Senator Daschle May Have An Alcohol Problem.

Written by Hal Pawluk
Published September 29, 2003

South Dakota Democrat Senator Tom Daschle is the main author of a mandate to double the use of ethanol alcohol and may have a real problem with this.  [Wall street Journal 9/25/03: Daschle's Ethanol Dilemma - requires subscription for online access.]

This is part of the energy bill in conference right now and will raise gas prices by $33 billion over the next four years. Other ethanol-loving senators include Democratic Senators Evan Bayh and Russ Feingold, both from two of the largest corn-producing states (5th and 6th - the Wall Street Journal didn't list the names of those from states 2, 3 and 4. What are the odds they're Republicans?)

The Wall Street Journal advises Republicans to let the Dems have their gouge on gas in return for getting them (the Dems) to agree to allow drilling for oil in the Alaskan wilderness:

"In the eternal battle between principle and pork, we know what usually wins in Congress. If Republicans play their cards right, they may be able to force Tom Daschle to make such a choice and get new Arctic drilling in the bargain." [WSJ]

As the railroad tycoon said to the reporter : "The public be damned" (circa1865).

But don't feel bad - this alcoholic binge hits California even harder than the rest of the country, thanks to the White House insisting that we continue to use MTBE or ethanol in our gasoline. MTBE is a gasoline additive (an "oxygenate") meant to reduce pollution and it does that. It's also a hazard to health and the country's water supply. Senator Feinstein says:

"U. S. EPA has indicated that 'MTBE is an animal carcinogen and has a human carcinogenic hazard potential.'
" There are acute effects in occupationally-exposed workers, including headaches,dizziness, nausea, eye and respiratory irritation, vomiting, sensation of spacinessor disorientation and burning of the nose and throat."

And it is polluting groundwater and wells as you read this, reducing the availability of drinking water throughout the country. California was the first to decide to do something about it, but then the feds stepped in. Rep. Henry Waxman testified to the problem at an April 23, 2002 hearing on energy policy :

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Senator Daschle May Have An Alcohol Problem.
Published: September 29, 2003
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Section: Politics
Writer: Hal Pawluk
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Comments

#1 — September 30, 2003 @ 00:58AM — Ralph Del Rio [URL]

More ethanol means changes in farm subsidies. Anyways, I think it goes without saying that we need to become more energy self sufficient. So perhaps some wheeling and dealing can jump start all sorts of activity regarding energy production.

#2 — September 30, 2003 @ 09:29AM — Phillip Winn [URL]

I used to live in South Dakota, the place Senator Daschle still visits at least once per year and pretends is his home. Oddly (from the perspective of everywhere else I've ever been) the 89 octane fuel there was cheaper than the lower-grade 87 octane fuel. Why? Because the 89 octane fuel contains ethanol, of course, and so was subsidized in some way.

No real substance to add to this conversation, sorry.

#3 — October 1, 2003 @ 18:35PM — warren meyer [URL]

First, keep up the fight!

Second, though, your attribution of the public be damned I believe is incorrect. As you can imagine with many anti-business quotes, its not really in context. I believe it is from a Vanderbilt decscendent running the NY Central. It was in response to a question about running more limited trains (non-stop trains, particularly between NY and Chicago) to satisfy public demand for speedier transit. The NYC exec said I believe "the public be damned, I'll run limiteds because the Pennsylvania [RR] runs limiteds". If I am right, then your date is off as well since the great business battles of the limiteds occured in the early 20th century.

#4 — October 1, 2003 @ 18:38PM — warren meyer [URL]

ok, I was half right. The context part was right but it was earlier than I thought - in 1883.

#5 — October 1, 2003 @ 19:20PM — Hal Pawluk [URL]

Re: (3, 4)

I removed the incorrect date, but my usage is appropriate.

The original statement was made by William Vanderbilt and here's one version of the story:

'In the late 1880s, the New York Central railroad decided to discontinue the Chicago Limited, a fast, extra-fare passenger and mail train which ran between New York and Chicago. Reporters interviewed William Henry Vanderbilt, son and heir of the Commodore. They asked, "Don't you run it (the train) for the public benefit?" Vanderbilt's famous answer, "The public be damned"...'

It gained a lot of notoriety and came to used when businesses and others did not live up to their responsibilities to their customers and constituents.

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