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Politics : Impeach George W. Bush -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jttmab who wrote (2119)4/2/2001 1:05:37 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 93284
 
Do you suppose he doesn't realize that Europeans can access US press stories?

For whatever reasons, Bush isn't in step with main-stream America. He is disengaged from the
rest of the world. I don't believe that it is just because he is a conservative. Conservatives and Bush
supporters don't want to drink poisonous water either. Even b4 he was elected it was widely reported
that he was disinterested in the world around him.

As Governor of Texas he could sit through a meeting that lasted only 10 or 20 minutes, then he was
off to the gym. The press said that he spent part of his time playing computer games in the afternoon
b4 he left the office early.

He was never prepared for the role of President. He is unable to make decisions, and according to
another article I found in The Washington Post which is printed here about Bush and coal
he has capitulated to the pressure of anti-environmental groups, groups who have made large
contributions to the Republican party. Do read the article if you have a chance.

When Bush was younger it was reported that he consumed large quantities of alcohol. He received
a ticket for drunk driving. There is also a rumor of cocaine abuse. Personally, I would not rule
out brain damage or at least some type of psychological problems. His family is wealthy. Yet,
he never traveled outside of the US except for a few trips to Mexico. I think his family persuaded
him to take a couple of short trips overseas, but I don't know the details.

How many wealthy young men or women would chose to stay home if it were possible to travel
the globe?

I don't know what will happen with the US role in foreign affairs. I'm scared though.

Thanks for the information about the reduction in arsenic levels. I'll have to look at the budget numbers
again, but there are people who believe we could be in debt by this summer.

The problem is that we've been pounded with one Bush surprise after another with all ideas looking
backwards. Many people are in shock so it is difficult to keep up with each issue.

Regards,

Mephisto



To: jttmab who wrote (2119)4/2/2001 1:57:13 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 93284
 
" the electricity crisis in the Golden State is partly the result of market manipulation by power
generators. The report alleges that generators overcharged the state's utilities, which
distribute power to consumers, by more than $6 billion over a 10-month period".


From RECKONINGS
March 25, 2001

The Price of Power

By PAUL KRUGMAN
From The New York Times

W elcome to the Cartel California. Last week a report by the Independent
System Operator, which runs California's power grid, made it more or less official:

the electricity crisis in the Golden State is partly the result of market manipulation by power
generators. The report alleges that generators overcharged the state's utilities, which
distribute power to consumers, by more than $6 billion over a 10-month period.


The report is almost certain to be ignored by federal authorities. But I'll come back
to that in a minute. First, there are a couple of things I need to make clear about the
report's claims.

The I.S.O. is not alleging that power generators were part of some vast conspiracy.
Actually, I shouldn't have used the word "cartel" in the opening sentence. The
generators didn't have to conspire: the logic of the situation made it easy, almost
irresistible, for each individual company to manipulate the market. In fact, to believe
that the generators didn't engage in market manipulation, you have to believe that
they are either saints or very bad businessmen, because they would have been
passing up an obvious opportunity to increase their profits.

Imagine the situation: it's a hot summer, and the California electricity market is very
tight. You are one of only a handful of major players selling wholesale electricity.
Surely the thought has to occur to you: what would happen to prices if one of my
plants just happened to go off line? And when companies act on that thought . . .
well, you get the picture.

It's also important to realize that accusations that power companies were
withholding electricity to drive up prices didn't emerge out of nowhere when the
crisis erupted; this isn't a case of politicians suddenly looking for scapegoats. On the
contrary, economists were raising red flags about the possibility of market
manipulation long before California's woes hit the headlines. Indeed, some
economists warned about the issue before California even deregulated: there was
clear evidence that "market power" was a problem in Britain, which began
experimenting with deregulation and privatization years before the movement came
to America.

And the research evidence continues to pile up. Just before the I.S.O. issued its
report, the economists Paul Joskow and Edward Kahn circulated a study that found
strong evidence that "exercise of market power" played a large role in raising
electricity prices last summer. The authors aren't leftists, or even opponents of
deregulation. They were merely trying to look objectively at the evidence, which
points more or less unmistakably to the conclusion that deliberate withholding of
electricity to drive up prices has been an important factor in the California crisis.

Still, there is every reason to believe that Washington will turn a deaf ear to this
evidence. As an article in this newspaper explained on Friday, the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, which is supposed to act as the nation's watchdog over the
energy industry, lately seems more like a lapdog. I was particularly struck with the
report that FERC's staff found that California's power companies "had the potential
to exercise market power," but could not conclude that they had actually used that
power. As I said, those power generators must be saints, bad businessmen, or both.

What should the regulators be doing? I'm skeptical about proposals to make the
generators pay big fines; it's not clear that you could figure out which company was
responsible for which part of the problem, or for that matter that the companies
were doing anything illegal. What FERC could do is impose a temporary cap on
wholesale prices. This would limit the financial damage to California — the state
government is currently spending more than a billion dollars a month to subsidize
electricity purchases. And in a market where "exercise of market power" is a major
factor, a wholesale price cap might actually increase supplies, because power
companies would no longer have an incentive to withhold electricity to drive up its
price.

But it's not going to happen. Blame knee-jerk free-market ideology, or the political
influence of the power companies (many of which are based in, yes, Texas).
Whatever the reason, it is hard to imagine an administration less likely to be
sympathetic to California's plight than the one currently in power.


And if this indifference makes Californians angry, it should.



To: jttmab who wrote (2119)4/2/2001 2:01:46 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
"Ignoring the fact that the energy crisis is a contrived crisis.
How is it that the President couldn't even think that an
energy crisis could occur only four months after the election...."


The answer didn't hit me until I brewed my first latte this morning. The contrived
energy crisis occurred in California because those responsible knew that Bush
wouldn't do anything about it. He would let the utilities peel the money off the
backs of the consumer. Clinton would probably have stopped it.

JMOP

Mephisto