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We're all part of one nation. So why do the people of Alaska get a cut of oil company profits when the rest of us don't?

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Palin Helps Alaska Get Rich Off Oil While the Rest of the Country Suffers

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig. Posted September 3, 2008.


We're all part of one nation. So why do the people of Alaska get a cut of oil company profits when the rest of us don't?
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Welcome to the People's Republic of Alaska, where every resident this year will get a $3,200 payout, thanks in no small measure to the efforts of Sarah Palin, the state's Republican governor. That's $22,400 for a family of seven, like Palin's. Since 1982, the Alaska Permanent Fund, which invests oil revenues from state lands, has paid out a dividend on invested oil loot to everyone who has been in the state for a year. But Palin upped the ante by joining with Democrats and some recalcitrant Republican state legislators to share in oil company windfall profits, further fattening state tax revenue and permitting an additional payout in tax funds to residents.

No wonder she is popular with voters in a state whose residents pay no income or sales taxes but are blessed with state coffers rolling in cash at a time when all other states are suffering. Indeed, when the oil companies pay more taxes to the state of Alaska, they get to write that off against their federal tax obligation, leaving the rest of us to make up the shortfall.

The state of Alaska owns most of the oil-producing land and was getting upward of 85 percent of its budget from the oil companies that lease the fields, even before Palin helped increase the state's cut. While other states fire schoolteachers because of the economic downturn, Alaska has, as Palin indicated in accepting John McCain's offer to join him on the GOP ticket, more money than it knows what to do with. In a display of plucky arrogance at her coming-out press conference, Palin boasted deceptively that if Alaskans wanted that infamous bridge to nowhere, "we'd build it ourselves."

She originally had supported having U.S. taxpayers finance that boondoggle, before McCain and others in Congress blasted it.

Not that I blame Palin for wrangling for her state a bigger cut of oil company windfall profits; it's just not an option that will work wonders for states without oil. Of course we can remedy that by having a federal windfall profits tax of the sort that Barack Obama dared propose, and which McCain and his fellow congressional Republicans have managed to quash. Their argument, rejected quite pointedly by Palin for Alaska, is that it would discourage oil companies from investing in boosting oil field yields.

McCain derided Obama's call for the windfall profits tax, saying it would "increase our dependence on foreign oil and hinder exactly the same kind of domestic exploration and production we need." I am far more interested in how McCain handles the contradiction between his and Palin's position on windfall oil profits than whether he properly vetted her on her family-values commitment to the abstinence-only teenage sex education program.

Why is it a good thing for the folks up in Alaska to get a cut of exorbitant oil company profits, but not the rest of us, if we are all part of one nation? Didn't taxpayers from across the U.S. buy the place from the Russians? Isn't it our federally collected tax dollars that have been subsidizing Alaska more lavishly than any other state, both before and after the bonanza of oil?

Just witness the success of Palin, who, as mayor of the hamlet of Wasilla, hired a big-time lobbying firm intimately connected with the state's now-indicted Republican Sen. Ted Stevens and thus obtained $27 million in federal earmarks during her tenure. As The Washington Post calculated in a devastating report on Mayor Palin's assault on the federal treasury, her home town of Wasilla (with about 6,000 inhabitants in 2002 when she was mayor) received $6.1 million, or $1,000 per resident in earmarks, almost as much as Boise, Idaho, got this year with a population that is 30 times larger.

It obviously helped to have Alaska's now-indicted senator as chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee. And despite McCain's claims that Palin distinguished herself by breaking with Alaska's discredited Republican establishment in February, the governor sent Stevens a request for $200 million to support various state projects. With representatives like that, it's no wonder that Alaska, despite its oil boom, is still at the top of states subsidized by federal dollars, receiving $1.84 back from Washington for every $1 that Alaskans pay in federal taxes. (California receives 78 cents for every $1.)

Unfortunately, looking to Palin for advice on helping the rest of us during the oil crunch, as McCain has promised, is a bit like asking a Saudi oil minister or Russia's Vladimir Putin to provide a model for our nation's economic woes. They hardly feel our pain at the pump.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: oil, alaska, palin

Robert Scheer is the co-author of The Pornography of Power: How Defense Hawks Hijacked 9/11 and Weakened America.

