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This is a discussion on "Real World Gas Wars" in the Top Mud Sites Tavern of the Blue Hand forum : I just got this from me Madre and figured it's worth a shot. I usualy buy from a Mobil so I guess I can move on to someone else, so long as it dosn't cost TOO much. Pass this on, I'm gonna' post on a few message baords to get it across. > GAS WAR - an idea that WILL work > > This was originally sent by a retired Coca Cola > executive. It came from one of > his engineer buddies who retired from > Halliburton. It ' s worth your > consideration. > > Join the ... |
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#1 |
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I just got this from me Madre and figured it's worth a shot. I usualy buy from a Mobil so I guess I can move on to someone else, so long as it dosn't cost TOO much. Pass this on, I'm gonna' post on a few message baords to get it across.
> GAS WAR - an idea that WILL work > > This was originally sent by a retired Coca Cola > executive. It came from one of > his engineer buddies who retired from > Halliburton. It ' s worth your > consideration. > > Join the resistance!!!! I hear we are going to > hit close to $4.00 a gallon by > next summer and it might go higher!! Want > gasoline prices to come down? We need > to take some intelligent, united action. Phillip > Hollsworth offered this good > idea. > > This makes MUCH MORE SENSE than the "don't buy > gas on a certain day" campaign > that was going around last April or May! The oil > companies just laughed at that > because they knew we wouldn't continue to "hurt" > ourselves by refusing to buy > gas. It was more of an inconvenience to us than > it was a problem for them. > > BUT, whoever thought of this idea, has come up > with a plan that can really work. > Please read on and join with us! By now you're > probably thinking gasoline priced > at about $1.50 is super cheap. Me too! It is > currently $2.79 for regular > unleaded in my town. Now that the oil companies > and the OPEC nations have > conditioned us to think that the cost of a > gallon of gas is CHEAP at $1.50 - > $1.75, we need to take aggressive action to > teach them that BUYERS control the > marketplace..... not sellers. With the price of > gasoline going up more each day, > we consumers need to take action. The only way > we are going to see the price of > gas come down is if we hit someone in the > pocketbook by not purchasing their > gas! And, we can do that WITHOUT hurting > ourselves. How? Since we all rely on > our cars, we can't just stop buying gas. But we > CAN have an impact on gas prices > if we all act together to force a price war. > > Here's the idea: > > For the rest of this year, DON' T purchase ANY > gasoline from the two biggest > companies (which now are one), EXXON and MOBIL. > If! they are not selling any > gas, they will be inclined to reduce their > prices. If they reduce their prices, > the other companies will have to follow suit. > > But to have an impact, we need to reach > literally millions of Exxon and Mobil > gas buyers. It's really simple to do! Now, don't > wimp out at this point.... > keep reading and I'll explain how simple it is > to reach millions of people. > > I am sending this note to 30 people. If each of > us sends it to at least ten more > (30 x 10 =3D 300) ... and those 300 send it to > at least ten more (300 x 10 =3D > 3,000)...and so on, by the time the message > reaches the sixth group of people, > we will have reached over THREE MILLION > consumers. If those three million get > excited and pass this on to ten friends each, > then 30 million people will have > been contacted! If it goes one level further, > you guessed it..... THREE > >>>>HUNDRED MILLION >>>>PEOPLE!!! > > Again, all you have to do is send this to 10 > people. That's all. (If you don't > understand how we can reach 300 million and all > you have to do is send this to > 10 people.... Well, let's face it, you just > aren't a mathematician. But I am, so > trust me on this one.) > > How long would all that take? If each of us > sends this e-mail out to ten more > people within one day of receipt, all 300 > MILLION people could conceivably be > contacted within the next 8 days!!!! > > I'll bet you didn't think you and I had that > much potential, did you? > > Acting together we can make a difference. If > this makes sense to you, please > pass this message on. I suggest that we not buy > from EXXON/MOBIL UNTIL THEY > LOWER THEIR PRICES TO THE $1.30 RANGE AND KEEP > THEM DOWN. > > THIS CAN REALLY WORK. |
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#2 |
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Member
Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 66
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I have a new toyota prius, go me.
Which gas stations are owned by exxon and mobile? Shell? Chevron? Be more specific so that I can do this |
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#3 |
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*looks around* Only Valero pumps in my town. Guess I'm in the free?
Doesn't really sound feasible to me, but luck with it. -WP |
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#4 |
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#5 |
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Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Mill Valley, California
Posts: 2,116
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Americans are spoiled. Gas is still cheap here compared to, say, Europe, though that's the result of large taxes in Europe. What's the result? Europeans drive much more responsible cars, generally, than Americans do.
