corn cornfield original Photo by Katherine Volkovski on Unsplash

Looming Food Crisis? Stop Turning Corn into Ethanol and You Could Lower Gas Prices and Help Feed the World

F Joe Biden, who ran on not passing the buck, has yet to take responsibility for anything that’s gone sideways (or backward) under his rheumy-eyed “leadership.”  A tactic he may have learned from Light Bringer (peace be upon him), though I suspect it’s just environmental.

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corn cornfield original Photo by Katherine Volkovski on Unsplash

Politics: Why is Ethanol in Gasoline Suddenly Bad for the Environment? (When it Always Was)

The government has been forcing corn ethanol into your gas tank for a while now, and it’s been a scientific fact that this was bad for engines and emissions. That’s been crazy talk for ten years, but there’s been a disturbance in the political force. Suddenly ethanol is bad.

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Food prices and global …cooling?

Personally I’d rather risk being warm and fed, than cold, broke, and starving.

What’s Greene Shaheen Up To?

corn snake
corn snake

Senator Shaheen has signed onto a letter to Senate Majority leader Reid and Minority leader McConnell, suggesting that the corn based ethanol mandates, and all the tariffs and protections associated with it, not be extended.  Your initial reaction might be surprise, but this is not in and of itself surprising.  Shaheen is on the record being against them since at least 2008 when she ran for the US Senate but not because she is against ethanol.  Her problem is the kind of ethanol, and so we can assume her co-signers have similar issues.

On the surface they are claiming to be against the law (the mandate) that props up ethanol on three fronts and also gives 31 billion dollars to the oil companies to offset the cost of forcing them to add ethanol to fossil based motor fuels.  I’m against corporate welfare so I can’t object to repeal even with ulterior motives, but this starts off as a calculated, backhanded poke in the eye, not just to the stupidity of the subsidy regime that liberals normally love, but to big oil.  And we should expect oil to get screwed. We should simply accept that even with repeal of the ethanol mandate, we could still see the government use other means of legislative or bureaucratic force to keep ethanol in the fuel supply and pass those costs off to the oil companies.  If they can screw oil and get what they really want along the way, that’s a dream come true to Progressives.  But what do these signers really want?

As usual, nothing in Washington is quite what it seems.

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