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Gasoline price thread


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2022 Mar 8, 11:35am   81,712 views  535 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (55)   💰tip   ignore  

https://slaynews.com/news/aaa-lists-10-most-expensive-states-for-gas-9-are-blue-states-in-bad-sign-for-joe-and-kamala/?source=patrick.net


AAA Lists Most Expensive States for Gas: 9 of Top 10 Are Run by Democrats
David Hawkins March 8, 2022

According to AAA here are the most expensive states for gas as of Monday:

The American Automobile Association (AAA) has listed the top-ten most expensive states to buy gas, nine of which are run by Democrats.

According to AAA, the national average for a gallon of gas is $4.06 and rising.

The average is now 45 cents more than a week ago, 62 cents more than a month ago, and $1.30 more than a year ago.

And it promises to get worse as the West debates banning Russian oil.

AAA has released a list of the ten states with the most expensive gas prices and most are blue states.

The only red state in the top ten is Alaska, which surprisingly comes in at number 6.

Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy, said:

“There are few words to describe the unprecedented rise in gasoline prices over the last week, with massive spikes coast to coast in both gasoline and diesel prices, as oil prices jump to their highest since 2008. ...

California: $5.34
Hawaii: $4.69
Nevada: $4.59
Oregon: $4.51
Washington: $4.44
Alaska: $4.39
Illinois: $4.30
Connecticut: $4.28
New York: $4.26
Pennsylvania: $4.23




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41   Patrick   2022 Mar 11, 10:03am  

https://t.me/greatreject/32049?source=patrick.net

Tennessee trucker sends a wakeup call…
45   clambo   2022 Mar 11, 10:17am  

My friend from Riviera Beach told me her mother voted for Biden because she thought Kamala was black and she was “our kind, one of us.”

I asked her if her mother was happy paying $2.25 more per gallon now.

Off the subject, the mother called me on her other daughter’s cell phone, the first time we ever spoke.
She “axxed” to borrow money to install a new roof on the family home.

I conveniently blamed Putin for a precipitous drop of my net worth. No dice madam.
I got the idea from Biden.
Of course since the invasion it’s just another 3% or so.

Gasoline isn’t expensive, it just costs more than some people can afford.
47   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Mar 11, 12:03pm  

clambo says
Gasoline isn’t expensive, it just costs more than some people can afford.



Spot On, bro.

I filled up an awd five-passenger hatchback a couple of days ago in San Jose. $34.50 at $5.299 per gallon for 197 miles of driving. That pencils out to about 17.5 cents per mile. This is one of the Bargains of the Millenia, an awd vehicle that weighs approximately one ton, can haul up to five adults, and some stuff in the back, for 17.5 cents per mile.

Compare that to what it'd have cost our ancestors not so long ago, to feed and water horses if they didn't want to walk.

$5.299 per gallon, even $20 per gallon, is Super-Cheap, considering what we get for what we pay.

Cannot afford it? What's so wrong with carpooling ("ride sharing"?). I traveled once to a place where folks of modest means who were lucky enough to have a car would pick up strangers along the way in exchange for some small amount of money to defray their fuel cost. I even got a couple such rides myself.

$5.299, Bargain of the Millenia.
48   Patrick   2022 Mar 11, 12:31pm  

I'm not a fan of cars and gas myself, but I don't like the true suffering the higher prices are causing for the poorer half of America.
49   EBGuy   2022 Mar 11, 2:46pm  

joshuatrio says
I saw this coming last year when Biden got elected. In July 2021, I sold my boat and new truck, both for significantly more than I paid for both. I ordered a Prius Prime and got it for under sticker.

Best of both worlds. 35 mile EV range which is 95% of my driving. When I switch over to gas, I get 55mpg.

Great timing JT on getting one under sticker. Used Prius Primes seem to have one of the higher premiums these days. Volts can be a little better. I was looking at the CMAX Energi (plug in hybrid) a while back. Nothing is cheap these days, but it does seem you can do better with the CMAX. From Edmunds:
My last 4 cars were Priuses, my wife also drives a Prius. Her first response when she drove my C-Max was, "WOW!" I wanted a plug in, but the Prius plug in wasn't available yet in my state (plus, it's about 8 grand more than I paid for my C-Max), so I took a look at the C-Max Energi. SO GLAD I DID! I LOVE THIS CAR! It is better than the Prius in every possible way, except, possibly, reliability, which in the Prius is legendary, the C-Max could be too, just haven't had it long enough to know. It is faster, more quiet, much more comfortable...
51   AmericanKulak   2022 Mar 11, 5:05pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says
Cannot afford it? What's so wrong with carpooling ("ride sharing"?). I traveled once to a place where folks of modest means who were lucky enough to have a car would pick up strangers along the way in exchange for some small amount of money to defray their fuel cost. I even got a couple such rides myself.

