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Ponce
5th March 2011, 09:12 AM
Who's To Blame For $4.00 A Gallon
Gas? How About $10.00?.

By Frosty Wooldridge
3-4-11


"At this point, it's almost certainly too late to manage a transition to sustainability on a global or national scale, even if the political will to attempt it existed, which it clearly does not. Our civilization is in the early stages of the same curve of decline and fall as so many others have followed before it. What likely lies in wait for us is a long, uneven decline into a new Dark Age from which, centuries from now, the civilizations of the future will gradually emerge."

Who can we blame for $4.00 a gallon? Answer: every last one of us cotton pickin' American gas guzzling 8-cylinder SUV drivers, trucks, trains, boats and planes! We burn 20 million barrels a day in the United States. The world's humans burn 84 million barrels daily. That's 29.9 billion barrels of oil annually worldwide! Whopping carbon footprint! Hey! Did you think a finite resource like 'endless oil' could go on forever? That's like sucking on an 'endless milkshake' straw at the local diner! It eventually runs dry and you suck on air.

Are you upset? You gotta' be kiddin' me! The "Hubbert Curve" told us that "Peak Oil" would hit the United States in 1970 when geologist M.King Hubbert predicted a drop from nine million barrels to three million barrels daily. It came to pass!

Peak Everything: Facing a Century of Declines by Richard Heinberg tells us we face rapidly declining supplies of metals, water, oil, coal, minerals and most other resources we rape the Earth to acquire for our rapacious human activities. Are we preparing with such simple plans like 10 cent deposit/return laws on all metals, plastics and glass. Not a chance!

If you think $4.00 a gallon today hits your wallet, think again. Chris Steiner wrote $20 Per Gallon, which predicts with deadly accuracy a steady rise of prices from $5.00 to $10.00 to ultimately $20.00 per gallon before mid-century. Why? Answer: we may have only burned 50 percent of the Earth's oil supplies, but it's father down, harder to get at and more expensive to extract. Thus, costs rise!

Experts knew it would happen, but since 1970, we just kept burning oil like there was no tomorrow. Tomorrow happens to be today! How's that big Ram truck with eight powerful cylinders doing for you at $4.00 a gallon. Peak Oil will prove a game-changer!

We failed to incorporate conservation in any form. We failed to plan. We failed ourselves and future generations.

"As we go from this happy hydrocarbon bubble we have reached now to a renewable energy resource economy, which we do this century, will the "civil" part of civilization survive? As we both know there is no way that alternative energy sources can supply the amount of per capita energy we enjoy now, much less for the 9 billion expected by 2050. And energy is what keeps this game going. We are involved in a Faustian bargain-selling our economic souls for the luxurious life of the moment, but sooner or later the price has to be paid." Walter Youngquist, energy

"An immutable fact of expensive gasoline: Americans will find someone to blame," said Kimberly Strassel of the Wall Street Journal. "We can expect in the coming months to hear many sober analysts attempt to explain the complex reasons for rising oil prices: inflation, Middle East tremors, growing demand. Expect, too, for all those reasons to vanish behind what most Americans will see as the far more obvious cause: President Obama's regulatory assault on domestic oil and gas production."

Obama, Congress and the American people dance around the fact that we failed to plan. We face an unsustainable "Peak Oil" consumption conundrum. We created a "Faustian Bargain" with the inevitable "Hobson's Choice" for the final answer. That 'answer' forces us to take only two choices left to us: pick door number 1 and you get to walk over a cliff with no parachute; pick door number 2 and you fall into quicksand with no lifeguard.

In January 2008, candidate Obama told the San Francisco Chronicle that under his cap-and-trade plan, "electricity rates would necessarily skyrocket." Steven Chu, now Secretary of Energy, told this newspaper in the same year: "Somehow, we have to figure out how to boost the price of gasoline to the levels in Europe." Currently, $8.00 a gallon in UK!

In his book The Long Emergency by James Howard Kunstler, he predicted that China would burn 98 million barrels of oil daily by 2030. They stick six million new cars on their highways every year-so they will reach that burn rate in 19 years.

However, the planet will be coughing up only empty 'stuff' like you do at the end of your 'endless milkshake' when you suck on 'nothing left'.

What can we do?

· Massive change-over to two and four cylinder cars
· Massive push for electric and solar cars
· Massive push for wind and solar energy
· Massive push conservation on all fronts
· Massive push for walking centric cities
· Massive push for mass transit
· Massive push to ride bicycles!


As the USA adds 3.1 million people annually, net gain, to rise from 312 million to 400 million by 2035-more demand, less oil-higher prices and lucky to have any oil at all! Finally, we need a massive push for population stability by the United States to lead the rest of the countries of the world.

We cannot keep adding human numbers if we expect to survive the 21st century.

http://www.rense.com/general93/blame.htm

mick silver
5th March 2011, 09:22 AM
i just dont like this part . just more control of people ............................. we need a massive push for population stability by the United States to lead the rest of the countries of the world.

We cannot keep adding human numbers if we expect to survive the 21st century.

dys
5th March 2011, 09:29 AM
Funny how sustainability always translates into the people (NOT the rich people) being forced to to accept a shrinking piece of the pie, and not the mega corporations and elitists. Even funnier is that it's the mega corporations and the elitists that use the vast majority of the resources.

dys

Cobalt
5th March 2011, 09:40 AM
The speculators are responsible for the rising price

We have lots of gas and oil sitting in tanks with no place to sell it because the economy is down but the price continues goes up.

