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Obama's failed foreign policyFollow

#52 Apr 08 2011 at 2:31 PM Rating: Excellent
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Pirates, Global warming.
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#53 Apr 08 2011 at 2:41 PM Rating: Decent
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varusword75 wrote:
bsphil,

You're really struggling in your attempt to validate your unsupportable position.

The graph clearly shows that when you have either a gop congress or president the price of gas generally stays lower than when the Dems control either one or both.



lolollololol lol

lol.

You are comedic gold.
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#54 Apr 08 2011 at 4:49 PM Rating: Good
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varusword75 wrote:
bsphil,

You're really struggling in your attempt to validate your unsupportable position.

The graph clearly shows that when you have either a gop congress or president the price of gas generally stays lower than when the Dems control either one or both.


Honestly Varus? The graph doesn't show that at all, unless one is being incredibly selective about how they measure which party is "in power" at any given time. The lowest price period occurred between the mid-80s to around 2000. During that time period, we had both Republican Presidents with Democratic Congresses, and a Democratic President with a Democratic Congress and a Democratic President with a Republican Congress. The two highest periods are in the late 70s and the late 2000s. In one, we had a Dem Congress and Dem president, and in the other we had a GOP president and a Dem congress.

We could try to make the argument that when the Dems control both White House and Congress that gas prices go up, but prices also went up when the GOP controlled those things as well. While the highest point was in 2008 (when Dems controlled congress), it's kinda hard to ignore the general trend leading up that that point.

We could attempt to argue that prices rise when one party controls both the white house and congress and drop when there's divided power, but that's not really supported either (otherwise prices would not have spiked in 2008, then dropped and now spiked again in 2011). The data just don't support making any specific claims about party power in government and gas prices and any attempt to do so is pretty questionable.


A far better argument to make with regard to gas prices and political party policies is to say that we should be increasing our domestic drilling capability in the US, not specifically because of any price effect that may have, but so that when prices do spike we actually will make money instead of sending it into foreign economies. IMO, that's the best argument for increased production capability. And we don't even have to use it all the time. When prices are cheap, there's nothing wrong with buying our oil from foreign sources. But IMO the ability to be able to walk away from a foreign oil producer when we want and say "Nah. We'll just turn on those pumps we've got at home and save ourselves some cash" gives us not only significant economic advantages, but also gives us a bit more foreign policy leverage.

That's the conservative argument with regard to oil and foreign policy.
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#55 Apr 08 2011 at 5:17 PM Rating: Good
varusword75 wrote:
Aripya,

Quote:
Country B was ruled by an Oligarchy masquerading as a democracy until a popular uprising of citizens (mostly) peacefully rebelled, seeking democratic reform.


This is complete mis-characterization of Country B. Allow me to fix this;

Country B was ruled by an Oligarchy masquerading as a democracy that was friendly the US until a staged uprising spured on by radical foregin muslims violently rebelled with the intent of installing a radical islamist state that will be unfriendly to the US.




I can't tell where Varus kicked in.
#56 Apr 08 2011 at 5:29 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
When prices are cheap, there's nothing wrong with buying our oil from foreign sources. But IMO the ability to be able to walk away from a foreign oil producer when we want and say "Nah. We'll just turn on those pumps we've got at home and save ourselves some cash" gives us not only significant economic advantages, but also gives us a bit more foreign policy leverage.

Except that the oil is sold on the global market unless you're advocating market controls to keep US produced oil within the United States and price control it so it's cheaper than they could sell it for on the global market. And we can't produce enough extra to significantly impact prices on a global scale. And that drilling doesn't make "us" any more money aside from the initial permit costs, etc. It makes the oil companies more money. Given previous threads about oil companies using tax loopholes (which you fully support) and subsidies paid to them (which you also fully support), I fail to see how "we" are making more money. The oil companies will make bank though.
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That's the conservative argument with regard to oil and foreign policy.

I don't doubt that it is.

Edited, Apr 8th 2011 6:36pm by Jophiel
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#57 Apr 08 2011 at 6:51 PM Rating: Default
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LockeColeMA wrote:
Almalieque wrote:

I hate to make so many cross references, but take R. Kelly for example. People were wondering why when M.J. got accused for child molestation (and other celebrities with other negative charges) their careers took a dump, but R. Kelly's didn't? The answer is, he was continually making good music and that's what people want him for. So, he can ***** up in other areas, but as long as he's getting the job done, that is all that matters.

