Berkeley CSUA MOTD:Entry 41635
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2025/05/24 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
5/24    

2006/2/1 [Politics/Domestic/President/Bush, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iraq] UID:41635 Activity:low
2/1     http://csua.org/u/ev6 (LA Times)
        "experts point out that the U.S. gets ... about 10% -- of its oil
        imports from the Middle East. In fact, the majority now comes from
        Canada and Mexico -- and Bush said nothing on Tuesday about them."
        http://csua.org/u/ep1 (doe.gov)
        Nov 2005 crude oil imports (barrels/day) published Jan 23, 2006
        - Percentage of total crude oil imports into U.S. -
        Middle East             ~ 22% (Saudi Arabia + Iraq + Kuwait)
        Canada+Mexico           ~ 35%
        Nigeria+Venezuela       ~ 22%
        Other countries contribute a maximum of ~ 7% each.
        These are ~ approximations because only the top 15 countries are
        listed (imports from other countries are assumed negligible).
        \_ Do you seriously think.... that if the Middle East stopped exporting
           oil....  that our prices would not increase?
        \_ it's a global market anyway.
        \_ So which one is correct?  10% or 22%?
           \_ Maybe it's 22% of the imports, 10% of all oil.
              \_ Then the article should read "about 10% -- of its oil from the
                 Middle East" instead of "about 10% -- of its oil imports from
                 the Middle East".
                 \_ I think you're expecting too much from the newspapers.
                    You're lucky if you get information that's correct to
                    the first order, and there's almost no chance they will
                    get anything subtle right.
                    \_ Agreed.  Newspapers are ok at the "what," not so great
                       at "how," and absolutely dismal at "why."  I imagine
                       historians have to pretty much discount any newspaper
                       account of an event as misinformation.  The only thing
                       you can say is that they're a damn sight better than
                       television news, which is dismal at pretty much
                       everything.
                       \_ I remind myself that these journalists probably
                          couldn't even handle high school calculus.  Then
                          I am not so annoyed or surprised by the quality
                          of their analysis.
2025/05/24 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
5/24    

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csua.org/u/ev6 -> www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-truth1feb01,0,1999790.story
Large Text Size Large Text Size Change text size NEWS ANALYSIS Bush Stretches to Defend Surveillance The president's justification for his spy program has disputable roots, as do some of the facts and figures he put forth in his speech. By Peter Wallsten and Maura Reynolds, Times Staff Writers WASHINGTON -- President Bush received a roaring ovation Tuesday for his prime-time defense of wiretapping phone calls without warrants. But Bush's explanation relied on assumptions that have been widely questioned by experts who say the president offers a debatable interpretation of history. Defending the surveillance program as crucial in a time of war, Bush said that "previous presidents have used the same constitutional authority" that he did. "And," he added, "federal courts have approved the use of that authority." Bush did not name names, but was apparently reiterating the argument offered earlier this month by Atty. Alberto R Gonzales, who invoked Presidents Lincoln, Wilson and Franklin D Roosevelt for their use of executive authority. However, warrantless surveillance within the United States for national security purposes was struck down by the US Supreme Court in 1972 -- long after Lincoln, Wilson and Roosevelt stopped issuing orders. That led to the 1978 passage of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Bush essentially bypassed in authorizing the program after the Sept. Since the surveillance law was enacted, establishing secret courts to approve surveillance, "the Supreme Court has not touched this issue in the area of national security," said William Banks, a national security expert at Syracuse Law School. "He might be speaking in the broadest possible sense about the president exercising his authority as commander-in-chief to conduct a war, which of course federal courts have upheld since the beginning of the nation," Banks said. "If he was talking more particularly about the use of warrantless surveillance, then he is wrong." Bush's historical reference on domestic spying marked one of several points in his speech in which he backed up assertions with selective uses of fact, or seemed to place a positive spin on his own interpretation. On his headline-grabbing pledge to decrease US reliance on Middle East oil by 75% over the next 20 years, Bush's words seemed to suggest a dramatic new program to reduce dependence on foreign oil. But experts point out that the US gets only a fraction -- about 10% -- of its oil imports from the Middle East. In fact, the majority now comes from Canada and Mexico -- and Bush said nothing on Tuesday about them. Speaking about Iraq, Bush argued that "our coalition has been relentless in shutting off terrorist infiltration." 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However, The Times has previously reported that some US counterterrorism officials knowledgeable about the case blame an interagency communications breakdown, not a surveillance failure or shortcomings of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
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csua.org/u/ep1 -> www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/petroleum/data_publications/company_level_imports/current/import.html
Company Level Imports > Crude Oil and Total Petroleum Imports Top 15 Countries November 2005 Import Highlights: Released on January 13, 2006 Preliminary monthly data on the origins of crude oil imports in November 2005 has been released and it shows that two countries have exported more than 15 million barrels per day to the United States. Including those countries, a total of four countries exported over 10 million barrels per day of crude oil to the United States (see table below). Total crude oil imports averaged 9924 million barrels per day in November, which is an increase of 0544 million barrels per day from October. The top five exporting countries accounted for 68 percent of United States crude oil imports in November and the top ten sources accounted for approximately 87 percent of all US crude oil imports.