LuvOrlando
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jun 8, 2006
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From Breitbart.com
"OPEC cannot be expected to bail out the world over the current global financial crisis, the secretary general of the oil producers' cartel said on Tuesday.
The United States must take the lead in resolving the crisis, which stemmed from a US-based credit crunch last year, said Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) Secretary General Abdalla Salem El-Badri.
"What is surprising me is everybody looking at OPEC to bail out this crisis. In OPEC, we are most of us very poor countries, we cannot bail out this crisis," he told an industry conference in London.
"This crisis created in the States must be solved within the States, they are capable of doing it," he added at the Oil and Money conference held in a London hotel.
Last week, OPEC ministers agreed to slash oil output by 1.5 million barrels a day in a bid to shore up crude prices which have plunged from highs of around 150 dollars a barrel to below 60 dollars.
The White House denounced OPEC's decision, made at an emergency meeting in Vienna on Friday, as "anti-market," while British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said he was "disappointed."
Rich oil-consuming countries are struggling to deal with a global economic slowdown, and falling oil prices have provided one reason for relief amid the overwhelming gloom."
Anyone who does not recognize OPEC's behavior as an act of war needs to take off those rosy glasses they've been wearing. I remember when the war started, people carrying on that these wars with the middle east were ONLY over oil as contempt dripped from their lips. All along I tried to point out that, like it or not, our entire lives are dependent on oil so yes, it is worth fighting over. We need it to get to & from work, to get our food to us, to heat our homes and generally to power our lives but everyone I spoke to refused to see this reality... it is an inconvenient truth(to borrow a phrase). Then as prices rose and people started to have trouble affording to go to work i noticed the anti war sentiment waning. As prices for gas pushed up prices for food and travel, and clothing as part of the ripple effect I heard fewer & fewer voices. Once people started to lose jobs and started pulling out of their investments for emergency relief (which caused a crash in the pyramid scheme that is Wall street) and started losing their homes without anyone behind them to buy them up on top of not being able to feed their families I noticed the deafening silence from the politicians.
So now what do we do?
Many many many of the world's greatest cultures and political powers have been destroyed due to economic factors, to see it all you have to do is open a history book & its all there. I'm concerned that this is no bump in the road because the crisis' we are seeing are the indirect effects of deliberate measures.
BTW, this isn't a partisan thing since I happen to know as many Democrats out of work and worried as Republicans. This has zero to do with the presidential elections since the problem is due to outside forces so I'd really like the elections to stay off the table. The arguing is divisive and clouds our collective ability to think. I'd just like to know how other people think this can be solved since OPEC is not even pretending to have our interests in mind.
"OPEC cannot be expected to bail out the world over the current global financial crisis, the secretary general of the oil producers' cartel said on Tuesday.
The United States must take the lead in resolving the crisis, which stemmed from a US-based credit crunch last year, said Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) Secretary General Abdalla Salem El-Badri.
"What is surprising me is everybody looking at OPEC to bail out this crisis. In OPEC, we are most of us very poor countries, we cannot bail out this crisis," he told an industry conference in London.
"This crisis created in the States must be solved within the States, they are capable of doing it," he added at the Oil and Money conference held in a London hotel.
Last week, OPEC ministers agreed to slash oil output by 1.5 million barrels a day in a bid to shore up crude prices which have plunged from highs of around 150 dollars a barrel to below 60 dollars.
The White House denounced OPEC's decision, made at an emergency meeting in Vienna on Friday, as "anti-market," while British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said he was "disappointed."
Rich oil-consuming countries are struggling to deal with a global economic slowdown, and falling oil prices have provided one reason for relief amid the overwhelming gloom."
Anyone who does not recognize OPEC's behavior as an act of war needs to take off those rosy glasses they've been wearing. I remember when the war started, people carrying on that these wars with the middle east were ONLY over oil as contempt dripped from their lips. All along I tried to point out that, like it or not, our entire lives are dependent on oil so yes, it is worth fighting over. We need it to get to & from work, to get our food to us, to heat our homes and generally to power our lives but everyone I spoke to refused to see this reality... it is an inconvenient truth(to borrow a phrase). Then as prices rose and people started to have trouble affording to go to work i noticed the anti war sentiment waning. As prices for gas pushed up prices for food and travel, and clothing as part of the ripple effect I heard fewer & fewer voices. Once people started to lose jobs and started pulling out of their investments for emergency relief (which caused a crash in the pyramid scheme that is Wall street) and started losing their homes without anyone behind them to buy them up on top of not being able to feed their families I noticed the deafening silence from the politicians.
So now what do we do?
Many many many of the world's greatest cultures and political powers have been destroyed due to economic factors, to see it all you have to do is open a history book & its all there. I'm concerned that this is no bump in the road because the crisis' we are seeing are the indirect effects of deliberate measures.
BTW, this isn't a partisan thing since I happen to know as many Democrats out of work and worried as Republicans. This has zero to do with the presidential elections since the problem is due to outside forces so I'd really like the elections to stay off the table. The arguing is divisive and clouds our collective ability to think. I'd just like to know how other people think this can be solved since OPEC is not even pretending to have our interests in mind.
Good luck keeping all your produce "American Grown"