You can see the same with Chris Brown.


Smiley: rolleyes


Rather you or me specifically like his music is irrelevant. His music was "good" to his fans.

Who doesn't like "Deuces"? Just like one-hit wonders, you only need one song to stay in the game...
#58 Apr 09 2011 at 7:52 AM Rating: Good
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Rather you or me specifically like his music is irrelevant.


Whether.
#59 Apr 09 2011 at 10:46 AM Rating: Decent
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Belkira the Tulip wrote:
Almalieque wrote:
Rather you or me specifically like his music is irrelevant.


Whether.


Thanks.. Didn't even notice that..

I need to brush up on my grammar as I've been procrastinating my studying for the GRE. It's "now or never much later", but I feel much more relieved as I was told that there is spell check on the test. Not, yet confirmed... Oh, how I hate standardized tests...
#60 Apr 11 2011 at 3:29 PM Rating: Default
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Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
When prices are cheap, there's nothing wrong with buying our oil from foreign sources. But IMO the ability to be able to walk away from a foreign oil producer when we want and say "Nah. We'll just turn on those pumps we've got at home and save ourselves some cash" gives us not only significant economic advantages, but also gives us a bit more foreign policy leverage.

Except that the oil is sold on the global market unless you're advocating market controls to keep US produced oil within the United States and price control it so it's cheaper than they could sell it for on the global market.


That's not the point at all. It's so that when prices are high, more of the cost of oil consumption generates benefits to US owned businesses instead of simply piling into the pockets of foreign owned businesses. That money will flow into domestic business operations, which pay taxes in the US, and which employ people in the US, who spend that money in the US, thus offsetting to some degree a higher price of oil.

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And we can't produce enough extra to significantly impact prices on a global scale.


Actually, we can. We don't have to in any particular scenario, but the largest impact on global oil prices is speculation. And that speculation often feeds off instability in the ME (and grossly exaggerates the market effects along the way). Oil prices can rise or fall by 20-30 dollars/barrel just on news of a single nation increasing or decreasing its oil supply by a few hundred million barrels a year (or fears of something happening which might affect said supply). If the US has the ability to do the same, we can be one of those nations with the ability to affect those prices rather than one of the nations who is simply subject to them.

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And that drilling doesn't make "us" any more money aside from the initial permit costs, etc. It makes the oil companies more money.


And that doesn't benefit the rest of us? You think oil company profits just go into a coffee can somewhere on some executive's desk?

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Given previous threads about oil companies using tax loopholes (which you fully support) and subsidies paid to them (which you also fully support), I fail to see how "we" are making more money. The oil companies will make bank though.


Your failure in this matter doesn't translate into you being right.

Edited, Apr 11th 2011 2:30pm by gbaji
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#61 Apr 11 2011 at 4:13 PM Rating: Decent
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gbaji wrote:
Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
When prices are cheap, there's nothing wrong with buying our oil from foreign sources. But IMO the ability to be able to walk away from a foreign oil producer when we want and say "Nah. We'll just turn on those pumps we've got at home and save ourselves some cash" gives us not only significant economic advantages, but also gives us a bit more foreign policy leverage.

Except that the oil is sold on the global market unless you're advocating market controls to keep US produced oil within the United States and price control it so it's cheaper than they could sell it for on the global market.


That's not the point at all. It's so that when prices are high, more of the cost of oil consumption generates benefits to US owned businesses instead of simply piling into the pockets of foreign owned businesses. That money will flow into domestic business operations, which pay taxes in the US, and which employ people in the US, who spend that money in the US, thus offsetting to some degree a higher price of oil.
lol, even if you did believe in trickle-down economics, that's only going to START happening after 6-8 years (the time it'll take to find a new site, construct the oil rig, drill for the oil, and start refining it), where it'll take several more years for the marginally increased revenue to outweigh the cost of the initial investment.

