Paul Ryan Exposes the Trillion Dollar Gimmick in Senator Reid’s Debt Ceiling “Compromise” Plan

Which, as I noted earlier, was the inclusion among Reid's supposed "savings" of funds for not fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq; funds that no one has included in any of their budget baselines. But Representative Ryan points that out clearly on the House Budget Committee website:
July 25, 2011
“Why, one wonders, not ‘save’ $5 trillion by proposing to spend that amount to cover the moon with yogurt and then cancelling the proposal?”-George Will, Washington Post, March 12, 2009
Claim 1: “Winding down the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will save $1 trillion.”
Reality: The Reid plan relies on the inaccurate assumption that surge-level spending in Iraq and Afghanistan is scheduled to continue over the next decade. An honest budget cannot claim to save taxpayers’ dollars by cutting spending that was not requested and will not be spent. Senate Democrats are employing a budget gimmick that will not fool the credit markets and does not address the urgent need for Washington to get its fiscal house in order.
Claim 2: “Paul Ryan’s budget also included this savings in its deficit reduction calculation.”
Reality: False. The House-passed budget cuts $6.2 trillion in spending relative to President Obama’s Fiscal Year 2012 budget request. This $6.2 trillion figure assumes ZERO savings from the global war on terror relative to the President’s budget.
Background
The $2.7 trillion debt-limit increase proposal offered by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid contains a $1 trillion gimmick meant to disguise the plan’s shallowness on spending cuts. Supporters of the Reid plan are measuring their savings against a baseline that assumes the continuation of surge-level spending in Iraq and Afghanistan, even though the President has neither requested this funding nor signaled that he might request it. Instead, the President has signaled the opposite: a troop drawdown over the next few years. In other words, the Reid plan is claiming credit for “savings” that were already scheduled to occur, and for “cutting” spending that no one has requested.
Rather than defend this gimmick on the merits, supporters of the Reid plan are defending it by claiming that House Republicans “also included” this $1 trillion in savings when calculating spending reductions in the budget resolution that passed the House last April. This claim is false. The House-passed budget cuts $6.2 trillion in spending relative to President Obama’s FY2012 budget request, and this spending reduction assumes ZERO savings from the global war on terror relative to the President’s budget.
In the interest of maximum transparency, House Republicans produced additional estimates in order to provide a broad range of comparisons by which outsiders could judge the seriousness of the their budget’s commitment to real spending cuts and controls.
For instance, Table S-4 of the House-passed budget provides two savings estimates. The first estimate compares the House-passed budget to the “current law” baseline used by the Congressional Budget Office [CBO], even though House Budget Committee Republicans have consistently noted that the CBO current-law baseline is not the most reasonable budget baseline with which to compare future-year budget plans. For example, the current-law baseline assumes a $3.5 trillion across-the-board tax increase in 2013, as well as a continuation of spending for the global war on terror at its current level for the rest of the decade, with upward adjustments for inflation. The CBO has noted that these policy outcomes are unlikely, which is why it has also constructed an “alternative fiscal scenario” baseline that assumes more realistic outcomes.
In order to provide a more relevant comparison, House Budget Committee Republicans provided a second estimate in Table S-4, comparing the House-passed budget to President Obama’s FY 2012 budget request. This comparison makes clear that, even with no savings attributed to the troop drawdown and with identical numbers to the President’s on the war on terror, the House-passed budget cuts spending by $6.2 trillion relative to the President’s request.
It’s one thing to include, as the House-passed budget does, information about savings relative to the CBO’s current-law baseline as part of an effort to be comprehensive and transparent. It’s another to claim, as supporters of the Reid plan are claiming, that such “savings” represent a major commitment to cutting spending. It simply isn’t true.
It is encouraging to see Senate Democrats acknowledge that job-destroying tax increases are a bad idea – and that they are ready to work with House Republicans to cut government spending. Yet it is critical for policymakers to maintain credibility as they work together to deal responsibly with the debt ceiling. Senator Reid’s misleading claims will not pass muster with credit markets. Such gimmickry does a disservice to the American people, who deserve responsible, honest leadership.
Nothing I can, or need, to add. Save for saying that if you choose to do as is widely expected Mr. Obama to ask Americans tonight in his speech, that is, and call their Congressional Representatives and Senators and make their wishes known, I would ask that you take Mr. Ryan's argument into consideration and reject the smoke-and-mirrors chicanery of the "Reid Plan" and instead choose the "Boehner plan".
As always, we're interested in your opinion, kind reader?
Is The President a Pathalogical Liar?

