Daily Kos

Obama Camp starts the week off swinging! -- Update: Rave Review- "Maybe he is The One"

Mon Aug 04, 2008 at 05:52:27 AM PDT

After last week's terrible press of a campaign intent on tearing Senator Obama down through baseless, senseless, insensitive, non-humorous attacks, the Obama campaign comes out swinging today on gas prices. While the media and McC[ompl]ain continue to practice the politics of personal destruction, Senator Obama is talking about the issues that matter most to Americans. With this ad, Team O attempts to change the dialogue from baseless and downright MEAN/belitting personal attacks to talking about the issues where the candidates have REAL substantive differences. While I don't hold out much hope that the corporate media will actually TALK about the issues (I'm sure something nasty will come out of McC[ompl]ain's campaign today, I do think the ad, and the speech Senator Obama will give later on today will show which candidate has fresh ideas as opposed to which candidate is going to merely "hope" things get better.

Here's the transcript:

Anncr VO:  Every time you fill your tank, the oil companies fill their pockets.

Now Big Oil’s filling John McCain’s campaign with 2 million dollars in contributions.

Because instead of taxing their windfall profits to help drivers, McCain wants to give them another 4 billion in tax breaks.

After one president in the pocket of big oil... We can’t afford another.

Barack Obama...  A windfall profits tax on big oil to give families a thousand dollar rebate.

A president who’ll stand up for you.

Barack VO:  I’m Barack Obama and I approve this message

I like the ad, it hits McCain hard, but it leaves no room for them to accuse Obama of playing any "cards." It also does what we need to do which is tie McC[ompl]ain to Bush as much as possible, we need those two names to become synonymous. An idea needs to be repeated at least 10 times to stick, so the more we push the "Bush" framing, the more likely it is to stick.

He will be giving a speech to outline his energy policy in Lansing Michigan at 11:00 AM EST. I'll add the text of the speech when it becomes available.

If you haven't read his energy plan, here's a link to it on his website.

What do you think of the ad?

Here's a song dedication to Senator Obama and all of my fellow Leos out there!

UPDATE #1: McCain camp responds to the ad:

"Barack Obama’s latest negative attack ad shows his celebrity is matched only by his hypocrisy, after all it was Senator Obama, not John McCain, who voted for the Bush-Cheney energy bill that was a sweetheart deal for oil companies. Also not mentioned is the $400,000 from big oil contributors that Barack Obama has already pocketed in this election."

They also included a memo about so called "myths" in the Obama ad that you can read if you click the link (too long to post here). Also, $400,000 is not NEARLY as much as $2 MILLION, so that's a dumb comment to make in my opinion. Sounds like they can't take hits that are legit even though they like to dish out hits that aren't.

But at least they are talking ISSUES and not personal stuff, although I'm sure it will come back to that soon. (Update: I just noticed they called him a "celebrity" looks like McC[ompl]ain can't go a day without a personal attack. SMH)

And with regard to the Bush-Cheney energy bill, I remember Obama saying he voted for it as a compromise for other things contained in the bill.

Obama "Reluctantly" Voted For The Bill As A "First Step, Not The Last, In Our Journey Towards Energy Independence." Obama said on the floor, "And so America has a choice. We can continue to hang on to oil as our solution. We can keep passing energy bills that nibble around the edges of the problem. We can hope that the Saudis will pump faster and that our drills will find more. And we can just sit on our hands and say that it's too hard to change the way things are and so we might as well not even try. Or we could accept and embrace the challenge of finding a solution to one of the most pressing problems of our time - our dependence on foreign oil. It won't be easy and it won't be without sacrifice. Government can't make it happen on its own, but it does have a role in supporting the initiative that's already out there. So, I vote for this bill reluctantly today, disappointed that we have missed our opportunity to do something bolder that would have put us on the path to energy independence. This bill should be the first step, not the last, in our journey towards energy independence." [Floor Statement, 7/29/05]