The fact is, Americans have no 'right' to cheap oil. Sheesh, even at current prices, it's often cheaper than milk! Long-term, you can expect to see oil prices continue to rise, because the fact is that oil is a limited resource that IS going to run out. If Americans won't learn to moderate their energy consumption voluntarily, the market will make them do it by driving up oil prices until demand slacks off some. The problem isn't Exxon. It's the average American consumer: addicted to oil and believing that cheap and easy access to it is their god-given right. And it's the average American who is contributing to the disaster that is global warming. Global warming = people dying and entire countries (like Tuvalu) being destroyed by rising waters. Reducing America's energy consumption is not just a practical matter when framed like this - it's a moral imperative. So all I have to say is: Three cheers for rising oil prices. It's about time. --matt |
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#6 | |
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Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 159
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If the sea level goes up a few inches a year, I think there will be time to get them out. Reminds me of the old Sam Kinison line about not living in the desert, though. Being American, "Evil America" sorts of statements just sort of naturally attract my attention, and usually my irritation as well. What an evil thing to do - keep taxes low on gasoline so people can afford it more easily. *shrugs* I mean, I do get annoyed when my countrymen try to tell the French how to run their economy and all, but I have a hard time feeling bad for having low gas taxes and higher consumption. China kills people for fun and profit, and we're the bad guys. Last China debacle I heard about, they are using political prisoners as organ doners. Organ Transplants But it's really America that is evil.... Go figure... Still, yeah... Gas. Lower gas prices are a lot like losing weight. Eat less; use less. Period, end of story. If you buy just as much gas from a different set of suppliers, they raise their prices... pretty simple. Then you get to go look for gas in out of the way places to pay more for it. Lovely. |
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#7 | ||
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Moderator
Join Date: Apr 2002
Home MUD: Carrion Fields
Posts: 642
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Saying that you'll move somewhere 20 feet above sea level because sea level is only expected to rise inches per year is a bit short-sighted. If you're interested in reading the scientific community's nail-in-the-coffin to the belief that global warming is fictional, check out this link. It's the result of a review of 928 peer-reviewed scientific publications dealing with climate change, and summarizes how every major scientific organization studying climate change agrees on the fact that global warming is both real and the result of human activity. |
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#8 | |
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 24
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Oil companies are the innocent victims in all of this. Forget how they dominate energy issues in Washington, and how their advertising campaigns and various business influences reinforce the American lifestyle of oil dependance. It's those greedy, stupid American consumers who deserve our scorn. |
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#9 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Name: Lamont
Location: Tallahassee, Florida
Posts: 436
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Sawyer Gas powers my house, other than that I don't use a lot of gasoline. I've never been able to afford a car, but I don't think I'm missing much.
Me, I've always thought global warming was some kind of hoax. Earth has been changing by itself for millions of years, but these scientists are just cooking up some kind of weird theories in an effort to get more research funding. Of course, I don't trust a whole lot of researchers and what-not, so I have a personal bias. |
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#10 | |
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Moderator
Join Date: Apr 2002
Home MUD: Carrion Fields
Posts: 642
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Add in the fact that companies which depend on fossil fuels would looooove to provide research grants to scientific organizations which supported their agenda. The problem is, you need data, and no one seems to be able to come up with any data which can withstand the review process that says anything except "global warming is real and caused by humans", which is why every major scientific organization is in consensus on this topic. |
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#11 |
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Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Mill Valley, California
Posts: 2,116
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It's not about trite, black & white "good" and "evil" guys. It's not about who is the bad guy, as that's just a label. It's about identifying the real problems and creating policy or taking action to reduce or eliminate them.
