in my case, i'm looking at buying another Jeep (either CJ or Wrangler). if i keep it pretty mild, it'll get in the high-teens...if I go with a chevy V8 swap, big tires, etc, prob closer to 12 or so.however, I'm gonna get another motorcycle, too, which will get 35 (MAYBE 40) mpg, and try to drive it a lot of times.
5/21/2007 1:28:52 PM
5/21/2007 1:38:12 PM
$10i wouldn't change my car for a hybrid.... $5-7 (premium) I would definitely consider biking.... that and I need a new bike anyways...
5/21/2007 1:52:29 PM
5/21/2007 3:06:15 PM
^ I would add this:
5/21/2007 6:25:22 PM
5/21/2007 7:35:05 PM
5/21/2007 9:27:19 PM
Easy. Human hands never had to touch the beef; a mechanized dis-assembly plant did that. However, the tomato had to be picked, washed, inspected by human hands and then carefully transported to prevent contamination since it was destined to be eaten uncooked. And what for all those tomatoes that did not pass inspection? Since customers refuse to purchase blemished produce, even if it is perfectly healthy and tasty, distributors are forced to dispose of tons. And where do you think that rejected produce ends up? That's right, Wendy's! The food at Wendy's is recycled produce that would have otherwise been thrown away by Food Lion. Since you do not see it until it is safely sliced up and shoved in a bun you don't have the chance to notice the blemishes. [Edited on May 21, 2007 at 9:58 PM. Reason : .,.]
5/21/2007 9:57:12 PM
Do some research before you respond again in this thread. Please.
5/21/2007 10:08:08 PM
5/21/2007 10:32:54 PM
5/21/2007 10:46:38 PM
Shell considers halting U.S. refinery plansSAN FRANCISCO: Royal Dutch Shell, the biggest European oil company, may shelve a joint venture plan to create the largest U.S. refinery because of President George W. Bush's efforts to reduce gasoline use, a Shell executive said Monday."If you're an investor getting ready to put several billion dollars into expanded capacity, would you do that when the president himself says we want less gasoline?" John Hofmeister, Shell's top U.S. executive, said at a conference in Santa Clara, California.At stake is a $3 billion plan by Shell and Saudi Arabia's state oil company, partners in the Motiva Enterprises venture, to more than double the processing capacity of a refinery in Port Arthur, Texas, to 600,000 barrels of crude a day. Bush called in January for the country to increase use of renewable and alternative fuels to curb reliance on imported oil, seeking a 20 percent reduction in gasoline use by 2017.Motiva in April 2006 said it planned to begin the expansion in 2007 and complete it in 2010. The expansion would vault the Port Arthur refinery past Exxon Mobil's plant in Baytown, Texas, currently the largest in the United States.http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/05/21/business/shell.php
5/22/2007 8:40:17 AM
5/22/2007 9:08:33 AM
^ You have yet to post any comments in disagreement with the arguments presented. Does that mean you found nothing disagreable, just wanted to know who it was that convinced you?
5/22/2007 10:38:23 AM
5/22/2007 10:38:41 AM
I still don't know if I would want the government involved in that situation. Did the ship owner get a bad deal? How much is his boat worth to him? Clearly he was willing to risk that 10 million when he went out to sea. He gambled and lost, but here comes a tug boat to rescue him, something which he could not have counted on being there. So now he has a chance to get out of his 10 million + error for 9 million. If that's worth it to him then what's the problem? The fact that afterwards he doesn't feel 9 million was worth it is his own fault.
5/22/2007 12:07:58 PM
^ because that is highly inefficient.
5/22/2007 12:11:41 PM
But this scenario is quite different from what we call gauging laws. If you fail to procure gasoline you do not lose ownership of your car, just as you do not lose your house if you fail to acquire a motel room. I am willing to concede that governmental involvement in situations of duress are valid if you are willing to concede that the threat of discomfort does not constitute duress.
5/22/2007 1:17:41 PM
^ absolutely I agree with that.Price gouging laws are efficient for situations of "duress". The problem is politicians are unable to correctly interpret what "duress" implies.The fact that a tornado is coming and people want to buy generators at Home Depot does not mean its a situation of duress.Its bullshit when artificial shortages are created because people are too scared to raise rates in times of high demand.
5/22/2007 2:39:32 PM
^X7 You're so full of shit. I POSTED the link, but you have yet to offer whether you "approve" of the source and you aren't addressing the argument I posited.So. . .what are you doing? Oh, that's right. . .you're continuing your obsession with me as some sort of conservative bogeyman--when nothing could be further from the truth. That creative writing concentration of yours really helps with the fiction, doesn't it? Try to focus, k? PS: And I'll not have you maligning fiber and relaxation here--you obviously could use a little of both.