Obama Helped Lead Efforts To Pass Amendments That Improved The Bill's Renewable Energy Provisions And Was Singled Out For His Work As A Negotiator On The Energy Bill's Ethanol Provisions. In 2005, Obama passed amendments to the 2005 Energy Policy Act which would double the amount of ethanol used in our gasoline supply by 2012 (from 2 billion to 8 billion gallons); provide a tax credit for the retail purchase of E-85 fuel; and established an applied research program to improve technologies for the commercialization of a combination hybrid/flexible fuel vehicle; or a plug-in hybrid/flexible fuel vehicle. The Chicago Sun-Times reported, "Hastert, meeting with reporters on Friday, praised the "incredible teamwork" of the delegation, singling out freshman Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) for his work on the House-Senate committee, which cut the final deals on the transit bill and ethanol tax breaks. The energy bill included an incentive for the use of what is called E-85, a blend of 85 percent ethanol and 15 percent gas that can be used in "flexible fueled" cars and is supposed to be cheaper than conventional fuel. The bill calls for gas companies to get a tax credit to cover 30 percent of the cost to install E-85 pumps at service stations, up to $30,000." [Chicago Sun-Times, 7/30/05; AP, 7/27/05; H.R. 6, Became Public Law No: 109-58; S. 918, 109th Congress; SA 670 agreed to, 5/12/05; H.R. 6, Became Public Law No: 109-58; S. 918, Referred to the Committee On Environment and Public Works; SA 851 to HR 6, Passed by Unanimous Consent, 6/23/05; H.R. 6, Became Public Law No: 109-58; S. 650, 109th Congress; HR 6, Vote 139, 6/15/06, Passed 70-26, D:32-12, R:38-14, I:0-0]

2005-2007: Obama Introduced Legislation Repealing Tax Breaks And Other Perks For the Oil Industry, Requiring Yearly Increases In CAFE Standards, And Requiring Significant Increases In Renewable Fuel Mandates And Alternative Energy Incentives. Since 2005, Obama has introduced legislation suspending the 2005 energy bill's tax incentives and other perks for the oil industry in the Energy Policy Act of 2005, requiring significant increases in the renewable fuel mandates over the next few years, requiring yearly increases in CAFÉ standards, and providing incentives for E-85 fuel pump installation, alternative vehicle research and production. [S. 115, 110th Congress; S. 23, 110th Congress; S. 133, Introduced 1/4/07; S. 2202, Read twice and referred to the Committee on Environment and Public Works. 10/18/2007 S. 2984, 109th Congress; S. 1324, Introduced 5/7/07; Press Release, 5/7/07]

So McCain's response on that is a total distortion of the same kind they claim Obama has done to his. The sad part is, this info was easily accessible on the Obama website.

UPDATE #2: This is part of the memothat the campaign sent out outlining what Obama is going to be saying today:

Senator Barack Obama will outline his New Energy for America plan in a speech in Lansing, Michigan today. Obama’s plan will provide an immediate energy rebate to Americans struggling with high gas prices, create five million new green jobs, and eliminate our need for Middle Eastern oil in 10 years. *** See full event details below.***

See the details of the New Energy for America plan at: http://www.NewEnergyforAmerica.com

New Energy for America

Barack Obama’s comprehensive energy plan will help Americans cope with the energy crisis in the short term, and make the long-term investments we need to break our addiction to oil. While Barack Obama is offering real solutions, Senator McCain continues to be part of the problem.

Putting Struggling Families Ahead Of Profits For The Oil Companies

During his time in Congress, McCain hasn’t done much to reduce our dependence on foreign oil.  He voted against increased fuel mileage standards and opposed legislation to provide tax credits for more efficient cars.  He voted against renewable sources of energy.  Against clean biofuels, solar power, and wind power.  And Senator McCain initially rejected the recent bipartisan energy compromise in the Senate because it would pay for clean energy by taking away tax breaks from oil companies like Exxon-Mobil—a corporation that makes $300,000 in the time it takes you to fill up a tank with $4-a-gallon gas. He not only wants them to keep every dime, he’s actually proposing that we give the biggest oil companies $4 billion more in tax breaks—including $1.2 billion more for Exxon.  And, just this morning, John McCain’s RNC sent out an email highlighting a defense of the oil industry’s profits in the Wall Street Journal.  It’s no wonder he and the RNC raised more than two million dollars in campaign contributions from the oil industry just last month. It’s time for leadership on energy that puts struggling families ahead of profits for the oil companies.

