Panic at the Pump
The Energy Crisis and the Transformation of American Politics in the 1970s
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
An authoritative history of the energy crises of the 1970s and the world they wrought.
In 1973, the Arab OPEC cartel banned the export of oil to the United States, sending prices and tempers rising across the country. Dark Christmas trees, lowered thermostats, empty gas tanks, and the new fifty-five-mile-per-hour speed limit all suggested that America was a nation in decline. "Don't be fuelish" became the national motto. Though the embargo would end the following year, it introduced a new kind of insecurity into American life—an insecurity that would only intensify when the Iranian Revolution led to new shortages at the end of the decade.
In Panic at the Pump, award-winning scholar Meg Jacobs reveals that the energy crisis of the 1970s became, for many Americans, an object lesson in the limitations of governmental power. Washington proved unable to design an effective national energy policy, and the result was a mounting skepticism about government intervention that set the stage for the rise of Reaganism. She offers lively portraits of key figures, from Nixon and Carter to the zealous energy czar William Simon and the young Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney. Jacobs's absorbing chronicle ends with the 1991 Gulf War, when President George H. W. Bush sent troops to protect the free flow of oil in the Persian Gulf. It was a failure of domestic policy at home that helped precipitate military action abroad.
As the nation continues to cope with the repercussions of a changing climate, a volatile oil market, and continued turmoil in the Middle East in the twenty-first century, Panic at the Pump is a necessary and lively account of a formative period in American political history.