Dear Mr. President: Thanks Again For Cap And Trade

by James Raider | July 1, 2009 at 02:06 pm
315 views | 13 Recommendations | 9 comments

To The Office Of The President Of The United States,


Dear Mr. Obama



We are the heads of a few of your largest constituents, including Dow, GE and DuPont. This letter represents our sentiments in wishing to express our gratitude for your and Ms. Pelosi’s efforts on our behalf. We thank you, our shareholders thank you, and certainly all of us look forward to contributing to your Presidential Library, once you leave office, if we did not sufficiently contribute already prior to the election.



We can appreciate that neither yourself nor your dear friends in Congress have had time to read the new Bill that opens: “A BILL - To create clean energy jobs, achieve energy independence, reduce global warming pollution and transition to a clean energy economy.” This Bill is very, very, very long and boring. It is also very complex. We conceived it and structured it in such way that the fewer the readers, the less editing would take place. We therefore anticipate that its passage will be swift. The sooner that train leaves the station, the more impossible its progress will be to reverse. It would also not be advantageous if the irrationality, and fear surrounding humanity’s hand in the process of global warming were to subside. Now, is an opportune time to strike.



Attaching the name “Cap and Trade” to this whole business has been a stroke of genius. No one really understands what it all means, and the media believes everything you tell them, so keep plugging it, and keep promoting the “reduction in CO2” stuff. That works really well in LA. Have you seen the air out there? Terrible. Terrible, or turbull as Charles Barkley would say. We are all thrilled that you have successfully reconstructed the original intent of CO2 reduction, into an energy consumption reduction program. We knew you could do it.



The impact on consumption reduction will, in our view, be minimal, and fortunately, that is not our objective. We wish you much luck in managing this monster, and in building an administration capable of verifying such things as the veracity of corporately claimed offsets. This Bill is so complex that it will provide endless possibilities for abuse and excesses, and we can smell the fraud stinking up the air already. As you know, a transparent system such as a simple graduated carbon tax, paralleled with targeted caps on emissions, would not have been as financially beneficial for us. Not even close.



We are well aware that most of our smaller brethren in the business will get put out to pasture as a result of their inability to move off-shore quickly enough, or by the fact that they will not be able to afford the carbon pollution permits. We, on the other hand, already have unregulated facilities around the world to which we can reallocate resources at a moment’s notice. Our competitors will also not have our advantage of receiving significant Cap and Trade credits based on our being able to provide all necessary products supporting this bill, from solar panels to wind mills in the sky. Our smaller competitors will also be unable to sustain the sheer costs of managing the government’s bureaucratic intrusion into their affairs, as it deploys armies of newly hired climate science experts to distribute and oversee capping and trading of carbon dioxide emissions.



We anticipate much higher costs in the manufacture of many alternate energy sources, such as solar energy absorption cells, and this will impact the expansion of solar cell farms, but well, we have no choice.



The Bill will be very effective in rendering the cost of any carbon-based energy unaffordable through overwhelming taxation. That should help you refill the government coffers somewhat, although the hole you are digging for American taxpayers is becoming rather considerable. Households across the country will bear the brunt of the costs, through higher product prices and a heavier tax burden, but most people seem very accepting of a “price” for reducing climate change. Even if most don’t believe that they impact climate, they still feel that the air needs cleaning. We are unsure, however, how taxpayers will feel about being mandated into financing the adoption of efficient technologies overseas. They will probably not be thrilled with paying to prevent the clear-cutting of the Amazon, for example, at a time when many households are barely paying their food bills. We, on the other hand, will not be affected, whatever reactions surface on that front, although a couple of us feel bad for our buddies running operations like aluminum, or steel mills. They are in for some tough times.



We note that some of our other friends on Wall Street are very preoccupied, as we write this letter, coming up with new and extremely creative financial tools which they expect to launch upon the Bill’s passing. Those boys have amazing ways of getting in on any game with the potential of throwing off billions in cash. They look forward to a whole new set of opportunities opening up for them, replacing the ones eclipsed by the recent devastating financial compression. Listening to some of them, one might conclude that they have been holding séances with Jeffrey Skilling of Enron fame.



