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Something to think about when you head to the polls this year
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Complete crap.
National gas prices averaged over 4 bucks a gallon near the end of the Bush Presidency. The only reason they've "increased" so much under Obama is because of the recession he inherited which caused the price of oil to plummet and took gas prices with it. Please. Quote:
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No, his promise of hope and change is and was complete crap..... As is the fact that we can't muster a competant candidate to challenge the current administration.....
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Your frustrations about the shambles that is the GOP has nothing to do with the article linked by the OP which is still complete crap.
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this is a gas station right around the corner from the Whitehouse...probably where Obama gasses up his 6mpg Eco- Chariot...right? |
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Are you guys all idiots? -spence |
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At the end of his second term(Bush), the price had decreased by 9% from the time he took office (adjusted for inflation). I don't think Obama will ever be able to claim this:) |
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hey Spence, Zimmy...have you picked up one of these yet?
Apparently the hottest new item among Obamaistas and at Democrat headquarters....:uhuh:...I'm sure they'll figure it out and put the correct flag on top.. apparently, when some military veterans expressed some concern the Democrat Headquarters chair stated “It leads me to believe that it’s not about the flag.” “Certain elements cannot accept Barack Obama as president.” that sounds exactly like the kind of thing you guys would say:uhuh: |
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I'm not talking steps that will reduce prices in the future, but what can any president do during their first couple years in office to repress prices within the first 26 months of office. Aside from the commentary not having an ounce of substance and is merely a partisan-fueled rant, the graph that's the highlight of the should actually hurt the case trying to be claimed by the author. A reasonable person should hopefully be aware that no president has immediate control of gas prices - especially when you're looking at the first 26 months as your window. To play devil's advocate, a case could be made that fuel prices in the first two years of a presidency are sculpted by the previous president's policies. A case that would make Bush look even worse since it could be argued that Clinton set him up with a solid price structure and then it all went to hell under Bush. Mr. Sandman, I hope you come back and participate in the discussion as opposed to your post being a drive-by. |
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I guess we're really fortunate they didn't ram Cap and Trade through Congress along with Obamacare...or it might be really ugly:) |
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There are far too many factors at play to put the price of oil onto any individual *country's* shoulders, let alone a specific leader within that country. I think OPEC, oil companies, speculators and refineries have substantially more control on the price of oil than any other factor - many of those factors have some form of control from (what I call) pump-to-pump - control across the entire supply chain from the minute it's pumped out of the ground to the moment I pump gas into my car. I will partially "credit" Obama with the $10-25/barrel increase associated to the tensions with Iran. The reason he gets only partial credit is because it's a continuation of terrible US policy that started before him and he's chosen to sustain. As a side note, the above is opinion formed as a derivative of too much reading. An opinion that I'm sure has a few holes in it. |
Fixing Spence: Your frustrations about the shambles that is the GOP has nothing to do with the shambles that is the Democratic Party.
Either way we are not getting the government we need but we are probably getting the government that we deserve. |
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Johnny, Well, Obama ran on creating a green economy...remember? The entire green jobs thing. Where is that? You know, reduce the mid east demand, and create jobs in the US by developing green tech. This effort has fallen flat. Grade: F He could have reduced prices by creating more domestic supply. Drill here. (short term solution) He could have created a massive infrastructural change to move to DOMESTIC natural gas. Creating jobs and reducing foreign petrol demand. Natural gas goes for $2/gal in this co and $16 in Europe. We have over 200 years of KNOWN supply in this country right now. We are exporting Nat Gas. He could have forced thru the pipe line deal from the north but canned it. He could have changed some of the methods speculators determine the price of fuel in this country. (wall street reg) (reduced meaningless volatility) He should have created long term programs that create a technology PUSH and consumer demand PULL A) Incentives to colleges and univ to develop innovative energy technologies (you have to start here) B) Create incentives for more kids to study science and engineering instead of investment banking C) Expand new electric technologies research op's, battery research, smart grids, fuel cell tech, ect... (long term solutions) D) He could create all kinds of incentives for consumers and business to move in the right direction He could have done SOMETHING...ANYTHING but has done NOTHING. Stop covering for him that he inherited all these problems and we are in great shape...every president has these inherited problems. When the republicans said this in the past the dems argue that Well..it doesn't matter he was president at the time". What did he do except put us under a mountain of debt that we will never get out of and bail out fat cat bankers? |
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There is no short-term solution. Hell, currently, there's no long-term solution because no politicians (executive or legislative) want to take the major steps towards developing energy independence due to a lack of wide-spread political support. I'm not defending Obama on his record with regards to energy prices. Like I said before, while he has had little influence on the short-term prices, he's not done much to help us over the longer-term either. Today's energy problems are an effect of yesterday's policy. Obama *will* be on the hook for our energy prices during his next term because he did not take steps in the past 3.5 years to hold prices down. However, looking at the change in prices during the first 26 months in office (like your drive-by post here and in the boating section, which I can't see how a political post like that still exists in there) as a metric for a President's energy policy is not only insignificant but also demonstrates ignorance to how complex the energy situation is. |
