The Thriller
Well-Known Member
My problem is that I don't have multiple voices in my head like you seem to. I've never seen you directly respond to anything the other person says. You just watch Sean Hannity at night or something and then respond to Sean Hannity through Jazzfanz. Guess what? Sean Hannity doesn't post here! Go call his show or something.
Except for this thread, where ALL I've done is respond to the issue and YOU'RE the one bringing up Sean Hannity.
Oil doesn't trade on the filth in the ground at any moment. It trades on what is, and what will be in 3-month and 6-month windows. They don't care about what's in the ground. That's what stock speculators trade on. Market caps rise and fall based on what is/isn't in the ground. Again, supply and demand doesn't come into play until oil is scarce. That isn't the case right now. Demand is being met and will continue to be so for many years to come.
There are small variances, such as your 3-month and 6-month windows. But again, oil is going bye bye.
That's simply untrue. There is plenty of supply to meet demand right now and the foreseeable future.
How so? You have no proof of this. While your own article shows proof of exactly the opposite. An unstable Iran is bringing about record prices. Last year, it was an unstable Syria. So we can either say that someone is simply using these unstable countries as an excuse to raise prices or agree that the supply and demand is so tight that slight variances (such as Iran threatening to not export to the US) could lead to record gas prices.
And expect prices to continue to increase as it becomes more and more in demand with more countries industrializing. Sorry, there's no reversing this direction. Been happenin for decades.
And lastly, there is less oil in this planet today than yesterday. Once again, you fail to address the long-term advantages of getting off this drug.
$2 gas would be possible in a world of stable monetary growth and peace.
When has the world ever had that? You're surely not delusional enough to believe this will happen anytime soon, right?
Because demand is so high and supply so tight, just a threat of a war in the ME is shooting gas prices to record levels. With markets becoming more and more interconnected, you're going to see small disturbances on the other side of the world creating huge waves here in the US.
Obama doesn't set monetary policy, you bonehead.
I didn't say Obama did, your ridiculous article did. So perhaps you should write him?
Once again, for the THIRD time now, you've failed to address the advantages of developing alternative energies. The sooner we get off this oil drug, the better.
Aren't you tired of playing this role?