Uncle O! wants YOU! to believe whatever he says
To which I respond all of the usual and customary replies to any uber obvious question; is the Pope Catholic? Does a bear, well, you know...
The Washington Times' James Curl:
In the weird world that is Washington, men and women say things daily, hourly, even minutely, that they know deep down are simply not true. Inside the Beltway, we all call those utterances “rhetoric.”
But across the rest of the country, plain ol’ folk call ‘em lies. Bald-faced (even bold-faced) lies. Those folks have a tried-and-true way of determining a lie: If you know what you’re saying is patently false, then it’s a lie. Simple.
And lately, the president has been lying so much that his pants could burst into flames at any moment.
His late-evening news conference Friday was a tour de force of flat-out, unadulterated mendacity — and we’ve gotten a first-hand insider’s view of the president’s long list of lies.
Curl goes on to provide a first-class "fisking" of Mr. Obama's Friday afternoon press conference foot-stamping temper tantrum. As we often say, read the whole thing...
Did Obama Just Take Ownership of the Debt Ceiling Debacle?

If WaPo's ersatz "conservative" Jen Rubin's reportage is correct then it would appear he indeed has:
A Republican aide e-mails me: “The Speaker, Sen. Reid and Sen. McConnell all agreed on the general framework of a two-part plan. A short-term increase (with cuts greater than the increase), combined with a committee to find long-term savings before the rest of the increase would be considered. Sen. Reid took the bipartisan plan to the White House and the President said no.”
If this is accurate the president is playing with fire. By halting a bipartisan deal he imperils the country’s finances and can rightly be accused of putting partisanship above all else. The ONLY reason to reject a short-term, two-step deal embraced by both the House and Senate is to avoid another approval-killing face-off for President Obama before the election. Next to pulling troops out of Afghanistan to fit the election calendar, this is the most irresponsible and shameful move of his presidency.
[emphasis-ed]
I personally am not as surprised as Ms. Rubin by the President's behavior, because for all his palavering on about a willingness to be satisfied with being a good one-termer who accomplished some of what he wanted than with playing politics in the interest of being re-elected, in my humble opinion every act he's made, decision he's taken, and word he's spoken has always been about holding on to power as long as possible.

Now as this is the only place I've seen this so far, it's hard to tell if it has legs, will be buried by other developments later today, or will simply be embargoed by Obama's campaign arm in the fourth estate. We'll have to see.
But if it does get more widespread circulation, then it will pose a serious problem, politically, for the self-professed MOST POST-PARTISAN PRESIDENT, EVAR!, since it will at once put the lie to that grand meme as well as some other longstanding facets of the narrative construct that is Barack Obama, such as his Brilliance!, Judgment, and Superior Temperament!
Additionally it may drive a wedge between Congressional Democrats and The Won on this particular issue. Many of them have run for years on platforms promising fiscal responsibility and balancing our national budget, and they can read the polls showing that the American people prefer to do something about the budget at this juncture; and by "doing something" don't mean raise taxes.
Congressional Democrats have a decision to make. Do they essentially tie their 2012 electoral fortunes to Mr. Obama by backing his play on this issue, and allow GOP challengers to continually point out their disingenuousness on this matter as being indicative of their candor as a whole and specifically seriousness to rein in DC spending, or do they live up to their promises, pass the bill, and send it to the President for signature or veto. I say call his bluff, because he doesn't dare throw all of Congress under the bus on this, and overtly take ownership of the issue.
Of course, those of us who pay attention have been aware of his ownership of the debt for sometime; it doesn't take a rocket-scientist to see the slope on this graph and understand who's exploded the US national debt faster that any other President in history.

