So there's this sudden faux-grassroots movement on the right to open up all of our wildlife reserves and our shores for oil drilling, under the pretense that it'll reduce our dependence on foreign oil and lower prices at the pump. It's even got a catchy, easily memorable slogan: "Drill Here, Drill Now, Pay Less." And it's all the rage in East Wingnuttia.
Too bad that it's completely wrong and as far from the truth as one can get while still being in the same space/time continuum.
But there is some good news on that front. As Brian Angliss reports:
If there's a silver lining here, it's that 60% of the country (up 6% from February) supports new energy development, while 34% support protecting the environment. The problem is convincing people that the two aren't mutually incompatible, and that "new energy development" cannot equal "drill more oil and gas wells, mine more coal, and grow more corn for ethanol"...new energy development is eminently possible without relying on even more coal or natural gas power plants and more domestic oil production (that won't come on line for at least a decade anyway).
Americans are smarter than we are often given credit for, and many of us do realize that destroying precious environmental resources and wildlife reserves to allow more domestic drilling is a psychological panacea--a placebo to make us feel like "something is being done." The trick is to get the word out and keep it going across the country, so that everyone understands clearly...we need longer-term solutions and a fundamental reorientation of how our country works on every level if we're going to preserve our economy and improve--not preserve, but improve--our way of life. Drilling is fine for a cavity, but what we need to fix our woeful state is a lot bigger than what a drillbit can offer.
Next time I'll talk about some real-world solutions that can offer some short-term reductions of the economic pain, but the first thing to do is combat the idea of "drill now" as a real solution--it's anything but.