$5 Gas in 2012?

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  • mrsleeve
    replied
    Originally posted by Bill 84 318i
    On the punctuation thing, I just have a knee-jerk reaction when (I'd guess 90%+) of your posts have the same punctuation mark or "^" repeated in the double digits. Regardless of your point, it's hard to not think "oh geez". I'm sure I'm not the only one.

    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

    that is reference the guy above me with out having to quote then in totality, and annoy every one else with endless quotes

    I use periods to hold palces to make somethings and points you know........................stand out.

    Originally posted by Bill 84 318
    I don't know that you answered my question. We're discussing volatile gas prices and you bring up the devaluation of the US dollar. I wondered why, if the US dollar was devalued (and didn't say it wasn't), then when aren't all foreign commodities affected in the same way as gas? I don't think you addressed that adequately.
    You seem like a smart guy, do I really have to connect all the dots for you.

    Ok 2 words .............................Exchange rate.

    Oil is GLOBALLY traded in US DOLLARS the price is for a barrel of oil is the same here as it is in China, or the UK, or Tasmania ($89.73 as of close of business today). This does not include any countries Tariffs, import fees, and taxes (directly). This raw cost of the product to get it outta the ground and to market, and is subject to the whims of a global market Supply and demand and Speculation ( Al LA 2008.)


    With the devaluation of the Dollar the real value of it is less so it takes more of them to get the oil, there by making gas go up and all other petrol products more. Now if you live in a country with a more stable currency your price for the Oil may actually go down a bit thanks to a Now more favorable exchange rate. Since our currency just happens to be the green back we will feel the greatest volatility in Petrol products pricing among other things that higher energy pricing brings with it.

    Oh an dub has it going with China holding its currency very low, and our attempts at quantitative easing. When China says fuck it and dumps all our bonds its all over.

    Oh and Dub Adjusted for inflation gold at 800oz in the early 80's translates into like 2400 of todays worthless dollars, just another fine example of the devaluation of the USD over the last 30 years
    Last edited by mrsleeve; 12-30-2010, 04:48 PM.

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  • Vedubin01
    replied
    Originally posted by Bill 84 318i
    then when aren't all foreign commodities affected in the same way as gas?
    really depends on who you are buying from. Walmart or Chi-Mart if you have not shopped there of late, prices have been rising on imports.



    The Chinese have held their currency value under the dollar for as long as I can remember. They do this to get the benefit of trade. Timmy and Ben's idea is to do the same back to China to repay the debt with cheap money. Being that China is really tied to our dollar its hurting both and China will soon say enough is enough. When that happens we are screwed.

    Has anyone paid attention to the price of Gold Lately?

    Live Gold Charts and Gold Spot Price from International Gold Markets, Prices from New York, London, Hong Kong and Sydney provided by Kitco.


    $1400 USD some of the highest prices ever set for gold. Why, because the USD is worthless.



    off topic again, thanks for answering the "what do you do question"

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  • Bill 84 318i
    replied
    Originally posted by mrsleeve
    Bill I do the all caps on occasion to get the point across to the people that have had it laid out in detail several times, as still keep asking the same stupid questions and same stupid responses.

    As to the reason gas is going up right now, is that OIL IS TRADED IN US. DOLLARS. Takes ore dollars to buy the raw commodity now that it did 10 months ago. Demand in china is starting to tick back up some, and the shortening of US domestic supply looming as the Gulf Drilling ban will start to catch up soon. Also its winter time Hydro Crackers are switched over to a more heavy fuels Biased production cycle to make heating oil and Kero to keep people warmer this time of year. Its a big combo of factors that is coming into play here. The one that is uncharacteristic as compared to past years is the BIG DEVALUATION of the Green Back, as compared to just last year.

    Other countries are dumping our bonds, and running to gold (China big time and Japan too IIRC) this dwindling lack of confidence in our currency ( held as reserve currency by most of the other nations of the world) has every one on edge. We fall so goes most of the rest of the civilized world. This has much further reaching implications than just gas prices (and there by the price of EVERYTHING) but this is a general synopses of WHY
    On the punctuation thing, I just have a knee-jerk reaction when (I'd guess 90%+) of your posts have the same punctuation mark or "^" repeated in the double digits. Regardless of your point, it's hard to not think "oh geez". I'm sure I'm not the only one.

    I don't know that you answered my question. We're discussing volatile gas prices and you bring up the devaluation of the US dollar. I wondered why, if the US dollar was devaluated (and didn't say it wasn't), then when aren't all foreign commodities affected in the same way as gas? I don't think you addressed that adequately.

    Originally posted by Vedubin01
    off topic but what do you do in DC Bill?
    Nothing interesting or directly political - software development for a small government contractor, which has been an experience in and of itself. I actually relocated a few months ago to Norfolk, VA (changing locales on r3v just takes so many clicks), but I've kept my position.

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  • Vedubin01
    replied
    off topic but what do you do in DC Bill?

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  • mrsleeve
    replied
    Originally posted by HarryPotter
    The cost to drill that oil shale up is insane and also extremely polluting, there are already some companies doing it and contaminating nearby hick towns and the people are bitching, good luck with that.
    Not this again, yeah its a little more money to produce shale resource, but not like you are thinking and what it was costing 30 years ago.

    A fractured well 30 years + ago was 30-40 million a hole, now that cost is down 1-4 million a hole.

    As far as the pollution I am not going there again, go find where darin and I have been round and about this, with his Mike More type gas land movie.