And that still doesn't offset the higher price of oil. Even if the amount of oil available on the market increases, as long as people think that the supply is going down or might be going down, the futures market will drive up the price of oil anyway.
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gbaji wrote:
I'm not getting my news from anywhere Joph.
#62 Apr 11 2011 at 4:36 PM Rating: Default
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bsphil wrote:
lol, even if you did believe in trickle-down economics, that's only going to START happening after 6-8 years (the time it'll take to find a new site, construct the oil rig, drill for the oil, and start refining it), where it'll take several more years for the marginally increased revenue to outweigh the cost of the initial investment.



And it'll still take 6-8 years more to do it if we wait another 6-8 years, wont it? How many years of conservatives saying "let's start drilling now so that we're not bent over the next time oil prices rise" before that argument stops having weight?

Quote:
And that still doesn't offset the higher price of oil. Even if the amount of oil available on the market increases, as long as people think that the supply is going down or might be going down, the futures market will drive up the price of oil anyway.


If the US chose to act as a supply balance to global oil production, speculation in that market would level out quite a bit. You get that speculation works because people aren't sure of the actual outcome, right? If everyone knows that any oil production drops are going to be countered by increased US supply, then they wont speculate that oil will rise so fast and far, and by not speculating this, the price wont follow their speculation. We could act as a stabilizing effect on oil if we want. Even absent that, being able to ensure that a larger portion of those increased costs end out back in the US economy instead of elsewhere is a good enough reason to do this.
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#63 Apr 11 2011 at 4:48 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
That's not the point at all. It's so that when prices are high, more of the cost of oil consumption generates benefits to US owned businesses instead of simply piling into the pockets of foreign owned businesses. That money will flow into domestic business operations, which pay taxes in the US, and which employ people in the US, who spend that money in the US, thus offsetting to some degree a higher price of oil.

Unless you have some real numbers, I think you're vastly, vastly overinflating the effect of what you describe. And if you think this gives some real foreign policy or economic leverage to say "Yeah well, Shell will just drill here and sell our oil back to us at $140 a barrel (unless China buys it or India or Indonesia or...) and we'll get some minor benefit so HA!", I'm just going to laugh at you. Or your statement that this will "save us some cash".

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Actually, we can

Actually, we can't. I mean, perhaps going from zero capacity to 100% full-every-spot-being-tapped capacity but any realistic ramp up from out current capacity is not going to make a major impact. And, again, you're vastly overstating the effect of "news". Remember when Bush announced about offshore drilling and it did nothing? Investors aren't stupid -- they know what you're looking at a decade or more between announcing and actual oil entering the market. Shit, in 2008, Saudi Arabia announced increasing capacity and it didn't cause more than a waver and they had the ability to increase global supplies that day. The 2008 rising streak finally broke when an unexpected surplus in natural gas was announced, taking pressure off the energy market as a whole followed by the 2008 economic collapse. Having you been buying into this fairy tale that Bush's announcement caused the market to fall despite it not being followed by Congressional action until nearly October or any actual increased drilling? Is your perception that energy investors are all retarded?

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And that doesn't benefit the rest of us?

Significantly so? No. Unless you want to show otherwise.

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Your failure in this matter doesn't translate into you being right.

But you're the one positing this little theory supporting production so it's really up to you to "right", not me. So far you're not producing any real evidence of it. And I doubt you ever will besides saying "it's obvious!" and "I don't have to show you..."
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#64 Apr 11 2011 at 5:11 PM Rating: Decent
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Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
That's not the point at all. It's so that when prices are high, more of the cost of oil consumption generates benefits to US owned businesses instead of simply piling into the pockets of foreign owned businesses. That money will flow into domestic business operations, which pay taxes in the US, and which employ people in the US, who spend that money in the US, thus offsetting to some degree a higher price of oil.

Unless you have some real numbers, I think you're vastly, vastly overinflating the effect of what you describe. And if you think this gives some real foreign policy or economic leverage to say "Yeah well, Shell will just drill here and sell our oil back to us at $140 a barrel (unless China buys it or India or Indonesia or...) and we'll get some minor benefit so HA!", I'm just going to laugh at you. Or your statement that this will "save us some cash".


If the choice is between buying that oil from Shell at $140 a barrel or buying it from some foreign oil producer for the same cost, isn't the former better than the latter? Even if our production has absolutely zero impact on global oil prices at all, it's worth doing. Isn't it?

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Actually, we can't. I mean, perhaps going from zero capacity to 100% full-every-spot-being-tapped capacity but any realistic ramp up from out current capacity is not going to make a major impact.