Obama’s plan provides immediate relief to families, invests in a clean energy future that creates jobs, and brings us closer to energy independence:

·       Provide immediate relief to American families facing pain at the pump. Obama will use some of the oil companies’ record profits to provide Americans with an Emergency Energy Rebate of $1,000 per family or $500 per individual. He’ll also release oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to cut prices.

·        Within ten years, save more oil than we currently import from the Middle East and Venezuela combined. To do this, Obama will increase fuel efficiency standards for our vehicles, work with the auto industry to put 1 million plug-in hybrid cars—cars that can get up to 150 miles per gallon—on the road by 2015 and he’ll invest in the development of new fuels.

·        Help create five million new jobs by investing in a clean energy future.  Obama will invest $150 billion over the next ten years to catalyze private efforts to develop clean energy technologies—from jumpstarting the commercialization of plug-in hybrids to advancing the next generation of biofuels. That will create 5 million jobs that can’t be outsourced. And Obama will make sure that American workers have the skills and tools they need to pioneer these new technologies.

·        Diversify our energy sources by adopting an aggressive Renewable Portfolio Standard. Obama will require that 10 percent of our electricity comes from renewable sources by 2012, and 25 percent by 2025. That standard will spur significant private sector investment in renewable sources of energy and create thousands of new American jobs.

·        Promote domestic energy production. Obama will take a "use it or lose it" approach to existing oil leases, requiring oil companies to develop the land they have—68 million acres that are currently going unused—or turn it over to another company. He’ll also work to improve access to untapped and unconventional domestic energy supplies.

·        Tackle climate change. Obama will implement an economy-wide cap-and-trade program to reduce greenhouse gas emissions 80 percent by 2050. And he’ll work with our allies abroad to develop effective emissions reduction efforts.

UPDATE #3: Obama will be giving his speech any moment now. You can watch at CNN and on Barack Obama's Website. If you are at home, they are showing the speech on all three major cable news stations.

UPDATE #4: The Prepared Remarks have been released (all emphasis is mine):

Below are the prepared remarks and please click this link for the New Energy for America Fact Sheet http://www.NewEnergyforAmerica.com

Remarks of Senator Barack Obama—as prepared for delivery
New Energy for America
Michigan State University
Monday, August 4th, 2008
Lansing, Michigan

We meet at a moment when this country is facing a set of challenges greater than any we’ve seen in generations.  Right now, our brave men and women in uniform are fighting two different wars while terrorists plot their next attack.  Our changing climate is placing our planet in peril.  Our economy is in turmoil and our families are struggling with rising costs and falling incomes; with lost jobs and lost homes and lost faith in the American Dream.  And for too long, our leaders in Washington have been unwilling or unable to do anything about it.

That is why this election could be the most important of our lifetime.  When it comes to our economy, our security, and the very future of our planet, the choices we make in November and over the next few years will shape the next decade, if not the century.  And central to all of these major challenges is the question of what we will do about our addiction to foreign oil.

Without a doubt, this addiction is one of the most dangerous and urgent threats this nation has ever faced – from the gas prices that are wiping out your paychecks and straining businesses to the jobs that are disappearing from this state; from the instability and terror bred in the Middle East to the rising oceans and record drought and spreading famine that could engulf our planet.

It’s also a threat that goes to the very heart of who we are as a nation, and who we will be.  Will we be the generation that leaves our children a planet in decline, or a world that is clean, and safe, and thriving?  Will we allow ourselves to be held hostage to the whims of tyrants and dictators who control the world’s oil wells?  Or will we control our own energy and our own destiny?  Will America watch as the clean energy jobs and industries of the future flourish in countries like Spain, Japan, or Germany?  Or will we create them here, in the greatest country on Earth, with the most talented, productive workers in the world?

As Americans, we know the answers to these questions. We know that we cannot sustain a future powered by a fuel that is rapidly disappearing.  Not when we purchase $700 million worth of oil every single day from some the world’s most unstable and hostile nations – Middle Eastern regimes that will control nearly all of the world’s oil by 2030.  Not when the rapid growth of countries like China and India mean that we’re consuming more of this dwindling resource faster than we ever imagined.  We know that we can’t sustain this kind of future.

But we also know that we’ve been talking about this issue for decades.  We’ve heard promises about energy independence from every single President since Richard Nixon.  We’ve heard talk about curbing the use of fossil fuels in State of the Union addresses since the oil embargo of 1973.

