- Nov 22, 2000
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I think they'd spend billions of dollars on drilling and new refineries if the Democrats, liberals, hippies, ecoterrorists, and enviro-nazis (and anyone else for that matter) would take a step back and let some of it happen. If the mandates and regulations weren't so prohibitive, I would imagine the oil companies would be building refineries and drilling wells like crazy, because those billions would translate to trillions at some point, maybe even translate to brazilians!JuliusPleaser said:Here's some common sense for you.
Big oil has two choices. They can either:
A. Do nothing and continue to make more profit than any industry in the history of mankind (while blaming the Democrats, liberals, hippies, ecoterrorists, and enviro-nazis for those record profits).
B. Spend billions of dollars on drilling and new refineries so they can sell their products for less.
Let's talk about common sense. ;)
Patman said:How do ya' figure that JP?
The "cost" of gasoline roughly breaks down like this.
-58 percent of the cost is for crude oil (the product itself, with a price determined by its market demand)
-15 percent goes to state and federal taxes
-17 percent to oil companies and refineries
-10 percent to distributors and marketers
Do the big oil companies make huge profits? Sure but what drives the cost of the base product up? Who doesn't want us tapping in to some the largest oil fields ever found? It looks like 17% of the buck stops at the big oil companies and 58% is someplace else. Shouldn't the 58% get 58% of the blame? The oil companies are not setting the price of the base product, but I figured everyone knew that.
XRpredator said:I think they'd spend billions of dollars on drilling and new refineries if the Democrats, liberals, hippies, ecoterrorists, and enviro-nazis (and anyone else for that matter) would take a step back and let some of it happen. If the mandates and regulations weren't so prohibitive, I would imagine the oil companies would be building refineries and drilling wells like crazy, because those billions would translate to trillions at some point, maybe even translate to brazilians!
I love you JP
Love,
your pal
pred :)
Now that IS true. Do you happen to subscribe that all this oil that is being extracted will also cause the plates of the eart to rub together like a giant 2 stroke piston without premix? :)JuliusPleaser said:That's the cool thing about being an American - you're free to buy whatever BS story you choose.
.
He wasn't abducted, he just went to his home planet.Patman said:Let me guess Elvis is still alive but abducted by little green men.
Patman said:Now that IS true. Do you happen to subscribe that all this oil that is being extracted will also cause the plates of the eart to rub together like a giant 2 stroke piston without premix? :)
Patman said:Now that IS true. Do you happen to subscribe that all this oil that is being extracted will also cause the plates of the eart to rub together like a giant 2 stroke piston without premix?
JuliusPleaser said:I was wondering what all the squeaking was about.
BSWIFT said:I don't know the exact amount of gallons of fuel sold in the US every day but, let's say that the oil companies clear $.01 of every gallon as profit. The resulting figure is huge (economy of scale). If you allow them to make $.01 thru every process from crude extraction, transportation, storage, refining, and retail delivery, you can see that their profits are HUGE. That is how an economy of scale works.
As a small business owner, I would flat be broke if I only made $.01 profit per given widget I produce. Now if you or anyone else are working for a private company and you only produce $.01 profit per widget, you'd be unemployed pretty quickly and you are about to see this happen in the 3 major US automakers.
US history provides many examples of "carpet bagging" and speculation. Each envolves greedy people or companies taking advantage of those in dire need. This is in effect, capitalism at its extreme. To me, those who drive up the price of such a vital comodity are UN-patriotic and they threaten our nations economic security, regardless of political affiliation. With all speculation there comes risks. The largest risk in this type of uncontrolled speculation is economic collapse and no president will have the power to stop it. Our do-nothing Congress will argue, study, and argue more before taxing us more and cause a second Historic Wall Street crash before any real solution is to be found, all the while lining their pockets with stock gains.
Continue to blaim the oil companies and the president if you must but they are only the whipping post of the ignorant and politically motivated. The Constitution spells out the powers of the three branches of government and I don't see anywhere that the President controls the price of fuel. The buck stops in congress. Congress is controlled by corperate special interests and the national party leaders that put their own agenda's ahead of the natural economic supply and demand formula.
Learn to grow your own food, fish, and hunt because the trips to the grocery store wll soon be the largest cut of your budget.
I think this is what the left doesn't want people to understand.Senior KX Rider said:Arctic May Hold 90 Billion Barrels of Oil, U.S. Says
Senior KX Rider said:You are absolutely right Brian. These companys operate on a profit margin of somewhere between 9 and 11 percent. That is borderline of being shameful in the business world.
They’ve always been at the top of the pyramid, but the past few years it’s exceeded anything in the past. Businessweek recently published article on oil executive paychecks. For the article, they commissioned a study on the compensation of the top 25 oil and gas firm’s executives. Here’s some of what they found:
“Equilar’s study found that for the 12 CEOs at the largest U.S.-based, publicly traded oil companies, median total compensation increased by more than four times the rate of that of executives in the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index as a whole.”
Last year, Exxon made the biggest profit of any company ever, $36 billion, and its retiring chairman appears to be reaping the benefits. Exxon is giving Lee Raymond one of the most generous retirement packages in history, nearly $400 million, including pension, stock options and other perks, such as a $1 million consulting deal, two years of home security, personal security, a car and driver, and use of a corporate jet for professional purposes.
Last November, when he was still chairman of Exxon, Raymond told Congress that gas prices were high because of global supply and demand.
"We're all in this together, everywhere in the world," he testified.
Raymond, however, was confronted with caustic complaints about his compensation.
"In 2004, Mr. Raymond, your bonus was over $3.6 million," Sen. Barbara Boxer said.
That was before new corporate documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission that revealed Raymond's retirement deal and his $51.1 million paycheck in 2005. That's equivalent to $141,000 a day, nearly $6,000 an hour. It's almost more than five times what the CEO of Chevron made.
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