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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Neocon who wrote (38875)9/21/2000 2:36:49 PM
From: Doughboy  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
Here's one, where "Big-Time" Dick is quoted as saying (I'm paraphrasing) that he's glad that OPEC appears to be getting its act together, and that he is "optimistic." What kind of Vice Presidential candidate gets a warm-all-over feeling when Americans start having to pay more at the pump?!!

kausfiles.com



To: Neocon who wrote (38875)9/21/2000 2:42:47 PM
From: Doughboy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
I pasted the wrong URL, so here's the whole article where "Big Time" Dick plays cheerleader for OPEC:

Cheney: Cheerleader
for OPEC

Let those Yankees in key Midwest battleground
states freeze in the dark!

Posted Friday, July 28, 2000



"I am impressed by the extent to which OPEC
seems to have got its act together. For the first
time in a long time there is optimism."

Who said that? The Venezuelan oil minister? A high-ranking
Saudi official? No. It was Dick Cheney, the GOP's
vice-presidential candidate, speaking at an oil-drillers'
conference in May 1999. What was he optimistic about? He
was optimistic that the oil cartel would succeed in carrying out
an agreement to cut world oil production, causing a rise in
prices, which would benefit the oil services company of which
Cheney was chairman and CEO. Cheney had said the same
thing about a month earlier at an energy conference in New
Orleans. ("There is a changed attitude inside OPEC. They
might not get to 100 percent, but a certain amount of
short-term optimism is justified.")

Cheney, of course, was only doing his job by rooting for
OPEC. It's one of the larger dirty secrets of American life that
many U.S. corporations, and the economy of much of the
state of Texas, benefit when the international oil cartel
succeeds in jacking up oil prices. But consumers in the rest of
the United States, who must pay those higher prices--and
who have been doing so, especially in the Midwest--may not
appreciate this fine point.

Cheney's pro-OPEC statements would seem to give
genuine ammunition to the Democrats. They fit in perfectly
with the "Whose side are they on?" theme-making of Gore's
consultants. They give Gore a killer debating point, especially
in the heavily contested Midwest. They're even a legitimate
target, in this sense: Lots of businessmen have an interest in
higher prices, and that's an interest their customers might not
deeply appreciate. But what Cheney was cheerleading for
was something--collusion to raise prices--that would normally
be illegal under the antitrust laws if it took place on American
soil. What would happen if the CEO of a Detroit carmaker
gave a speech saying he was "optimistic" that a
production-cutting deal negotiated by the Big Three would
hold? He might go to jail. He certainly wouldn't be nominated
for vice president.

And to think the pundits said that high gas prices made
Energy Secretary Bill Richardson electoral poison!
Richardson has at least been trying to bargain OPEC down.
Cheney apparently actually held meetings with Venezuelan
officials--Venezuela being a country that in the past has
"cheated" on OPEC by boosting production and upsetting the
cartel's price-fixing regime. What did he tell them?