Oh Joy
Oh Joy
I just heard on the news that the "National Average" for a price of regular unleaded has dropped seven cents in the last week to $3.70 a gallon....
Well that settles it....
We're moving to National Average; that sounds like a great town....
Here in The City That Used To Know How, we're still well north of 4 bucks a gallon (though it has come down some what from the $4.59 a gallon from a few weeks ago)
Well that settles it....
We're moving to National Average; that sounds like a great town....
Here in The City That Used To Know How, we're still well north of 4 bucks a gallon (though it has come down some what from the $4.59 a gallon from a few weeks ago)



-
@meric@nwom@n
Re: Oh Joy
I filled up at $3.74 a gallon last night. If I had not been in a hurry earlier I could have got it for $3.68.
Re: Oh Joy
Sounds like a great incentive to utilize TCTUTKHBDTMDITSAF's mass transit system. 
For me, it is far better to grasp the Universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring.
~ Carl Sagan
~ Carl Sagan
- Sue U
- Posts: 9084
- Joined: Thu Apr 15, 2010 4:59 pm
- Location: Eastern Megalopolis, North America (Midtown)
Re: Oh Joy
Yesterday filled up at $3.45, down 10 cents from last week and about 50 cents from the high point a few months ago.
GAH!
Re: Oh Joy
I wouldn't wish a ride on MUNI on my worst enemy.bigskygal wrote:Sounds like a great incentive to utilize TCTUTKHBDTMDITSAF's mass transit system.
Your collective inability to acknowledge this obvious truth makes you all look like fools.
yrs,
rubato
-
oldr_n_wsr
- Posts: 10838
- Joined: Sun Apr 18, 2010 1:59 am
Re: Oh Joy
Jersey's gas is always about 40 to 50 cents cheaper.Sue U wrote:Yesterday filled up at $3.45, down 10 cents from last week and about 50 cents from the high point a few months ago.
Here on LI we are about $3.85.
Re: Oh Joy
I paid $3.91 this morning, but it was at a small local station that is always higher and I was running on fumes, so only bought $20 worth. It looks like the average price here is closer to $3.80 again.
“I ask no favor for my sex. All I ask of our brethren is that they take their feet off our necks.” ~ Ruth Bader Ginsburg, paraphrasing Sarah Moore Grimké
Re: Oh Joy
Here in western Pa. the average is $3.65. Down from almost $4.00.
I expect to go straight to hell...........at least I won't have to spend time making new friends.
Re: Oh Joy
I pulled into a gas station the other day because I saw that regular was 3.97 / gallon and everywhere else it was at least 10 cents more.
I inserted my credit card and pushed the 'regular' button.
Nothing came out.
They were out of regular.

I inserted my credit card and pushed the 'regular' button.
Nothing came out.
They were out of regular.
Re: Oh Joy
we're down to the $3.60's
Okay... There's all kinds of things wrong with what you just said.
Re: Oh Joy
Keep it up! Higher!
http://mitsloanexperts.wordpress.com/20 ... economics/
"My colleagues and I found that a jump in the price of gas causes a significant change in the kinds of cars that consumers buy and the price they pay for them. A $1 increase in the gasoline price changes the market shares of the most and least fuel-efficient new cars by +20% and -24%, respectively. Changes in gasoline prices also change the relative prices of the most fuel-efficient cars and the least fuel-efficient cars. For new cars, the relative price increase for fuel-efficient cars is $363 for a $1 increase in gas prices; for used cars it is $2839. (For comparison: a $1 increase in gas prices alters the budget of the average household by about $50 a month.)"
...
" The run-up in the price of gas in recent years has been substantial enough to make top auto executives give up their historic opposition to gasoline price taxes: some have even suggested that Congress should ... create a $4 floor for retail gasoline prices.
Mike Jackson, CEO of AutoNation, the largest U.S. dealership chain, told the Wall Street Journal: “We need more expensive gasoline to change consumer behavior. Otherwise, Americans will continue to favor big vehicles, no matter what kind of fuel-economy standards the government imposes on automakers.”
http://mitsloanexperts.wordpress.com/20 ... economics/
"My colleagues and I found that a jump in the price of gas causes a significant change in the kinds of cars that consumers buy and the price they pay for them. A $1 increase in the gasoline price changes the market shares of the most and least fuel-efficient new cars by +20% and -24%, respectively. Changes in gasoline prices also change the relative prices of the most fuel-efficient cars and the least fuel-efficient cars. For new cars, the relative price increase for fuel-efficient cars is $363 for a $1 increase in gas prices; for used cars it is $2839. (For comparison: a $1 increase in gas prices alters the budget of the average household by about $50 a month.)"
...
" The run-up in the price of gas in recent years has been substantial enough to make top auto executives give up their historic opposition to gasoline price taxes: some have even suggested that Congress should ... create a $4 floor for retail gasoline prices.
Mike Jackson, CEO of AutoNation, the largest U.S. dealership chain, told the Wall Street Journal: “We need more expensive gasoline to change consumer behavior. Otherwise, Americans will continue to favor big vehicles, no matter what kind of fuel-economy standards the government imposes on automakers.”
Re: Oh Joy
Average where I work is about $3.61 a gallon, though one station on the Taunton-Raynham (Massachusetts) line is $3.499 for cash.
I saw gas in Georgia for $3.379 a couple weeks ago.
Rube is, as per usual, a dipshit.
I saw gas in Georgia for $3.379 a couple weeks ago.
Rube is, as per usual, a dipshit.
Treat Gaza like Carthage.
Re: Oh Joy
Lower energy costs are of course good news for everyone, but most particularly for the lowest income citizens, who are always hit the hardest by these gasoline price spikes. Working poor and low income people who rely on their car to get work are badly hurt directly, and all lower income people, whether they drive or not, are of course the ones most damaged by the secondary effects of sharp fuel cost increases, especially the impact on the cost of food. (Anyone one who's been to a grocery store lately can certainly attest to this.) High energy costs also hit small businesses hard, making the them far less likely to hire new people; so another one of the biggest losers from high energy prices are the unemployed.
The only one's I can imagine who would be happy about high gas prices might be some really hardcore Obama haters who are willing to see the economy wrecked to have him defeated; since these costs have been the primary factor in pushing the economy towards a double dip recession, and that would pretty much assure his defeat.
The only one's I can imagine who would be happy about high gas prices might be some really hardcore Obama haters who are willing to see the economy wrecked to have him defeated; since these costs have been the primary factor in pushing the economy towards a double dip recession, and that would pretty much assure his defeat.



Re: Oh Joy
As I said; "bed wetting liberal".
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: Oh Joy
LOL!! 
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: Oh Joy
Lord Jim wrote:Well you know me Strop, "Lord Jim, Champion Of The Downtrodden"....
You mean, you trickle down on them for the economic good?