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Maybe AK should secede and be its own country for at least a decade.
Posted by: jwverez on Sep 3, 2008 1:01 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's see how that state fares when it can no longer leech off the other 49 states or Big Government in Washington !

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They were trying to float this in California a while ago, I think.
Posted by: Ike Solem on Sep 3, 2008 1:06 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
However, the deal was slightly different, since instead of oil, it had to do with illegal drug sales, in particular heroin, methamphetamine and cocaine.

These drugs lead to economic blight - addiction, breakdown of families, greater crime rates, and the need for more policing. However, at the same time, "The business of America is business", and our illegal drug dealers really are not so different from some of our legal drug pushers, who also sell amphetamines (Ritalin) to kids.

Now, here's how Alaska works: Alaska has 670,000 people. The payout is $1650 per person. That adds up to about $1 billion per year.

Net Alaskan oil production is over 260 million barrels per year, and at $100 a barrel (cheap) that's $26 billion (at $144 a barrel, that's $38 billion).

So, here's the solution that was proposed, based on the Alaskan model:

Allow the dealers to sell whatever they want to whoever they want, wherever they want to, but insist that they put 5% of all proceeds into an investment fund that will pay out dividends to all citizens.

The analogy is close. Oil production does serious damage to Alaskan fisheries and wildlife, degrading the state for future generations - but the citizens get a little kickback, so it's all A-OK.

However... Sarah Palin is no reformer or champion of the Alaskan people. Her main legacy is one of slavish service to the same crowd that Ted Stevens is involved with - Big Oil

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Some clarification
Posted by: akbirdwm on Sep 3, 2008 4:06 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
from an Alaskan. The Permanent Fund Dividend was set up by the Alaska State Constitution which states that Alaska's resources belong to the people. A portion of the revenue from oil sales tax is placed into the fund which is bascially a stock portfolio. The amount of the dividend is calculated by a 4 year average of the funds profits. This year we'll see a very high dividend due to the last few years of very high oil prices, a bit over 2,000. Personally, I'm aware that the Permanent Fund dividend is somewhat of a bribe from the oil companies to take our resources, but I'd rather it go to the people of the State than the CEO's of the company. Also, it helps a lot of folks who are cash poor pay for thier winter needs and put thier kids in college.

I must also remind readers that Alaska pays the highest costs for fuel in the nation. We are currently paying well over 4 dollars a gallon in Anchorage and in the outlying villages which fuel must be barged or flown in fuel prices can be as much as $12/gallon or more. (There is supposedly an investigation going on now to see why this is.) The extra $ put into the dividend this year for "energy relief" was yet another one of those feel good "fixes" that does nothing to fix the problem only float it down the road while more problems arise from the "fix". For example, this "rebate" will only go to those who qualified for the dividend. Folks who forgot to apply for it, just moved to the state, are SOL. Also, its taxable and garnishable, so there are those who owe debts that will never see the money - and the Fed gets money from this that they would never have had in the first place. I would have much rather that energy relief money go into infrastructure, conservation and applications to reduce our dependance on oil, instead it will all go into an account to pay our taxes with in Feb.
Its a long, cold winter up here and I know a lot of folks are very concerned with how they are going to pay their heating bill this year.

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» RE: Some clarification- Thank you Posted by: AngryWhiteFemale
» on a state wide average Posted by: akbirdwm
» Thanks. About the oil. Posted by: maxpayne
» RE: Thanks. About the oil. Posted by: akbirdwm
» Alaskans Pay No Income Or Sales Tax Posted by: FoonTheElder
Same is true of Texas..! $10.7 Billion dollar surplus for one year..
Posted by: TJColatrella on Sep 3, 2008 4:49 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The same is true of Texas they had a $10.7 billion dollar surplus this past year due to their corporations gouging their fellow Americans for Oil and Gas ..!

