Certainly tight with energy companies, from MSNBC.com
Windfall tax lets Alaska rake in billions from Big Oil
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/l ... tax07.html
yeah they must lover her lol

Moderator: Jim O'Bryan
Certainly tight with energy companies, from MSNBC.com
Bret Callentine wrote:As I've said before, Alaska is more like a country than a state. And being Governor of Alaska is unlike anything the "lower 48" has to offer.
Find me another Governor that has to deal directly with the Russians on a regular basis over border issues?
Where in the continental U.S. is there an equally high percentage of people who own guns, yet retain an amazingly low violent crime rate, given a police force that has 10 and sometimes 100 times more area to cover?
Stephen Eisel wrote:BS! A Governor has a lot more responsibility than a legislator... regardless of the size of the state..Brad Hutchison wrote:I agree with Jim that executive vs. legislative experience is overrated. That some republicans claim she has more experience than Obama because she was in the executive branch is laughable. The population of Alaska (600,000) is smaller than that of the greater Cleveland area. Approximately 85 metropolitan areas in the US have larger populations than Alaska.
On domsestic energy, she wins hands down..Brad Hutchison wrote:Stephen Eisel wrote:BS! A Governor has a lot more responsibility than a legislator... regardless of the size of the state..Brad Hutchison wrote:I agree with Jim that executive vs. legislative experience is overrated. That some republicans claim she has more experience than Obama because she was in the executive branch is laughable. The population of Alaska (600,000) is smaller than that of the greater Cleveland area. Approximately 85 metropolitan areas in the US have larger populations than Alaska.
The population of the state is relevant, as are the issues specific to that state (as Bret points out). However, my broader point is that while a governor may have different responsibilities than a U.S. senator, I think it's arguable whether those responsibilities are "greater." And with Sarah Palin specifically, I believe her experience is less relevant than Obama's in terms of being president/vice-president.
Brad Hutchison wrote:I can't knock her experience with oil and gas, but it makes me uncomfortable that she (and many others, to be sure) is pushing increased domestic production. As an energy policy, shifting from foreign to domestic oil is not the answer. She is pro-fossil fuels and anti-sustainable/renewable.
A percentage of the profits from domestic drilling need to be invested into alternative energy.Brad Hutchison wrote:I can't knock her experience with oil and gas, but it makes me uncomfortable that she (and many others, to be sure) is pushing increased domestic production. As an energy policy, shifting from foreign to domestic oil is not the answer. She is pro-fossil fuels and anti-sustainable/renewable.
Should that make me feel better about the prospect of her being VP?
We need a president and vice president who understands that drilling for more oil is merely a band aid.
Bret Callentine wrote:In my opinion, when it comes to energy use, this country is in for some serious hardships ahead. And if you don't use oil to stop the bleeding now, you'll never make it to the point where you can get the transplant of new technology.
Oil is a traded commodity. World supply,demand and specualtion impact the price of oil more than President Bush. Nancy Pelosi promised us lower oil prices in 2006. She has not delivered. We elected a ton of dems in 2006 to end the war in Iraq and lower oil prices. To date, we have only seen higher oil prices since 2006. We have been hoodwinkedDanielle Masters wrote:Brad Hutchison wrote:I can't knock her experience with oil and gas, but it makes me uncomfortable that she (and many others, to be sure) is pushing increased domestic production. As an energy policy, shifting from foreign to domestic oil is not the answer. She is pro-fossil fuels and anti-sustainable/renewable.
Her stand on increasing oil production worries me too. We have had a pro-oil guy in office for 8 years and all that has happened is that we have high oil prices. We need a president and vice president who understands that drilling for more oil is merely a band aid. I think we need candidate that understands that we need to find alternatives to oil and I don't think the McCain/Palin ticket is going to do anything but continue to push for more drilling as the answer to our energy crisis.
yes, it will take at least 5 years until the oil begins to flow and 3 of those 5 years will be spent on paper workBrad Hutchison wrote:Bret Callentine wrote:In my opinion, when it comes to energy use, this country is in for some serious hardships ahead. And if you don't use oil to stop the bleeding now, you'll never make it to the point where you can get the transplant of new technology.
I agree about upcoming hardships, but if you consider new drilling, whether offshore or ANWR, will take 5-10 years to start extracting oil, we could make a lot of progress in alternative sources by then... if we dedicate ourselves to it.
Brad Hutchison wrote:Maybe in the first month of drilling, but 6 months later? 3 years later? Oil prices will stay down because increased supply is expected in a few years? I'm skeptical...