Back then, we imported about a third of our oil.  Now, we import more than half.  Back then, global warming was the theory of a few scientists.  Now, it is a fact that is melting our glaciers and setting off dangerous weather patterns as we speak.  Then, the technology and innovation to create new sources of clean, affordable, renewable energy was a generation away.  Today, you can find it in the research labs of this university and in the design centers of this state’s legendary auto industry.  It’s in the chemistry labs that are laying the building blocks for cheaper, more efficient solar panels, and it’s in the re-born factories that are churning out more wind turbines every day all across this country.

Despite all this, here we are, in another election, still talking about our oil addiction; still more dependent than ever. Why?

You won’t hear me say this too often, but I couldn’t agree more with the explanation that Senator McCain offered a few weeks ago.  He said, "Our dangerous dependence on foreign oil has been thirty years in the making, and was caused by the failure of politicians in Washington to think long-term about the future of the country."

What Senator McCain neglected to mention was that during those thirty years, he was in Washington for twenty-six of them.  And in all that time, he did little to reduce our dependence on foreign oil.  He voted against increased fuel efficiency standards and opposed legislation that included tax credits for more efficient cars.  He voted against renewable sources of energy.  Against clean biofuels.  Against solar power.  Against wind power.  Against an energy bill that – while far from perfect – represented the largest investment in renewable sources of energy in the history of this country.  So when Senator McCain talks about the failure of politicians in Washington to do anything about our energy crisis, it’s important to remember that he’s been a part of that failure. Now, after years of inaction, and in the face of public frustration over rising gas prices, the only energy proposal he’s really promoting is more offshore drilling – a position he recently adopted that has become the centerpiece of his plan, and one that will not make a real dent in current gas prices or meet the long-term challenge of energy independence.

George Bush’s own Energy Department has said that if we opened up new areas to drilling today, we wouldn’t see a single drop of oil for seven years.  Seven years.  And Senator McCain knows that, which is why he admitted that his plan would only provide "psychological" relief to consumers.  He also knows that if we opened up and drilled on every single square inch of our land and our shores, we would still find only three percent of the world’s oil reserves.  Three percent for a country that uses 25% of the world’s oil.  Even Texas oilman Boone Pickens, who’s calling for major new investments in alternative energy, has said, "this is one emergency we can’t drill our way out of."

Now, increased domestic oil exploration certainly has its place as we make our economy more fuel-efficient and transition to other, renewable, American-made sources of energy.  But it is not the solution.  It is a political answer of the sort Washington has given us for three decades.

There are genuine ways in which we can provide some short-term relief from high gas prices – relief to the mother who’s cutting down on groceries because of gas prices, or the man I met in Pennsylvania who lost his job and can’t even afford to drive around and look for a new one.  I believe we should immediately give every working family in America a $1,000 energy rebate, and we should pay for it with part of the record profits that the oil companies are making right now.

I also believe that in the short-term, as we transition to renewable energy, we can and should increase our domestic production of oil and natural gas.  But we should start by telling the oil companies to drill on the 68 million acres they currently have access to but haven’t touched. And if they don’t, we should require them to give up their leases to someone who will.  We should invest in the technology that can help us recover more from existing oil fields, and speed up the process of recovering oil and gas resources in shale formations in Montana and North Dakota; Texas and Arkansas and in parts of the West and Central Gulf of Mexico.  We should sell 70 million barrels of oil from our Strategic Petroleum Reserve for less expensive crude, which in the past has lowered gas prices within two weeks.  Over the next five years, we should also lease more of the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska for oil and gas production.  And we should also tap more of our substantial natural gas reserves and work with the Canadian government to finally build the Alaska Natural Gas Pipeline, delivering clean natural gas and creating good jobs in the process.

But the truth is, none of these steps will come close to seriously reducing our energy dependence in the long-term.  We simply cannot pretend, as Senator McCain does, that we can drill our way out of this problem.  We need a much bolder and much bigger set of solutions.  We have to make a serious, nationwide commitment to developing new sources of energy and we have to do it right away.

Last week, Washington finally made some progress on this.  A group of Democrat and Republican Senators sat down and came up with a compromise on energy that includes many of the proposals I’ve worked on as a Senator and many of the steps I’ve been calling for on this campaign.  It’s a plan that would invest in renewable fuels and batteries for fuel-efficient cars, help automakers re-tool, and make a real investment in renewable sources of energy.

