If you had the ability to change the world in a positive way, what specific changes would you make?
I do that now by pouring my self into my friends who have need. As I give to others, I have received back so much more than I ever have asked for. Other than that, I'm gonna use musical activism to stick it to the oil mongers (the man) over how they suppress the technologies of alternative fuels. I want to shed as much public light on that subject
as I possibly can.
Ex:
http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=1232
USA: Oil Money Gushing into Bush Campaign
Industry Seeks Breaks on Drilling, Pollution
by H. Josef Hebert, Associated Press
July 3rd, 2000
WASHINGTON -- While locked in a string of disputes with the Clinton administration, the oil industry has pumped more than $1.5 million into George W. Bush's campaign. Oil companies will be seeking Bush's help on a range of issues, should he be elected president.
Recent high gasoline prices have brought energy policy into the campaign as Democratic presidential contender and Vice President Al Gore tries to tar Bush, the Republican governor of Texas, as a pawn of Big Oil. Bush, a former oilman from Midland, Texas, says it isn't so.
But across a range of issues -- from drilling in an Alaskan wildlife refuge to new rules setting the price of oil taken from federal land to whether to pursue a controversial international agreement on climate control -- oil-company executives believe a Bush administration would be more receptive to their objectives.
In fact, the industry's relationship with the Clinton administration -- and Gore himself -- has often bordered on hostile. The industry has contributed less than $100,000 to Gore's campaign. Last week, Gore said the nation was "vulnerable to big oil interests trampling on the public interest."
The top priority of oil lobbyists for years has been to open the coastal strip of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in northern Alaska to drilling. The government says 10 billion barrels of oil likely could be pumped from beneath the coastal plain, which environmentalists view as an ecological sanctuary.
Congress once approved such drilling, but Clinton blocked it. Gore has promised, "I will never agree to oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife, never."
But Bush views drilling there as a cornerstone of his goal to reduce America's reliance on foreign oil. "We need to increase domestic exploration," said Bush campaign spokesman Dan Bartlett.
While drilling in the Arctic refuge would be the biggest plum the oil companies could expect from a Bush administration, the industry would likely prevail on other issues.
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The Kyoto Accord
Environmentalists say U.S. acceptance of the agreement, which requires reductions of heat-trapping "greenhouse" gases to address global warming, would be dead if Bush becomes president. Bush has called it "ineffective" and unfair and would not seek its ratification.
Oil companies have led the fight against the agreement, which Gore was instrumental in crafting at a meeting in Japan more than two years ago. Should the pact be ratified, it would require reductions in carbon-dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels, principally oil and coal.
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Sulfur in gasoline
For months, oil-company lobbyists have argued unsuccessfully with the Environmental Protection Agency over the reduction of sulfur in gasoline and diesel fuel. The EPA has sided with the auto industry and environmentalists and called for almost eliminating sulfur in these fuels. The EPA wants sulfur cut to 30 parts per million in gasoline and 15 parts per million in diesel, more than a 95 percent reduction. The oil companies have offered a cut to 50 parts per million -- a level EPA Administrator Carol Browner has insisted would not do the job.
On such regulations Bush "wants to strike the appropriate balance" and be assured "they are based on the most sound and available science," said Bartlett. Bush has said he wants to reduce the sulfur in motor fuels.
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Valuing the government's oil
The industry has been at loggerheads with the administration over royalty payments to the government for oil taken from federal land. Over strong objections from the industry and oil-state lawmakers, led by Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, the Interior Department is changing the way it values the oil, contending the government has been cheated out of millions of dollars over the years.
Oil-company supporters in Congress, who view the change as a new tax on the industry, have been trying to postpone the new rules until after the election, confident Bush would be more receptive to industry interests. Bush has not addressed the issue.
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Oil exploration
Apart from the Arctic refuge, the industry believes Bush also might be more receptive than Clinton has been to developing oil and gas reserves on federal land in mountain areas of the West and in some offshore areas. The Interior Department has put many of those reserves off limits.
Like Gore, Bush has said he wants to continue the moratorium that generally bars exploration and drilling in U.S. coastal waters outside of the central and western Gulf of Mexico.
But while Gore has promised a blanket ban on drilling off California on a number of existing oil leases, Bush has reserved judgment. Bartlett said he would review them on a case-by-case basis.












http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=91808342&ft=1&f=101...
Bush Pushes to Ease Offshore Drilling
Listen Now [4 min 39 sec] add to playlist
Day to Day, June 23, 2008 · President Bush has been pressing Congress to ease restrictions on offshore drilling. Even if his proposals are realized by July 4, as he would like, we won't see prices drop anytime soon. Alex Cohen speaks with Chevron spokesman Mickey Driver about the challenges of building off-shore oil rigs.
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June 23, 2008
Lessons Learned from Santa Barbara Spill
We can all have an impact on things around us. Some of us more greater an impact than others, as for an example, the President. No matter what we do to satisfy the needs in life there will always be room to go beyond the need, meaning there is a chance that people in the midst of solving a situation or problem can sometimes negatively affect the outcome of the situation or problem. They do this by trying to correct the problem "they" see. If this seems confusing, think of it this way. Maybe it is just me, but when I am hungry I eat. Meaning I go get food and feed myself. If there were a chance to solve a situation out there that had to do with hunger if it ever existed what should a person do? Sure, give that person or persons some food! That simple right. I think of the saying if you give a man a fish he will eat for a day, but if you teach a man to fish he will have the ability to eat for a lifetime.