![Image](http://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/petroleum/analysis_publications/primer_on_gasoline_prices/html/Images/pump.gif)
The Left blames Bush Co. (greed) for high prices.
The Right blames the Government (taxes) for high prices.
Where do you shake down on this?
Moderator: Jesus H Christ
King Crimson wrote:anytime you have a smoke tunnel and it's not Judas Priest in the mid 80's....watch out.
mvscal wrote:France totally kicks ass.
King Crimson wrote:anytime you have a smoke tunnel and it's not Judas Priest in the mid 80's....watch out.
mvscal wrote:France totally kicks ass.
windfall tax = cost passed on to the consumer.PSUFAN wrote:The "windfall profits tax" on oil companies that is being proposed is gaining bipartisan momentum. It sounds like a good idea to me..but I'd also like to see some clarity brought to how federal and state tax monies are allocated s it stands now, and what savings and potential services would be rendered with such an additional tax.
what doesn't get taxed that you use every day? hardly anything. trust me the, gubment is getting plenty of funds for construction and upkeep. besides, taxes will only go up no matter what crisis we're in.Dinsdale wrote:As far as the taxes -- how the fuck do people think those roads get there? By magic?
The tax argument is asinine. Another example of Average Joe thinking that everybody else but him should pay his bill. Not nearly as egregious an example as people getting tax breaks for having children, but asinine, nonetheless.
You used the road...that's how you came to buy gasoline. Building and maintaining a road system is very expensive. I can't think of a better way to tax the actual users, in proportion to the amount they use them. People bitching about what amounts to as close to a "perfect" system of taxation is...asinine.
Probably because that would be moronic beyond words.Wolfman wrote:I hear not one single person in DC
calling for even a temporary repeal of taxes
at the pumps !!
Perhaps not there.....but there's been plenty by the conservatives around here.Wolfman wrote: however--I hear not one single person in DC
calling for even a temporary repeal of taxes
at the pumps !!
Gas lines started with Nixon's Administration.mvscal wrote:It would be a disaster. The peanut farming dildo, Jimmuh Cahtuh, did that and the result was rationing and lines out the ass.PSUFAN wrote:The "windfall profits tax" on oil companies that is being proposed is gaining bipartisan momentum. It sounds like a good idea to me..
What, exactly, is that tax supposed to accomplish? How is that going to help?
Nixon never tried price controls?mvscal wrote:The OPEC embargo of 73 in response to the Yom Kippur War has nothing to do with Carter era price controls, dumbfuck.BSmack wrote:Gas lines started with Nixon's Administration.mvscal wrote: It would be a disaster. The peanut farming dildo, Jimmuh Cahtuh, did that and the result was rationing and lines out the ass.
What, exactly, is that tax supposed to accomplish? How is that going to help?
That's odd -- whenever I buy gas, the sticker that is required by law to be on every pump shows the taxes as a "cents per gallon" rate. And I don't believe those have changed at all recently.Jack wrote:State and Federal Government make a %, so the higher the cost, the higher their profit!!
Melting after two replies eh?mvscal wrote:They were a mistake and he admitted as much, you stupid, braindead fuck.BSmack wrote:Nixon never tried price controls?
Why are you so insistent that we repeat that mistake? Don't answer. Just go fuck yourself, dumbshit.
Certainly, deregulation has encouraged gouging. It astounds me to this day how little public outrage there is regarding ENRON's scuttling of the electricity marketplace. They begged for the marketplace to be deregulated, then they raped it. It's really as simple as that.the answer lies in that very dirty word...
Regulation.
King Crimson wrote:anytime you have a smoke tunnel and it's not Judas Priest in the mid 80's....watch out.
mvscal wrote:France totally kicks ass.
I see the new buzzwords are taking hold. Gasoline tax doesn't result in "profit" for government. As Dins points out, these monies are used to maintain the road infrastructure - a staggering task at best.State and Federal Government make a %, so the higher the cost, the higher their profit!!
