Updated 12:47 pm.EST, Sun November 22, 2009

Opinion|Fri, Jul. 18 2008 10:37 AM EDT

It's Time to Drill

By Chuck Colson|Christian Post Guest Columnist

According to a recent Reuters report, a leading Senate Democrat “would consider supporting opening up new areas for offshore oil and gas drilling.”

Senator Richard Durbin (D-Ill.), the majority whip, said that, subject to certain conditions, he—and possibly even Majority Leader Reid—are “open to drilling and responsible production.” Until now, they have been adamantly opposed.

Reuters is correct when it implies that this grudging, newfound openness is related to “the spike in oil prices to record highs above $145 per barrel.” It is a shame it took those kinds of prices—and the pain they cause—to spur long-needed action.

I have got to admit: As each day goes by, I am growing angrier over the debate about oil prices. Elites pontificate that if we simply let the prices rise, the country will be forced to develop alternate energy sources. People will drive less and use less fuel, and that would benefit the environment.

I use the word pontificate deliberately, because the tone is often condescending—as if they were telling a young child to “eat your vegetables.” Hand-in-hand with the pontification is a stubborn resistance to looking for new sources of domestic oil production, either onshore or offshore, or in Alaska.

The implicit message is that allowing such drilling would interfere with the lesson that the American people need to learn.

Ok, we have got to conserve more; I agree. And we have got to find alternatives to foreign oil. But, in the meantime, the “lessons” the elites are seeking to teach us are killing the world’s economy. And nobody feels the pain more than working-class Americans and the poor.

Historian Victor Davis Hanson recently wrote about talking with some people at a rural gas station in central California. These people could not afford a “new fuel-efficient” car, and “they were now spending a day or two of their wages just to fuel their cars for their long rural commutes.”

As Hanson put it, the “truly ethical and environmental solution would require embracing positions long considered anathema” to our elites. “Fairness to the poor and middle class” means lowering oil prices, not raising them as part of some social engineering scheme.

At this point, people object that increased drilling will do nothing to lower gas prices. They insist it will be decades, if not longer, before the increased exploration pays off in new supplies.

Well, they are wrong: Before the moratorium on offshore drilling, oil companies had already discovered billions of barrels of reserves on the California coast. A friend of mine in the industry says they could be online and pumping within two years.

What is more, announcing that we would allow more domestic production would quickly lower prices at the pump—because traders would be convinced that the supply is going up, not down.

Nobody would benefit more from offshore drilling than working Americans—those being hurt the most by the status quo.

It is galling to me to watch people who, doubtless, live in large homes, fly in private planes, and are not affected by the price of gas, build their idea of utopia on the backs of the poor. Christians must care about the environment, of course—but people, especially the poor, come first.

So, if our leaders are, indeed, ready to change this immoral status quo, I say, “What took you so long? And let’s get going now.”

_______________________________________________________

From BreakPoint®, July 16, 2008, Copyright 2008, Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with the permission of Prison Fellowship Ministries. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced or distributed without the express written permission of Prison Fellowship Ministries. “BreakPoint®” and “Prison Fellowship Ministries®” are registered trademarks of Prison Fellowship
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  • Fri Jul 25, 2008 7:24 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Thank God that Colson is addressing this issue. There are not a lot of voices of reason. Check out IBD editorials also. The elites have their huge mansions, SUVs, and private jets, while most regular folk are just trying to get by.

  • JHS »
    Tue Jul 22, 2008 10:26 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    scientist3


    Again there has been no oversite except for enviromental oversite on the oil companies, they can drill where ever they want otherwise. In 2001 Bush et al took out the oversite of the speculators in the industry and congress is passing laws to get it back...this is fact check it out.


    Also as far as jobs the median income in this country is almost where it was in 2001, the middle class has gotten the shaft since Bush has been in office, as far as the jobs created they are lower wage service except for some technolgy and healthcare jobs. Your right wing economics rewards American companies for sending jobs over seas and has been a boon for corporate america, but devastating to middle class. But that's OK, November is coming!!!!!!!1

  • Sun Jul 20, 2008 6:33 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    To Gratus,
    I never mentioned & don't believe that increased oil production is killing the rest of the country. I also didn't use the %&*?@ that you accuse me of. That was JHS.