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hey Zim...worth a read "But the economic news has not been all that striking. We had a quarter in which economic growth reached 2.8 percent. We’ve had two months with job growth of better than 200,000. Peachy. But in 1983, the year before Ronald Reagan’s reelection, the gross domestic product rose 8.9 percent not just for one quarter but over the whole year. There were two months when job growth was 729,000 and 660,000. But some fundamentals are unlikely to change. Voters’ focus is on economic issues and on these most oppose the president’s policies. His media cheerleaders who thought his February numbers meant the election was over were fooling themselves." http://www.nationalreview.com/articl...michael-barone |
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We're approaching a tipping point. Not sure if you've seen my post in one of the other threads where I talked about the price per barrel of oil that is a limiting factor for some alternative energies. Things like bio fuels, solar panel and geothermal heat sources aren't the cheapest option until oil hits $130-140/barrel. We're getting there and once we do, there will be a push for more buses running on LPG, government vehicles running on bio fuels and more consumers will buy hybrids. Alternative energy sources were talked about the last time oil got high, and it's going to happen again. |
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Your assertion is so disingenuous I'd have to say you're guilty of outright deception...in other words a liar. -spence |
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That $4.28 record under Bush doesn't count? Not that it was his fault, anymore than this is Obama's fault. But, you can't fix stupid. |
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the nastiness is spreading...."pent up anger"? Financial Times...pretty funny "In exchange for 48 hours of priceless photo opportunities, Mr Cameron offered to support the US if it released oil reserves to lower fuel prices, even if Britain thinks the move would be a largely futile short-term gesture." |
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Plus ca change, plus c'est la meme chose. -spence |
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Kraut(not unbiased) nails it as usual....wanna talk about the President's dishonesty Spence? ....remembered the quotes just for you:)
""""""Yes, of course, presidents have no direct control over gas prices. But the American people know something about this president and his disdain for oil. The “fuel of the past,” he contemptuously calls it. To the American worker who doesn’t commute by government motorcade and is getting fleeced every week at the pump, oil seems very much a fuel of the present — and of the foreseeable future. But the event that drove home the extent of Obama’s antipathy to nearby, abundant, available oil was his veto of the Keystone pipeline. It gave the game away, because the case for Keystone is so obvious and overwhelming. Vetoing it gratuitously prolongs our dependence on outside powers, kills thousands of shovel-ready jobs, forfeits a major strategic resource to China, damages relations with our closest ally, and sends billions of oil dollars to Hugo Chávez, Vladimir Putin, and already obscenely wealthy sheiks. Obama boasts that on his watch, production is up and imports down. True, but truly deceptive. These increases have occurred in spite of his restrictive policies. They are the result of Clinton- and Bush-era permitting. This has been accompanied by a gold rush of natural-gas production resulting from new fracking technology that has nothing at all to do with Obama.""""""""" Seaweed in Your Gas Tank - Charles Krauthammer - National Review Online |
No quotes here (except for one paraphrase) my take only...
1. Where was most Keystone XL pumped oil going to end up? Refineries in the gulf, and then onto the world market (likely Asia). The shovel ready jobs would have been around for a bit, then gone again. This would not have dropped our price at the pump. 2. Obama should say Oil is the fuel of the past and present. I agree it is still a huge part of the present and near future. but if we continue to think of it as the fuel of the future, we will continually face these challenges. As has been said, we need more Natural Gas. Fracking is controversial, but not as bad as people thing, and environmentally, as a whole, a lot better than oil sands like Athabasca. In the next decades, we need to be transitioning to gas and beyond. I heard a good quote this morning, to paraphrase, 'oil is a 40 year problem, not a 3 year problem' fossil fuels reamin a part of the solution in coming decades or more, but we need to keep looking forward. part of that is increased fuel efficency for sure, in cars, heating, power etc... all of which save most people money, and cut down on our usage and reliance on foriegn imports from geopolitically unfavorable regions A lot has been made re: algae. newt got a good laugh out of it (so, fine Newt, no Biofueled rockets to the moon) BUT... if free market is always the answer, and buisness knows what is best, why is Exxon spending 600+ Million on R&D with biofuels?!?! (Chevron and others spend big bucks too...) because we need to start moving forward! |
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By the way... keystone, like Bryan said, would do nothing for gas prices. More scamming by the leaders on the right to sway the minions. |
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multivariate is one word.....:) |
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It CAN be one word, but it is standard practice and completely acceptable to hyphenate it. for example: Scalable Multi-variate Analytics of Seismic and Satellite-based ...vis.pku.edu.cn/research/publication/Vis10_earth-small.pdfYou +1'd this publicly. or MATLAB By Examples: Multi-variate Model Fitting using Taylor Series Method :love: |
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Obama went on to say... Quote:
Regarding the Keyston XL pipeline, it's far from a no-brainer. Yes, it will create "shovel ready" jobs...but only for 6-12 months. Most of the steel for the project has already been manufactured...in India. Transcanada's own research for the US Government indicated the pipeline would actually INCREASE gas prices in the mid-west US and not have any real impact on domestic energy security. http://www.keystonepipeline-xl.state...pt.pdf#page=99 And perhaps worse, the company has already been bullying landowners to sign easements or be sued to have their land taken under eminent domain. All the Administration asked was for a new route that wouldn't threaten an environmentally sensitive area. Initially they said it would be impossible...then they agreed to do it. If anything, Obama isn't playing politics and is evaluating the cost/benefit tradeoff for the Americans involved. You know where that oil will be going? To refineries in the Gulf Cost where it will be EXPORTED. -spence |
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Word not found in the Dictionary and Encyclopedia. Did you mean: multivariate ? and WIKIPEDIA "Multi-variate" does not exist" I didn't check the Urban Dictinary:)...check that...I did just for kicks..."multi-variate isn't defined yet" .were you really talking about "Analytics of Seismic and Satellite-based stuff"? I noticed it's the first thing you could locate on Google ..... |
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any time that O starts a sentence with "here is the truth"...you know it's going to be a Whopper:uhuh: you guys should really be much, much happier and confident:) |
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