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To: LindyBill who wrote (96708)1/25/2005 10:56:37 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793729
 
Hybrid Liberalism
The government and Detroit's Big Three are trying to change the way you look at your car.
by Henry Payne
01/25/2005 12:00:00 AM
The Weekly Standard

Detroit
AMIDST THE CUTTING-EDGE Ferraris, Jaguars, and Lexus concept vehicles at the 2005 North American International Auto Show in Detroit last week was one particularly pricey concept that is a government creation: a federal tax gift to upper-class Americans buying fuel-efficient hybrid cars.

While Washington played host to the presidential inauguration, 6,000 international journalists and nearly a million spectators descended on America's Motor City for a different kind of inauguration: the annual rollout of the auto industry's newest products. One of the market's hottest niches is for green vehicles like the Toyota Prius and the Honda Accord Hybrid--gasoline/electric hybrids marketed to liberal, socially-conscious buyers with six-figure incomes. In 2004, hybrid sales reached 80,000 units in the United States, mostly to "luxury-type vehicle owners, people who want to be first on their block with plasma screen TVs and all that," says Ford spokesman Dan Bedore.

Limousine liberals? Call them "hybrid liberals."

But unlike other, low-volume niches such as plasma TVs or high-performance sports cars, hybrid buyers will not be paying a premium for their products. In fact, they will be receiving a federal subsidy of $2,000 per car.

Billed by its congressional supporters as a way to seed new technology in the fight against global warming and oil dependence, the hybrid tax break has lined the pockets of some of the richest people in America.

For example, the Toyota Prius--America's best-selling hybrid at 30,000 units sold last year--is typically bought by childless couples with an annual household income of $100,000, according to Toyota's own demographic study. The car has become a status symbol among the liberal Hollywood elite. Millionaire celebrities like Cameron Diaz, Leonardo DiCaprio, Larry David, and Jack Black are all proud owners of the Prius and its $2,000 tax break. And this year, Toyota is offering its second hybrid vehicle through its luxury division, Lexus. The Lexus E330 SUV hybrid--already pre-sold to 11,000 buyers--is being gobbled up by Hybrid Liberals making $130,000 a year on average.

With the Lexus SUV and other new hybrid offerings from Mercedes, Honda, and Ford, hybrid sales are expected to more than double this year to 165,000 units in the United States. That means a total federal subsidy of some $330 million to upper-income customers.

Sage Eastman, press spokesman for the tax break's congressional sponsor, Rep. Dave Camp from Midland, Michigan, defends the tax break: "Congress wants to encourage emerging technology that can have a lasting effect on the environment. Initially, the tax break may have been taken advantage of by wealthier individuals, but in the long run we'll see a broader use as more cars are introduced into the market."

Keith Ashdown, vice president for policy for the non-partisan Taxpayers for Common Sense, however, is skeptical the hybrid tax credit is serving its purpose. "You want tax breaks that alter consumer behavior. This tax break probably isn't working because it's putting money into the pockets of people who would buy this product in the first place."

Even with the subsidy, however, auto companies are losing their shirts on hybrids.

Since gasoline/electric hybrids use two power sources--a combination of a gasoline engine and an electric motor--they are substantially more expensive than standard cars. Though hybrids typically sell at a sticker price of $3,500 over comparable gasoline cars, manufacturers are not recouping their costs.

One indicator of hybrid technology's expense came this December when General Motors and Chrysler announced a pooling of resources to develop their own hybrid vehicles. Says David Cole, chairman of the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor: "The sheer costs are horrendous. They'll do a whole lot better with a partnership."

The costs put manufacturers in a box. They cannot make money on hybrids, and yet their public relations value among Hybrid Liberals in the press, Hollywood, and elsewhere mean they cannot afford not to. Even GM product guru Bob Lutz, one of the industry's legendary executives and a hybrid skeptic, admits that General Motors' decision not to get into the hybrid business was a mistake.

"The reason we missed the boat on hybrids is we business-cased it too much," he recently told the Detroit Free Press. "We took this hard analytical look at it and said for that amount of investment to sell that quantity of vehicles where we lose money on every one is irresponsible vis-à-vis the shareholders. We failed to appreciate that Toyota basically treated it as an advertising expense. They said we need these to demonstrate our . . . concern for the environment, capture the imagination of the growing environmental movement in the U.S., and get all those East and West Coast intellectual opinion leaders, movie stars, etc. on our side, which they successfully did. So even if they lose money on it, it's cheap at twice the price."

