

oilrig.jpg

The e-mail (and my post) both linked to a site called Stop Oil Speculation Now that made it easy to share this concern with your government representatives.

Just after I posted that piece I followed the link, filled out the form, and submitted it. Piece of cake.

Wellsir, today I got a response from my Senator, Saxby Chambliss. Which is to say it was from his office, and a typical form letter - well meaning, certainly, but a form letter, just the same.

I say typical because it touched on many of the hot buttons surrounding this issue - not just the issue of speculation:

The key areas of a responsible energy policy that will reduce gas prices, lessen our dependence on foreign oil, and strengthen our economy include: increasing our domestic energy production, improving energy efficiency through technology, increasing conservation, diversifying our nation's energy supply through the use of renewable fuel sources, and ensuring transparency in our futures markets.

The letter went on to explain the senator's stance on each issue and, of course, tout his and his colleague's "bipartisan" efforts to solve "... the current energy crisis."

I can't decide if this is a shell game or not. Sure, domestic production and alternative fuels are awfully important. But the one issue that government, industry and lobbyists allowed to happen - if not directly caused - is presented as an afterthought.

This, from my response to the form letter:

In the near term, I urge you and your peers to address the issue of speculation with the greatest enthusiasm and force. We have allowed regulations and laws to creep through deregulation to a point that futures trading has traded our futures in ways we've yet to realize. This behavior - while perhaps not technically criminal anymore - is at the very least abhorrent. Lobbyists and industry have been allowed to create wealth based on a scam unchecked, and government must accept responsibility and take action to correct this now. All of the valuable efforts you mention in your response will take years from which to realize benefits - closing the loopholes, focusing the FTC on speculators in the U.S., and working with other countries to scrutinize the behaviors of speculators overseas will offer short-term relief.

Our system and officials have failed us and we are looking to you to take action to fix this. I strongly urge you to focus your short-term efforts on the speculative markets and their current regulations to ensure this doesn't happen again, while we pursue the noble efforts you've listed.

Manufacturers - and all businesses - must react to this. I believe that the credit and energy crises are related in a fundamental way: They aren't random. They are the result of deregulation and opening loopholes through which the rats entered the pantry.

Whether you choose to follow the link above or not, get in the grills of your representatives.

My advice: Raise holy ****.

0 Comments Permalink

MFGx Blog