2/1/2006 11:19:48 AM
the 3 cents a gallon tax isnt why anyone is complaining about gas prices
2/1/2006 11:38:19 AM
^The 3 cent/gal increase is adding to an already high gas-tax. We have the highest in our region....North Carolina: 29 cents per gallonTennessee: 20 centsAlabama: 18 centsVirginia: 17.5 centsGeorgia: 7.5 centsFlorida: 14.3 centsSouth Carolina: 16 centsThose are just the state taxes. The feds add on another 18.4 cents in every state. In North Carolina, we pay 45 cents in taxes for every gallon of gas we buy. South Carolina, drivers pay 10.6 cents per gallon less.[Edited on February 1, 2006 at 11:50 AM. Reason : .]
2/1/2006 11:46:40 AM
grapehead: easley should put his money where his mouth is and cut our fucking gas taxes.
2/1/2006 11:50:18 AM
he flat out wouldn't do that when gas was $3.50 a gallon. "it would hurt the state too much"i'm sure he'll do it now when it's $2.27
2/1/2006 11:52:39 AM
if there's any tax in the world I'm 100% behind, it's gas tax and taxes on other environmentally dangerous businessesI'm not 100% behind any tax, but if I was, that would be it
2/1/2006 11:59:07 AM
'course, I'd much rather see the corporations taxed (and not given free handouts) than the citizens taxed[Edited on February 1, 2006 at 12:00 PM. Reason : .]
2/1/2006 11:59:42 AM
more like "STOP BUILDING/MAINTAINING/IMPROVING ROADS"right?
2/1/2006 11:59:46 AM
virginia has roads that are about a million percent better maintained and they pay 11 cents a gallon less than usthat's made up elsewhere i know[Edited on February 1, 2006 at 12:02 PM. Reason : *]
2/1/2006 12:02:00 PM
my point was that this is an obvious ploy from easley to place the blame on exxon and the "evil corporations" before an investigative reporter or whistleblower can make public all the waste and mismanagement by the DOT that contributes to our higher than average gas tax.
2/1/2006 12:11:01 PM
^That's about right.When I first heard this news I was floored that Gov. Easley was actually going to do something that might help the citizens of N.C. He has been king of State first citizens second here lately.Then I rememberd that all the government is going to do has already been done several months ago. Bring the oil tycoons in to have a chat, don't swear them in, ruffle a few feathers in front of them so they have some soundbites for the next election. I guess this is Easley's soundbite. The latest do nothing about it round of hot air to avoid taking the fall for their party come next election.I wonder how many millions in profit the state made if you consider the taxes they collected for roads via the gas tax minus the amount of money actually spent on roads.
2/1/2006 12:28:09 PM
I'm sure the gigantic hike in gas prices and the fact that the gas company just made more money than any american company ever has are totally just coincidences.
2/1/2006 12:46:40 PM
2/1/2006 1:33:44 PM
Who said they were? From an economics standpoint, if Easley reduced gas taxes in North Carolina, then carolina citizens would pay less for gasoline and the rest of the country would pay slightly more.
2/1/2006 1:56:00 PM
^Not sure how carolina citizens paying less for gas because of a reduced gas tax would change the price of gas for the rest of the country one way or the other.
2/1/2006 2:23:12 PM
Sounds like Easly should be the last person to call out Exxon on gas prices.However, I do think these massive profits need to be investigated. If I had to pay extra on gas, I'd have that extra go towards NC schools rather than oil exec pockets.
2/1/2006 2:35:47 PM
^^ that's why you should leave and go take econ101
2/1/2006 3:44:21 PM
But the important thing is what margin of profit do the oil companies make.I believe I remember hearing ~10%.Oil is a extremely large industry. 10 billion for a company that operates in the trillions is not "strange"MSN says 10.7% margin. http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/Investing/CNBC/Dispatch/060128markets.aspxEasley is an idiot[Edited on February 1, 2006 at 7:43 PM. Reason : -]
2/1/2006 7:42:11 PM
NO WAITWHAT THE FUCK DOES THE NORTH CAROLINA TAX RATE HAVE TO DO WITH THE COST OF GAS IN OTHER STATESI FEEL LIKE I'M TAKING CRAZY PILLS
2/1/2006 7:45:55 PM
If the problem is an increased demand driving up the cost of crude, why don't the profits reflect this? The profit margin would be the same, the revenue would just be higher.IOW...
2/1/2006 7:46:25 PM
do you know what a profit margin is, gamecat?
2/1/2006 8:26:21 PM
^^ If I sell 1 million gallons at $2 a gallon, I earn $2 million, take 10% as my margin and take home $200k. Now, gas goes to $4 a gallon, I earn $4 million, take 10% as my margin and take home 400k. Profits have doubled, but my margin has not changed. Secondly, The United States is the worlds third largest producer of crude oil and a lot of those oil wells are owned by you know who (Exxon, Mobil, BP, etc). So, when the price of crude oil goes up the extraction division of these companies become rediculously profitable. A welcome change because this part of the oil industry operated at a loss for most of the 90s.
