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Boycott Middle East Oil
boycott-middle-east-oil.com ^
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Posted on 09/09/2002 5:57:09 PM PDT by Ed_NYC
Our Mission:
We are striving to educate the hard working American public - YOU, on how much oil is being imported from the Persian Gulf. We want to present alternatives to purchasing oil from the middle-east. There are oil wells all over the world i.e. Venezuela, Canada, the North Sea, our own Gulf, Alaska, etc... To think the only oil in the world is in the middle-east is absurd. We want to urge lawmakers to look elsewhere and encourage them to quit placing monetary gain ahead of America's best asset, our personal safety and our freedom.
(Excerpt) Read more at boycott-middle-east-oil.com ...
TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS:
1
posted on
09/09/2002 5:57:09 PM PDT
by
Ed_NYC
To: Ed_NYC
our own Gulf, Alaska, etc... Left wing environmental wacko extremists have done damn well to prevent us form going after these sources.
To: Ed_NYC
Oil is a global commodity. It makes absolutely no difference who we buy it from, unless every other nation that consumes oil also boycotts the M.E. The only thing we can do is protect ourselves from supply shocks by diversifying our sources of supply.(exploration and exploitation)
3
posted on
09/09/2002 6:03:58 PM PDT
by
Blackyce
To: Ed_NYC
So, assuming we can acutally pin down oil companies who only buy "middle-east" oil, and boycot them, where will the other oil companies get the extra oil they need to fill the need?
We need to start exploiting our own supplies, but boycotting oil companies won't help.
4
posted on
09/09/2002 6:31:51 PM PDT
by
TomB
To: Phantom Lord
Left wing environmental wacko extremists have done damn well to prevent us form going after these sources. Environmental extremists, funded by the World Wildlife Fund (Prince Bernhard's money, (that's Shell)), or coordinated by the Environmental Grantmakers Association (Rockefeller money), or the Natural Resources Defense Council (got a Rockefeller on that Board of Directors too)...
To: Ed_NYC
While you're at it, start boycotting products manufactured in China, too
To: Ed_NYC
Blackyce took the words out of my mouth. If we buy more oil from Russia or Latin America, someone else will simply buy more oil from the Middle East.
However, if we used less oil altogether, that would actually help. The only plausible way of doing that is nuclear power for electric plants; but that will be politically difficult to accomplish. The Dems and the media would have a field day if Bush tried it.
7
posted on
09/09/2002 7:15:17 PM PDT
by
Cicero
To: Eowyn-of-Rohan
Let me see, what's the best way to put this . . . ?
How about this:
You are stupid.
Yes, I think that works well.
8
posted on
09/09/2002 7:18:29 PM PDT
by
Conagher
To: Cicero
As the saying goes, "Ted Kennedy has killed more americans then Nuclear power plants ever did". Ironically, France, the most left wing of them all, gets most of its power from Nuclear power, and have no problems with doing such.
9
posted on
09/09/2002 8:02:05 PM PDT
by
Sonny M
To: Phantom Lord
Needing to diversify a bit ... I've looked at various Oil stocks ... didn't want to get burned in a year when Saudi sources take a hit. Any "safe" - non-saudi producers to back?
To: Phantom Lord
Psst. The enviros are hypocrites. The Audobon Society has wells working inside of thier preserve. Black Gold andnatural gas keep flowing outta tet swamp.
11
posted on
09/09/2002 8:23:00 PM PDT
by
Madcelt
To: Ed_NYC
This is so stupid, but I will not even try to explain it to someone who would post this. PLEASE go to any local community college or a good high school and take an economics course.
To: Ed_NYC
OH now that I look at your profile and see that you live in Queens NY, I may understand. Did you go to PS 193 in the early 60's and a guy with a Texas accent kicked your brains out? If so I'm sorry.
To: Ed_NYC
We want to present alternatives to purchasing oil from the middle-east. Pretty tough to do by merely calling for a boycott.
U.S. Petroleum & Crude Oil Overview
(thousand barrels per day)
|
1960
|
1965
|
1970
|
1975
|
1980
|
1985
|
1990
|
1995
|
2000
|
U.S. Crude Oil Production |
7,035
|
7,804
|
9,637
|
8,375
|
8,597
|
8,971
|
7,355
|
6,560
|
5,834
|
U.S. Petroleum Imports |
1,815
|
2,468
|
3,419
|
6,056
|
6,909
|
5,067
|
8,018
|
8,835
|
11,093
|
Total
|
8,850
|
10,272
|
13,056
|
14,431
|
15,506
|
14,038
|
15,373
|
15,395
|
16,927
|
Imports as % of Total
|
20.5
|
24.0
|
26.2
|
42.0
|
44.6
|
36.1
|
52.2
|
57.4
|
65.5
|
Congress has failed miserably in its responsibility to formulate an Energy Policy that would make us less reliant on imported oil. In fact, in the 30 years since the original Arab Oil Embargo, our dependence on foreign oil has skyrocketed from 25% to over 65%.
The technology exists to reduce our consumption of oil and make our economy less vulnerable to the whims of OPEC tyrants. Construction of modern, efficient mass-transportation systems in our nation's most densely populated regions and urban areas provide such an opportunity. And nuclear and clean-coal electric generating technology can easily supply the power to operate these systems, cleanly and safely.
To: Ed_NYC
According to the website, if you are boycotting Middle Eastern Oil (i.e., Saudi Arabia), then you should shun Exxon/Mobil, Chevron/Texaco, Valero, Marathon (including Speedway, Starvin' Marvin, SuperAmerica, Ashland & Pilot), and Motiva. BP/Amoco (including Arco) "imports little or none from the mid-east and should be your last choice if no others are available."
Safe brands include Citgo, Conoco, Philips 66, Sunoco, and Coastal.
15
posted on
09/09/2002 9:07:43 PM PDT
by
mhking
To: mhking
I think the boycott the arabs crowd ought to do a liitle leg work. The middle east holds 65% of the worlds oil reserves. This is a current link for oil reserves ,
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/iea/table81.html
The U.S. percentage has not changed, even though this is the most extensively researched area in the world. Hell, Nigeria has more oil than we do. We need to reduce our consumption of oil, through some as yet unarticulated combination of conservation and new technologies (fuel cells) and old technologies. Very little oil goes to power generation. Nuclear power isn't the answer unless we all switch to electric cars ( I get 12 miles to the gallon) Last year we imported 3.3 billion barrels of oil. We need foriegn oil, we will wither economically without it. Here is a link on U.S proven reserves.
http://www.eia.doe.gov/neic/infosheets/petroleumreserves.htm
To: mhking
I read somewhere that was an urban legend. Once the oil gets to the US it's sold to refineries all over the place. Saudi oil might mix with venezuelan etc. By the time all is said and done you really have no idea where it came from.
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