We are anxious to be in receipt of our free Trade Allowances, but most of all, we are excited with the anticipation of enjoying astronomical growth for many years. In passing, we should thank you for having allowed, and fuelled with cash, firms like Goldman Sachs or Morgan Stanley to become even bigger, and more powerful than they were before the financial down-turn. This action set a tremendous precedent we look forward to duplicating in our industries. If you thought “too big to fail” applied to these giants before the crash, wait until you see how big a few of us get in the next five years.



We have one last request if we can be so bold. Could you repeat as often as possible to the Nation that this Bill will not cost over $3,000 per household each year, and that much like the national objective of being carbon neutral, so too the cost will be, … “neutral.” Explain to America that it is just a methodology for keeping track of excessive energy consumers, and polluters. Perfect, don’t you think? They’ll all buy it. The media will promote that theme for you.



We will continue to postulate assertively on the need for battling global warming, and look forward to your persistent oratory on getting this momentous Bill passed into law.



Sincerely.


Your Friendly Benefactors

 

 

 

James Raider writes  The Pacific Gate Post

recommend This comment thread is now closed
1
Mortal

Hah, (LOL), what a nice way to tell the news that even the NEWS people hate to tell!

1
ojt offline

but ... but.... it has worked so well for california  LOL

0
Edmund Jenks

PG&E, Halliburton, and a few other companies are companies that would benefit from Cap & Trade as well, but the major differences are:

1) They were companies that focused on delivering what the Government needed as to services and logistics. .... 2) They operated as FOR PROFIT companies in an effort to give back a return on stock of the investors. ... and 3) They did not structure their company efforts to lobby the Government to put in place a Cap & Trade legislation upon which the company would grow and/or survive.

The above three distinctions can not be said about GE. Further, GE helped to get Barack Obama elected using their ample Media properties operating under the NBC Universal Banner. There are at least ten Television outlets, print media properties, and amusement parks ... and all are directly involved with promoting the Governmental Greening of America (through favorable Cap & Trade legislation).

0
debrarae

Thank you so much!  I love your insight, and  I sure as heck needed the laugh!

0
debrarae

Congressman Lujan of NM (naively) voted for this bill.  He voted for it because (according to him) it creats whopping 22,000 jobs.  ((Yep with over 9,000,000 people out of work ... alot of good 'that' will do)

What he 'ignored' was the enormous burden that this bill will put on the American people.  The businesses affected, won't be able to hire as many people.  And as for the $3,100 tax that WE the American People will have to pay (EACH YEAR - according to CONGRESS.GOV - bill search CAP & TRADE), that tax will affect the working poor (who are living just above the poverty line) the most.

So much Lujan, for the 22,000 jobs that this 'bill' is 'supposed' to create.

Yeppers, this bill is a 'winner' alright. 

0
Lynette McCracken

Reminds me a bit of the screwtape letters by C.S Lewis

0
MediaSplatters

Great Piece! Sometimes the only way to see the truth is through the eyes, hearts, and minds of... THE BENEFACTOR!

Newz

0
MediaSplatters

Great Piece! Sometimes the only way to see the truth is through the eyes, hearts, and minds of... THE BENEFACTOR!

Newz

0
Rocco Tiberi

I am not thrilled by this either, but if your going to bitch about it, offer positive solutions that are REALISTIC and remember how little the last as_hole who was in office did in this area.... oh yeah... he DIDN'T DO JACK SHI_!!!  As a matter of fact, he Cheney and the rest of the "EMPIRE" did all they could to further global warming and help thier planet destroying buddies.  He didn't create ANY jobs for ANYONE who wasn't scratching his back at some point.  I may see the current President at the G8 summit tommorow as we will be staying in the same small town of 89 people in Italy.  I will copy this article, your comments, and ask him about it if possible. At least I will hand it to his aides if I can.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

What is NowPublic?

NowPublic lets people work together to cover news events around the world.

Find out more

Crowd Power

albertacowpoke
First Flagged at 4:03 PM, Jul 1, 2009 by albertacowpoke

Related Stories

Recommendations (13)

Most recently recommended by:
 

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from