In these days of suburbs, where it's not unusual for a couple to work in two completely different directions, or neighbors for that matter, carpooling is less of an answer.

The entirety of the US is built around suburbs and commuting.

What would really be great leadership is "If you are not physically required to be present, companies MUST let you work at home or themselves be ineligible for any tax breaks on gas/travel expenses."
53   pudil   2022 Mar 11, 5:47pm  

All this talk about electric cars is all bullshit. Congrats, your subsidized bad decision is cheaper to drive now that Biden has fucked it all up.

I’m going on vacation pulling a trailer for 400 miles. It’s going to cost me $200, which is $100 too much but your model X will take 2 days to cover it as it will only go 100 miles between charges.

Nevermind trucks hauling important shit like food.

Anyways, congratulations on your slave made car fueled by coal. Progress!
54   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Mar 11, 6:03pm  

AmericanKulak says
In these days of suburbs, where it's not unusual for a couple to work in two completely different directions, or neighbors for that matter, carpooling is less of an answer.

The entirety of the US is built around suburbs and commuting.


I have only ever lived in suburbs. I carpooled for about ten years, from San Jose to different Silicon Valley workplaces (Mountain View, Sunnyvale, IBM in South San Jose, Milpitas). My spouse who also worked (and carpooled), and some of those ten years we were parents of kids who needed chauffeuring. It can be done.

Yes, it's true, I had to drive a little bit to our meeting point (carpool did not meet at my residence). I quit carpooling when I began night shift.

But! What I/we did not do, was arrange our life in a super-hyper-efficient way where every freaking thing has to dovetail perfectly in such a way that made carpooling impractical. Doing that would be kind of stupid, allowing no margin for error.
55   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Mar 11, 6:14pm  

pudil says
All this talk about electric cars is all bullshit.


I got one of the early Priuses in 2001. I needed a car and was sort of fascinated with the concept. I did not purchase it out of environmentalism or as a status symbol. (Besides the early Priuses were butt-ugly).

As time went on the Prius became a Status Symbol (this is pre-Tesla days), and so many Bay Area Hipsters got one. They used to like to boast about how much they were saving on gasoline. But they never talked about the cost of a replacement battery.

Every time I took my Prius for service, I would have the service advisor re-give me an informal quote for a replacement battery. The answer was always the same: $4000.

In 2006, Toyota replaced the battery under warranty due to a defect. They did not extend the original warranty. I asked the service advisor what was the warranty period if I had to buy a replacement battery after my battery's warranty expired: two years. The $4000 replacement battery warranty would be two years.

I keep log sheets of my costs for all my cars.. For the Prius, I had an accrual for the replacement battery cost that I amortized over the warranty period. I reckoned, for the fuel savings compared to a Corolla (about the same size), I had "broken even" on battery vs fuel cost savings after about 100,000 miles, this was after about ten years driving.

Smugsters and Hipsters with EV's don't bring up the cost of the battery.
56   socal2   2022 Mar 11, 6:23pm  

There is a dude that drives a Prius in my neighborhood that has a bumper sticker saying:

"Nice Prius!"
"Said no one....."
57   Eman   2022 Mar 11, 6:43pm  

socal2 says
Save_Ukraine says
@socal2
Which model did you get?


I got a Model Y dual motor. Ordered it back in August and it arrived in January. The thing is a spaceship! The speed, acceleration, torque, regenerative breaking (especially the regen breaking!), infotainment/audio system, autopilot (didn't get FSD). Can't imagine the acceleration in the Performance model let alone the Plaid, it is already crazy fast for a mid-range model.

All American car made by a company with a non-woke CEO like Musk.


@socal, congrats! It’s a fun car to drive. Hope you got it before all the price increases.