There's really no debating the existence of global warming at this point. Its existence is not significantly under discussion in the responsible scientific community anymore. Sure, the Bush administration can trot out 'experts', but this is the same administration who recently tried to claim that under Bush, America's wetlands have made a comeback....only to be pressed on the issue and be forced to admit that by 'wetlands' they literally mean water hazards on golf courses and sewage reprocessing fields. (Also the administration that wants to triple the allowed arsenic in rural water supplies because it's cheaper than cleaning up the water.) Given that we -are- doing long-term damage, the analogy to dictating how France runs its economy is not apt. I live just north of San Francisco. I'd be pretty ticked off if something France was doing was increasing the chances that the Bay Area will get hit by a bad earthquake. As regards the oil companies, I have lots of issues with them (mainly in the areas of environmentalism and human rights...they can be real bastards to locals in third world countries), but I don't see how we can begrudge them making their profits. It's not our oil. We don't have some right to it and to act as if we do, especially when most of it comes from foreign countries, is just the kind of attitude that makes so many people in the rest of the world hate America. If you don't like the price or can't afford it, modify your lifestyle. If you're not willing to modify your lifestyle, suck it up and pay. Anyway, fundamentally, gas prices track oil prices, and the oil companies don't have much say in what they pay for crude. And finally, I'll give you a nice, selfish reason why we should all celebrate the inevitable rise in oil (and thus gasoline) prices: As oil prices rise, other energy alternatives become increasingly economically viable. High oil prices = increased research by energy companies, governments, and other companies into non-oil energy sources. The faster the world can end its dependence on oil, the better off we will all be. There are very real economic consequences for -everybody- of $200/barrel oil with no practical alternative, and simply awful consequences for the poor of the world (drastically increased starvation, for instance, since fertilizers will become too expensive for them to use, cutting food development significantly). Yes, it sucks shelling out at the pump. But let's not forget that our big cars and energy-wasting lifestyles have a price for the rest of the world. Americans (I am one of them) are addicted to oil, and we (including me) have shown an inability or unwillingness to reform our behavior out of compassion or simple moderation. Think of high oil prices as an intervention to help us break the disease that is our addiction. --matt |
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#12 |
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Member
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 159
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Something that has also been proven beyond much debate is we were due for a heavier series of years of hurricanes due to natural phenomenon.
I don't doubt global warming. I do doubt modern sciences ability to gauge how much of it is natural and how much is related to man, but the bottom line is polution is polution and should be minimized. What I don't like is scare tactics. I also fail to understand how moral relativism even plays into this. People being tortured and killed and their bodies parted out for profit should not somehow be ignored in favor of trying to bring down oil companies who are basically guilty of buying and selling things. This sort of thing is I believe precisely why the issue of global warming doesn't get the attention it deserves. It is almost always attached to a group of people whose values are so outside the comprehensible norm that it seems that no rational way forward will suffice. Things will be done as they have always been done, in increments, which priorities set in line with percieved importance. That's just how life goes. I can't get myself that excited about it. If I'm wrong, I'm wrong but since I don't know any other people who are always right anyhow, I am willing to take a more moderated stance on the subject of global warming than I am on more immediate and obvious sorts of problems. It's not as if Human Rights Watch is some sort of right wing operation or something. |
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#13 | |
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Moderator
Join Date: Apr 2002
Home MUD: Carrion Fields
Posts: 642
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#14 |
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Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Milwaukee, WI
Posts: 73
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This is a reprint of a posting by Arianna Huffington posted today on her website "The Huffington Post":
George Bush: Foreign Policy from God, Energy Policy from Big Oil The president may turn to God when it comes to shaping his foreign policy, but his energy policy is strictly courtesy of the Men Upstairs at Big Oil. Which is why it is beyond comical to watch Moe, Curly, and Larry -- sorry, I mean Bush, Hastert, and Frist -- getting all blue in the face about skyrocketing gas prices, and calling on the Energy and Justice Departments to look into possible market manipulation by oil companies. It’s the least believable call for an investigation since O.J. set out to find the real killers. For those of you experiencing a sudden wave of déjà vu, yes, the GOP demand for a federal probe of potential oil industry price-gouging was a carbon copy of the demands Chuck Schumer made last week. Hey, maybe they just unconsciously “internalized” Schumer’s words. If it wasn’t so despicable it would be laughable. There was Frist on Good Morning America today, putting aside his video diagnostic skills to become one of the “Car Talk” guys. Among Frist’s helpful money saving tips for drivers forced to consider taking out a second mortgage in order to fill up their tanks: get a tuneup, drive slower, and carpool. Thanks, Dr. Goodwrench! But Frist was just the gassy second banana. The clear headliner was Bush, who had them rolling in the aisles at a meeting of the Renewable Fuels Association, with zingers like his claim that “large cash flows” mean that “these energy companies don’t need unnecessary tax breaks”. A sentiment that didn’t stop the