President Obama is
trying, according to CNN, to “convince voters of a
vigorous recovery that a majority still doubts.” Describing comments the
president made on October 2 at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of
Management in Chicago, CNN calls his attempt, the “political problem
inherent in having to describe an economic recovery that many Americans still
aren’t feeling.”
The coverage
points to polling data that shows the public still sees that the economy is
“poor”—with 56 percent disapproving of how Obama has handled the economy.
Perhaps
people are beginning to sense what a new documentary makes clear. We may not
officially be in a recession, as some numbers have ticked slightly up, but
people, as CNN pointed out, aren’t feeling it.
What are they
feeling? Higher electricity rates at home, plant closures, and jobs being sent
overseas, while few new jobs are being created at home.
On a recent
radio interview, a caller told me that companies shouldn’t be allowed to move
their business—and the jobs previously held by Americans—overseas. He wanted
laws passed that prevented closing an American plant and reopening in China,
hiring the locals. I believe laws can be passed that would slow, what Ross
Perot called, the “giant sucking sound”—the sound of jobs and economic growth
being sucked from America to Mexico, China, or some other country that makes it
easier to do business. Instead of controlling whether or not a company can do
what is best for its bottom line, wouldn’t it be better to make America the
best business environment?
Current
government policy is actually the cause of that “giant sucking sound,” the
reason people aren’t feeling a supposed economic recovery. These policies, in
the form of regulations—especially those from the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA), are keeping people from living the American dream and are even
lowering the standard of
living from that
of our parents.
While we may
not technically be in a recession, we are in a regcession—an economic
decline caused by excessive regulations. The cost of complying with the
regulations makes it virtually impossible to meet them and remain competitive
or make a profit. The result of these regulations: Americans lose their jobs,
as businesses close or move to more hospitable countries.
Released on
October 7, a new documentary (on YouTube):
“Regcession: The EPA is Destroying
America” boldly posits that regulations are
actually causing more world-wide pollution, destroying American jobs, and even
putting America itself at risk.
Citing
President Abraham Lincoln: “If America is to be destroyed, it will be from
within,” Regcession makes a strong case illustrating Lincoln’s wisdom.
Regcession proclaims: “Instead of standing up to
regulatory insanity, companies have taken the path of least resistance and sent
jobs to China.”
Detroit is
one such example. President Obama proudly claims the bailout of General Motors
(GM) as one of his great successes. We taxpayers had no say in the $49.5 billion
we funded to keep GM afloat—supposedly saving jobs and saving Detroit. Yet, as Obama-appointed GM CEO Dan Akerson (2010-2014) said during a 2011 visit to China’s Shanghai
Auto Show: “Our commitment to working in China, with China, for China remains
strong and focused on the future.” He called the eleven joint ventures with
China “eleven keys to success” and bragged that seven out of ten cars GM makes
are made outside the U.S. Only one-third of GM’s workers are in America.
We bailed out
GM. China’s economy is booming, while Detroit became the largest municipal
bankruptcy in history. GM sells more cars in China than in the U.S., while
American’s can’t pay their mortgage—let alone buy a new car. Regcession
points out that Americans are increasingly driving older cars.
“China’s
unregulated industry and underpaid workers, combined with free trade policies
make it impractical for American corporations to keep American jobs in
America,” states Regcession.
The film
features Senator Mike Johanns (R-NE) saying: “This administration has generated
nothing short of a mountain of red tape—hundreds of new regulations. Of these,
at least 219 have been categorized as significant. What that means is that they
will cost more than $100 million a year.” It shows TV host John Stossel, author of Give Me a Break and No they
Can’t, surrounded by boxes—the 160 thousand pages of new regulations. Yet,
the EPA keeps proposing more regulations.
“Anything
that hurts the economy, hurts the American worker,” Roy W. Spencer, Ph.D.,
Principal Research Scientist, University of Alabama in Huntsville, states.
“Environmental regulations in general, while originally well intended to try to
protect the environment, end up going overboard and ultimately destroying jobs.”
Since the
Clean Air Act was revised in 1990, demand for electricity in the U.S.—along
with the American lifestyle—has dropped. Concurrently, China’s demand for
electricity—and its lifestyle—has gone up. A growing economy requires more electricity,
not less.
America used
to manufacture goods that the world wanted. But manufacturing is messy and
regulations sent industry away. We now send China, for example, our coal and
our lumber. Due to regulations and free-trade laws, it is cheaper and easier
for companies to use these American raw materials and manufacture products
there and then ship the finished goods to the U.S. America loses the jobs,
economic growth, increased property values, and the taxes that would have been
generated through the entire process. China puts our cash in its pocket.
Using
mitigating human-caused climate change as the excuse, EPA regulations
increasingly ratchet down on American industry and electricity generation.
Hundreds of billions of dollars have already been spent to remove sulfur,
mercury, and particulates from emissions—only to have new regulations force
those same factories and power plants to shut down over new carbon dioxide
regulations. Jobs go overseas, electricity rates rise for the average American,
global pollution goes up.
Don
Blankenship, Regcession Executive Producer, explained to me, that with
the debt trajectory, the U.S. will be broke—thanks to excessive
regulations—long before the planet’s projected warming takes place. Yet, the
business community is afraid to fight, as regulators have punitive power.
Industrial
chemist Chris Skates, author of Going
Green,
explains it this way: “If we have an amalgam filling in our mouth for a cavity,
there’s enough mercury vapor in the vapor of our breath to contaminate the
sample. My question is, if the levels we are testing for are that low, who
cares?”
Regcession concludes: “The American dream is being
eroded by abusive overregulation, corporate greed, union misrepresentation,
environmentalists, and a president whose priority is supposed to be protecting
and improving lives of Americans, yet is instead hurting Americans.”
But all is
not lost. Americans can end the regcession, by abandoning the doomsday-based
regulations and instead have practical, meaningful regulations that give
American workers a chance to compete. Dumping bad regulations would be an
economic shot-in-the-arm, a true “vigorous recovery.”
President
Reagan said we needed to do whatever it took to protect the last bastion of
freedom that is America—it is too big, too important to fail. Let’s protect
America, not change it.
Stand up for
America. Stand up for American jobs. Stand up against over-regulation.
The author
of Energy
Freedom, Marita
Noon serves as the executive director for Energy Makes America Great Inc. and the companion educational organization, the Citizens’
Alliance for Responsible Energy (CARE). She hosts a weekly radio program: America’s Voice for
Energy—which expands on the content of her weekly column.
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