Whether or not tax credits should be going to well-off car buyers, the hybrid subsidy is but a foot in the door of federal efforts to fundamentally alter the auto market. And, despite the blue state concentration of hybrid buyers, it is an effort that transcends party lines.

Congressman Camp, for example, is a self-described conservative Republican. He sponsored the hybrid tax break, his spokesman Eastman explains, because "Congress is saying now is the time to transition to sources that are eco-friendly and lower our dependence on foreign oil."

While the United States government has firmly rejected participation in the Kyoto Treaty limiting greenhouse gases, automakers are under tremendous pressure to reduce their carbon dioxide emissions. Their business is a global one, and European and Asian governments have already moved to put caps on CO2 emissions.

Even in the United States, automakers are facing new regulations in California and Northeast states that limit greenhouse emissions through mileage standards, regulations that could fundamentally change what consumers would be allowed to buy. Add to this the very real threat of tobacco-like global warming lawsuits against automakers, and a transportation future in which the government subsidizes industry to make only "earth-friendly" vehicle looks quite plausible.

It is a future that is being actively promoted by big auto players like GM and Ford--chief advocates for Camp's tax credits not only for hybrids, but ultimately for cars powered by "renewable resources" such as hydrogen.

In a somber, almost religious, news conference held on the Detroit auto show's opening day, General Motors CEO Richard Wagoner dropped all pretense that cars are about individuality and fun. He sketched a "guilt-free driving" future where "government and industry will have to solve together" the challenges for transitioning to a hydrogen transportation system.

"This should excite you for what it means to society. Whatever motivates you--global warming or the sustainable use of resources--the hydrogen economy is coming," he said, upon introducing a the Sequel, a hydrogen-fueled concept. "This is a bold step toward the reinvention of the automobile. This is our moons hot."

And like NASA's moons hot, this ambitious government/industry re-invention of the auto won't be cheap. Obviously, its costs will dwarf those of the hybrid subsidy.

To the car enthusiasts making their annual pilgrimage to Detroit, the auto show was still a celebration of the individual transportation. But if you listened closely to the industry's executives you heard them saying that cars are increasingly seen as a threat to be harnessed for societal goals. If, as players as diverse as GM's Wagoner, Cameron Diaz, and Rep. Camp insist, the goal of automobiles is no longer to offer a good consumer product but to save the planet, who will be able to say no?

Henry Payne is a Detroit free-lance writer and editorial cartoonist for the Detroit News

© Copyright 2005, News Corporation, Weekly Standard, All Rights Reserved.



To: LindyBill who wrote (96708)1/25/2005 11:27:08 AM
From: JDN  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793729
 
I wish someone would take a poll of the American voters to see if they appreciate this GRANDSTANDING on Rice and efforts to hold up government proceedings over items not part of the proceeding. Barbara Boxer particularly galls me as she CONSISTENTLY went WAY over her alloted time with her BS and now wants ANOTHER HOUR which I suspect she will go over to continue to blow wind in the Senate (Gawd it must stink there) and Kennedy, another one not even fit to shine Condi's shoes. Just disgraceful. I hope the American Voter will continue to show their disapproval by further eliminating Democrats from Congress. jdn



To: LindyBill who wrote (96708)1/25/2005 1:10:05 PM
From: John Carragher  Respond to of 793729
 
"This isn't a crisis, so why should we be lurching forward?" asked Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the new Democratic leader.

Let's wait until it becomes a crisis... democrat answer to resolve soc sec.



To: LindyBill who wrote (96708)1/25/2005 9:12:38 PM
From: KLP  Respond to of 793729
 
The Democrats won't win any votes themselves with this type of obstructive behavior. The MSM and Foreign media headlines it this way.......Even Aljazeera gets to send this idiocy around the Arab world...

news.google.com

Democrats attack Rice for advice on invading Iraq

Financial Times, UK - 43 minutes ago
By Joanna Chung in Washington. Senate Democrats on Tuesday sharply criticised Condoleezza Rice for her role in President George W ...

Democrats Say Rice Misled About Iraq War
Guardian, UK - 1 hour ago
By ANNE GEARAN. WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Democrats said Tuesday that Condoleezza Rice lied to them, misled Americans about the Iraq ...

