T. Boone Pickens plans to publicize U.S. foreign oil consumption
Tuesday, January 13, 2009 at 4:01PM
Staff in News/Commentary, RFK Jr., Robert F. Kennedy Jr., pickens plan, t. boone pickens
Texan tycoon T. Boone Pickens Jr. announced that he will be launching a program to offer the public a monthly update on how much the U.S. is spending on foreign oil.

Pickens, appearing at a press conference alongside activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr., drew attention to December's figures, in which the U.S. imported 379.6 million barrels of oil, which added up to $19.3 billion dollars. This amount, Pickens contends, could fun D.C.'s schools for nearly four hundred years.

In regard to the public's interest, Pickens commented that he believes there is a demand for the information.

"I know my nearly 370,000 members of the Picken's Plan that I'm in communication with... want to see them, I think it's a pretty good sampling of what America wants to see. You watch, we'll elevate the interest in this if we do it every month," said Pickens.

He went went on to say that he believed the program will result in lowering the amount of money spent on foreign oil.

"The fun of it will be....when we reduce that number, and that is going to happen. We will reduce that number.

While the Department of Energy releases this information already, Kennedy Jr. noted that it tends to not be publicized, a situation that the nephew of assassinated Senator Robert F. Kennedy blames on the media.

"We're very grateful in the environmental community for this plans{plan} by Mr. Pickens to release this date, and highlight this date, and publicize it," said Kennedy.

He continued, "The big problem really with the environment in this Country is intertwined with problems in our democracy. We have a press that is really not functioning to inform us about the issues that we need to understand in order to make rational decisions in a democracy."

T. Boone Pickens is the author of the Picken's Plan, which calls for installing thousands of wind turbines in the U.S. wind corridor and using natural gas to replace the gasoline used for transportation.
Article originally appeared on Talk Radio News Service: News, Politics, Media (http://www.talkradionews.com/).
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