Shale oil has boosted U.S. GDP, lowered world oil prices, and added a potent new surge capacity to U.S. oil output that lessens the risk of a global oil supply disruption. These gains dwarf the effects of shale oil on climate change or on the communities where drilling takes place. But shale oil supporters have yet to fully detach the many citizens concerned about drilling’s real, although modest, local costs from the centrally planned campaigns of climate change zealots whose demands flout all reasoned balancing of costs and benefits.

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Gunners from the Armed Forces of Ukraine fire at Russian position with a 155 mm self-propelled howitzer 2C22 in the Kharkiv region on April 21, 2024. (Anatolii Stepanov/AFP via Getty Images)