Like all compromises, this one has its drawbacks.  It includes a limited amount of new offshore drilling, and while I still don’t believe that’s a particularly meaningful short-term or long-term solution, I am willing to consider it if it’s necessary to actually pass a comprehensive plan.  I am not interested in making the perfect the enemy of the good – particularly since there is so much good in this compromise that would actually reduce our dependence on foreign oil.

And yet, while the compromise is a good first step and a good faith effort, I believe that we must go even further, and here’s why – breaking our oil addiction is one of the greatest challenges our generation will ever face.  It will take nothing less than a complete transformation of our economy.  This transformation will be costly, and given the fiscal disaster we will inherit from the last Administration, it will likely require us to defer some other priorities.

It is also a transformation that will require more than just a few government programs.  Energy independence will require an all-hands-on-deck effort from America – effort from our scientists and entrepreneurs; from businesses and from every American citizen.  Factories will have to re-tool and re-design.  Businesses will need to find ways to emit less carbon dioxide.  All of us will need to buy more of the fuel-efficient cars built by this state, and find new ways to improve efficiency and save energy in our own homes and businesses.

This will not be easy.  And it will not happen overnight.  And if anyone tries to tell you otherwise, they are either fooling themselves or trying to fool you.

But I know we can do this.  We can do this because we are Americans.  We do the improbable.  We beat great odds.  We rally together to meet whatever challenge stands in our way.  That’s what we’ve always done – and it’s what we must do now.  For the sake of our economy, our security, and the future of our planet, we must end the age of oil in our time.

Creating a new energy economy isn’t just a challenge to meet, it’s an opportunity to seize – an opportunity that will create new businesses, new industries, and millions of new jobs.  Jobs that pay well.  Jobs that can’t be outsourced.  Good, union jobs.  For a state that has lost so many and struggled so much in recent years, this is an opportunity to rebuild and revive your economy.  As your wonderful Governor has said, "Any time you pick up a newspaper and see the terms ‘climate change’ or ‘global warming,’ just think: ‘jobs for Michigan.’"  You are seeing the potential already.  Already, there are 50,000 jobs in your clean energy sector and 300 companies.  But now is the time to accelerate that growth, both here and across the nation.

If I am President, I will immediately direct the full resources of the federal government and the full energy of the private sector to a single, overarching goal – in ten years, we will eliminate the need for oil from the entire Middle East and Venezuela.  To do this, we will invest $150 billion over the next ten years and leverage billions more in private capital to build a new energy economy that harnesses American energy and creates five million new American jobs.

There are three major steps I will take to achieve this goal – steps that will yield real results by the end of my first term in office.

First, we will help states like Michigan build the fuel-efficient cars we need, and we will get one million 150 mile-per-gallon plug-in hybrids on our roads within six years.

I know how much the auto industry and the auto workers of this state have struggled over the last decade or so.  But I also know where I want the fuel-efficient cars of tomorrow to be built – not in Japan, not in China, but right here in the United States of America. Right here in the state of Michigan.

We can do this.  When I arrived in Washington, I reached across the aisle to come up with a plan to raise the mileage standards in our cars for the first time in thirty years – a plan that won support from Democrats and Republicans who had never supported raising fuel standards before.  I also led the bipartisan effort to invest in the technology necessary to build plug-in hybrid cars.

As President, I will accelerate those efforts to meet our urgent need.  With technology we have on the shelf today, we will raise our fuel mileage standards four percent every year.  We’ll invest more in the research and development of those plug-in hybrids, specifically focusing on the battery technology.  We’ll leverage private sector funding to bring these cars directly to American consumers, and we’ll give consumers a $7,000 tax credit to buy these vehicles.  But most importantly, I’ll provide $4 billion in loans and tax credits to American auto plants and manufacturers so that they can re-tool their factories and build these cars. That’s how we’ll not only protect our auto industry and our auto workers, but help them thrive in a 21st century economy.

What’s more, these efforts will lead to an explosion of innovation here in Michigan.  At the turn of the 20th century, there were literally hundreds of car companies offering a wide choice of steam vehicles and gas engines.  I believe we are entering a similar era of expanding consumer choices, from higher mileage cars, to new electric entrants like GM’s Volt, to flex fuel cars and trucks powered by biofuels and driven by Michigan innovation.

