Ed Driscoll

By Ed Driscoll

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Investor’s Business Daily notes President Obama’s  — surprise! — double standard:

If Iran has “legitimate energy concerns” that make its nuclear plants OK, doesn’t the energy-starved U.S.? Why doesn’t Iran, with the second-largest proven oil reserves, just build some refineries?

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That Iran is not serious about peaceful nuclear energy is shown by its refusal to build the refinery capacity needed to eliminate its dependence on imported gasoline. That money instead has gone to buying more centrifuges and expanding nuclear facilities. If Iran’s energy aspirations were legitimate, it would be building refineries and not bombs.

The irony here is that at the same time we are encouraging Iran to exploit the peaceful uses of nuclear power, we are discouraging its use here at home. We have legitimate energy aspirations as well, and one of them is reducing our dependence on imported oil from countries that do not have our interests at heart.

We let billions flow overseas and domestic oil resources from the Chukchi Sea to ANWR to Western oil shale to the Gulf of Mexico go unexploited. We have one thing in common with Iran: We’re not pushing refinery construction here either.

We prattle on about nuclear power being costly and nuclear waste being a danger without a safe place to store it even as we shut down Yucca Mountain, a perfectly safe place to store it. We place all sorts of regulatory and environmental impediments in its way.

Why is nuclear power a viable energy source for Iran but not for America?

Meanwhile, “In a new overture to Iran, the Obama administration has authorized U.S. embassies around the world to invite Iranian officials to Independence Day parties they host on or around July 4th.”

Personally, I’ve been a little nervous whenever representatives of the Iranian government are near a U.S. Embassy since, oh, about November of 1979. But still, I’m sure the hot dogs will be on the grill and the beer and Martinis will be flowing. What could go wrong?

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1 Comments, 1 Threads

  1. 1. Mikey NTH

    Better than oil for Iran is its natural gas reserves. Gas turbine plants and high tension lines would work very well, as would extensive gas pipelines, bringing gas to domestic customers – industrial and residential.

    Yet the concentration is on nukes as the symbol of modernity.
    Funny that, eh?