If it weren’t for the tri-motor Cybertruck, I would have ordered the Plaid. Can’t take anything with us when we’re gone. Might as well enjoy life without breaking the bank. YOLO! 😂
58   Eman   2022 Mar 11, 6:44pm  

socal2 says
There is a dude that drives a Prius in my neighborhood that has a bumper sticker saying:

"Nice Prius!"
"Said no one....."


I saw a license plate frame on a Prius “0-60 eventually”. The car owner has a good sense of humor.
59   socal2   2022 Mar 11, 7:12pm  

Eman says
@socal, congrats! It’s a fun car to drive. Hope you got it before all the price increases.

If it weren’t for the tri-motor Cybertruck, I would have ordered the Plaid. Can’t take anything with us when we’re gone. Might as well enjoy life without breaking the bank. YOLO!


I ordered in August, so I got it about $4-5K cheaper than what it is now. Still the most expensive car I have ever owned/leased.

I can't drive it enough! I am volunteering for every errand and school pickup/drop-off. I am fortunate that I live in an area with really nice roads and hills where I can let it out and get some really good speed. It never gets old.

Can't wait to see some Cybertrucks on the road. I live in EV mecca and already saw a few Rivians driving around.
60   Eman   2022 Mar 11, 7:25pm  

socal2 says
already saw a few Rivians driving around.


Same here in NorCal. Saw a few driving around. The pricing is not bad compared to the competitions.

I got mine in 2017 so free supercharging for life. It’s convenient to get free charge most of the time. Get a free charge while going for a 2-3 mile walk with my wife, or picking up stuff at Target or Home Depot while getting a free charge.

To me, it has been worth every penny. Also the most expensive car I’ve ever bought. I dreamed of owning it in 2012 and it happened in 2017. As Walt Disney said “All your dreams can come true if you have the courage to pursue them.” This has been so true for me in the last 20+ years. 🙏
61   HeadSet   2022 Mar 11, 8:08pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says
I had an accrual for the replacement battery cost that I amortized over the warranty period. I reckoned, for the fuel savings compared to a Corolla (about the same size), I had "broken even" on battery vs fuel cost savings after about 100,000 miles, this was after about ten years driving.

Interesting. I know the folks who operate a taxi company in Arizona that has a fleet of 200 Prius. They told me they routinely get 250,000 to 300,000 miles out of the Prius, with no change in battery.
62   Patrick   2022 Mar 11, 8:34pm  

https://nitter.pussthecat.org/Not_the_Bee/status/1501716520472350721?source=patrick.net


President Biden recently said “it’s simply not true that my administration or policies are holding back domestic energy production.”

I figure the fact checkers likely won’t touch this one, so I did the homework.

Biden’s claim isn’t true. I explain.


Just two weeks ago, Biden froze new drilling permits and stopped leases on federal lands because a court ruled that they couldn’t use an elevated “social cost of carbon” to make it more difficult to drill.

Instead, they shut the whole process down: nytimes.com/2022/02/20/clima…

Biden Administration Halts New Drilling in Legal Fight Over Climate Costs
The Interior Department is pausing new federal oil and gas leases and permits after a judge blocked the government from weighing the cost of climate damage in decisions.

nytimes.com


This opposition to domestic energy production isn’t new. When Biden first took office, he moved to ban new oil and gas leases on federal land (a huge slice of US energy) via executive order.

The measure was eventually stopped by the courts. nytimes.com/2021/01/25/clima…

Biden Sets in Motion Plan to Ban New Oil and Gas Leases on Federal Land (Published 2021)
The president will announce a suite of executive actions on Wednesday to combat climate change, two people familiar with his plans said, and will ask federal agencies to determine the extent of a...

nytimes.com

Back before gas prices hit record highs, Biden’s allies were praising the Admin for taking bold steps to limit fossil fuel production.

One of their key points? We, supposedly, already had enough supply “to meet domestic needs.”

nrdc.org/experts/joshua-axel…

Biden’s Fossil Fuel Leasing Pause Is Bold Climate Action
The moratorium on fossil fuel leasing is a key step in addressing the climate crisis.

nrdc.org

Biden also proposed ending a wide range of tax benefits for drilling and exploration, something supporters said would hopefully “discourage additional oil and gas development.”

This makes the process more expensive, particularly when competing with heavily subsidized renewables.