    Bill I do the all caps on occasion to get the point across to the people that have had it laid out in detail several times, as still keep asking the same stupid questions and same stupid responses.

    As to the reason gas is going up right now, is that OIL IS TRADED IN US. DOLLARS. Takes ore dollars to buy the raw commodity now that it did 10 months ago. Demand in china is starting to tick back up some, and the shortening of US domestic supply looming as the Gulf Drilling ban will start to catch up soon. Also its winter time Hydro Crackers are switched over to a more heavy fuels Biased production cycle to make heating oil and Kero to keep people warmer this time of year. Its a big combo of factors that is coming into play here. The one that is uncharacteristic as compared to past years is the BIG DEVALUATION of the Green Back, as compared to just last year.

    Other countries are dumping our bonds, and running to gold (China big time and Japan too IIRC) this dwindling lack of confidence in our currency ( held as reserve currency by most of the other nations of the world) has every one on edge. We fall so goes most of the rest of the civilized world. This has much further reaching implications than just gas prices (and there by the price of EVERYTHING) but this is a general synopses of WHY

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  • HarryPotter
    replied
    Originally posted by slammin.e28guy
    Maybe if we would drill up that vast reserve we have under Arizona and not give a fvck about some dumb antelope instead of letting the Saudis ream us.

    Also, what's the use in chilling in Iraq for so long if we're not taking advantage of it. We need to revert back to the 17th century imperialism sh!t and take advantage of places we occupy. It'd create jobs over there too, helping the Middle East!

    Also, if we wouldn't outsource to China & Mexico for everything and impose larger tariffs on stuff imported from said countries, maybe companies would move back stateside and provide jobs to the, what is it, 15%? (it will be 15% by the time I'm done typing this) unemployed. Why employ the rest of the world when we need jobs here?

    But I digress. This is a thread about gas, not how badly the current administration is handling things.
    The cost to drill that oil shale up is insane and also extremely polluting, there are already some companies doing it and contaminating nearby hick towns and the people are bitching, good luck with that.

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  • Bill 84 318i
    replied
    Originally posted by mrsleeve
    NO thats Just how the card fell this time around.


    Boosh didnt devalue the dollar to shit (as much as 0) and there was not a global down turn in demand (like 35ish %) at the same time of over printing of money.

    this is not complex to get, you are smart enough to connect the dots
    I really think this is almost worth it's own thread, but I think people would take you far more seriously if you chilled on the all-caps and punctuation repetition.

    Regardless, you reference the "printing money" thing. Which, for purposes of this question, let's get into the details of yet. But I'm inferring that you are referencing the hyper-inflation that unchecked money printing could cause, yes? So why isolate gas? If it was a US dollar thing, the entire economy would follow the crazy trend that gas has.

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  • joshh
    replied

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  • Vedubin01
    replied
    here is a great article that discusses a lot of things we have been talking about in this thread. Thought it was perfect timing....

    Discuss....


    Townhall is the leading source for conservative news, political cartoons, breaking stories, election analysis and commentary on politics and the media culture. An information hub for conservatives, republicans, libertarians, and liberty-loving Americans.

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  • joshh
    replied
    Originally posted by CorvallisBMW
    I always figured that was the terrorists?



    No, it's a fixed price per gallon.


    Six dozen of one......terrorist sympathizers.


    My mistake. Per gallon is correct.
    Last edited by joshh; 12-29-2010, 11:32 PM.

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  • mrsleeve
    replied
    Originally posted by CorvallisBMW
    Isn't it nice to know that rising prices under a democratic president are always the fault of the administration while rising prices under republican presidents is always caused by uncontrollable market forces. Now i can sleep better at night.
    NO thats Just how the card fell this time around.


    Boosh didnt devalue the dollar to shit (as much as 0) and there was not a global down turn in demand (like 35ish %) at the same time of over printing of money.

    this is not complex to get, you are smart enough to connect the dots

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  • lga714
    replied
    Originally posted by Jonny Cash
    omg thats awesome! you'll never have to be concerned about anything!

    Save this post, and put it in a time capsule. And in 10 years, open it.

    -Jay
    :giggle: I'll have to make my sarcasm more obvious in my posts

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  • ill4noreason
    replied
    Originally posted by z31maniac
    I have officially given up on the younger generations and thusly, the future of our country.
    haha. So I guess the older generation ( which you are apart of? ) that have put us in this hole before we even had a say have nothing to do with the fact that the younger generation is in this position? Oh is thusly even a word? I was kidding about the alcohol thing here in the USA. But not about the Brazil part. Big booty's everywhere...

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  • CorvallisBMW
    replied
    Isn't it nice to know that rising prices under a democratic president are always the fault of the administration while rising prices under republican presidents is always caused by uncontrollable market forces. Now i can sleep better at night.

    Leave a comment:


  • mrsleeve
    replied
    Originally posted by Massive Lee
    It seems the price of fuel is lower now than 3 years ago.... When no money was printed.
    Not to mention that Saudi Arabia's currency has been indexed to the US dollar 25 years ago and hasn't moved since then. Therefore, whatever the value of the US currency with other countries, it stays the same with the main supplier...
    You asked why its going UP NOW ........................ so thats the answer you got

    In 08 it was being pushed by to main factors 1 Speculation on the commodities market (those that pulled all their money outta housing had to put it some where so they made their own bubble) and 2 GLOBAL demand was MUCH MUCH FUCKING HIGHER.


    Like I told you reread Dubs posts hes already explained this to you.

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