industry, but as oil is directly related to national security, the country's entire economy, transportation infrastructure and every America's standard of living... has it come to a point that Enron-like profiteering and price gouging of consumers will result in a major problems for our overall society? Should private business continue to control a resource that is so heavily tied to our entire existence?
4/19/2006 8:02:46 PM
ehh trading oil company big wigs for former oil company big wigs in governmenti dunno
4/19/2006 8:08:47 PM
but at least government big wigs are limited by governmental pay scalesand any profits could be diverted to the public good, such as paying down the public debt or paying for social programs / education, or even reducing taxes
4/19/2006 8:11:25 PM
yea boy that's just a fantastic idea to move corruption from a prosecutable and public arena to a secretive and protected government shelter!1
4/19/2006 8:13:26 PM
Do you want gasoline shortages and bureaucratic red tape every time you try to fill up your tank? Does the idea of our national government paying Iraq and Saudi Arabia billions of dollars every day appeal to you? It's not like federalizing the industry would change the fact that we have to get some of our oil from shitholes like OPEC, and that supply and demand will continue to dictate prices.This is just a horrible idea all around.
4/19/2006 8:25:23 PM
4/19/2006 8:27:38 PM
i would say it's like walking by and sneering at their wristsbut not even thatmore like walking by and smiling while thinking about sneering at their wrists
4/19/2006 8:29:27 PM
yeah, after you do that, each of us will be given a quota and it will be more expensive because now you have to pay for the bureaucracy and govt has no incentive to run efficiently like an oil company bound by the rules of the free market.you fucking socialists make me fucking sick. give everythign to the goddam government.
4/19/2006 8:31:10 PM
^^^Well, considering that wall street execs have been recieving long jail sentences left and right for things that most people don't even realize are crimes, I'd say it's only a matter of time if the oil execs are truly profiteering like you guys say. As it is, consider me underwhelmed by the arguments so far.[Edited on April 19, 2006 at 8:32 PM. Reason : 2]
4/19/2006 8:32:09 PM
fucking agriculture is more directly related to national security than oil. Lets go fucking nationalize that too. And while we're at it, computers are pretty important. Lets do taht.I hate the slippery slope argument, but you people, once you start, you want to give the govt everything (see: France)
4/19/2006 8:34:44 PM
You act like there isnt a corrupt collaboration between the oil industry and the government already. Our President is a Texas oil man and the Vice was the CEO of Halliburton. We basically use our defense budget to subsidize foreign policy that ensures oil companies get the oil they need to continue making record profits. The US taxpayer pays a significant amount of their income to subsize these policies. The entire country deserves this money alot more than few rich assholes.
4/19/2006 8:38:28 PM
HEY I LOVE CONJECTURE! I LOVE PRESENTING WHAT I THINK TO BE TRUE!You wanna be rich, bitch? Go make it for your fucking self. You climb the corporate ladder. You go fucking do it.
4/19/2006 8:40:43 PM
I'm sorry, what? Exactly how much oil are American companies pumping out of Iraq? Please back that up, or get the fuck outta here with your Micheal Moore conspiracy theories.
4/19/2006 8:41:55 PM
^ thank you. I thought we went to war over oil... well where the fuck is it? It's not here at $3 a gallon.And I'm not even a supporter of the president/iraq war. I just think what scuba steve said is ridiculous.
4/19/2006 8:55:23 PM
Its apparent that big oils profit margins are increasing,and there are reports that producers are intentionally operating refineries under capacity and that the current prices still do not justify the prices at the pump. It is quite simply, the greatest fleecing of the worlds wealth in history. Its no different from Enron or any other corporate scandal except for the scale is several orders of magnitude higher.
4/19/2006 9:00:39 PM
4/19/2006 9:24:53 PM
I say bomb the Indians and the Chinese.That'll teach those fuckers to demand our oil.
