Father, Husband, Geek. One Cool Monkey.
High Pump Prices Give Me Gas
Gas has gone up once again. This time, presumably, under the pretense that the devastating Hurricane Katrina that has pummeled the southeastern United States has crippled our domestic oil production and therefore is deserving of a .25/gallon raise in price. The oil companies are telling the gas stations and convenience stores that in order to get their new loads of gas, they must raise their prices. So, they are forced to do so in order to even have gas. I’m sorry, but there is no way that the price of gas has been effected so quickly that it has necessitated a quarter per gallon raise in one day. Everyone seems to have their theory as to why this is happening now. Today, on a local radio talk show, I heard one person espouse their theory that gas prices are rising because of the automotive makers latest “employee discount” sales strategy. There are somehow “more cars” now on the road so we need more gas and that supports an upturn in gas prices. At least that theory was good for a laugh. It’s about the only laugh I’ve had regarding the entire issue.
President Bush has stated his interest in exploring the idea of tapping the U.S. oil reserves to take some of the pressure off the American pocketbooks. This is precisely why we have built these reserves in the first place, to my understanding. When an event occurs to disrupt oil production, we have resources to lean upon until the situation can be repaired. To quote the above article, “the reserve was established to cushion oil markets during energy disruptions.” Sounds exactly like this is the case. So, why is this even a topic to ponder? We have to think and decide if this is a “natural disaster”? I believe the folks of Louisiana and Mississipi will tell you it certainly is, and would be supported by the rest of the nation. The article also aims to correct the misguided notion that gas prices even should be effected by Hurricane Katrina. Again quoting the article: “The expected move would be designed to give refineries in the area a temporary supply of crude oil to take the place of interrupted shipments from tankers or offshore oil platforms affected by the storm. It would not be intended to keep a lid on soaring gasoline prices.” I guarantee if this happened last year at this time, being an election year, we’d be paying just over $2.00 a gallon now, and not closer to $3.00 as a nation, because this is about as “hot-button” of a topic as the war here in America right now.
Anyway, I really dislike being political…but this whole subject has me really agitated right now. I miss living in the northeast where I could make a tank of gas last a week very easily. Living in a big city that is so spread out like the Dallas/Ft. Worth metroplex, I use 4-5 gallons a week easily, and I don’t even travel that much right now. *sigh* I guess I can cling to the hope that my favorite fillup station, QuikTrip, will keep the prices low. They’re always the lowest price, plus, they have the yummy drinks. Love me some QT drinks! Mmmmmmmm….Orange Cream-Vanilla slushes.
| Print article | This entry was posted by Ben on August 30, 2005 at 5:09 pm, and is filed under uncategorized. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed. |
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Minerva
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Jessica-Star
