^^ Public perception.
3/7/2012 3:06:30 PM
That would imply that demand is not "almost totally inelastic" if mere public perception can throw it off, let alone prices.
3/7/2012 3:14:41 PM
Oil is inelastic because it takes ridiculous prices for demand to suffer. No matter how high prices go, people still have to go to work and products still need to be shipped. People would be revolting in the streets (more than they already are) if they raised prices too high. But if they raised them on the pretense that the government cut subsidies they could get away with it.Kind of like how the US went to war in WWII. The public absolutely did not want to be the aggressor and jump into a fight we had no part in. But fuck be damned if we let those asshole Japs attack us without retaliation.Public perception plays a huge role in political and social issues. It can shape cause and effect in the context of history.
3/7/2012 3:24:49 PM
We see today (on the very last page) that they can raise prices and claim the government's fault even when it's not the government's fault, and people seem to by-and-large buy it, so still I don't see why an actual move by the government (dropping subsidies) would be much different?[Edited on March 7, 2012 at 3:44 PM. Reason : .]
3/7/2012 3:44:13 PM
Because then people who know the president bit is bullshit get pissed and they're way smarter and more organized than dumb people.
3/7/2012 3:51:48 PM
3/7/2012 4:04:50 PM
3/7/2012 4:08:02 PM
Very good points on the last page. It's refreshing to have a TSB thread where everyone is civil.
3/7/2012 4:48:59 PM
So you admit that government is at least capable of creating positive policies and is not inherently evil? If a certain policy creates more positive outcomes than negative outcomes would you oppose it based on ideology alone? If a policy helps 70% of citizens but hurts 30% would you oppose that? 90% vs. 10%? 99% vs. 1%? Could the economy have benefited from regulations to prevent the housing bubble or subsequent financial bubble in 2008? Where exactly does the role of government end in situations where it can prevent disaster from happening? Are there any instances of government intervention with which you agree?What do you think of the auto bailout? How do you feel about the positive and negative outcomes from that piece of legislation? Do you think the country would be better off if hundreds of thousands more people had become unemployed? Is there any cost that would be low enough for you to think it was worth it or would you always oppose it based on principle?These are questions I'm left asking about the libertarian perspective. It frames the world in such a black and white way with no room for middle ground or compromise. I agree with the premise of libertarianism but it is purely theory (having never been put to the real world test) and often fails to address reality on a number of issues.
3/7/2012 5:03:25 PM
3/7/2012 8:55:26 PM
3/7/2012 9:10:30 PM
can we get a response showing how MSNBC was spinning it at that time?
3/7/2012 9:16:02 PM
^that's your job.
3/7/2012 11:02:19 PM
3/7/2012 11:22:46 PM
3/8/2012 2:05:23 AM
Lonesnark I know it's fun to talk about ideology since there's no requirement that you link what you say to the real world, but I'd still like to know how you came to the conclusions you stated on page 1 about US oil production and world prices.
3/8/2012 9:21:37 AM
3/8/2012 10:54:10 AM
3/8/2012 11:44:56 AM
3/8/2012 12:19:37 PM
no, you cant blame government agencies for anything they do.
3/8/2012 12:46:22 PM
The mortgages handled by Fanny and Freddy were, in fact, among the less toxic, and made up a minority of the total next to the private sector. They played a part, yes, but the right vastly, vastly blows their role out of proportion, for obvious reasons related to their agenda.[Edited on March 8, 2012 at 1:38 PM. Reason : .]
3/8/2012 1:37:53 PM
3/8/2012 2:03:34 PM
http://money.cnn.com/2011/04/25/news/economy/oil_drilling_gas_prices/index.htm
3/8/2012 2:09:30 PM
3/8/2012 2:27:17 PM
^^ Well then, might as well get started. The crux of the study you link is the assumption that Saudi Arabia will cut back production when confronted with increased U.S. production. This is apparently true right now, as Saudi Arabia just last month reduced exports, so the discussion kinda ends there. But, it is not obvious OPEC can maintain sufficient production given their dysfunctional economic organization far into the future. As such, increasing our supply can work to keep OPEC in the marginal producer and price setting business, rather than subjecting the world to price setting by marginal consumer, which is perhaps twice the current price for oil. Also, there is always the more optimistic possibility that perhaps we are all wrong about how much oil can really be extracted from currently unknown discoveries or new fracking techniques, perhaps enough to produce a repeat of the 1980s when Saudi Arabian officials became terrified that their attempts to maintain the price floor meant they would soon no longer be an oil exporting country, causing them to give up, open the taps, and crash the price of oil to less than $10 a barrel.
