Lights
Out For Civilization?
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell,
Jr.
The
environmentalists and price controllers who shut out the lights
in California have wrought untold amounts of economic wreckage.
But at least California's woes serve to remind us of just how fragile
civilization is. Our economic well-being is far too important to
let these lunatics ever have control over essential resources again.
The
heroic Thomas Edison was never a huge fan of government, but wouldn't
he be aghast today to find that a full-fledged movement was conspiring
to restrict people's access to his great invention of 1878? He was
right in thinking that the lightbulb would change the history of
the world and bring massive improvements in human welfare. Imagine
how much he would loathe those who seek to erect barriers against
using it.
It's
been said that only capitalist economies can afford to breed movements
that set out to deliberately destroy economic development. Throughout
most of human history, people were too busy beating back famine,
disease and poverty to fret about the supposed evils of consumerism
or overindulgence in energy.
In
a rich society, however, politicians indulge the regulators because
wealth seems so plentiful. They forget that wealth is a fragile
thing. It can be smashed by policies that curb innovation and investment.
Once these policies are adopted, everything can seem to be clicking
along normally and then, suddenly wham! there are blackouts
and you are back to the dark ages.
And
in a market economy, the effects of these kinds of interventions
are impossible to isolate. Here in Alabama, everyone is hopping
mad about his heating bill, but few know who is to blame. Many denounce
the producers themselves. But the environmentalists have for years
extolled the glories of natural gas while attacking coal and nuclear
power. It's hardly a wonder that we have shortages today. It is
entirely man-made or green-made, in any case.
Even
the Department of Energy attributes soaring prices to a shortage
of supply and growing demand as industry and electric utilities
are forced to shift more and more to "cleaner burning" natural gas.
Just as the Clintons trashed the White House on their way out, they
trashed the entire country's ability to provide for its own energy
needs. As Gordon Prather has pointed out,
the administration cooperated with every anti-energy nutcase out
there precisely to curb supplies.
After
years of letting the greens dictate energy policy, Bush is on the
right track in wanting to allow more exploration and production
of energy. He wants drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
and to permit exemptions to Clinton's profligate "clean air" regulations
so that older plants can chip in to keep civilization going.
Notice
that his proposals (so far) do not depend on spending money or government
programs. He is only proposing that private enterprise and localities
be permitted to do what they otherwise would do in the absence of
the federal government. But Bush inherits an energy policy designed
by left-wing eggheads who know nothing about economics and care
nothing about economic development. He's got to do more, much more,
to reverse policy trends of recent years that have brought us to
the brink of calamity.
Bush
should demand the full loaf: a complete repeal of the 1990 Clean
Air Amendments (even if his dad was the one who approved them).
These regulations have caused prices to rise along with the costs
of doing business and saddled every local government and power producer
with intolerable levels of federal supervision. If, at the same
time, restrictions were lifted on nuclear power, the result would
be cleaner air in the long run, and, far more importantly, lower
prices and plentiful supplies of electricity.
Another
step in the right direction would be to jettison the view that somehow
we need to be less dependent on foreign oil. This language is just
a guise for protectionism. Who cares where it comes from, so long
as we get it? We are not in a war with anyone (nor should we aspire
to be). The war with Iraq was 10 years ago, so it's long past time
that we opened up full trade relations. Maybe Saddam will stop acting
like we are the enemy when we stop behaving like the enemy. Do we
really need to make the case for free trade to Republicans?
There
are thousands of energy firms and entrepreneurs just waiting to
make a buck by providing us what we all want: lots of electricity
and natural gas at extremely cheap prices. Who is preventing it?
Environmentalists and central planners who are dead set on preventing
us from enjoying the fruits of economic development.
If
you know an environmentalist, tell him that if he likes barbarism
so much, to turn off the electricity in his home and recycle his
own waste. But leave the rest of us alone to enjoy the fruits of
a capitalist society.
February
2, 2001
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr., is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. He also edits a daily
news site, LewRockwell.com.
Copyright
© 2001 LewRockwell.com
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