What do you think, kind reader?
[UPDATE]: Byron York at The Washington Examiner corroborates Rubin's source's story.

And Juice-Box Mafiosi Ezra Klein laments that, "The Republicans have won!", and searches for a silver lining for the Democrats while presenting a time line that will convince the "Fightin' Nutroots" that their pols didn't go down without a fight.
Palin RIPS Obama regarding His Petulant Presser

Like many of us, Sarah Palin seemed to be taken aback a bit by Obama's press conference today following Speaker Boehner's withdrawal from the debt ceiling negotiations. You know, the one where he summoned Congressional leaders to the White House tomorrow (Saturday 7/23) morning, and where he displayed more of his SUPERIOR TEMPERAMENT!; typical, nay classic, Obama- sanctimonious, disingenuous, demagogic, self-righteous, and arrogant...
This is the same president who proposed an absurdly irresponsible budget that would increase our debt by trillions of dollars, and whose party failed to even put forward a budget in over 800 days! This is the same president who is pushing our country to the brink because of his reckless spending on things like the nearly trillion dollar “stimulus” boondoggle. This is the same president who ignored his own debt commission’s recommendations and demonized the voices of fiscal sanity who proposed responsible plans to reform our entitlement programs and rein in our dangerous debt trajectory. This is the same president who wanted to push through an increase in the debt ceiling that didn’t include any cuts in government spending! This is the same president who wants to slam Americans with tax hikes to cover his reckless spending, but has threatened to veto a bill proposing a balanced budget amendment. This is the same president who hasn’t put forward a responsible plan himself, but has rejected reasonable proposals that would tackle our debt. This is the same president who still refuses to understand that the American electorate rejected his big government agenda last November. As I said in Madison, Wisconsin, at the Tax Day Tea Party rally, “We don’t want it. We can’t afford it. And we are unwilling to pay for it.”
Now the President is outraged because the GOP House leadership called his bluff and ended discussions with him because they deemed him an obstruction to any real solution to the debt crisis.
He has been deemed a lame duck president. And he is angry now because he is being treated as such.
His foreign policy strategy has been described as “leading from behind.” Well, that’s his domestic policy strategy as well. Why should he be surprised that he’s been left behind in the negotiations when he’s been leading from behind on this debt crisis?
Thank you, GOP House leaders. Please don’t get wobbly on us now.
2012 can’t come soon enough.
[emphasis-ed]
Which, I don't think I can, or should, add anything of substance here except for a hearty "Amen!" But for your enjoyment, I'll throw in a link to Protein Wisdom; one where Darleen provides us video of Charles Krauthammer's delicious take on the President's presser. It's worth a few minutes of your time.

What is your opinion, kind reader?
Just a reminder: None of the Senate Democrats Voted to Raise the Debt Ceiling in 2006

