FerrelGeek
Diamond Member
Well, according to Obama we need to raise the taxes on oil companies, cut the oil subsidies, and the prices will drop. Can't see anything wrong with that.
Delightful sarcasm!
You were being sarcastic, right???? Right?????
Well, according to Obama we need to raise the taxes on oil companies, cut the oil subsidies, and the prices will drop. Can't see anything wrong with that.
Did he not say he wants to raise the taxes on BIG OIL and cut their subsidies? What effect will that have on gas prices, hmmm?
OK, you clearly didnt read the first paragraph of the article. They flat out stated it only takes them 2 dollars to produce it.
Well, according to Obama we need to raise the taxes on oil companies, cut the oil subsidies, and the prices will drop. Can't see anything wrong with that.
He may not have said that exactly but he DID say over and over again that you can't drill your way out of this problem. A supply and demand issue can't be solved by more supply. LOL
I wonder how much oil Saudi Arabia has left. I'd imagine they want that to remain a secret for as long as possible.
He may not have said that exactly but he DID say over and over again that you can't drill your way out of this problem. A supply and demand issue can't be solved by more supply. LOL
I don't drive my car with nuclear energy
I don't drive my car with nuclear energy
Seriously? Do I need to keep reading after this; does it get better? It costs under a buck to package a DVD for software, so why might that software cost $60?If it costs only $2 to produce a barrel of oil, then why do we pay over $105 a barrel?
Seriously? Do I need to keep reading after this; does it get better? It costs under a buck to package a DVD for software, so why might that software cost $60?
OK, you clearly didnt read the first paragraph of the article. They flat out stated it only takes them 2 dollars to produce it.
There is more demand than just what the US consumes. I haven't seen global numbers, but my guess is they're not going down.
Edit: Actually, they have been down slightly the past 2 years.
Edit 2: Well, this says otherwise for 2012 projections:
http://www.foxbusiness.com/markets/2012/01/18/iea-cuts-2012-global-oil-demand-growth-forecast/
Actually, this is more like an auction. And by more like I mean that's exactly what it is.Are you honestly trying to say that's anywhere close to the same thing?
Driving a car (electric) powered by nuclear power from a plant is quite technically feasible.
I personally have stopped asking the question of why gas is so expensive at the pump and instead have started asking the questions of
1) why do cars get such crappy gas mileage?
2) why do cars need gas at all?
3) why are no alternative means of transportation other than cars viable?
There is actually a lot of speculation that big oil and the auto industry take considerable efforts to bury inventions/patents (through legal and illegal means) that improve gas mileage, reduce the amount of gas needed to be purchased, and can potentially hurt their profits.
You clearly didn't read the part about it being $2 a barrel of oil. The key word being OIL and not GASOLINE. Gasoline prices follow the trend set by the price of oil but are consistently being manipulated by false shortages through refinery shenanigans.
My official opinion is that gasoline prices as they currently stand don't have a huge impact on my life in terms of expenses despite driving at least 60min a day. The solution is to use less gasoline. Bring on the hydrogen fuel cells and the thorium nuclear reactors!
Does the spike in prices have anything to do with supply and demand?
^ That's an excellent point. Collusion of refineries? Or an honest capacity issue?
Personally, I think a combination of just about everything mentioned in this thread is the cause of high gas prices, but I also think it's interesting that no one will tell us definitively what the cause is.