3/8/2012 7:25:46 PM
3/9/2012 9:31:26 AM
You already put it up. We can produce at least 500,000 barrels a day. And if OPEC finds itself with zero spare capacity in ten years, us producing an extra 500,000 barrels a day would return them to 500,000 barrels a day of spare capacity. The price for oil increases a lot once OPEC is completely tapped.
3/9/2012 10:03:21 AM
3/9/2012 11:26:18 AM
^idiots like this think that keeping production as-is will keep the price the same toofucking moron
3/9/2012 2:17:30 PM
Because coastal residents don't want their beaches to smell like ass like they do in the Gulf? I know this point is lost on the transplants among you, but us native (some more than others ) North Carolinians are exceptionally proud of our historic coastline and will fight to preserve and protect it.
3/9/2012 3:06:48 PM
I live in southern Califirnia, within sight of offshore drilling rigs in Santa Barbara. The beaches certainly don't smell like shit out here, despite the fact that oil has been leaking from the bottom of the ocean out here for thousands of years.
3/9/2012 3:20:31 PM
Fair enough. Perhaps those operating along Alabama and Mississippi coasts can adopt the same practices.
3/9/2012 3:24:07 PM
Not much they can do about all the putrid swampland
3/9/2012 3:43:45 PM
The coast of California typically doesn't have to deal with hurricanes.
3/9/2012 5:06:28 PM
The reason it is that way is because the currents in the Pacific flow away from the coast.
3/9/2012 5:22:29 PM
3/10/2012 3:07:47 AM
Numbers, Lonesnark, just once I'd like to see you use an actual number of some kind.
3/10/2012 12:07:15 PM
3/10/2012 12:16:42 PM
On a discussion about possible futures, how can I have numbers? I am not a time traveler. Like I said, whatever numbers I could find on the internet would be similar to the numbers you found on the internet, so I based my position on your numbers. 500,000 barrels a day is more oil. At some point in the future it may turn out that more oil is significantly better than no more oil.
3/10/2012 12:41:06 PM
3/10/2012 7:31:54 PM
http://oil-price.net/en/articles/iran-oil-strait-or-hormuz.php
3/11/2012 7:13:54 PM
3/12/2012 9:15:28 AM
^you need to upgrade your chevy hypocritical asshole. or start walking.[Edited on March 12, 2012 at 11:43 AM. Reason : -]
3/12/2012 11:43:10 AM
I burn less gas than you do, what the hell are you talking about?
3/12/2012 11:51:31 AM
i burn more gas out my ass than i burn on the road n-word.i'm waiting for you to post that chart that shows how electric cars are worse for the environment than gas cars.
3/12/2012 12:02:07 PM
3/12/2012 12:34:13 PM
since you refuse to post what your extreme pro green groups are saying....i'll post it for you (and make sure to point at something wrong about this SPECIFIC cartoon and fail to realize there are billions others like it coming out constantly)[Edited on March 12, 2012 at 2:13 PM. Reason : ,]
3/12/2012 2:09:57 PM
The cartoon's accurate, simply having an electric car doesn't make you more eco-friendly if that electricity is derived from burning fossil fuels.
3/12/2012 2:44:47 PM
therefore we can conclude that electric cars are eviltherefore we can conclude that all cars are evileureka!!!
3/12/2012 2:57:42 PM
There's nothing evil about people doing what they have to do to get to their jobs and back. It's just a shame the country doesn't have more extensive public transit, high speed rail, better city planning, more nuclear/solar/geo power, or any other of the many ways we could reduce fossil fuel use without hurting people's ability to travel as necessary. Good and evil have nothing to do with any of this.
3/12/2012 3:09:05 PM