And I’m sure that no one has forgotten that Biden shutdown the Keystone XL pipeline on his first day in office.

But what you may have forgotten was that this was part of a broader suite of efforts to “reverse ‘more than 100’ Trump-era policies.” foxbusiness.com/economy/bide…



Taken together, these early moves represent what climate activist Bill McKibben said “may well mark the official beginning of the end of the fossil-fuel era” arguing “they send a decisive signal about the end of one epoch and the beginning of another.” newyorker.com/news/daily-com…




In June of 2021, Biden suspended oil and gas leases that the Trump Admin had granted in Alaska, outraging local officials and ending one of the key actions Trump took to expand domestic energy production. apnews.com/article/alaska-ar…

Biden suspends oil leases in Alaska's Arctic refuge
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration on Tuesday suspended oil and gas leases in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, reversing a drilling program approved by the Trump administration and...

apnews.com

All of these federal efforts came with a clear goal in mind: sending a signal that the days of fossil fuels would be ending soon.

Again, once upon a time, the corporate press was comfortable admitting this was the goal:

time.com/5934090/joe-biden-c…

Biden's Biggest Climate Move: Signaling that Fossil Fuels Are Not the Future
Biden’s remarks communicated a sea change in how the U.S. government will approach global warming

time.com

These signals matter.

Extractive industries like oil & gas rely heavily on tea-leaf-reading, because even seemingly small gov’t actions can have huge impacts for a heavily regulated industry. A quick, easy-to-follow breakdown of some of the reasons here: investopedia.com/ask/answers…

How do government regulations impact the oil and gas drilling sector?
Find out how government regulation of the oil and gas sectors is often positive for the large companies, but may be negative for smaller operations.

investopedia.com

And it wasn’t just Biden acting on his own.

As @SaysSimonson wrote about for @FreeBeacon, Dems in Congress have pushed to restrict domestic energy production even as prices have climbed:
freebeacon.com/politics/how-…

How Dems Helped Spike Gas Prices - Washington Free Beacon
Despite reassurances from the White House that it is doing nothing to discourage oil companies from opening new drill sites, President Joe Biden's allies in Congress just months ago pressured oil...

freebeacon.com

Congressional Dems have also taken steps to add tighter (and in some cases, just punitive) regulations that make it harder for domestic energy companies to do business, including regs on offshore oil & regarding methane.

Naturally, making a process harder increases the cost.



And there were numerous hearings where Democrats have demonized the oil and gas industry in colorful but seriously dubious ways, making the industry’s standing on that side of the aisle clear.


Plus, something that gets left out of the current discourse is that numerous states have banned or proposed banning fracking, an effective way to access hard-to-reach energy sources.

I’ll give you one guess which politically party was behind these efforts.




Now, to be clear, the impacts of some of these efforts have been overblown.

Despite trying to ban new drilling on federal lands, lots of plans have moved forward to do so - more than under President Trump’s first year (largely b/c of Obama-era rules), but fewer than last year.


And it isn’t reasonable to blame Biden - or any president - exclusively for the price of oil and gas. The world is just more complicated than that.

Here’s a good primer on some of that complexity: npr.org/2021/11/14/105506858…

Gasoline prices are surging. Can Biden actually do something about it?
Presidents don't set the gas price you pay at the pump, but they're often blamed for it. And right now, high energy prices are helping send inflation to an over 30-year high.

npr.org

But it’s intellectually disingenuous for President Biden to pretend that he and his party haven’t taken action to make domestic energy production more difficult and, as a result, have made energy more expensive.

They’ve done a lot with the explicit goal of doing just that.

The inconvenient truth is that Biden campaigned on ambitious climate goals. Those aren’t likely to get done organically, so he and his administration have tried to apply pressure to traditional energy sources.

Now that prices have jumped, they’re trying to pretend otherwise.

Increased costs have always been a good-faith concern about climate efforts among lots of people, left, right and center.

Biden and his team ignored those warnings and helped make the bed they find themselves laying.

Rather than admit that, now they’re trying to memoryhole it.
64   joshuatrio   2022 Mar 12, 4:52am  

socal2 says
There is a dude that drives a Prius in my neighborhood that has a bumper sticker saying:

"Nice Prius!"
"Said no one....."