King Crimson wrote:anytime you have a smoke tunnel and it's not Judas Priest in the mid 80's....watch out.
mvscal wrote:France totally kicks ass.
Energy needs to be treated as a public commodity. Until it is, people will always try to game the system.PSUFAN wrote:Certainly, deregulation has encouraged gouging. It astounds me to this day how little public outrage there is regarding ENRON's scuttling of the electricity marketplace. They begged for the marketplace to be deregulated, then they raped it. It's really as simple as that.the answer lies in that very dirty word...
Regulation.
While most reasoning surrounding a new windfall profits tax has to do with punishing oil companies into lowering prices, mvscal is right...the result of this will be increased prices for the consumer -- unless there is new marketplace regulation.
PSUFAN wrote:It astounds me to this day how little public outrage there is regarding ENRON's scuttling of the electricity marketplace. They begged for the marketplace to be deregulated, then they raped it. It's really as simple as that.
And a newsflash for the not-so-deep-thinkers (sup wolfman) -- The machinery and vehicles required to build and maintain that infrastructure use...are you sitting down?.....petroleum products. Lots of them.PSUFAN wrote:As Dins points out, these monies are used to maintain the road infrastructure - a staggering task at best.
King Crimson wrote:anytime you have a smoke tunnel and it's not Judas Priest in the mid 80's....watch out.
mvscal wrote:France totally kicks ass.
If that's the case, why were we paying as low as .99 cents a gallon in the 90s when Clinton was president?mvscal wrote: Congress reauthorized what were supposed to be temporary price controls from the Nixon administration from 1973 to 1979 or 80. Carter, for some inexplicable reason, decided to replace these price controls with a windfall profits tax and it knocked the bottom out of our domestic energy market and has left us in thrall to foreign producers to this day.
I'd be more impressed if the strawman depiction of Carter he is presenting was even accurate. Not only is he reduced to blaming the shitstorm Chimpy has given to us on a man who hasn't been in office for 25 years, but he can't even get THOSE facts right.PSUFAN wrote:Impressive spin...well, not really. If Carter is really to blame for our dependence on foreign oil, then why haven't almost 5 full Republican administrations been able to change our energy policies for the better?
Kick that strawman's ass, mvscal. Sock it to him. Make him pay.
One only need to look at the congressional hearings last year regarding the oil industry to see how interested republicans are in controlling gas prices. Dems wanted the oil executives to testify under oath, but were blocked by republicans.PSUFAN wrote:Impressive spin...well, not really. If Carter is really to blame for our dependence on foreign oil, then why haven't almost 5 full Republican administrations been able to change our energy policies for the better?
Are you at least capable of admitting that THIS is factualy wrong and an utter pile of partisan shit?mvscal wrote:No, I'm not. I'm using his mistakes and failures as an example of what not to do in the current situation while clueless dumbfucks like you seem hell bent on repeating those mistakes.BSmack wrote:Not only is he reduced to blaming the shitstorm Chimpy has given to us on a man who hasn't been in office for 25 years,
Let's run this past ONE more time. The Windfall Profits tax of 1980 had NOTHING to do with the gas lines of 1979. PERIOD. If you say otherwise you are relying on data from some other alternate reality, not any obtained from this here planet earth.mvscal wrote:It would be a disaster. The peanut farming dildo, Jimmuh Cahtuh, did that and the result was rationing and lines out the ass.PSUFAN wrote:The "windfall profits tax" on oil companies that is being proposed is gaining bipartisan momentum. It sounds like a good idea to me..
What, exactly, is that tax supposed to accomplish? How is that going to help?
Great response... and well thought out once again!mvscal wrote:Come back, if and when, you figure out what the fuck it is you're talking about, you fatass dumbshit.Uncle Fester wrote:If that's the case, why were we paying as low as .99 cents a gallon in the 90s when Clinton was president?mvscal wrote: Congress reauthorized what were supposed to be temporary price controls from the Nixon administration from 1973 to 1979 or 80. Carter, for some inexplicable reason, decided to replace these price controls with a windfall profits tax and it knocked the bottom out of our domestic energy market and has left us in thrall to foreign producers to this day.
