No, but would you blow off a goat on the internet for $7?
Being from Alaska originally, I can personally assure you that drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge will NOT solve our current issues with the price of a barrel of oil.
The present prices of oil have to do more with speculation, the falling US dollar, refining capacity, and limitations being placed on production than the amount of total available oil. Drilling in ANWR wouldn't really affect this.
Btw, I happen to be FOR drilling in ANWR.
Also, BTW, us Americans have been spoiled on cheap gas for years, time to deal with reality.
Yes it would take years for the drilling to take effect. From what I have read though it would supply us with 60 years of oil.
Your stance on Oh Well..now we gota pay what everyone else pays is screwed. Middle America can't afford $7 or even $5 a gallon gas. Our cities are not set up like the compact European cities. Most of the people I know commute 70 miles a day from work and back. We gota find a solution to the problem or we are fucked.
How about not living 70 miles from where you work?
I could care less what the price of gas is... I say push it up to $10/gallon and force people to find a better way to travel.
But I guess that's easy to say when I put more miles on a bicycle than I do on a car. I spend less than $5/month on gas and my electric bill is about $30/month.
This is how I travel across the country:
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Grow up and have a family? Do you think we chose to drive 70 miles..fool??. We have to because we live in a town where the nearest "city" is 70 miles away.
Option C - Move the country toward alternative energy sources.
Option C - Move the country toward alternative energy sources.
You do realize that this argument, as written, makes absolutely no sense. At least not as a counter to my original statement. You choose to live 70 miles away from one city out of thousands of possible cities you could live or work in. Therefore, driving 70 miles to work is a consequence of a conscious choice you made.
I own a car and have a family. Economic realities force people to change their living conditions. Living 70 miles from work (or perhaps even 15 miles from your kids daycare is no longer practical)
Take public transportation, carpool, or move closer to the places you must go to.
Its really academic to me, but you're lost if you think a grand solution is going to materialize for this problem. People who adapt will naturally do better.
In my state there is a town called Brookline. Housing values have skyrocketed leaving people who inherited houses struggling to pay property taxes. Their income and resources haven't kept pace with economic reality. Its unfortunate, but many of them will have to leave the homes they currently own and move to places that are more in line with what they can afford to pay.
Do people have a right to live 70 miles from work, or in the midwest for that matter? Do people have a right to live in a house that their grandparents bought for $15.000 that is now worth over $1.000.000? No, people have a right to live where they can afford.
If you cant afford gas, or property taxes where you live, you need to leverage your advantages before you lose everything.
Conservatives, like to talk about letting the free market reign, but when it comes down to brass tacks, everyone wants a bailout.
I'm not saying it shouldn't happen, I just don't believe that in a very hurtful short term it will. Best advice? Move.
Amen. With our ablility to innovate, We should have had this issue solved by now. I'm convinced the only reason we don't have an alternative energy solution is because of the goddamn lobbiests (automotive, gas/oil) So to answer popeyes question. I would rather pay 7 dollars, 10 dollars, make 15. Because the only thing that is going to rival Texaco is a national political environment that stands united in their rage against these ridiculous circumstances. And the only way that we seem to get off our empathetic asses is when someone is threating our pocket books. It's already heading that way and I don't want to take the pressure off of them buy opening up a finite resource like Alaska.