Comments on: Stein: Stop Whining And Blaming Oil Cos.
Worried About Gas Prices? Ben Stein Says Don’t Look To Government Or OPEC To Help
- rudy654
But the mid east has the cheapest gas prices in th world. they are gouging the rest of us. It is time we started matching their prices with our goods, then when they raise the price of oil we raise our prices. A bushel of grain for $137, just like a barrel of oil and so forth. When they start getting hungry they will come around and reason with us. - Reply to this comment
- nonayaBiness
This could be dangerous for you. There are a lot of nut cases out there who would run you off thre road and even shoot you for just being in "their way". You need to be cautious about what you do when driving. Americans have a tendency to suffer from severe cases of road rage. - Reply to this comment
- Spoken like a true politician. He is rich so he doesn''t care what gas costs the American working family.We need to cut off foreign aid, start selling our products to the arabs for the same price they are charging fo gas. Why should they have gas for 12 cents a gallon while we pay $4 a gallon. End the illegal war in Iraq and bring our troops home. Our govt needs to address our own problems and stop worrying about the rest of the world. It is time we stopped trying to be the world police. Other countries hat us because we try to push our way of thinking on them. Let them choose how they want to live.
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- I actually agree with a representative of the corporate media. We are the ones who bought into the unsustainable lifestyle of SUVs and suburbs and shopping malls.
We, the consumer have the ability to bring the big corporations and their selected government official to their knees. Start conserving, organize boycotts and if the government doesn''t start regulating them we start doing general strikes. Until the government starts working for us again. - Reply to this comment
That would mean today that at least $50 to $60 or more of today''s $115 a barrel price is due to pure hedge fund and financial institution speculation. However, given the unchanged equilibrium in global oil supply and demand over recent months amid the explosive rise in oil futures prices traded on Nymex and ICE exchanges in New York and London, it is more likely that as much as 60% of the oil price today is pure speculation. No one knows officially except the tiny handful of energy trading banks in New York and London, and they certainly aren''t talking.
By purchasing large numbers of futures contracts, and thereby pushing up futures prices to even higher levels than current prices, speculators have provided a financial incentive for oil companies to buy even more oil and place it in storage. A refiner will purchase extra oil today, even if it costs $115 per barrel, if the futures price is even higher.
As a result, over the past two years crude oil inventories have been steadily growing, resulting in US crude oil inventories that are now higher than at any time in the previous eight years. The large influx of speculative investment into oil futures has led to a situation where we have both high supplies of crude oil and high crude oil prices.- Reply to this comment
- There''s more than one factor in current prices, but this is just a taste of what''s to come if we don''t get our butts into gear. That doesn''t mean drilling in ANWR, which would likely take a decade to have a negligible effect on a globalized oil market. Or resorting to expensive, carbon-intensive tar sand processing. It means conserving what we can, continuing with the expansion of existing refinery facilities, building an efficient society, and transitioning to alternative energy sources. We''re still nowhere near getting off the oil teat. American usage alone, for gasoline alone, is somewhere around 388,000,000 gallons a day. God help us if another half decade passes, the global economy heats up, and tens of millions more Chinese have bought gas guzzlers. Things will have to change, one way or another.
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- Economy 101: Drill in Anwar (an arctic wasteland that Russia dumped on us because nobody wanted it), develop the fantastic new find in North Dakota, and prices will come crashing down. It''s called supply and demand. We have enormous natural resources. The environmental arguments are getting more and more far fetched with modern technology. Stop the political agendas, stop suppressing news of new energy finds, stop distorting scientific findings and start discussing this issue rationally and allow America to solve our energy problems.
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- You have some valid viewpoints, but name calling like that won''''t do anyone much good. Believe it or not, he''''s more of a moderate; on an interview with Bill O''''Reilly a few months ago, he did put Bill in his place. (or at least came up with some *** good responses.)
Posted by hypnotoad72
Ben is a relentless huckster for the Iraq war, supports corporate interests at every opportunity, and just released an anti-evolution movie.
Moderate? No. - Reply to this comment
- In the US, stockpiles of oil climbed by almost 12 million barrels in April according to the May 7 EIA monthly report on inventory, up by nearly 33 million barrels since January. At the same time, MasterCard''''s May 7 US gasoline report showed that gas demand has fallen by 5.8%. And refiners are reducing their refining rates dramatically to adjust to the falling gasoline demand. They are now running at 85% of capacity, down from 89% a year ago, in a season when production is normally 95%. The refiners today are clearly trying to draw down gasoline inventories to bid gasoline prices up. "It''''s the economy, stupid," to paraphrase Bill Clinton''''s infamous 1992 election quip to daddy Bush. It''''s called economic recession.
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- The price of oil is up for many reasons, but big contributors are the falling dollar (oil is traded for in dollars), which is a direct result of Republican borrow and spend policies, and the war in Iraq, which has successfully kept most Iraqi crude from reaching the market, and further contributed to the national debt. The national debt is now around $11 trillion, almost double what it was at the end of the Clinton administration.
Also, too much attention is focused on the Arabs. Arabian peninsula oil accounts for less than 1/4 of our oil purchases. More than a third comes from Canada and Mexico.
"Environmentalists" are NOT why more refineries haven''t been built. The last new refinery in the US to come online was finished in 1972. Since then, only 2 refinery building permits have been applied for (1 in Texas, and 1 in California), and both permits were approved. Neither refinery was ever actually built. The oil companies have no interest at all in increasing US supply of gasoline. - Reply to this comment