Dins,Dinsdale wrote:That's odd -- whenever I buy gas, the sticker that is required by law to be on every pump shows the taxes as a "cents per gallon" rate. And I don't believe those have changed at all recently.Jack wrote:State and Federal Government make a %, so the higher the cost, the higher their profit!!
And the government doesn't "profit" from taxes -- they spend it building and maintaining roads which facilitate the use of...gasoline.
Of all the taxes that can be bitched about, this one ain't it.
Completely agree on the whole supply/demand angle, though. It's nice that the oil industry isn't working with the auto makers to produce fuels that would increase efficiency and reduce emissions, though.
List me as a "defender."m2 wrote:Or, though he has his defenders, Herbert Hoover
Please stop with the retardation.Jack wrote: Some states charge a flat rate but MOST charge sales tax and additional taxes.
That's not what you said the first time. You said this...mvscal wrote:It was a REPONSE to those gas lines....something we are talking about right now as a RESPONSE to "record profits".BSmack wrote:The Windfall Profits tax of 1980 had NOTHING to do with the gas lines of 1979. PERIOD.
It was the wrong RESPONSE then and it is the wrong RESPONSE now.
Clear enough for you?
The result was actualy price stability and a gradual lowering of prices for the long term. You have a problem with that?It would be a disaster. The peanut farming dildo, Jimmuh Cahtuh, did that and the result was rationing and lines out the ass.
OK, I broke down.Dinsdale wrote:I'm much too lazy to count
BSmack wrote:That's not what you said the first time. You said this...mvscal wrote:It was a REPONSE to those gas lines....something we are talking about right now as a RESPONSE to "record profits".BSmack wrote:The Windfall Profits tax of 1980 had NOTHING to do with the gas lines of 1979. PERIOD.
It was the wrong RESPONSE then and it is the wrong RESPONSE now.
Clear enough for you?
Meanwhile, domestic oil production had fallen to its lowest level in 20 years. While demand had continued to rise, domestic producers had fallen behind in the search for new oil reserves. As a result, the United States had increased its reliance on foreign oil supplies. According to the American Petroleum Institute, the United States had derived about 32 percent of its energy from foreign sources in 1983. By 1986 that figure had climbed to 38 percent.
And if we increased FUEL EFFICIENCY, that number could be much closer tyo 100%...without any expensive research and exploration.Meanwhile, domestic oil production had fallen to its lowest level in 20 years. While demand had continued to rise, domestic producers had fallen behind in the search for new oil reserves. As a result, the United States had increased its reliance on foreign oil supplies. According to the American Petroleum Institute, the United States had derived about 32 percent of its energy from foreign sources in 1983. By 1986 that figure had climbed to 38 percent.
Cicero wrote:I like my SUV. I've had once since I was 16. I am used to paying more for gas and as long as I can afford it, I dont care. Its not my fucking problem that gas costs $3.00.
Newsflash, dumbass -- they drill the living FUCK out of Alaska.Ways I would propose to remedy the situation:
1. Drill in Alaska and find areas to drill in other parts of North America
Hello? There's been collusion between the oil giants to PREVENT this. Kind of tilts the whole "supply and demand" thing in their favor -- more profit for less work and production...tell me you knew?2. Expand the number of domestic refineries in this country
I believe this is where the :HUGEFUCKINGROLLEYES: goes.3. Have the Gov't promote that the avg consumer buy gas from companies that dont get their oil from the Middle East (never will happen)
In other words, My minds made up! Don't CONFUSE ME with the facts!!Dinsdale wrote:Jack wrote: Some states charge a flat rate but MOST charge sales tax and additional taxes.
Note to self: Scroll past any future posts from Jack, since he has his head way up his ass, and is making shit up.