Not a single one; many of whom are still in the Senate... It was a strict party line vote...From the Senate's website:
Grouped By Vote Position
| YEAs —52 | ||
| Alexander (R-TN) Allard (R-CO) Allen (R-VA) Bennett (R-UT) Bond (R-MO) Brownback (R-KS) Bunning (R-KY) Burr (R-NC) Chafee (R-RI) Chambliss (R-GA) Cochran (R-MS) Coleman (R-MN) Collins (R-ME) Cornyn (R-TX) Craig (R-ID) Crapo (R-ID) DeMint (R-SC) DeWine (R-OH) |
Dole (R-NC) Domenici (R-NM) Enzi (R-WY) Frist (R-TN) Graham (R-SC) Grassley (R-IA) Gregg (R-NH) Hagel (R-NE) Hatch (R-UT) Hutchison (R-TX) Inhofe (R-OK) Isakson (R-GA) Kyl (R-AZ) Lott (R-MS) Lugar (R-IN) Martinez (R-FL) McCain (R-AZ) McConnell (R-KY) |
Murkowski (R-AK) Roberts (R-KS) Santorum (R-PA) Sessions (R-AL) Shelby (R-AL) Smith (R-OR) Snowe (R-ME) Specter (R-PA) Stevens (R-AK) Sununu (R-NH) Talent (R-MO) Thomas (R-WY) Thune (R-SD) Vitter (R-LA) Voinovich (R-OH) Warner (R-VA) |
| NAYs —48 | ||
| Akaka (D-HI) Baucus (D-MT) Bayh (D-IN) Biden (D-DE) Bingaman (D-NM) Boxer (D-CA) Burns (R-MT) Byrd (D-WV) Cantwell (D-WA) Carper (D-DE) Clinton (D-NY) Coburn (R-OK) Conrad (D-ND) Dayton (D-MN) Dodd (D-CT) Dorgan (D-ND) |
Durbin (D-IL) Ensign (R-NV) Feingold (D-WI) Feinstein (D-CA) Harkin (D-IA) Inouye (D-HI) Jeffords (I-VT) Johnson (D-SD) Kennedy (D-MA) Kerry (D-MA) Kohl (D-WI) Landrieu (D-LA) Lautenberg (D-NJ) Leahy (D-VT) Levin (D-MI) Lieberman (D-CT) |
Lincoln (D-AR) Menendez (D-NJ) Mikulski (D-MD) Murray (D-WA) Nelson (D-FL) Nelson (D-NE) Obama (D-IL) Pryor (D-AR) Reed (D-RI) Reid (D-NV) Rockefeller (D-WV) Salazar (D-CO) Sarbanes (D-MD) Schumer (D-NY) Stabenow (D-MI) Wyden (D-OR) |
Now I don't know about you, kind reader, but I don't recall any of the current hyperventilating that we're hearing these days, now that the shoe is on the other foot-so to speak. Senate Democrats weren't being characterized as RAAAAACIST! h8terz; heartless politicians who wanted to see old people die-and be forced on to a cat food diet until that happened; who were abandoning our troops in the field without bullets or butter; who were denying our college kids the loans and grants they needed; who callously chose to deny poor children school means and the homeless a place to sleep; who were choosing Wall Street over Main Street-doing all these things to benefit "Big Oil" and corporate jet owners...
Help me out here if I'm wrong, but none of this comes to mind. In fact, I remember a very passionate speech by a junior Senator at that time:
The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the U.S. Government can’t pay its own bills. It is a sign that we now depend on ongoing financial assistance from foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies. … Increasing America’s debt weakens us domestically and internationally. Leadership means that ‘the buck stops here. Instead, Washington is shifting the burden of bad choices today onto the backs of our children and grandchildren. America has a debt problem and a failure of leadership. Americans deserve better.
Who said those stirring words? Why, none other than then-Senator, now-President, Obama. And he was right, we do deserve better...
So next time you hear about how all of this is UNPRECEDENTED!, HYPERPARTISAN! HOSTAGE TAKING! on the part of the TALIBAN RETHUGS!, feel free to remind the speaker of the events of 2006.
In fact, if you live in a deep blue state, it might be handy to have this information at hand when you contact your Senator and ask them to vote FOR cloture on Saturday when the House's Cut, Cap, and Balance legislation is brought up. Because if nothing else, CC&B deserves a fair vote in the Senate.
Senator Jeff Sessions: it’s past time for Obama to put his debt plan on the table