4/19/2006 9:43:24 PM
4/19/2006 11:31:16 PM
I dunno, man.Is it really in our nation's best interest to subsidize the purchase of weapons that are intended for us?[Edited on April 20, 2006 at 1:07 AM. Reason : I'm just sayin. I don't think either plan is in our best interest.]
4/20/2006 1:03:51 AM
4/20/2006 1:17:21 AM
^ Worst example ever
4/20/2006 10:19:20 AM
^^ hahahahaaha self-pwned
4/20/2006 10:36:57 AM
The USPS gets how many tax dollars each year?
4/20/2006 10:48:08 AM
4/20/2006 10:53:37 AM
The post office was largely privatized long ago. It is kinda like most french companies where the managers have free reign of the company but the company is wholly or partly owned by the government. Kris is absolutely right that it opperates exactly like a private company in that is fails or suceeds freely in the marketplace. If only all government entities were operated this way.
4/20/2006 11:08:28 AM
4/20/2006 11:18:33 AM
^,^^,^^^you both deserve to have your TSB credentials revoked. you in particular LoneSnark -- I expect that kind of stupidity from Kris, but wtf were you thinking?The USPS isn't self-supporting at all, it gets billions upon billions of $texas in bailouts every single fucking year, in addition to constantly hiking rates and providing shitty service.
4/20/2006 11:27:06 AM
I support nationalizing the oil industry though. We could relive the 1970s all over again, and I'd be able to go the rest of my life without a liberal Democrat ever winning the presidency...
4/20/2006 11:28:14 AM
This seems to be a reasonable thread to pose this question.I have never seen a good explanation of the mechanism by which the oil/gas companies are racking up big profit with the higher cost of oil. Of course the rising cost of gas makes sense because it is costing them more to buy oil, but why does that translate into mega profits? Seemsm like to me they could have been making mega profits just as easily when oil was cheaper?And I can't understand how gas stations don't operate like a free market? I know that they don't make dick off of gasoline sales, but it seems like if one stations operated long enough (while keeping their tanks full) losing money off the gas sales but hopefully making it up on the conv. store stuff, the loss of business at other stations would force them to lower their prices too.
4/20/2006 11:35:47 AM
4/20/2006 11:47:13 AM
TGD, my bad. I realized the post office received various kinds of subsidy (for carrying congressional mail, etc). But was under the impression that it wasn't that much. Could you provide a link to an estimate of about how much it gets and what percentage that is compared to its total revenues?
4/20/2006 11:47:47 AM
Didn't the gas lines start under Nixon?I'm just sayin...
4/20/2006 12:27:46 PM
4/20/2006 12:40:24 PM
4/20/2006 12:52:43 PM
dp[Edited on April 20, 2006 at 1:01 PM. Reason : V]
4/20/2006 1:00:23 PM
In this case, the economic model you supplied is wrong because it is limited to a closed system, with a no growth projections. Here in the US, we can reduce the amount we use and conserve, but as long as record increases in demand come from China and India, the aggregate demand will not drop. You are looking at a linear model when the problem instead is exponential. We can all reduce the amount we use by 25 or 30% ect., but when the number of vehicles in the world doubles, any savings we achieve will grossly be outpaced by the increase in demand. The market will eventually fight back to help find alternative technologies, but even alternative fuels such as ethanol will find that there are production restrictions that are related to the carrying capacity of the land. Ethanol is derived from corn, and corn is food, so the second picture details the model that the land can only produce so much food (or fuel) before it cannot support any further capacity. Scientists generally estimate at about the 9 billion mark we can no longer feed any additional people, and starvation coupled with massive famine and death becomes the norm. Which leads to an interesting ethical dilemma: Should we be using food for fuel if billions of people will starve to death because of it? Oil demand as a logarithmic and not a linear functionThe eventual end of growth of renewable resources (food and fuel)[Edited on April 20, 2006 at 1:09 PM. Reason : .]