Lol. I have that one on my Prius. My teenage son got it for me. We make fun of the car all the time, but it's actually a nice/comfortable car.
65   WookieMan   2022 Mar 12, 7:12am  

I don't fill up often. Fuel gauge said 10 miles to go. So pretty much a max fill up. $107..... Our prices are sill under $5 because we have the BP refinery over in Gary, IN, so shipping is cheap. We get to write it off, but I know people in town with similar sized cars that aren't going to be able to afford prices like this much longer. Outside of a uHaul or RV rental I don't think I've ever dropped 3 figures on gas.

This is just stupid at this point considering damn near every white collar worker I know is working from home. We have shortages so that has to mean less truck movement of goods. I feel like demand per capita should be at one of its lowest levels in history. I've never spent $75 plus filling my car. Although I don't really care as we'd be fine even if it was $10/gal. Not that I want that... As Patrick mentioned this is basically a tax on the poor because we don't want to drill some holes by some mountain goats or some other animal. The poor, in general, not all, are stupid and don't see it this way. They should be screaming drill baby drill. Mobility is a huge factor in getting out of poverty.
66   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Mar 12, 9:52am  

WookieMan says
I don't fill up often. Fuel gauge said 10 miles to go

I used to operate like that.

I learned my lesson after the Loma Prieta Quake. The power in my neighborhood was restored within about three hours after the quake. We watched the aftermath unfolding on a local news channel. A news-camera-reporter van ran out of gas (or nearly did) in Woodside (on the peninsula). They could not get gas though because the electricity was not restored so the pumps did not operate. Another vehicle was stranded at the station, a Trans Am coasted in on fumes. The driver was Jose Canseco of the Oakland Athletics. His passenger was his super-hot babe of a wife Esther. Canseco was still in uniform, as the players evacuated from the ballpark World Series game that was cancelled. With nothing else to do the TV reporter interviewed Canseco and Esther using their giant antenna transmitter to send the signal to their station.

I learned my lesson from the camera crew and Jose Canseco. Some people died on the causeway across Lake Pontchartrain fleeing hurricane Katrina, because they ran out of gas. Some people died on the road out of Paradise, CA, in the recent wildfire because they ran out of gas. Burned to death in their cars or while fleeing on foot. These are the dramatic stuff that can happen. But a minor inconvenience can become a major one from running out of gas or not being able to buy more, at an inopportune time. After the quake I always try to keep a half tank.
69   SunnyvaleCA   2022 Mar 13, 1:17am  

I saw a Prius bumper sticker that say: "I may be slow, but I'm ahead of you!"

I had a rental Prius and actually kind of liked it... I generally hate automatic transmissions, but at least the Prius was reasonably predictable without any sudden unintended acceleration after a spurious downshift. I also liked the handling of the non-stick tires, with the wheels squealing and front-end plough giving the impression of fun and excitement without needing to go 2x the speed limit.
70   SunnyvaleCA   2022 Mar 13, 1:19am  

I always thought it was bizarre to have a big battery for 35 miles of all-electric driving on a car that already got 50+ MPG. If gas were back at $2/gallon each diligent nightly charge is saving you a maximum of $1.40.
71   SunnyvaleCA   2022 Mar 13, 1:23am  

What do people think about about the Plural for Prius:
Latin: Prii
Greek: Priora
'Merican: Priuses

There's little debate about the collective noun for a group of the things. It's called a "smug." As in: "A see a smug of Priuses waiting at the Über pickup location."
72   SunnyvaleCA   2022 Mar 13, 1:30am  

Diesel is over $6/gallon here in California — more than the so-called "high" octane gasoline (91 octane). I'm thinking this will be putting a squeeze on commercial ground transportation. I assume marine diesel and home heating oil is similarly high, too.
73   joshuatrio   2022 Mar 13, 3:45am  

SunnyvaleCA says
I always thought it was bizarre to have a big battery for 35 miles of all-electric driving on a car that already got 50+ MPG. If gas were back at $2/gallon each diligent nightly charge is saving you a maximum of $1.40.


99% of my driving is less than a 35 miles a day total so I can run for months on a single tank of gas. When I have to take a trip and switch to hybrid mode, I'm still pulling 55+mpg.