Barack "L'etat c'est moi!" Obama
Which he's speaking about a debt reduction plan. Because everyone's already seen the President's plan to increase our debt; that would be the risible "plan", that was not really a plan but a speech, that the MBM allowed him to palaver on about in April in a press op that was more about ripping Paul Ryan and his Roadmap for America,that had been released the day before, than about presenting a serious budget to the American people. From Sessions' Senate website:
After my staff and I have had additional time to analyze the summary, even more questions and concerns have arisen. Serious flaws have been identified.… The production of the Gang’s summary at the last minute also underscores my severe concerns over how this process has unfolded… Senate Democrats and the White House have fiercely resisted formulating an actual debt plan at every step of the way. Instead, the president has pushed for secret meetings—avoiding the public accountability of putting a plan to paper—followed by press conferences at which he asserts his support for broad deficit reduction even when no such plan has been written. The real bluff from the president is the idea that a White House deficit reduction plan exists. It’s time for the White House to lay its cards on the table.
The production of the Gang’s summary at the last minute also underscores my grave concerns over how this process has unfolded. The Republican-led House has fulfilled its responsibilities. The Republican-led House passed a budget more than three months ago. The Democrat-led Senate, by contrast, has refused to pass a budget in 812 days, and refused to make one public this year. If they had presented a budget in public, in the open, we wouldn’t be in the situation we are in right now. The president presented a budget in February, meanwhile, that would have added a stunning $13 trillion to our debt. That remains the only plan he has ever put on paper.
Senate Democrats and the White House have fiercely resisted formulating an actual debt plan at every step of the way. Instead, the president has pushed for secret meetings—avoiding the public accountability of putting a plan to paper—followed by press conferences at which he asserts his support for broad deficit reduction even when no such plan has been written. The real bluff from the president is the idea that a White House deficit reduction plan exists. It’s time for the White House to lay its cards on the table.
[emphasis-ed.]
Sessions makes a good point. The Cut, Cap, and Balance plan passed by the House of Representatives is the only plan that's on the table in writing right now; not to mention that it is a viable piece of legislation waiting for a vote in the Senate. Make no mistake, no matter what anyone thinks of the McConnell "plan B" compromise, Coburn's own plan, or the outline of intent put forth this week by the erstwhile "Gang of Six", they are merely frameworks at best.
Once again the President has been leading from behind, and that's not cutting it for a pressing matter that may be disastrous if not addressed. Instead of trying to "stay above the fray" and appear Presidential, Obama need to actually be Presidential . This isn't like when he was at the Harvard Law Review, or frankly like most of his career in public life; he can't sit back, wait for others to do the heavy lifting for him, and appear at the last minute to take credit .

Try being a leader for a change. Put the dang plan on the table, Mr. President.
I urge all our readers to e-mail or call the White House and give voice to this sentiment.
Wynn not the only CEO unhappy with The Won

Recall the story posted here the other day about Wynn Resorts CEO's epic rant that stemmed from his dissatisfaction with Obama's failed economic policies? Did it seem like something out of the ordinary to you? I mean, generally business leaders tend towards being apolitical; especially since the modern political left in America are devotees of the notion that, "the political is personal", and will call for a boycott of any company which they decide isn't doing business or comporting themselves in the "correct" manner in a proverbial New York second.
That's what makes the statements of some major US CEOs recounted in this article from IBD all that more interesting. While not as long and complete as Wynn's rant, they definitely don't beat around the bush:
-3M's George Buckley, who blasted Obama last February as anti-business. "We know what his instincts are," Buckley said. "We've got a real choice between manufacturing in Canada or Mexico — which tends to be more pro-business — and America," he told the Financial Times.
-Boeing's Jim McNerney, who in the Wall Street Journal last May called Obama's handpicked National Labor Relations Board's suit against his company a "fundamental assault on the capitalist principles that have sustained America's competitiveness since it became the world's largest economy nearly 140 years ago."
-Intel's Paul Otellini, who told CNET last August that the U.S. legal environment has become so hostile to business that there is likely to be "an inevitable erosion and shift of wealth, much like we're seeing today in Europe — this is the bitter truth."
-Home Depot co-founder Bernie Marcus, who observed to radio host Hugh Hewitt last month that Obama "never had to make payroll," that "nobody has ever created a job in this administration" and that the president is "surrounded by college professors."
There's more. As we often say, read the whole thing...
It's interesting to me how executives are just now starting to speak out against Obama's failed economic policies. And they're not all "Knucke-Dragging, Reich-Wingahz" by any stretch; Wynn, for instance, is a Democrat who supported Harry Reid's re-election. Part of it may be the usual and customary reluctance to alienate potential customers, as I mentioned earlier. But it may be that the weight of these past few years, coupled with the uncertainty about what lies ahead, has finally convinced them that Obama is not the one they were waiting for. Of course, they might have realized this before now if they'd chosen to listen to the opinions of former GE CEO Jack Welch, who hasn't minced words about the disastrous nature of Obamanomics and the O!ministration's hostility to business.
Not to be an I told you so, or anything, but many of these same individuals backed Obama with both the weight of their opinions as well as their cash donations in 2008. My advice to them this time around would simply be not to...

Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me...
Paul Ryan brings Obama’s spending history up to date

Alternate headlines: "Timelines of a spending spree", or, "$4 trillion later; how we got here from there". But Paul Ryan calls it what it is, "A Brief History of President Obama's Fiscal Record"; though in my opinion he left out the word "dismal" between "Fiscal" and "Record", most likely in the name of politeness. It can be found at this page on the House Budget Committee's website.
It really is a definitive timeline of not only each major spending bill signed by the O!ministration, but also of each major pronouncement made by the President that was related to, or was meant to influence, fiscal issues; complete through his latest attempts to duck his responsibility to lead the debt ceiling increase debate. Each entry is has links that pertain to that episode, as well as a running tally on the amount of debt held by the American public listed as a sort-of footnote (the amount of debt held by the public is the portion of the total national debt the public owns in the form of securities and bonds, and does not include foreign holdings, individual or sovereign, or Federal Reserve bank holdings-so don't be confused because it is less than the $14+ trillion cited in the press).
With the debt ceiling negotiations reaching a critical phase, and ramping up to a frantic pace, their will be mud slinging and finger pointing a plenty; indeed, I've already had my fill of hearing how all our problems are due to the "Bush tax cuts", medicare part D, and two "unfunded wars of conquest" (the characterization of the war on terror most popular among the far-left)-when the most these things could have added over the last 10 years is on the order of 2.5 trillion on the outside. But I've expected the "I blame BOOOOSH!" brigade to go into action for a while now.
So do what I do; arm yourself with stubborn facts and inconvenient truths, so you can refute this hyperbole with the sober fact that Mr. Obama has increased the national debt by nearly the same amount as Mr. Bush, but sadly has done so in 1/4 of the time. As we often say, read the whole thing. And in this case, bookmark it for future use.

What are your impressions of this recounting? Do you think it a helpful debating tool?
It’s All About the Uncertainty, Stupid (I am talking to you, CNN)
Briefly saw mention of Steve Wynn's complete slamming of Obama's "handling" of the economy.
Came across this blog post at CNNMoney, written by Staff Reporter Charles Riley .
There is some of what I was looking for in there, such as quotes, etc... but there was also this incredibly daft couple of sentences:
Some business leaders have cited an uncertain regulatory atmosphere as a reason for the slow pace of hiring. But there are plenty of examples of individual companies -- like Google -- that are hiring at a breakneck pace.
I'll go slowly for Mr. Riley.
The use of the word "[S]ome" indicates something other than "the vast majority of"... do you people live in a vacuum?
On the other hand, there are "plenty" examples (according to Mr. Riley) of companies, like G!!ooggL!E!!ElEVenTY, hiring. And not just hiring, but hiring at a "breakneck pace".
Sorry, Mr. Reporter Guy, but a pathetic shill is no way to go through life.
They have a term for people who suck appendages for money.
Here, let me google that for you.
Pathetic.
How much more “Green Jobs!” success can America stand