The cost to the consumer has absolutely nothing to do with supply and demand and hasn't for quite some time.

dys
5th March 2011, 09:46 AM
The speculators are responsible for the rising price

We have lots of gas and oil sitting in tanks with no place to sell it because the economy is down but the price continues goes up.

The cost to the consumer has absolutely nothing to do with supply and demand and hasn't for quite some time.


You don't think the speculation might have something to do with QE1 and QE2? Dollars in the wrong hands searching for yield+real estate collapse= commodities price explosion.

dys

gunDriller
5th March 2011, 03:17 PM
last weekend's Financial Sense had one hour about oil. very scary when you listen to it. inspired me to build up my gasoline stash, bought some more 5 gallon cans.

http://www.netcastdaily.com/broadcast/fsn2011-0226-3.mp3

as far as who's to blame - the people who killed Rudolf Diesel and pushed automotive technology towards reliance on fossil fuels - knowing about the humongous fortunes to be made by dominating the Middle East and extracting those mineral resources.

for example, Iraq has 110 billion barrels of light sweet crude. at today's prices - $11 Trillion worth. kind of explains the drive to station US troops in Iraq and to kill all the locals.

Neuro
6th March 2011, 03:05 AM
Gas price is down a silver quarter will get you 1.5 gallons of gas...

hoarder
6th March 2011, 07:15 AM
Isn't Frosty Woldridge Sorcha Faal's compadre? I've learned not to trust his articles.

He wrote several articles about immigration which I liked at first, but realized later that they were simply rants lacking substance.

Cobalt
6th March 2011, 07:58 AM
last weekend's Financial Sense had one hour about oil. very scary when you listen to it. inspired me to build up my gasoline stash, bought some more 5 gallon cans.

http://www.netcastdaily.com/broadcast/fsn2011-0226-3.mp3

as far as who's to blame - the people who killed Rudolf Diesel and pushed automotive technology towards reliance on fossil fuels - knowing about the humongous fortunes to be made by dominating the Middle East and extracting those mineral resources.

for example, Iraq has 110 billion barrels of light sweet crude. at today's prices - $11 Trillion worth. kind of explains the drive to station US troops in Iraq and to kill all the locals.


Diesel was way ahead of his time along with Henry Ford and his vision of farmers growing crops for alchol
Henry Ford originally intended for his cars to run on alcohol because he knew the farmers could produce a cheap reliable fuel but Standard Oil owned by Rockefeller needed a market for the byproduct called gasoline, Standard Oil persuaded politicians to raise a tax on alcohol which made gasoline a cheaper fuel

Hillbilly
6th March 2011, 08:04 AM
Yep those first Ford's were ran on Hemp gas and the body panels were built from a "Fiberglass" Hemp resin. There are some pics on the web of it. But Rocky made him a deal he could not refuse and he dropped it.






last weekend's Financial Sense had one hour about oil. very scary when you listen to it. inspired me to build up my gasoline stash, bought some more 5 gallon cans.

http://www.netcastdaily.com/broadcast/fsn2011-0226-3.mp3

as far as who's to blame - the people who killed Rudolf Diesel and pushed automotive technology towards reliance on fossil fuels - knowing about the humongous fortunes to be made by dominating the Middle East and extracting those mineral resources.

for example, Iraq has 110 billion barrels of light sweet crude. at today's prices - $11 Trillion worth. kind of explains the drive to station US troops in Iraq and to kill all the locals.


Diesel was way ahead of his time along with Henry Ford and his vision of farmers growing crops for alchol
Henry Ford originally intended for his cars to run on alcohol because he knew the farmers could produce a cheap reliable fuel but Standard Oil owned by Rockefeller needed a market for the byproduct called gasoline, Standard Oil persuaded politicians to raise a tax on alcohol which made gasoline a cheaper fuel

Ponce
6th March 2011, 08:41 AM
Gas is now at $3.89 in my Micky Mouse of a one mule town......I haven't check it out yet but I believe that IT IS the higest in the nation...............it has gone up a dime at a time week after week.

gunDriller
6th March 2011, 02:29 PM
Gas is now at $3.89 in my Micky Mouse of a one mule town......I haven't check it out yet but I believe that IT IS the higest in the nation...............it has gone up a dime at a time week after week.


just talked to a friend in San Diego - it's over $4 a gallon down there.

California has more taxes on gas. Something I noticed doing the drive to 101 South through Crescent City. BANG as soon as you cross the border, it seems like it's 50 cents a gallon more.

PatColo
6th March 2011, 02:52 PM
$5.00 Gallon Gas Comes to Los Angeles ($4.999)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4A4f5k9adcc


Uploaded by george4title on Mar 6, 2011

Los Angeles Ca
A West Covina Mobile Gas Station is charging $4.99 9/10 for premium gasoline. Not quite $5.00 but almost. It's amazing how fast prices for gasoline have gone up in Southern California. Inflation? Oil speculation? Middle east tensions? Who really know... only thing I know for sure is that the common commuter will be paying the price.


Unleaded, weekly chart, continuous contract:

solid
6th March 2011, 03:36 PM
Gas is now at $3.89 in my Micky Mouse of a one mule town......I haven't check it out yet but I believe that IT IS the higest in the nation...............it has gone up a dime at a time week after week.


just talked to a friend in San Diego - it's over $4 a gallon down there.

California has more taxes on gas. Something I noticed doing the drive to 101 South through Crescent City. BANG as soon as you cross the border, it seems like it's 50 cents a gallon more.


It was $3.89 at a shell station in San Francisco, a couple of hours ago.

PatColo
7th March 2011, 02:15 PM
:D