I used to hate prius's, but ever since getting one, I have about it all the time. It's a brilliant car that's actually kinda fun to drive.
74   HeadSet   2022 Mar 13, 9:13am  

SunnyvaleCA says
Diesel is over $6/gallon here in California — more than the so-called "high" octane gasoline (91 octane). I'm thinking this will be putting a squeeze on commercial ground transportation. I assume marine diesel and home heating oil is similarly high, too.

Jet fuel too.
75   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Mar 13, 10:07am  

SunnyvaleCA says
There's little debate about the collective noun for a group of the things. It's called a "smug." As in: "A see a smug of Priuses waiting at the Über pickup location."


Agreed.
76   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Mar 13, 10:24am  

SunnyvaleCA says
I always thought it was bizarre to have a big battery for 35 miles of all-electric driving on a car that already got 50+ MPG.

I got my driver license during the Iranian Revolution. I remember reading at the time, the disruptions led to about 5% reduction in global supply of crude oil, causing three hour queues to get gasoline in San Jose, and a tripling of prices (because all pricing of everything is in the margins). My parents let me drive their car when they didn't need it, - they even paid for the gasoline. But in return, I had to buy their gas (with their money). In the three hour queues. Lots of people on edge in those lines.

So, when I finally got some marginal buying power as an adult in the 1990's I was interested in getting an alternative to a gasoline powered car, in case something like that were to happen again. Because of this little detail that I needed reliable transportation to my job. Especially since working night shift then carpooling and public transit were not options. I explored an EV. At the time, it was hobbyists who made their own EVs. (I think the GM EV1 was already off the market and besides too expensive). I attended a couple of meetings of the Silicon Valley Electric Vehicle Association to learn about this concept. What I learned was, this concept was not a practical solution for me. Those hobbyist EVs were for tinkerers who were obsessed with their hobby. Suitable for hobbyist tinkerers but not suitable for a paranoid commuter who wanted reliable transportation. This how I became fascinated by the early Prius when it was available in California in year 2000. Not a gasoline-free solution, but a step in that direction. When the Prius caught on in a big way a few years later, with a new design that was not as butt-ugly as the yr-2000 design, then Bay Area Hipster-Smugsters me-tooism smugged all over the Bay Area in their Priuses. And they became so Smug about their carpool lane stickers.

In recent years I got the plug in version. Not as a fashion statement or status symbol (Tesla replaced Prius for that), but as a somewhat practical alternative for gasoline, because of my paranoia. It is not a perfect solution. A pure EV is more efficient, and as pointed out by Sunnyvale, hauling around a heavy battery for 55 mpg is ridiculous. Maybe even being paranoid about something that happened in 1978 is ridiculous too. Whatever. Sticks and stones.
77   Onvacation   2022 Mar 13, 10:41am  

joshuatrio says
I used to hate prius's, but ever since getting one, I have about it all the time. It's a brilliant car that's actually kinda fun to drive.

My wife bought one new in 2005.

What a great car! Good (not great) acceleration and handling, awesome brakes, and very good gas mileage. It was also comfortable to sit in. Other than maintenance, it never went to the shop. In 200,000 miles we never did anything but change the oil. At 230,000 the catalytic converter went out (damn you CARB for making us pay double for parts just for your sticker) and the battery started to fail. $3,000+ repair bill. I put it on craigslist for $3,000 and had cash in hand a couple hours later.
78   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Mar 13, 11:09am  

Onvacation says
At 230,000...the battery started to fail


Interesting, 230,000 miles; how many years?
79   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Mar 13, 11:21am  

HeadSet says
SunnyvaleCA says
Diesel is over $6/gallon here in California — more than the so-called "high" octane gasoline (91 octane). I'm thinking this will be putting a squeeze on commercial ground transportation. I assume marine diesel and home heating oil is similarly high, too.

Jet fuel too.


This will cause a crisis for the airlines. Because, like restaurant (also in crisis) meals, air travel is a discretionary luxury that we can do fine without. The airlines don't have the pricing power to pass along their higher cost for the scale of marketplace they sized their industry for.

There are a few, like the guy in Chicago area who attacks me, calls me out, calls me names, thinks he's inside my mind that I cannot stand the fact he likes to fly (untrue, my observations are not all about him), who are wealthy enough to pay whatever the new cost will be to operate the flights. There are a few. But just a few. Not enough of them to sustain the scale of the industry.

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