Sunday, March 6, 2011

When it suits this administration...

Interior appeals oil drilling ruling
By: Dan Berman and Darren Goode

The Obama administration late Friday appealed a judge's orders directing the Interior Department to act on several Gulf of Mexico deepwater drilling permits.

The appeal is the latest salvo in the ongoing fight over the speed with which Interior is – or isn't – letting oil drillers get back to work after last year's BP oil spill.

Gulf state lawmakers and the oil industry have accused the department of enacting a "de facto" moratorium against new drilling, while Interior says it needs to ensure safety and environmental protections are in place.

Friday's appeal challenges rulings by Judge Martin Feldman of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana, who on Feb. 17 gave Interior 30 days to make a verdict on five pending deepwater drilling permits applications. He later added two additional permits to that order.

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar had hinted the appeal was coming at a Senate hearing Wednesday.

“The judge in this particular case in my view is wrong," Salazar said. “And we will argue the case because I don’t believe that the court has the jurisdiction to basically tell the Department of Interior what my administrative responsibilities are.”

He added, “the policy we have in mind is unmistakingly clear: We are moving forward with the development of oil and gas” production."

Earlier in February, the judge held Interior in contempt, citing "dismissive conduct" by blocking offshore drilling during last year's spill.

The delay in issuing permits since last year’s Gulf of Mexico oil spill is “increasingly inexcusable," Feldman wrote.

Interior on Monday announced the approval of the first deepwater drilling permit held up since last year’s spill. The permit, issued to Noble Energy for a well partially owned by BP, was not one of those that Feldman’s ruling addressed.

The courts can be used to counter voter approved legislation. When the courts rule to block drilling they're okay with it. If it harms the US economy the administration is happy.

What you see in this administration is their utopian mindset. No matter how obviously disastrous their policies are they won't change them because they are trying to overlay reality with fantasy. There's nothing that will replace oil at the present time. Restrictions on oil will not make us functional or economically viable in the world market.

Wait until the oil price starts to add its impact in rising food prices. These Washington politicians are so cut off from the real productive world that their policies are simply destructive. Can you imagine any sane businessman making a long term policy based on fantasy. No, because he would soon be out of business.

Marxists are all about suffering for some greater utopian goal. Just look at all communist/socialist governments from Stalin to Castro. The promises are grand the reality not so much. Social engineering has a lousy track record.


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