5/23/2007 2:34:09 AM
5/29/2007 11:12:01 AM
those numbers don't make the gouging right.we're getting raped; it's wrong. there is no excuse for it. you can justify anything with the right numbers, but all i know is that i've cancelled several events this summer simply because i can't afford the additional cost of getting there.
5/29/2007 11:31:59 AM
So where exactly is the gouging occuring? In the refining process? An industry historically marked by extreme competition and low-to-negative margins? I just want to make sure I understand the argument. Because the oil industry is one of the most scrutinized industries in business, and countless investigations have failed to turn up any evidence of gouging.
5/29/2007 11:38:07 AM
Well, we could outlaw the high prices; do away with the gouging. Of course, that would mean people like you that have cancelled events because of the high price would not have done so; which would mean gasoline consumption would have been higher if not for the prices. Where do you suspect the extra gasoline would come from? No where, is where. As people attempted to consume more gasoline than exists, shortages would develop, stations would run out, hoarding would kick in, and gas lines would return. Instead of opting to cancel events, you would go anyway; only to find no gas in the pump when you ran out, stranding yourself in the middle of nowhere until the next gas truck came along. Not to mention, most of our fuels are imported. As lower prices in America set in, the world price would fall, ingendering higher consumption everywhere: China, India, Europe, etc; all of which would be canibalized from America (if American's are only legally allowed to pay $2.50 a gallon, then other countries can have all our fuel for $2.51 a gallon). To sum up, the gouging is not only justified, it is necessary. It would be immoral to do otherwise. Americans need fuel; if we were not made to pay for it then we would not have enough, and some of us would be made to go without, perhaps to our deaths.
5/29/2007 11:47:44 AM
gasoline is cheap
5/29/2007 3:54:27 PM
^^
5/29/2007 4:09:41 PM
we should all buy electric cars. Check out the tesla:http://www.teslamotors.com/index.phpUnder 100k and accelerates faster than a stock ferrari or lambo all in a 70 pound electric engine.
5/29/2007 4:17:28 PM
100k dollars?
5/29/2007 4:24:07 PM
who else besides me gets company gas cards aka never has to buy gas out of their own pockets?
5/29/2007 4:30:50 PM
your penis must be huge
5/29/2007 4:34:11 PM
If my work had good showering facilities and I had a safe and enjoyable way to get to work, I would bike. In fact I'm going back to grad school and will be biking to campus.
5/29/2007 4:35:19 PM
^^yes it is...but more relevant to the topic at hand, i dont get as bent out of shape at higher gas prices because they dont affect my wallet directly as much as most other people
5/29/2007 4:39:20 PM
the electric car will never be a good idea until the power grid is completely nuclear
5/29/2007 5:39:54 PM
[Edited on May 31, 2007 at 7:38 PM. Reason : mpg]
5/31/2007 7:36:45 PM
^ And have you seen this:Edwards Wants Probe Of High Gas PricesEdwards Calls For Investigation Of Oil Company Mergers, High Gas Priceshttp://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/05/31/ap/politics/main2868969.shtmlDamn panderer.
5/31/2007 11:32:43 PM
When it starts costing me $75 to fill my tank up, you better believe I'll never be leaving the house except for work and school.
6/1/2007 12:07:48 AM
cheap gas
7/19/2007 4:40:41 PM
$6 would be too high, and will happen by 2009.that said, we'll see lower prices the rest of this year (as low as $2.50) before we restart the hike towards $6.
7/19/2007 6:43:57 PM
Odd, gasoline futures for that year are not that high, so what makes you think gasoline will be selling for that much by that time? That said, I couldn't find actual prices, but I suspect futures contracts for then (just two years hence) are going for less than $2 a gallon. If you are sure the price will be $6, then I guess you have already purchased all the futures you can? I ask because, seriously, who doesn't want to get a 300% return over two years. You should take out a second mortgage on your house, borrow every penny you can get ahold of, and buy gasoline futures, you'll earn every cent invested back and then three more with it!
7/19/2007 7:48:52 PM
^^where'd you hear that? And nobody can predict that.
7/19/2007 11:08:35 PM
^ Well, probably no one can predict that. If they could then, as I explained, they would be fabulously wealthy.
7/19/2007 11:19:43 PM
too high for gas is about 15 a galloni think at that point it would actually cause people to buy better fuel efficient cars and change their driving habits
7/20/2007 8:54:33 PM
it would have to get pretty high for me to get a hybrid.i already use public transportation when i can. no real effect from gas price.
7/20/2007 9:09:21 PM
^ $15 a gallon? At that price a plug-in hybrid would pay for itself in a matter of weeks.
7/20/2007 9:38:12 PM
maybe if i used more gasas is, even at $15/gallon it would still be more expensive for me to make a car payment than buy gas for the one i already have
7/20/2007 10:28:24 PM
$15/gal would make the world economy implode
7/20/2007 10:50:12 PM
$15 a gallon would require an assertive and continuing effort from God.
7/21/2007 9:22:50 AM