The second step I’ll take is to require that 10% of our energy comes from renewable sources by the end of my first term – more than double what we have now.  To meet these goals, we will invest more in the clean technology research and development that’s occurring in labs and research facilities all across the country and right here at MSU, where you’re working with farm owners to develop this state’s wind potential and developing nanotechnology that will make solar cells cheaper.

I’ll also extend the Production Tax Credit for five years to encourage the production of renewable energy like wind power, solar power, and geothermal energy. It was because of this credit that wind power grew 45% last year, the largest growth in history.  Experts have said that Michigan has the second best potential for wind generation and production in the entire country. And as the world’s largest producer of the material that makes solar panels work, this tax credit would also help states like Michigan grow solar industries that are already creating hundreds of new jobs.

We’ll also invest federal resources, including tax incentives and government contracts, into developing next generation biofuels. By 2022, I will make it a goal to have 6 billion gallons of our fuel come from sustainable, affordable biofuels and we’ll make sure that we have the infrastructure to deliver that fuel in place. Here in Michigan, you’re actually a step ahead of the game with your first-ever commercial cellulosic ethanol plant, which will lead the way by turning wood into clean-burning fuel.  It’s estimated that each new advanced biofuels plant can add up to 120 jobs, expand a local town’s tax base by $70 million per year, and boost local household income by $6.7 million annually.

In addition, we’ll find safer ways to use nuclear power and store nuclear waste.  And we’ll invest in the technology that will allow us to use more coal, America’s most abundant energy source, with the goal of creating five "first-of-a-kind" coal-fired demonstration plants with carbon capture and sequestration.

Of course, too often, the problem is that all of this new energy technology never makes it out of the lab and onto the market because there’s too much risk and too much cost involved in starting commercial-scale clean energy businesses.  So we will remove some of this cost and this risk by directing billions in loans and capital to entrepreneurs who are willing to create clean energy businesses and clean energy jobs right here in America.

As we develop new sources of energy and electricity, we will also need to modernize our national utility grid so that it’s accommodating to new sources of power, more efficient, and more reliable.  That’s an investment that will also create hundreds of thousands of jobs, and one that I will make as President.

Finally, the third step I will take is to call on businesses, government, and the American people to meet the goal of reducing our demand for electricity 15% by the end of the next decade.  This is by far the fastest, easiest, and cheapest way to reduce our energy consumption – and it will save us $130 billion on our energy bills.

Since DuPont implemented an energy efficiency program in 1990, the company has significantly reduced its pollution and cut its energy bills by $3 billion.  The state of California has implemented such a successful efficiency strategy that while electricity consumption grew 60% in this country over the last three decades, it didn’t grow at all in California.

There is no reason America can’t do the same thing.  We will set a goal of making our new buildings 50% more efficient over the next four years.  And we’ll follow the lead of California and change the way utilities make money so that their profits aren’t tied to how much energy we use, but how much energy we save.

In just ten years, these steps will produce enough renewable energy to replace all the oil we import from the Middle East.  Along with the cap-and-trade program I’ve proposed, we will reduce our dangerous carbon emissions 80% by 2050 and slow the warming of our planet.  And we will create five million new jobs in the process.

If these sound like far-off goals, just think about what we can do in the next few years.  One million plug-in hybrid cars on the road.  Doubling our energy from clean, renewable sources like wind power or solar power and 2 billion gallons of affordable biofuels.  New buildings that 50% more energy efficient.

So there is a real choice in this election – a choice about what kind of future we want for this country and this planet.

Senator McCain would not take the steps or achieve the goals that I outlined today.  His plan invests very little in renewable sources of energy and he’s opposed helping the auto industry re-tool.  Like George Bush and Dick Cheney before him, he sees more drilling as the answer to all of our energy problems, and like them, he’s found a receptive audience in the very same oil companies that have blocked our progress for so long.  In fact, he raised more than one million dollars from big oil just last month, most of which came after he announced his plan for offshore drilling in a room full of cheering oil executives.  His initial reaction to the bipartisan energy compromise was to reject it because it took away tax breaks for oil companies.  And even though he doesn’t want to spend much on renewable energy, he’s actually proposed giving $4 billion more in tax breaks to the biggest oil companies in America – including $1.2 billion to Exxon-Mobil.

