Miriam C. wrote:It will only divert attention from the real problem and that is absolute greed.
"High oil prices reflect primarily the reality of the marketplace," Cheney said in Iraq at the start of his trip. "There's just not a lot of excess capacity worldwide."
angib wrote:Just come and look at what we Europeans buy at $8/gallon!
Andrew
angib wrote:Miriam C. wrote:It will only divert attention from the real problem and that is absolute greed.
I think the real problem is that we are reaching the point where oil demand is equalling oil production - there is some spare capacity in the system, but a lot of it is high-sulphur heavy crude that nobody wants very much.
This used to be a fringe view, but it's now becoming mainstream. Even Dick Cheney was saying it last week:"High oil prices reflect primarily the reality of the marketplace," Cheney said in Iraq at the start of his trip. "There's just not a lot of excess capacity worldwide."
Today's price will no doubt seem quite reasonable in 5-10 years' time when there's only enough oil production to meet 90% of the demand and those willing to pay the most get that 90%.
I don't think there is a price that people won't pay for gas - they may buy less but they will still pay. Just come and look at what we Europeans buy at $8/gallon!
Andrew
caseydog wrote:So, if gas prices double again, like they have since 2001 (hmmmm, who took over the white house in 2001???),.....
CD
angib wrote:Miriam C. wrote:It will only divert attention from the real problem and that is absolute greed.
I think the real problem is that we are reaching the point where oil demand is equalling oil production - there is some spare capacity in the system, but a lot of it is high-sulphur heavy crude that nobody wants very much.
This used to be a fringe view, but it's now becoming mainstream. Even Dick Cheney was saying it last week:"High oil prices reflect primarily the reality of the marketplace," Cheney said in Iraq at the start of his trip. "There's just not a lot of excess capacity worldwide."
Today's price will no doubt seem quite reasonable in 5-10 years' time when there's only enough oil production to meet 90% of the demand and those willing to pay the most get that 90%.
I don't think there is a price that people won't pay for gas - they may buy less but they will still pay. Just come and look at what we Europeans buy at $8/gallon!
Andrew
caseydog wrote:....until you quoted Dick Cheney.....
angib wrote:caseydog wrote:....until you quoted Dick Cheney.....
Hey, be fair - I didn't quote "Dick Cheney" - I quoted "even Dick Cheney"....![]()
Andrew
Miriam C. wrote:angib wrote:Miriam C. wrote:It will only divert attention from the real problem and that is absolute greed.
I think the real problem is that we are reaching the point where oil demand is equalling oil production - there is some spare capacity in the system, but a lot of it is high-sulphur heavy crude that nobody wants very much.
This used to be a fringe view, but it's now becoming mainstream. Even Dick Cheney was saying it last week:"High oil prices reflect primarily the reality of the marketplace," Cheney said in Iraq at the start of his trip. "There's just not a lot of excess capacity worldwide."
Today's price will no doubt seem quite reasonable in 5-10 years' time when there's only enough oil production to meet 90% of the demand and those willing to pay the most get that 90%.
I don't think there is a price that people won't pay for gas - they may buy less but they will still pay. Just come and look at what we Europeans buy at $8/gallon!
Andrew
So that explains billions in profits and bonuses. So the less oil we have the more profit we make.Sorry dear, that sounds suspiciously like "blaming the victim" to me. Greed in it's purest form.
Miriam C. wrote:Bruce if everyone in the country or better yet the world would not buy gas on Sunday or any other day, as long as it is the same day you would send a rolling signal around the world that the days of extreme profiteering on the backs of working people is at an end.
Just one day every week!![]()
That might work.
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