Joined Jun 2006
Jambi-rific in Seattle!
Forum Thread
You think gas is expensive in the US?
March 23, 2012 at
01:59 PM
in
Finance
(2)
Petrol hit a new record high today in the UK of 140 pence per liter. Worked out to gallons and dollars, that's $8.41 per gallon. 
Linky [dailymail.co.uk]

Linky [dailymail.co.uk]
102 Comments
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I could take the train, but the train station is about 3 miles from my house, I could drive to this train station but then on the other side the station is another 3 miles from my work. No buses on either side to take me to the train.
In the UK taking public transit is not an issue for most. In the US, unless your in a major city it is non existent.
In America though, you have more freedom to move about the country. Assuming you have a good working car, you can get into it and literally go anywhere in the country (negating Alaska and Hawaii). In England or Europe, it's much more difficult to do that if you only have one family car or have to rely solely on public transportation.
I'm use to TP crowd and libs who nitpick everything so that caveats of the post:
1. Yes, I realize that you can travel by car to many countries in Europe. But, language barriers and different country customs and what not limit you. Also, when you're paying $9 a gallon, you're less likely to travel far from home and just like when we're paying $4 per gallon here in the US.
2. This is not a "freedom" issue in the Ron Paul or libertarian sense. It's just more of a general sense of the word "freedom". Like Credit Cards give me the freedom to buy as much as I want without having to carry around a wallet full of cash that can get lost/stolen. With a car, you have options to go places that public transportation doesn't necessarily give you.
3. America has a good car culture. We have three major auto makers here with many foreigns that build with American workers as well.
4. We have our own oil and the refining capacity to handle our auto use (we actually are a net EXPORTER of gas believe it or not).
A lot of people want us to "be like Europe" in certain senses, but they don't realize what makes us uniquely American probably because they've never actually been to those parts of the world. It's easy to pick and choose the highlights of every country and wonder why America can't be more like that. People want all of the good and ignore all of the bad.
(I'd bet it was slutsky - sounds like something he'd say.
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If you put your car on a boat you can
I see HI stickers all the time. They're usually from military folks though. I haven't seen too many Hawaii plates, but I do see the tags they use a lot.
I'm use to TP crowd and libs who nitpick everything so that caveats of the post:
1. Yes, I realize that you can travel by car to many countries in Europe. But, language barriers and different country customs and what not limit you. Also, when you're paying $9 a gallon, you're less likely to travel far from home and just like when we're paying $4 per gallon here in the US.
2. This is not a "freedom" issue in the Ron Paul or libertarian sense. It's just more of a general sense of the word "freedom". Like Credit Cards give me the freedom to buy as much as I want without having to carry around a wallet full of cash that can get lost/stolen. With a car, you have options to go places that public transportation doesn't necessarily give you.
3. America has a good car culture. We have three major auto makers here with many foreigns that build with American workers as well.
4. We have our own oil and the refining capacity to handle our auto use (we actually are a net EXPORTER of gas believe it or not).
A lot of people want us to "be like Europe" in certain senses, but they don't realize what makes us uniquely American probably because they've never actually been to those parts of the world. It's easy to pick and choose the highlights of every country and wonder why America can't be more like that. People want all of the good and ignore all of the bad.
If it's going to cost $100 million in labor and capital to extract $80 million dollars in oil, only in Obamaville is that an awesome investment.
If everything you say is true, Obama can just wave his magic wand since no President has been more pro-oil than him (or whatever garbage he says about his administration taking credit for Bush era policies) and oil produces would precipitously decline to levels they were when he was inaugurated, right? Or, did America get a crash course on how oil works on the global market since Bush left office and we can't use the convenient excuse that he's just paying off his oil buddies?
Just like I'm sure you own investments, you're free to buy and sell as you please. Are they not allowed to extract the oil as they see fit?
Like I said, unfortunately there are those who nitpick statements, like you just did, to suit their purpose. I know this all too well from my time in the Podium.
You're hatred for this country and the selfish comment is unfortunate. I'm sorry for you.
Also, I failed to realize that you're last sentence undid your whole statement. We're free to drive 1/4 mile to the liquor store, 1.4 miles to the grocery store, 14 miles to the ballpark and 140 miles to a neighboring city. Now, I'm not saying that you can't do that in Europe. I never said that. Rather, you have the FREEDOM to do it whenever the hell you want, however the hell you want, etc. You're not operating on the subway conductors schedule. You're not operating on the bus drivers schedule. You're not operating on the train schedule.
Like I'm said, I'm sorry that your hatred for this country is so ingrained in your very being that you don't understand my point. Yeah, I'm selfish because I don't want to be like Europe.
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