This is a corporation that just recorded the largest profit in the history of the United States. .  This is the company that, last quarter, made $1,500 every second.  That’s more than $300,000 in the time it takes you to fill up a tank with gas that’s costing you more than $4-a-gallon.  And Senator McCain not only wants them to keep every dime of that money, he wants to give them more.

So make no mistake – the oil companies have placed their bet on Senator McCain, and if he wins, they will continue to cash in while our families and our economy suffer and our future is put in jeopardy.

Well that’s not the future I see for America.  I will not pretend the goals I laid out today aren’t ambitious.  They are. I will not pretend we can achieve them without cost, or without sacrifice, or without the contribution of almost every American citizen.

But I will say that these goals are possible.  And I will say that achieving them is absolutely necessary if we want to keep America safe and prosperous in the 21st century.

I want you all to think for a minute about the next four years, and even the next ten years.  We can continue down the path we’ve been traveling.  We can keep making small, piece-meal investments in renewable energy and keep sending billions of our hard-earned dollars to oil company executives and Middle Eastern dictators.   We can watch helplessly as the price of gas rises and falls because of some foreign crisis we have no control over, and uncover every single barrel of oil buried beneath this country only to realize that we don’t have enough for a few years, let alone a century.  We can watch other countries create the industries and the jobs that will fuel our future, and leave our children a planet that grows more dangerous and unlivable by the day.

Or we can choose another future.  We can decide that we will face the realities of the 21st century by building a 21st century economy.  In just a few years, we can watch cars that run on a plug-in battery come off the same assembly lines that once produced the first Ford and the first Chrysler.  We can see shuttered factories open their doors to manufacturers that sell wind turbines and solar panels that will power our homes and our businesses.  We can watch as millions of new jobs with good pay and good benefits are created for American workers, and we can take pride as the technologies, and discoveries, and industries of the future flourish in the United States of America.  We can lead the world, secure our nation, and meet our moral obligations to future generations.

This is the choice that we face in the months ahead. This is the challenge we must meet.  This is the opportunity we must seize – and this may be our last chance to seize it.

And if it seems too difficult or improbable, I ask you to think about the struggles and the challenges that past generations have overcome.  Think about how World War II forced us to transform a peacetime economy still climbing out of Depression into an Arsenal of Democracy that could wage war across three continents.  And when President Roosevelt’s advisors informed him that his goals for wartime production were impossible to meet, he waved them off and said "believe me, the production people can do it if they really try."  And they did.

Think about when the scientists and engineers told John F. Kennedy that they had no idea how to put a man on the moon, he told them they would find a way.  And we found one.  Remember how we trained a generation for a new, industrial economy by building a nationwide system of public high schools; how we laid down railroad tracks and highways across an entire continent; how we pushed the boundaries of science and technology to unlock the very building blocks of human life.

I ask you to draw hope from the improbable progress this nation has made and look to the future with confidence that we too can meet the great test of our time.  I ask you to join me, in November and in the years to come, to ensure that we will not only control our own energy, but once again control our own destiny, and forge a new and better future for the country that we love.  Thank you.

minor update That man just fired a crowd up talking about POLICY! It wasn't "rhetoric" it was his plan, and he got a standing ovation from a very enthusiastic crowd. I'll post the video when it's up, which will probably be soon.

UPDATE #5 A few pictures of the smile on his face as the crowd sang "Happy Birthday" to him

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During the speech:

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UPDATE #6 Man, the GOP can't even "unite" wasn't this the same party that was supposed to be all about unity? Remember the Republicans in Congress having their little protest this morning? Well it seems they couldn't get the White House to go along.Score one for the Dems!

   The White House has rejected calls from House Republicans that it convene a special session of Congress on energy, saying it wouldn't make a difference.

   "We don't have plans to call Congress into session -- it won't make a difference if Democratic leaders are unwilling to bring up a bill for an up-down vote," said White House spokesman Tony Fratto.

UPDATE #6: Partial Video h/t NCDemAmy:

and Enviro Leader Raves: Obama's Energy Plan Best Ever From A Presidential Candidate:

This is an aggressive, achievable, and most important of all, a necessary energy plan. Kudos to Senator Obama and his energy team. Maybe he is The One.

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