Becoming ‘A Country I Do Not Recognize’

Becoming ‘A Country I Do Not Recognize’
Gas prices are displayed at a Chevron station in Los Angeles on Sept. 19, 2023. Mario Tama/Getty Images
Star Parker
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Commentary

If there is one overriding theme of the Biden years, it is the systematic degradation of American freedom, pushing the lives and freedom of private citizens aside as government expands and takes over.

This is done under the rubric of the left that “government knows best.”

Day by day, we are becoming what the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia described as “a country I do not recognize.”

In a new paper published by the Committee to Unleash Prosperity, Casey Mulligan, professor of economics at the University of Chicago and former chief economist of the president’s Council of Economic Advisers, estimated the current and future costs of new regulations imposed so far by the Biden administration as almost $10,000 per household.

Per Mr. Mulligan, although the largest single area of new regulatory costs is fuel economy and emission standards, that still accounts for only one-third of the total costs. The rest come from “health, labor, telecommunications and consumer finance regulations.”

In a paper published last year by Mr. Mulligan with Stephen Moore, they estimated that Biden administration policies, driven by climate change dogma, to shut down the oil and gas industry have resulted in 2 million to 3 million barrels per day less of oil production and 20 billion to 25 billion cubic feet less natural gas production.

Mr. Mulligan and Mr. Moore estimate the cost of this foregone energy production to the U.S. economy is on the order of $100 billion per year.

Now we have the latest move by the Biden administration to remove millions of acres of land in Alaska from oil and gas drilling and development.

This includes blocking nearly half of the National Petroleum Reserve–Alaska, the largest expanse of public land in the country, and canceling seven leases issued during the Trump administration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

These moves may leave President Joe Biden’s climate change dogmatists happy but less so Americans who care what they pay for energy.

Sen. Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska) and Rep. Harriet Hageman (R-Wyo.) have introduced the Energy Poverty Prevention and Accountability Act that requires cost-benefit evaluation from federal agencies on energy-related policies that assesses the effects of policies on the affordability of energy on Americans, particularly at-risk communities.

There is no question about the effect on the cost of living of all Americans as the Biden administration tilts at climate change windmills.

Oil prices and gasoline prices are now at 12-month highs.

Biden climate/energy policies have also found their way into the current auto strike.

Despite that the United Auto Workers (UAW) is a traditional stalwart supporter of the Democratic Party, so far UAW president Shawn Fain has not endorsed President Biden.

One of the issues is government mandates on automakers to move to electric vehicles. Estimates are that production of EVs requires about 30 percent less labor. Therefore, these mandates threaten the long-term economic security of auto workers.

Instead of backing off these mandates, the likely solution will be subsidies and mandates to support union jobs in EV production.

This means even more government. More government controlling our economy, more government controlling our lives.

It is all a kind of backdoor socialism. But rather than increasing government control coming from some abstract ideology, we get the same result from the belief that “government knows best.” The result is armies of government bureaucrat micromanagers controlling our lives.

Let’s recall our own Declaration of Independence, which states our founding based on individual rights—life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness—and “that to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men ... that whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it.”

It is time for Americans to act to restore our free nation while we have a few breaths of freedom left.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
Star Parker
Star Parker
Author
Star Parker is the founder and president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education (CURE) and host of the new weekly news talk show “Cure America with Star Parker.”
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