2/1/2006 10:02:57 PM
I actually like Easley's letternot because I agree with itbut because I work in energy management now and it helps with the "ya never know what ourstupid ass govt is gonna do" pitch to companies. [Edited on February 1, 2006 at 11:53 PM. Reason : ]
2/1/2006 11:44:17 PM
I love the idea of reducing gas prices.I think gas prices should be like $1 a gallon.I mean sure waiting in line for 17 hours to get gas would be inconvenient, but so what...Think about it $1 A GALLON!!!!!!!!!!People who complain about prices are fucking gay. No one is forcing you to buy gas.[Edited on February 1, 2006 at 11:49 PM. Reason : a]
2/1/2006 11:48:46 PM
aha jbtilley strikes again!My favorite jbtilley quote:
2/2/2006 12:44:03 AM
2/2/2006 12:56:02 AM
^^Yeah, I pretty much still stand by that. I guess you think that prices are at record levels because of "the situation" with Iran, Sharon's stroke, butterflies dissapearing in the Amazon, record cold weather for this time of year, record warm weather this time of year, etc., etc.I still have yet to hear from anyone that has taken econ101. How does lowering the gas tax in NC by $0.03/g raise the price of gas for the rest of the nation? Does it have something to do with the huge spike in demand on gas in NC lowering the supply for the rest of the nation? I haven't taken econ101, so enlighten me.
2/2/2006 7:47:24 AM
hmmm...Easley in '08, this is only the begining[Edited on February 2, 2006 at 8:44 AM. Reason : /]
2/2/2006 8:43:53 AM
2/2/2006 10:10:16 AM
Great stuff from Ben Stein....
2/2/2006 10:21:15 AM
^^I thought people were talking about repealing the $0.03/g tax increase, not reducing it to equal that of other states. If it wouldn't be a huge spike or even noticeable then how would it affect national supply?[Edited on February 2, 2006 at 10:23 AM. Reason : -]
2/2/2006 10:22:06 AM
2/2/2006 10:33:14 AM
2/2/2006 10:35:32 AM
2/2/2006 10:44:15 AM
^ well that is not actually true. those profits go to a lot of rather useful areas. they don't just sit in the bank. for example: 1. making up for years where we lost money 2. looking for more oil (those little platforms cost 100's of millions to build and 100's of millions more to operate 3. returns to investors 4. improving and replacing 100 year old equipment (i.e. at refineries) so that they will continue to be useful 5. building units that produce lower emissions fuels (that cost us 100's of millions to build and give negative roi) 6. research into alternative energy sources 7. all the $ we give to charities (of course that is pr and we get a tax break but still... lots of charities would not exist if not for exxon, shell, bp, etc) 8. money to employees (not just your execs... all the little people get some of that too so it goes right back into the economy really)
2/2/2006 11:34:44 AM
2/2/2006 11:39:36 AM
corporations are taxed more here than even in all those wonderful environment loving welfare states
2/2/2006 11:44:46 AM
but they're also given tons of handouts, and even if that's true, I bet that if you subtracted the handouts and 'assistance,' and the laws that let them scoot around tax laws, they pay way less in taxes than those countriesalso, i'm not all about welfare states
2/2/2006 11:46:45 AM
Queti: I thought that the claimed 6-8 cents per gallon profit was what they were left with after considering all the expenses you mentioned.
2/2/2006 11:49:35 AM
2/2/2006 11:52:10 AM
^^no, the things she mentioned are what profits are invested in when a corporation makes profit it can only do two things1. pay out dividends to shareholders2. retain the earnings to invest the company's growth - which is what all that stuff falls under[Edited on February 2, 2006 at 11:53 AM. Reason : ]
2/2/2006 11:53:06 AM
I don't know if you guys know thisbut the other day Americans became addicted to oil.
2/2/2006 11:55:40 AM
well, proto my boy, if you'd read my whole initial statement, you'd see that I said
2/2/2006 12:02:47 PM
Easley is trying to get his name out there on a National level.... basically testing the waters for the slim chance of a possible '08 presidential run. Not that I agree with most of his politics, but he is a popular GOVERNOR from a SOUTHERN state and I would think he has as good a shot as any other. (I may be wrong, but I think this is the 2nd time in as many months he's called Bush out on something like this. ---- and not to say he isn't legit in his concern either.)What do ya think?[Edited on February 2, 2006 at 12:24 PM. Reason : .]
2/2/2006 12:23:12 PM
2/2/2006 12:28:09 PM
2/2/2006 5:07:13 PM