president from signing a GOP energy bill stuffed with some $14.5 billion in tax breaks, tax subsidies, and tax deductions for his cash-rich energy industry chums. I guess those tax breaks were “necessary.” Bush also scored big with his impression of a guy who cares about conservation, highlighting the need to “promote greater fuel efficiency”: “And the easiest way to promote fuel efficiency,” said the president, “is to encourage drivers to purchase highly efficient hybrid or clean diesel vehicles.” As the proud owner of a pair of hybrids, I say “hear, hear.” As a sentient human being I say, "Isn't this the same guy whose administration hasn't increased fuel efficiency standards for passengers cars even a single m.p.g. in six years?” Maybe now that former GM-lobbyist (and fuel efficiency opponent) Andy Card has left the White House, Bush has finally allowed his inner-Prius owner to run free. Or maybe the lure of touting vehicles that can run on alternative energy sources to an alternative energy trade association was just too hard to resist. How gullible do they think we are? Memo to the White House: it’s not working. Bush’s approval rating just dropped to 32% -- a number at which both water and political clout freeze. All this huffing and puffing about manipulated markets and record gas prices scream of a blatant attempt to inoculate Republicans from consumer rage over the massive earnings oil companies are scheduled to announce this week. Industry analysts predict that ExxonMobil will report first-quarter earnings of only $9.1 billion on Thursday -- down from the record $10.7 billion posted in the fourth quarter of 2005. With profits like that, Lee Raymond’s $400 retirement package is starting to look a little stingy. Except to those paying through the nose at the pump. The most honest comment on the gas price crisis came from Scott McClellan (freedom’s just another word for nothing left to lose, eh, Scottie?) who said: “This is not something we got into overnight.” Exactly. These levels of oil company profits took years of careful lobbying and planning to orchestrate. Our oil-man president may want us to think that he’s shocked, shocked by the “large cash flows” of the oil companies, and the sticker shock drivers are experiencing at the pump, but even before Team Bush was dreaming of toppling Saddam, it was laying the groundwork for the gargantuan windfall the oil industry is seeing -- starting with Dick Cheney’s secret Energy Task Force. It’s not a coincidence that the oil and gas industries donated over $25 million to Congressional campaigns in 2004 (with 80% of that money going into Republican coffers), and another $7.2 million so far in the 2006 cycle (with 84% going to the GOP). They also doled out over $4.5 million to Bush’s 2000 and 2004 presidential runs. And what did they get for their largess? According to Public Citizen, the top five oil companies have pocketed over a quarter of trillion (that’s with a “T”) in profits since Bush took office. Talk about a return on investment. That’s a gusher! So for American consumers, payback is a bitch. And three bucks a gallon at the gas pump. The Bush administration has turned the White House into a full service filling station for Big Oil. And we’re the ones being forced to pick up the tab. So don’t let the empty rhetoric and the phony outrage pouring out of the White House and the Republican Congress fool you: America isn’t facing a shortage of fuel; it’s facing a shortage of leadership. |
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#15 | ||
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Member
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 159
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I don't subscribe to Nature. I'm going to need a little help here with the details. Also, it would be helpfull if you would not pluck random comments out on their own. You make it look as if I have not already affirmed right along with you that polution is bad and we should do what we can. I am simply saying that there does not seem to be enough of an emergency to liken buying and selling oil products to human rights violations. |
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#16 |
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Member
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 159
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Guru,
All I can tell you is we in Texas would have really appreciated all this attention on the scandalous, years long plot to inflate oil profits in the 80's when everyone was going bankrupt in the industry. Also, it is well known that a big part of the problem is we stopped building refineries somewhere in the 70's, so there is no way to increase supply. This has as much to do with environmental concerns as it does oil profiteering, but the bottom line is if you're only running a handful of refineries at peak capacity, supply goes down and profits go up. It's one of those things scientists don't debate much either. So again, I am sorry but the bleak, evil-American-oil-barons-ought-to-be-strung-up sort of rhetoric is not reality. You slap some more restrictions on oil and you may well be looking at a Repeat of Carter's gas line phenomenon, where it simply ceases to be profitable to make and sell gas at all, so people just stop. If you wanted to be a good liberal on this issue, what you really might ought to be talking is, "why with record profits are oil industry workers not making more than they are?" That would get some folks' attention in a hurry. These are important matters, I understand, but it is also important not to get so ramped up you are motivated to shoot people over what essentially, once again, is merely the buying and selling of things. Certainly, anyone who wants to go into the alternative energy source market and open a company is welcome to. The fact is, even at its present price range, gas and oil and so forth are still cheaper. The new things are coming. Just have a little patience and a little faith in your fellow human being. I've been hearing this sort of thing all my life, and it appears it has been going on for all of recorded history. With the rare exception of ignoring the possibility that people who claim they intend to conquer the earth really mean to try to do that, there are very few instances in history where the world as we know it really does just suddenly cease to exist, though. That's more of a religious thing than a scientific thing. |
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