The Solyndra Scandal
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Note:
4 mins and 30 seconds into the video above you discover that a report
actually shows that this project would run out of money this
September of 2011, i.e. it was written on paper that this project
wasn't feasible.
The
Energy
Department’s loan guarantee program is the real Solyndra
scandal
You
can call it crony capitalism or venture socialism — but by whatever
name, the
Energy
Department’s loan guarantee program privatizes profits and
socializes losses.
It’s an especially risky approach in the alternative-energy space,
where solar energy is many years from being cost-competitive with
fossil fuels for most uses — and history is littered with failed
government attempts to back the next big thing.
Exclusive
Timeline:
Bush Administration Advanced Solyndra Loan Guarantee for
Two Years, Media Blow the Story
It’s
often claimed that the Solyndra loan guarantee was “rushed through”
by the Obama Administration for political reasons. In fact, the
Solyndra loan guarantee was a multi-year process that the Bush
Administration launched in 2007.
You’d
never know from the media coverage that:
The
Bush team tried to conditionally approve the Solyndra loan just
before President Obama took office.
The
company’s backers included private investors who had diverse
political interests.
The
loan comprises just 1.3% of DOE’s overall loan portfolio. To date,
Solyndra is the only loan that’s known to be troubled.
Because
one of the Solyndra investors, Argonaut Venture Capital, is funded by
George Kaiser — a man who donated money to the Obama campaign —
the loan guarantee has been attacked as being political in nature.
What critics don’t mention is that one of the earliest and largest
investors, Madrone Capital Partners, is funded by the family that
started Wal-Mart, the Waltons. The Waltons have donated millions of
dollars to Republican candidates over the years.
More
incredible signs of corruption...
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But
the above is just the tip of the iceberg...
Oil Industry and Government connections
(Image is edited from here - Found this image through Bill Moyers.com)
Solyndra
Scandal:
5 More U.S. Energy Scandals
2005:
Halliburton and Iraq:
The Texas oil giant reportedly overcharged $108 million for work in
Iraq, but reports didn't leak until after the 2004 election. Former
Vice President Dick Cheney, who was once chief executive, came under
fire for his connection to the company. Nonetheless, Halliburton
continued to be awarded government contracts, such as in 2006 when
subsidiary Kellogg Brown & Root received a $385 job to build
immigration detention centers in the U.S. for the Department of
Homeland Security.
Over the last eight years, President Bush, Vice President Cheney and their Republican allies in Congress have fallen over themselves to give oil companies huge tax breaks. They have repeatedly blocked meaningful progress toward energy independence and they have shown no interest in taking on the unchecked speculation that has created extreme volatility in energy markets and pushed oil and gas prices upward. Yesterday, addressing the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Vice President Cheney said, "We have to recognize that there isn't anything out there that is going to get us away from a hydrocarbon economy anytime in the near future. There really isn't anything on the horizon that today is economic, relative, for example, to basic, good old oil and gas." Not surprising coming from an oil man, and the man who sat down with oil company lobbyists behind closed doors to write the current failed policy. But those remarks show the bankruptcy of the Republican vision on energy. It's a vision of the status quo, invested in the problem, not in finding a solution. And it just doesn't cut it.
Note: A closed door meeting on a ‘failed’ policy that put Halliburton at number one and helped Exxon have the largest profits EVER. I wonder how many other failed policies have helped the oil companies?
The following is from an old book called Unequal Democracy
“The recession of 1974-1975 was triggered by a massive oil price shock engineered by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). The real price of oil increased by 140% in 1974, throwing the industrial sector of the United States and other advanced economies into a tailspin. Accidental president Gerald Ford entered the White House in the midst of a major economic crisis not of his own making.
Scientists and economists have been offered $10,000 each by a lobby group funded by one of the world's largest oil companies to undermine a major climate change report due to be published today. Letters sent by the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), an ExxonMobil-funded thinktank with close links to the Bush administration, offered the payments for articles that emphasise the shortcomings of a report from the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
When Lou Dobbs lied, Bill Schneider played along.
Dobbs: "We have to consider what else happened in the markets and that is precisely as most of the experts had suggested, once the executive ban on oil drilling offshore had been lifted, we have seen a huge decline of approximately 13 percent decline in the price of crude oil and gasoline prices actually begin to roll back over the course of 11 days, which is remarkable, isn't it?"
Schneider: "It is certainly remarkable. And the vast majority of Americans do support offshore oil drilling. They support anything, anything that will give them relief from high gas prices." , July 29, 2008 No experts said any such thing. For obvious reasons. "[Bush's] move to end the moratorium, in place since 1992, won't have any effect until a separate congressional prohibition expires or is overturned," said The Wall Street Journal on July 15. Instead, analysts "point to two distinct trends that may take the wind out of this year's price spike: an easing of tensions over Iran and evidence that demand for oil in the U.S. is falling faster than many believed."(The Wall Street Journal, July 18, 2008)
Senator Pete Domenici, R-N.M, has relayed the mixed message of "we feel your pain" (at the pump), while attempting to justify his party's blockage of a windfall profit tax on Big Oil by saying that increased taxes on oil companies would be something Americans wouldn't want. [Note: Which Americans?]
"Americans are furious about what's going on," declared Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., and want Congress to do something about oil company profits and "an orgy of speculation" on oil markets.
"If
you
don't tell the big oil companies they can no longer run energy
policy in America, we will not succeed, plain and simple,"
Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., told CBS Radio News.
With
all the evidence of corruption above, the following connections
between General Electric and it's (initial) lack of taxes makes
complete sense, as it's part of the government so obviously it will
create policy that will benefit them...
With
so
many corporations so firmly embedded in the government, it's funny
the kind of rhetoric you hear. Jon Stewart explains...
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Conclusion:
Crony
Capitalism
has existed for a long time. So energy companies have been able to
get government officials to pass legislation that helps them make
more money. So they get tax breaks, loopholes, subsidies while the
rest of the economy suffers and they make huge profits (and in some
cases, record breaking profits).
Clearly the Department of Energy has failed at it's job.