We can't now, because our own oil needs so far outstrip our oil production that we're at or near production maximums already and are unable to take any advantage of changing oil prices.

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And, again, you're vastly overstating the effect of "news". Remember when Bush announced about offshore drilling and it did nothing?


No one expected that it would. Not today anyway.

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Investors aren't stupid -- they know what you're looking at a decade or more between announcing and actual oil entering the market.


I'm not sure what point you're making here. No one is arguing that announcing plans to increase US domestic oil production 8-10 years down the line is going to have an immediate effect on oil prices today (ok, maybe some nutballs are, but no one serious). The argument is that we need to start increasing oil production infrastructure today so that 10 years down the line we're not just as subject to the whims of the oil market as we are today.

I just don't understand at all the argument that there's no sense doing this because it'll take too long to take effect. If we'd increased that oil production infrastructure 10 years ago, wouldn't we have it in place today? It's like arguing that there's no point taking any steps towards the grocery store because it'll take a thousand more to get there and we need groceries right now. Um... That need doesn't change if we don't start walking, right?


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And that doesn't benefit the rest of us?

Significantly so? No. Unless you want to show otherwise.


Huh? Are you seriously arguing that it doesn't benefit us to produce more of the oil we consume in the US than to buy it from foreign sources? Because that's a bit crazy. If you can't grasp that producing something locally is pretty universally viewed as good for said local economy, then I'm not sure how I can help you to understand this. You'll just have to take my word for it that this is true I guess.


Quote:
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Your failure in this matter doesn't translate into you being right.

But you're the one positing this little theory supporting production so it's really up to you to "right", not me. So far you're not producing any real evidence of it.


What evidence would suffice? You need someone to tell you that increased domestic oil production would benefit the US economically? Isn't the fact that this is true for any good in any market proof enough? Maybe you should take a basic economics class or something?


Quote:
And I doubt you ever will besides saying "it's obvious!" and "I don't have to show you..."


Lol! Covering your bases, aren't you? I love it when you do this btw Joph. You predict the obvious response to your ridiculous argument and then declare victory because you predicted it. Wow! That's so clever...

But heres some guy writing a paper on the subject. As predicted, he concludes that areas where oil is produced locally are not negatively impacted when there are sudden oil price spikes (and in some cases actually benefit). That was like 10 seconds of googling Joph. It's not like the concept of "local production of a good benefits local economy if said good increases in cost" is even remotely difficult to understand much less even refuted seriously.


But I'm sure you'll insist that that's not sufficient evidence I guess. I'm sure you'll play the usual game you play of insisting that nothing I say is "proof", while insisting that if I don't provide proof, I must be wrong. At the end of the day, what you are arguing completely flies in the face of some pretty basic economic realities. It's you who need to make the argument that increased production wont benefit the US. I don't think you can do that though, so you fall back on this incredibly lame approach.

Edited, Apr 11th 2011 4:12pm by gbaji
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#65 Apr 11 2011 at 5:23 PM Rating: Decent
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And just for giggles, here's another article discussing this issue. Note, how the political appointee repeats the same strawman you are "that increased supply wont affect price", and see how it's refuted with the exact same arguments I'm making:

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Despite its impact on the price of gasoline, Felmy said there are plenty of other economic benefits to increasing our domestic oil production.

“Even if you forget about the price impact,” he said, “there’s a very good number of reasons why you would produce here. It would generate jobs. It will reduce the trade deficit, and it will improve our economic security and government revenue. So irrespective of the price, there are a lot of very good reasons to do it, and so we continue to emphasize that.”


Arguments against increased domestic oil production only work if they focus solely on the effect on the price of oil (and really the resulting price for gas at the pump). They fail utterly when one considers all the other economic aspects of the issue.

Edited, Apr 11th 2011 4:24pm by gbaji
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#66 Apr 11 2011 at 6:16 PM Rating: Excellent
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You've completely changed your argument to one about domestic drilling creating jobs. Your initial argument was, and I quote you again...
Quote:
When prices are cheap, there's nothing wrong with buying our oil from foreign sources. But IMO the ability to be able to walk away from a foreign oil producer when we want and say "Nah. We'll just turn on those pumps we've got at home and save ourselves some cash" gives us not only significant economic advantages, but also gives us a bit more foreign policy leverage.

