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Post 20

Friday, February 3, 2012 - 5:05pmSanction this postReply
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Michael,

Just like I said: Begin selling as much public land as possible, but in the meantime open up all energy development. And to make things more efficient, replace the current regulations that purport to keep the drilling safe from leaks with a simple requirement for adequate private insurance. The regulations don't work and no one should wait to see if the drilling company will be able to cover any damages. This fits an insurance model better than any other.

The government does not buy the insurance, it is the private company that won the drilling lease who is required to get and maintain the insurance (just like people who buy a house are required to carry mortgage insurance, and people who buy cars on credit must have auto insurance against loss).

I have no more than that.



Post 21

Saturday, February 4, 2012 - 2:35pmSanction this postReply
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Do you know how the spectrum auctions were last done as a "Nash Auction" (after mathematician John Nash).  Instead of being secret one-time bids, bidding was open in two rounds, so buyers could adjust their offerings based on open information.  In the movie, Beautiful Mind, it's a great scene where the four math nerds are at the bar and they see five pretty co-eds and they all want to rush the alpha, but John Nash points out that if they cooperate and go for the Betas, they all get a date, rather than one winning and the rest losing.  It's cute when the girls approach and the prettiest realizes that she's been rejected.  Anyway, the method is argued pro and con with the cons coming from the left.  Some claim that these auctions did not raise public revenues beyond expectation, but only raised the consulting fees of game theory mathematicians.

So, there's that.

The problems I cited in the three quotes are:  the potential for malfeasance, fraud, and abuse anytime the government does business with business (Teapot Domes); the tug-of-war between competing claims as the environmentalists want to subsidize the not-grazing of public lands - it's easy to dislike the Greens, but what standard measures their concerns above or below timber, hunting, or pharmaceutical firms in search of microbes in the soils; and then, the continued grazing which may or may not be cost effective for us who eat meat and pay taxes, but seems to work well for those who sell meat and get subsidies.

So, as for drilling, mining, etc., on public lands, it seems like an old problem in new guise.

And I must say that I am surprised that you worry about "energy independence" (whatever that is). 


Post 22

Saturday, February 4, 2012 - 4:16pmSanction this postReply
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Michael, I don't worry about energy independence. Read what I wrote.

Post 23

Wednesday, February 8, 2012 - 8:34amSanction this postReply
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I took this to set the context:
"The whole business of Energy Independence and the business of not buying from countries that support terrorism and don't like us is a little peculiar. The situation doesn't arise where we only use the oil that we produce. "We" is shorthand for those who purchase oil that are part of the U.S. market."
Perhaps I misperceived your premise.


Post 24

Thursday, February 9, 2012 - 9:12amSanction this postReply
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The author comments on the Stock Act here.

Both the House and Senate have passed versions (link).



Post 25

Thursday, February 9, 2012 - 9:26amSanction this postReply
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duplicate deleted


(Edited by Merlin Jetton on 2/09, 9:31am)


Post 26

Saturday, June 2, 2012 - 4:23pmSanction this postReply
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Spoiler Alert

Schweizer's bullet-point, 10-part solution to America's biggest problems (adapted from p 174-6):

--Make trading on nonpublic government information illegal (as it is in Europe)
--Make Congress disclose all trades over $5000 to the SEC within 2 days (as our 'corporate insiders' already have to do) 
--Make it illegal for members of Congress in oversight committees to trade stock in companies that their committee oversees (e.g., Senate Banking committee members couldn't trade bank stocks)
--Apply "whistleblower laws" to Congress
--Disallow "sweetheart" IPOs (e.g., 2008 Nancy Pelosi/Visa IPO scandal)
--Force some members of Congress to place their assets in mutual funds, rather than in individual stocks (where their votes would imply a "conflict of interest")
--Disallow all earmarks
--Prevent family members of legislators from being able to become lobbyists
--Disallow campaign contributions when Congress is in session (as is already done in 28 states)
--Disallow all federal grants and taxpayer-backed loans (e.g., Solyndra)

Ed

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Post 27

Saturday, June 2, 2012 - 11:34pmSanction this postReply
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Here is an idea I had... It is a constitutional amendment that creates an agency like the FBI but it is funded solely by contributions from states, and it is overseen only by a rotating group of 10 states general attorneys. It specifically can not be effected, or interfered with by any federal level office or agency. It has a simple charter: it constantly examines all high level federal appointees, and elected officials, for any corruption or felony violations. Along with this amendment, we need for each of the high-level appointees and elected officials to sign a release before taking office that gives up rights of privacy (during their tenure and for a period of time following) to agents of this new agency (who are sworn under severe penalty to keep everything confidential that doesn't add up to corruption or a felony).

The idea is that we are fighting a double war. We are trying to win an ideological war, to get candidates in place that understand and agree with a government limited to protecting individual rights. That would be hard enough if it were an honest battle. But it isn't. Candidates from all sides are attracted to graft and will tell any lie, join any side, to feed at the trough. This amendment only takes care of the crooks. And if they were taken care of, the ideological battle should be easier to win.

I don't see this as any cure to the many problems we have, just something that would help.

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