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Drill Here, Drill Now, Pay Less: A Handbook for Slashing Gas Prices and Solving Our Energy Crisis | 
enlarge | Manufacturer: Regnery Category: EBooks
List Price: $14.95 Buy New: $9.99 You Save: $4.96 (33%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 13 reviews Sales Rank: 1252
Format: Kindle Book Media: Kindle Edition Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 120
Dewey Decimal Number: 333.8230973 ASIN: B001GA1SEU
Publication Date: September 18, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description
America is unrivaled in our ability to solve tough problems and create bold, powerful solutions. That-s exactly what we need to do with the energy crisis we now face. We CAN become energy independent, while lowering prices at the pump today and developing innovative and effective energy alternatives for the future. We CAN produce an overwhelming supply of oil and natural gas here at home, and break the stranglehold that foreign (often hostile) countries have on our energy supply, and by extension, our economy. And we CAN be responsible stewards of our environment, protecting the grand beauty and richness of our country without sacrificing our robust engines of growth, expansion, and entrepreneurship. As Newt Gingrich, former Speaker of the House and bestselling author, spells out in stunning simplicity, when it comes to developing domestic energy resources, we CAN do it all. Isn-t it time we relied on American energy for America-s security and prosperity? With your help, your citizen action, and Newt Gingrich-s plan as laid out in this handbook, we can solve this energy crisis-and slash gas prices, too.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 8 more reviews...
Newt Gets it!....So why is he offering a solution that does not solve the problem December 1, 2008 A friend at work said to me that we could have solved the high price of gas, if only we started drilling off shore 10 years...I wondered why he could believe that...and now I have read why.
Newt gets it (we have to have energy independence); however he is disingenuous and dishonest though out the whole book. Within the 1st 10 pages he asks and answers who is to blame for the problem. It is the leftist politicians (He also calls them the energy elitist and people who hate energy production). He does NOT mention the oil companies; He does NOT mention the auto companies; and he does NOT mention any Republican politician. Near the end of the book he even has a spread sheet comparing the pro America group and the anti energy group...
So for me, the book's main theme was not to solve the energy problem, but to put another wedge issue between the American people.
Besides that, it is a great book, but if you want to read a book that has a real solution whose author is a conservative...read Energy Victory by Robert Zubrin
The 2nd Civil War... November 23, 2008 There is a battle waging in America over whether the People or the Government control the resources of this great land.
Left wing govt. bureaucrats and politicians, fueled (no pun intended) by the global warming maniacs, are going to bring us down-down to a third world status--if we the People, do not get control of these resources and USE THEM! A resource is of no value if not used when needed.
Drill now, Drill less sets the stage for a revolution. We must fight tooth and nail to win it.
Drill here drill now pay less November 22, 2008 An excellent read of a current event affecting us all. A real eye opener into the world of oil.
This should be on the required reading list... November 11, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This should be on the required reading list of every freshman for college AND high school, AND those intelligent enough to walk into a bookstore. It was full of so much common sense it just made me want to go "Duh!".
The only question it didn't answer was "Why are Americans being lied to?" - And this was because it was designed to be a handbook on how to solve serious problems and NOT political commentary
Biased and somewhat ignorant November 2, 2008 2 out of 8 found this review helpful
Drill Here Drill Now is convincing in many respects yet carries the air of willful ignorance about certain key facts of the oil market that send nearly all of its premises crashing to the ground.
First of all, the recent rise in oil prices was not in any way caused by a lack of domestic supply, or even world supply. To suggest that a five-fold increase in price was a direct market response to supply-demand imbalance when both the supply and demand have not dramatically changed in recent years is a ridiculous argument. Now that oil prices are plummeting, are we then to believe that world supply has suddenly doubled or tripled, or demand has been cut by half? Of course not. As recent events prove beyond any doubting now, the recent spike in oil prices was a speculative bubble. Long term supply concerns remain, of course, with peak oil virtually inevitable in the next couple of decades. But the recent price spike was pure speculation enabled by deregulation of the oil futures markets, and that reality is not explored adequately in this book. Since the 2003 deregulation, prices are now driven by futures contract speculation and not by the simply suppy-demand model.
Secondly, if we were to "drill here, drill now," in ANWR and up and down all of our coasts, substantially increasing domestic supply even, does Mr. Gingrich posit any reason at all, even one, that would prevent OPEC from notching back production modestly to account for an increased U.S. supply, thereby immediately and easily canceling any price benefit? No, of course he doesn't, because there is no reason. OPEC controls the world supply, not the U.S. no matter how much we drill. If oil is at $100/barrel, drilling in ANWR would only mean that the oil drilled there would be worth $100/barrel on the world market. And is Mr. Gingrich naive enough to think that the oil companies would sell that oil at a discount to American consumers, just because we have freckly-faced kids and pink flamingoes on our lawns?
Our greatest leverage lies in the fact that we control the world demand for oil, not the supply. But taking that power and manipulating world demand to bring down prices is a green approach that is cultural anathema to the intended readership of this book. This book is a book written by and for neocons who don't know much about how the world oil markets work, and the complex interplay of global and domestic supply and demand. If you like Sean Hannity and Rush Limbaugh, this book will competently confirm the notions that you already believe about how oil markets work, without challenging what you didn't know that you don't know.
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