We're not going to be walking away from any foreign oil producer. How exactly do you propose that we only purchase domestically produced oil?

Your first link fails to address this at all. Your second link has the American Petroleum Institute guy admitting that just drilling for domestic oil won't affect global prices but it'll produce some jobs so yay for that. By the way, lulz at you snidely saying "political appointee!" but then taking an oil industry lobbyist's word as gospel.

If your argument is solely "Paying people to drill holes in the US results in hole drilling jobs", then let me know. But that wasn't what you were arguing. You were saying that we could just walk away from foreign oil producers and "save some cash" by "turning on the pumps at home".

Edited, Apr 11th 2011 7:19pm by Jophiel
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#67REDACTED, Posted: Apr 12 2011 at 9:21 AM, Rating: Sub-Default, (Expand Post) Jophed,
#68 Apr 12 2011 at 9:32 AM Rating: Excellent
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Why "get serious about drilling" if no one can explain how this will significantly reduce our dependence upon foreign oil without utilizing strict market controls? We have no effective way to tell Saudi Arabia (for example) to **** off and stop buying their specific oil off the global market while ensuring that we only buy oil from Exxon drilled in the Gulf.

And, even if we could, we have no way to prevent Exxon from charging the same exact $135 a barrel for Gulf oil that the Saudi oil is costing. Try to pay Exxon less and they'll just sell the oil elsewhere for the real going rate. So this pipe dream that we'll "turn on the pumps at home and save ourselves some cash" is just that, a pipe dream.

Can we at least get an honest admission that domestic production isn't going to be some magic unshackling from foreign production?

Edited, Apr 12th 2011 10:34am by Jophiel
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#69 Apr 12 2011 at 9:34 AM Rating: Good
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varusword75 wrote:
First lets start getting serious about drilling.
So you have no idea how you would be able to purchase only domestically produced oil? Got it.
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#70 Apr 12 2011 at 9:36 AM Rating: Excellent
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Jophiel wrote:
And, even if we could, we have no way to prevent Exxon from charging the same exact $135 a barrel for Gulf oil that the Saudi oil is costing. Try to pay Exxon less and they'll just sell the oil elsewhere for the real going rate. So this pipe dream that we'll "turn on the pumps at home and save ourselves some cash" is just that, a pipe dream.
That's easy to solve. Just buy up Exxon with US taxpayers money and dictate how they run things.
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#71 Apr 12 2011 at 9:38 AM Rating: Decent
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The government doesn't have to buy anything. You "nationalize" it.
#72REDACTED, Posted: Apr 12 2011 at 9:38 AM, Rating: Sub-Default, (Expand Post) Jophed,
#73 Apr 12 2011 at 9:48 AM Rating: Excellent
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varusword75 wrote:
First off you have to start somewhere.

That's a meaningless phrase that does nothing to answer the question. We're supposedly "starting" to remove the shackles of foreign oil. So how does this "start" to do so? You can't just do random things and say "I can't say how this will work but you have to start somewhere..."

Quote:
And you won't have to prevent Exxon from charging the same exact 135$ a barrel. It would be in their best, most profitable, interests to offer a better product for less. You know that whole profit motive thing.

Exxon produced oil sells for the same price as the rest of the oil in its class on the global market. They will sell their sweet crude for the same price as every other producer is selling their sweet crude. We're not talking widgets here but global commodities.

So are you going to answer the question yet? How does domestic production allow us to "turn on the pumps at home and save some cash" thus giving us some sort of notable foreign policy leverage without strict market controls keeping that oil at home and underpriced?
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#74 Apr 12 2011 at 10:16 AM Rating: Excellent
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I daresay Joph has Varus over the proverbial barrel.
#75REDACTED, Posted: Apr 12 2011 at 10:21 AM, Rating: Sub-Default, (Expand Post) Jophed,
#76 Apr 12 2011 at 10:24 AM Rating: Excellent
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varusword75 wrote:
We're talking about capitalism.

Well, I am. You're talking some sort of unicorn daydreams.
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And it never ceases to amaze me that you think flooding the market with oil won't decrease it's cost.

You don't know what "flooding" is, do you?

Did you have an answer yet about how we're going to purchase and use US oil off the global market instead of foreign oil?
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