4/20/2006 1:01:13 PM
I wasn't assuming that the demand for oil is linear. What I am saying is that the laws of supply and demand nonetheless hold up.Just because you're able to sell at a higher price with a decreased supply does not mean that you're making more money than you should. If the supply were steady and the demand were steady, then they could maximize profits by running production at the equilibrium price. Currently, that is not the case.Because of the shortage in the supply (OPEC controlling the means of production) and because of the increased demand, you have a double shift along the supply demand curve along the lines of higher prices. This explains why gas is more expensive. If you want to analyze profits, then lets look at the math:profits = revenue - expensesThe expenses are the cost of refining, barrels of crude, etc. The big increase here is with crude (now around $72 a barrel). But because the demand for energy is at the highest point ever, revenue is also up, through the rough actually. By minimizing their other expenses, refining costs, transport costs, drilling costs, etc, they can maximize profits much easier than undercutting the supply of oil and allowing less to be sold. As a rule, you want to sell as much as possible for as much money you can get as possible (the very definition of equilibrium).Many of you think the oil companies are in bed together. Let me ask you this. If you're the president of an oil company, exxon, and a guy from ammoco or wherever comes to you and says, "Hey lets fix prices right here." You say, "sure ok." But you know that since the price is set artificially high, you can EASILY undercut him by selling at the market rate (and earn max profits by an increased customer base buying cheaper fuel). In the instance where there are like, 5, big oil firms in the country, they all have to be weary of setting prices because the others could easily break their word and earn $texas from it. There is no incentive to set prices because there is no incentive to honor those set prices when you could profit handsomley by undercutting your competition. This is how efficiency is created in the free market. Sell as much as you can at the highest price you can (whcih is constantly driven lower by the entrance of new firms doing things more efficiently and increasing the supply of the good in question).The real problem here is that people see higher prices in gas and jump to conclusions. There are many market factors which determine the price of gas. Yes, the oil companies are making huge profits. And why shouldn't they? They ahve the hottest commodity on the market. You would EXPECT that someone selling something so valuable to so many would reap quite a large reward. [Edited on April 20, 2006 at 1:28 PM. Reason : .]
4/20/2006 1:18:53 PM
wow...Kris actually posted propaganda straight from a website and expects everyone to take it as gospel...personally I think the cheese is to blame for the higher gas prices, come visit my website!!1...---
4/20/2006 1:30:18 PM
4/20/2006 1:30:52 PM
4/20/2006 1:35:31 PM
4/20/2006 1:37:14 PM
Oops I forgot, buying oil at $72 a barrel instead of $30 doesn't make expenses go up at all. What was I thinking?I bet you can divide by 0, Excoriator.I think TGD is my new favorite TDub poster. Finally, someone who realizes that gas lines were the result of government interference... price caps.They lifted the cap and the lines went away OVER NIGHT.
4/20/2006 1:40:53 PM
my point is that the price of gas has risen at a rate faster than the price of oil
4/20/2006 1:42:15 PM
The statement as it stands isn't incorrect. Don't be lazy.
4/20/2006 1:44:52 PM
plz to understand supply/demand before making your points.Of course they will. We have a two-sided shift in supply/demand. Increasing demand, decreased supply. Prices will go up higher than than the price of a single commodity (crude oil). Gasoline is the product of many goods and services across an array of markets. While heavily dependant on crude, it is not the only input into gasoline.Plus, look at the disruption due to Katrina, etc. It's not just a simple linear problem as you assume it to be.[Edited on April 20, 2006 at 2:00 PM. Reason : .]
4/20/2006 1:45:18 PM
4/20/2006 2:18:02 PM
4/20/2006 2:21:00 PM
4/20/2006 2:49:06 PM
4/20/2006 2:55:43 PM
On a local scale, 5 cents might not be enough to convince people to buy at another station. I know if I had to drive across town and back to save an extra $0.50 or $1.00 a tank, it would'nt be worth it to me because I would probably use $2 or $3 in gas to do so.
4/20/2006 3:10:28 PM