Chattanooga Times Free Press

PROMISES MADE; PROMISES KEPT

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I operate a small business. While my day job is as a radio host for one of the most-listened-to talk stations in the country, I have my own business that takes that program and distribute­s it nationally. I have a daily subscripti­on-based email and ads on my show that generate the revenue to meet payroll, satellite expenses, etc.

I had previously given my employees cost-of-living increases because of inflation. The employees who cannot work from home and must commute will find some extra money in their check to help with gas costs. Everyone else gets to work from

home.

This is not to pat myself on the back but to suggest if you are an employer you might want to think similarly. Merely by letting your employees work remotely you are giving them a pay raise of sorts. Every time they have to fill up because of the office commute, you are taking money from them.

It has been more than 40 years since Americans have experience­d anything like this, and it is all part of President Joe Biden keeping some key promises.

There are issues related to oil prices that are outside Biden’s control. The Russian invasion of Ukraine and our nation’s willingnes­s to give up Russian oil imports do matter. The ongoing guerrilla efforts by Yemeni terrorists against Saudi production facilities matter. Global demand matters too. Additional­ly, several American oil refineries have been damaged in hurricanes while others are undergoing upgrades and repairs.

But Biden has also directly affected oil and gas prices in the United States. During the 2020 political campaign, Tim Alberta of Politico asked Biden this question: “Three consecutiv­e American presidents have enjoyed stints of explosive economic growth due to a boom in oil and natural gas production. As president, would you be willing to sacrifice some of that growth, even knowing that it could displace thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands, of blue-collar workers in the interest of transition­ing to that greener economy?”

Biden responded, “The answer is yes. The answer is yes.”

In a later debate, Biden made clear he wanted to end the oil and gas industry in the United States. He wanted to end drilling on federal land and in the Gulf of Mexico. He said he wanted to end the oil industry. That was his promise.

When Biden came into office, his administra­tion began pressuring Wall Street firms to stop funding oil ventures. Specifical­ly, he urged Wall Street banks not to fund drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and, when they announced they would not fund the project, Biden terminated the project, citing a lack of funding.

Biden also killed the Keystone XL pipeline. He imposed a moratorium on leases and reduced the amount of land available for drilling. There are many variables outside Biden’s control, but those within his control he used to cripple the American oil and gas industry.

The industry takes 20 years to see real returns on investment. Now, with the most powerful man on the planet hellbent on destroying the industry, the oil men are paying back their shareholde­rs. They are generating returns on previous investment­s instead of expanding new projects. Who can blame them?

Biden could bring gas prices down tomorrow if he were to declare a truce, encourage drilling in the Arctic and the Gulf of Mexico and encourage Wall Street to invest in fossil fuels. The oil market is a futures market. Present positive action that shows a future supply is coming will impact the market price now.

But the Biden administra­tion will do none of those things. This is Biden manufactur­ing a crisis and not letting it go to waste so he can force us into a green new hell.

 ?? ?? Erick Erickson
Erick Erickson

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