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alaska oil
Posted by: willd4change on Sep 4, 2008 5:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Im glad "some clarification" answered the question. I was going to ask if the author of that story ever went to alaska or investigated the fund before writing that story. That is our politics at work and nothing is going to change much with obama or mcain unfortunately. They have to many policies to change and to little time to do it. The government is our problem. The DOD uses 400,000 barrels of oil a day and want us to believe we are the problem lmao. We need to conserve, buy hybrids, cut back on driving. The GAO just launched a blow smoke up my ass investigation into DOD fuel consumption, imagine that. Any way have a good election year folks and do some research on all the candidates this year. Will in Atlanta GA. Go Blue

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» Atlanta Posted by: akbirdwm
RNC crowd chants "Drill, Baby, Drill..."
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on Sep 4, 2008 6:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
RNC crowd chants "Drill, Baby, Drill..."

How absolutely horrifying....

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waaaaah waaaaah waaaaah
Posted by: slydad on Sep 8, 2008 7:54 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What a bunch of cry babies. If you want something. Go out and get it and stop whining about the fact that someone else went out and got it first. There's plenty out there for the taking.

That's the problems with you libs. All you do is envy success. You waste a lot of time and energy trying to knock down people who are successful. Why don't you instead use that energy for something positive and productive?

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» RE: waaaaah waaaaah waaaaah Posted by: Jellocat
» I got your solution Posted by: slydad
» RE: I got your solution Posted by: GrantBurkeVT
» Partisan GOP BULLSHIT. Posted by: maxpayne
» RE: waaaaah waaaaah waaaaah Posted by: Huey Long
I can see clearly now...
Posted by: MartianBachelor on Sep 10, 2008 1:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And I'd always thought those huge checks sent out to the citizens were a sort of inducement to get people to move there, to get them to populate that huge but empty state, even though in retrospect I guess the checks are just too small to really make any difference because the state's entire population is still less than that of the Knoxville (Tennessee) Metro area even after some thirty years of such incentives.

The real reason The Establishment put Palin on the ticket was to get her out of the state of Alaska, so that The Powers Which Really Run the State can get back to business as usual. I mean, she's irreplaceable, and has made a whole lot of trouble. Which is why they got to get her out of there. Now! It's sorta like the way antibodies attack and just absorb germs. In Washington she'll be rendered powerless.

Remember, you heard it here first.

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» Oh Yeah......... Posted by: gellero1
Why
Posted by: scienceisnotconsensus on Sep 11, 2008 2:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why they get a share

It's called a bribe
buying votes

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GOP: lots of politics, very little substance
Posted by: gcbillinois on Sep 11, 2008 6:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Clearly, Palin's popularity in Alaska is a direct consequence of her efforts to force rich oil companies to share profits with every man woman and child in the state; $12,800 per year for a family of four!?!? Apparently, the crazy folk in Alaska are too unsophisticated to understand the importance of privatizing public resources.



Seriously, if this happened anywhere else in America, conservatives would decry it as outright Communism. Remember that fuss over the Iraqi Oil Law? Where are all the conservatives who argued in favor of de-nationalizing Iraq’s oil resources? Are they all too busy clapping for Hugo Chavez? And why aren’t they clapping for Obama’s windfall profits tax (which McCain opposes)?



The bottom line is that conservatives have given up their fundamental values in favor of mythologizing their candidates (especially McCain and Palin) and win-at-all-costs politics. “Every revolution begins with the power of an idea and ends when the only idea left is power.” Time.com

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Reminds Me Of Gingrich...
Posted by: jooljetkmae on Sep 11, 2008 1:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...and all the federal money his district got when he was in office. I believe his district was the third highest recipient of federal aid overall, only being outdone by a couple districts bordering DC. GOP politicians all "hate" the federal government, until it is time to try to get money to their congressional districts and states, and many of them are able to one up Democrats at bringing federal pork home.

I have no bone to pick with Palin and the taxing of oil profits in her state. Good policy there Comrade Palin. It's just that she's joined a national political campaign that refuses to support the federal government doing the same thing, and bringing cash strapped Americans some badly needed relief in the face of higher and higher costs of living.

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