Democrats blast Iraq war policy
MSNBC
- 1 hour ago
WASHINGTON - One Senate Democrat called Condoleezza Rice a liar Tuesday and others said she was an apologist for Bush administration failures in Iraq, but she ...

Democrats assail Rice, citing role on Iraq
International Herald Tribune, France - 1 hour ago
WASHINGTON The nomination of Condoleezza Rice as secretary of state encountered a barrage of determined opposition Tuesday on the Senate floor, where several ...

Democrats pummel Rice, Bush administration over war in Iraq
Kansas City Star (subscription), MO - 1 hour ago
BY JIM PUZZANGHERA. WASHINGTON - (KRT) - Senate Democrats hammered away Tuesday at national security adviser Condoleezza Rice, using ...

Senate Democrats Accuse Rice of Lying
Los Angeles Times (subscription), CA - 2 hours ago
By Sonni Efron, Times Staff Writer. WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats today attacked the nomination of Condoleezza Rice to be secretary ...

Democrats Slam Rice, But Senate Approval Assured
Wired News - 2 hours ago
By Vicki Allen. WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senate Democrats denounced Condoleeza Rice on Tuesday as an architect of some of the worst ...

Dayton says his vote against Rice a statement against 'lying'
Kansas City Star (subscription), MO - 4 hours ago
WASHINGTON - Sen. Mark Dayton said Tuesday he is voting against Condoleezza Rice for secretary of state as a protest against what ...

Democrats delay approving Condoleezza Rices new post
Aljazeera.com, UK - 3 hours ago
While waiting for the Senate's approval of her nomination as the future American Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice faced a barrage of criticism from the ...

Democrats Call Rice Liar, Bush Apologist
ABC News - 3 hours ago
Sen. Robert C. Byrd DW.V. speaks during the Senate debate on the confirmation of Condoleezza Rice as Secretary of State in Washington Tuesday, Jan. 25, 2005. ...

Democrat senators criticise Rice
BBC News, UK - 4 hours ago
Democrat senators have used a debate in Congress to criticise Condoleezza Rice, President George W Bush's choice for the next US Secretary of State. ...

Senate Democrats assail Rice as misleading American public
Atlanta Journal Constitution (subscription), GA - 4 hours ago
WASHINGTON — A handful of determined Senate Democrats on Tuesday assailed President Bush's decision to invade Iraq and said they would oppose Condoleezza ...

Boxer's rebellion and Democrats' new tone
Christian Science Monitor - 5 hours ago
Smarting from defeat, Senate minority leaders talk about values and let colleague play 'bad cop.'. By Gail Russell Chaddock | Staff ...

Democrats, citing Iraq war, refuse to rubberstamp Rice as top US ...
Turkish Press, Turkey - 6 hours ago
WASHINGTON (AFP) - Democrats doled out harsh criticism of Condoleezza Rice for her role in crafting US policy in Iraq as the Senate weighed her nomination for ...

Democrats Use Rice Debate to Inveigh Against War in Iraq
New York Times - 6 hours ago
By DAVID STOUT. WASHINGTON, Jan. 25 - Senate Democrats who oppose President Bush's Iraq policy spoke today against Condoleezza Rice's ...

US Senate Debating Rice Nomination
Voice of America
- 6 hours ago
By VOA News. The US Senate is holding a debate Tuesday on the nomination of Condoleezza Rice as secretary of state. Opposition Democrats ...

Kennedy Leads Democratic Onslaught on Bush and Rice
The Scotsman, UK - 7 hours ago
Senator Edward Kennedy and other Democrats assailed President George Bush’s decision to go to war with Iraq today and declared they would oppose Condoleezza ...

Senate begins debate on Rice nomination
CNN - 7 hours ago
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Senators on Tuesday began a nine-hour debate to consider national security adviser Condoleezza Rice's nomination for secretary of state ...



To: LindyBill who wrote (96708)1/25/2005 9:30:12 PM
From: KLP  Respond to of 793729
 
Here's a list of Senators, with phone numbers and email addresses I looked up. Just wrote to Senator Frist as Senate Majority Leader to share my thoughts on what the Democrats are doing, and requesting the Republican and Democratic Senators that actually care about this Country and our reputation, stop the Democrats who are so totally out of line regarding Dr. Rice.

senate.gov