โMay-20-2008 09:25 PM
โJul-10-2008 04:02 PM
โJul-10-2008 03:09 PM
โJul-10-2008 01:40 PM
โJul-10-2008 01:16 PM
โJul-10-2008 11:00 AM
Strawfoot wrote:
* "With the basic laws of supply and demand no longer operative in crude oil markets,"
โJul-10-2008 10:51 AM
โJul-10-2008 10:12 AM
Strawfoot wrote:
Show me where production is above demand. A source of your claim.
โJul-10-2008 10:09 AM
Strawfoot wrote:
Isn't it just possible that the demand for crude oil has finally surpassed the maximum output.
โJul-10-2008 09:58 AM
macira wrote:
Strawfoot.. Supply and demand are neat words to use..But thingss are are worth what they cost to produce plus a reasonable profit. Oil at it's current price does not fit that scenario. If you want to substitute "charge what you can get" for supply and demand, I'll buy your story.
If you check around a bit you will find there still is production above demand.
It may not continue to be so but at the moment it is. Price now is based on betting on what you can sell for. Price control is not needed but gambling control is needed. I think the ante for the bet should be increased dramatically.
โJul-09-2008 10:27 PM
โJul-09-2008 09:24 PM
Power Stroker wrote:
what you see right now is fabricated to benefit a certain few.
โJul-09-2008 08:47 PM
โJul-09-2008 03:08 PM
Strawfoot wrote:macira wrote:
Was the previous speed limit deal a big winner? No just a goofy idea then as well as now.
Highway fatalities dropped by a noticeable amount. I'd call that a very big winner. Had crude oil not dropped to $10-$15 a barrel, the speed limit might have stayed at 55.
As a transport driver who uses his own one-ton diesel to haul RV's, I can tell you that we are saving over $1300 a month in fuel costs by slowing to 55mph, from 70mph, driving an average of 10,000 miles per month. That's significant savings.
Most highway patrol officers will tell you that over 90% of traffic fatalities are a result of excessive speed. Yet all the people who are ticketed for speeding will tell you they didn't feel their speed was excessive. They feel that others are going to slow and they are forced to make sudden lane changes and bob-and-weave through traffic, tailgate, and cut off other drivers. I use to drive way too fast when I was younger but I now support slower speed limits. We should do all we can to conserve fuel.
Strawfoot
โJul-09-2008 03:06 PM
RetiredArmy wrote:
I can remember the Arab oil embargo of the 70's. President Nixon asked all Americans to conserve. America did. What happened? Everything went up in price because Americans were not spending and conserving energy, etc. It was a lose-lose situation. Adding taxes to the already burdened taxpayer is foolish. Adding more taxes to big oil would push up the prices at the pump and rich will still get richer. Larry G.
โJul-09-2008 02:24 PM
macira wrote:
Was the previous speed limit deal a big winner? No just a goofy idea then as well as now.