Bachmann: I'll bring back $2 gas

No need to guess.... I posted it above.... :)

It wasn't too hard to guess. I've been pushing for these initiatives since before 9/11/01... But at that point thought we missed a perfect opportunity to drive for it, and with the Great Recession on its way to double-dip and a President who insists that only companies he endorses can save us (ignoring that they seem to go bankrupt in two years after his endorsement and infusion lf "stimulus" cash) and the Volt (250 sold last year 250), it's going to take somebody picking this up and running with it to the WH to get it done. It shouldn't take that, but he's a true ideologue on this issue and Obama isn't going to do it. Only the Volt can save us, because he says so.
 
ITs easy to make promises contengent upon an "if" that will never happen.


IF I am elected president, I promise unlimited apple pie for everyone!
 
lol... thanks for such an in depth response.... seriously though.... do you object to any/all of that plan? Or is it a good framework with which to start?

Haven't really thought about it. I'd rather just make sarcastic remarks and make fun of Michele Bachmann.
 
Haven't really thought about it. I'd rather just make sarcastic remarks and make fun of Michele Bachmann.

lol... fair enough... though I would suggest that you do think about it. We need people from far left to far right to get on board with such an initiative for it to work. Obviously the Independents and moderates in both parties would not object.... but would the far right and far left?
 
ITs easy to make promises contengent upon an "if" that will never happen.


IF I am elected president, I promise unlimited apple pie for everyone!

Its even easier to recognize that you are an idiot and offer little to nothing in these discussions.
 
SF, so to achieve your plan you are fundamentally talking about major changes in the country in terms of energy. It's not just a tweak here and there. Do you think Bachmann is thinking something similar? I'm not trying to put her down just trying to understand what she would do to achieve this.
 
SF, so to achieve your plan you are fundamentally talking about major changes in the country in terms of energy. It's not just a tweak here and there. Do you think Bachmann is thinking something similar? I'm not trying to put her down just trying to understand what she would do to achieve this.

yes, I am talking about major changes. No, I don't think she has a plan... I think it is all rhetoric from her... I could be wrong, but if she had a comprehensive plan she would let us know about it. She could even put pressure on the current admin by doing so.

Do you see flaws or potential changes with what I stated? Just looking for feedback from across the spectrum, because I am going to send it to my Senators and Rep. (along with the flat tax plan that I have sent 20 times before :))
 
ITs easy to make promises contengent upon an "if" that will never happen.


IF I am elected president, I promise unlimited apple pie for everyone!


Yeah, its too easy....like President Obama said " that if the economic stimulus bill was passed, unemployment would not go over 8%."
Is there one standard for Democrats and another for Republicans ?

 
no massive change is going to happen, for that I'm happy

Dune, here is a hurdle for you. If electric is soo viable, why is only 1 sold in mass numbers the leaf. And further even a plug in hybrid like the volt only sells in the 10,000 volume.
 
Pipe Dream?!!

How will she do this short of price controls? I would love $2 gas but how much control does the President really have that they can promise or guarantee this?


Bachmann: I'll bring back $2 gas


President Michele Bachmann has a promise: $2 gas.

"Under President Bachmann you will see gasoline come down below $2 a gallon again," Bachmann told a crowd Tuesday in South Carolina. "That will happen."

Sure, politicians promise all kinds of things on the campaign trail. But Bachmann, a leading contender for the 2012 Republican nomination, is wading into truly tricky territory.

The price Americans pay at the pump is tied to the crude oil market -- a global system largely beyond the reach of Washington.

It's certainly true that prices -- now about $3.50 a gallon on average -- have risen since President Obama took office.

"The day that the president became president gasoline was $1.79 a gallon," Bachmann said. "Look what it is today."

Of course, that's not the full story.

When Obama took office, the country was mired in a terrible economic contraction.

"That was in the 4th inning of the greatest recession of our lifetime," said Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst at the Oil Price Information Service.

During recessions, demand for gasoline plummets as trucks pull off the road, companies cut back on travel and laid off workers drive fewer miles.

Obama's desperate SPR oil play

"You have to be careful what you wish for because the recipe for cheap prices these days is economic disaster," Kloza said.

Since early 2009, the economy has recovered somewhat and demand for crude has risen. It has even spiked in the developing world -- especially in China, India and South America.

Kloza said that increased crude demand is the principal driver behind higher gas prices.

"We're going to have to recognize the rest of the world has this increasing appetite for oil," he said. "If we go below $2 a gallon, it probably means there has been a lot of wealth loss and we are in a deflationary period."

There are some measures that could be taken to lower gas prices, according to Phil Flynn, a senior market analyst at PFG Best.





A stronger dollar would take pressure off prices, and reducing the number of miles Americans drive in gasoline-powered cars would also weaken demand.

"I never say never," Flynn said. "But whether or not Bachmann can do that in four years is a tall order."

Bachmann did not lay out a specific plan to drop prices on Tuesday. But her campaign website says that as president, she would ease restrictions on drilling and roll back federal regulations on the shale gas industry.

While increased oil and gas drilling in the United States may create good-paying jobs, reduce reliance on foreign oil and lower the trade deficit, it would have little impact on gas and oil prices.

Drill baby drill won't lower gas prices

That's because the amount of extra oil that could be produced from more drilling in this country is tiny compared to what the country -- and the world -- consumes.

Plus, any extra oil the United States did produce would likely be quickly offset by a cut in OPEC production.

According to a 2009 study from the government's Energy Information Administration, opening up to drilling areas off the East Coast, West Coast and the west coast of Florida would yield an extra 500,000 barrels a day by 2030.

The world currently consumes 89 million barrels a day, and by then would likely be using over 100 million barrels.

After OPEC got done adjusting its production to reflect the increased American output, gas prices might drop a whopping three cents a gallon, the study said.


http://money.cnn.com/2011/08/18/news/economy/bachmann_gas_prices/index.htm?hpt=hp_t2

She Blowing smoke up your ass?!!
ZlRaH.jpg
 
First time for everything.

Your name is no longer rootbeer. I noticed your new moniker... \(\(V\/V)/)/ which means "tobacco enema" in old Norwegian, it's closely related to your old moniker which translated to "teabaggee" as we determined in another thread... We'll call you enema for short. :D
 
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