    To JHS, Unregulated oil industry? What planet are you living on? The oil industry is very regulated in terms of building oil refineries & drilling for oil. They have become so regulated by so-called environmental concerns that its not monetarily beneficial to build refineries anymore. If they weren't regulated, why can't they drill for more oil & gas in 85% of America's known oil reserves? We're making OPEC rich at our expense. I live in Michigan. The gov't won't let us drill for known oil below the Great Lakes. Canada has been doing it for years. They drill & refine it in Canada and sell it to us in Michigan for a nice profit. How much sense does that make?
    Your comment on oil industry profits shows your ignorance of the facts. Fortune 500 companies make between 8-15% profit. Oil companies make about 10% profit, so there's no gouging going on. Because we keep increasing our usage of gas & oil, the oil companies make more dollars in profit but not necessarily more % in profit. In my business, if I sell more product, my company makes more money. If Exxon or Chevron weren't so big, they would probably be bought up by other countries oil companies like Amoco was by BP (British Petroleum) and like Citgo was by Hugo Cavez' Venezuela. Please spare me the "evil oil company" routine. Actually, American oil companies are small compared to other countries nationalized oil companies. For example, Exxon has control over only 3% of the entire oil production in the world. Compare that to Saudi Arabia or Russia or any other OPEC country.
    What our American oil companies need is less regulation & more freedom to drill here in America. Maybe then you'd see lower gas prices. More regulation means HIGHER gas prices, not lower.
    Your statement on India & China shows your socialistic views. Millions of people are being lifted out of poverty and you can only think of the VERY fewe jobs that we've lost. Let's see, how many jobs have we lost? Funny that our unemployment is lower now than almost any time in our country's existence. What's really happening is that the USA is undergoing an economic shift (as free market countries always do). We're shifting from a mfg'ing economy to an information technology economy. Please JHS, take a basic course in economics & history and see how a free market economy works. The world economic "pie" is not stagnant. Just because China gains a job doesn't mean the USA loses one. get educated about these issues JHS!

  • Fri Jul 18, 2008 5:47 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    Another point: Although this column is not as bad as most of Colson's deadly dull lectures, there is no shortage of "pontificating." Colson pontificates. I pontificate. RoBear pontificates. All God's chillun pontificate - at least, here on the CP bulletin board.

  • Fri Jul 18, 2008 5:42 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    RoBear wrote:

    "Your positions are unsustainable and everyone knows it but you."

    I read this same remark somewhere else in CP - but aimed at evangelical Christians. Everybody has opinions about other people's passions.

    By the way, RoBear, I think you have confused me with someone who cried, "Evil oil!" That was not me, and I have never thought that. I believe you flew off the handle on that intended put-down.

  • Fri Jul 18, 2008 1:31 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 4

    Great plan, Chuck! Let's just continue to subdue nature (as God told us to in the Garden). Don't take advantage of the high cost of oil in order to learn to build economical vehicles or to start putting on a sweater inside our houses in the winter (as our grandparents did). I guess you think Jesus won't tarry long anyway, so let'sjust drive as far and as fast as we can until He gets here. (This is another example of the fact that many evangelicals are actually body snatcher victims!)

  • Fri Jul 18, 2008 12:31 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    To JHS
    Next time try to talk rationally & logically. Just about everything in your rant is wrong. It makes it hard to talk to people with BDS (Bush Derangement Syndrome) but I'll try anyway. The oil industry is very regulated. That's why we're paying so much for oil. We could be the leading producer of oil & gas in the world but the whackos won't let ANYBODY drill for more oil here in America. Instead, people like you, are sending our hard earned money overseas, mostly to countries that engage in terrorism. The main reason oil & gas is going up is twofold:
    1) China & India are lifting millions of people out of poverty by industrializing and that requires more oil.
    2) If demand increases & supply doesn't, then prices will go up. The supply hasn't increased because the US gov't hasn't let it.
    So next time, try using logic & rationality in y7our answer.

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