Green Vehicle's products: Left-Moose, Right-Triac
When President Obama first began to speak of all the unbridled success that "green jobs" would bring to his crony Jeffery Immelt the American people, folks responded with a cautionary tale of Spain's "all in" experience; one that resulted in the loss of jobs overall and wasted money by the Spanish government-even Hillary admitted this to be the case! In the wake of Solyndra's high visibility failure, and it's concomitant cost to US taxpayers of 535 million dollars, some are questioning what the true cost of green jobs really are, and whether those jobs are as "sustainable" as proponents claim.
This week there is news out of Salinas, California, of what appears to be another "green jobs" failure. From KSBW comes the news that Green Vehicles Inc. is closing their doors for good, at a cost to taxpayers that ins't insignigicant:
A Salinas car manufacturing company that was expected to build environmentally friendly electric cars and create new jobs folded before almost any vehicles could run off the assembly line.The city of Salinas had invested more than half a million dollars in Green Vehicles, an electric car start-up company.
All of that money is now gone, according to Green Vehicles President and Co-Founder Mike Ryan.
The start-up company set up shop in Salinas in the summer of 2009, after the city gave Ryan a $300,000 community development grant.When the company still ran into financial trouble last year, the city of Salinas handed Ryan an additional $240,000. Green Vehicles also received $187,000 from the California Energy Commission.
Salinas Mayor Dennis Donohue said he was "surprised and disappointed" by the news. City officials were equally irked that Ryan notified them through an email that his company had crashed and burned.
City leaders wooed Green Vehicles to jump-start the sputtering local company and turn Salinas into an "electric valley." Donohue and Weir both voiced their high hopes for Green Vehicles.The start-up company promised city leaders that it would create 70 new jobs and pay $700,000 in taxes a year to Salinas.
Now from the outset I'd like to commend Mr. Ryan for trying to start up what he was confident would become a thriving business, no doubt taking advantage of Californians by-and-large heightened concern for the environment, subsidies offered by the Feds for electric vehicle purchases, and projected prices for his products that were a full 1/3 less than either the Nissan Leaf or Chevy Volt. It seems though that, by his own admission, he never secured enough private venture capital for the endeavor, and there were rumors that several investors were waiting for Ryan to secure a promised 2 million dollar grant from the California Energy Commission (CEC) before adding their own money to the mix. For their part, of course, CEC dimisses their involvement and actions as a factor in Green Vehicles closure:
"Our grants are paid in arrears and everyone ì we thought ì was fully aware of that. We write the checks only after receiving the proper paperwork and that includes an invoice," Gottleib said. "It would be unfortunate and inaccurate if anyone laid the blame for Green Vehicle's decision [to close] at the feet of the state."
And I'm inclined to agree...
Given California's fiscal crunch over the last few years, a fact well known to residents as well as many Americans, it was unwise for Ryan to depend so heavily on the state's contribution to his start up funds. Unlike a DoD weapons project, where the end user is the US government, this was a private company hoping to manufacture vehicles for sale to the public at large. While it's not unusual for local and state governments to provide businesses with incentives, via grants and tax deferments, it appears that Green Vehicles business plan relied on government funds at nearly every level to be a viable concern. And really, that's where the rub lies in many of these "Green Jobs!" promised panaceas.
The inconvenient truth is that save for a niche market fully electric cars aren't viable yet. Much of the problem has to do with batteries being unable to provide the same level of potential energy density as currently available fossil fuels. But there are many engineering challenges to be solved before EVs are viable for all but the shortest of ranges. Perhaps the most advanced, and viable, are made by Tesla motors; but in the past they too have received grants from the US Department of Energy.
The bottom line really, for all "green energy" technologies, is that while the government can provide some research dollars to universities they can't effectively "jump start" the entire industry and guarantee that it survives in the long term. That will only come when the technology itself reaches a point of profitability, from both a consumer and manufacturer's viewpoint, as it has by-and-large wit hybrid vehicles and is reflected in those types of vehicle sales.
Green products have to be a viable alternative to existing technology on their merits alone and be profitable to produce, otherwise we as a nation are merely subsidizing someone else's "environmentally friendly" lifestyle; either through our tax dollars or via the inherent inefficiency it foists upon our economy. They can't provide a quick fix to our economy, or environment, regardless of what any politicians tell you.
What do you think? What is your opinion of green technology? Would you like to see a more technical analysis of EVs versus conventional autos? Tell us what you think; your opinions are always thought provoking :)




