Rhoto said:
And stop oil speculation and trading on borrowed money.
That too. That is a big problem.
And I'm curious, how is mass transit going to help farmers in the Midwest filling up their tractors? I can appreciate the benefit to those of us who live in densely populated areas and the job boom, but that will still be a temporary work force, that will probably be Mexican.
How won't it help the farmers? Getting tractors that are better mileage and can run better and longer. Plus when the shipping costs of the farmers goes down, then so will the gas prices.
Do not think that this is to get gas prices to go down. I am advocating an entire shift in the nature of the United States political system and its people. If we continue to rely on outside sources for energy then we will be damned.
And are you willing to have a massive increase to anything that requires gas to arrive at your local store?
If there was an effective program coming into use for public transportation, then I would be one of the first people to help get it going.
if we would redo the public transit system, then we would actually be creating growth in this country and demand would go down as well. More people using public transit would theoretically equal less gas consumption. Less gasoline consumption would equal lower prices as well at the pump.
And if you would really like to think about it, if we could rework the coal industry of Montana. Montana has enough coal that it has been dubbed "the Saudia Arabia of the United States"
Cause a $2 tax cannot be absorbed by the economy. Even if 50% of people switch to public trans, bicycle, etc, that still won't help the shipping industries and every thing that requires gasoline to be brought to market.
true all at once, it cannot be absorbed. If we would continually add a quarter in each couple months, then the country would be able to absorb it.
Actually less demand will help the country more and more. Supply and Demand is what is happening. Gasoline is an inelastic demand unless we change the backbone of the country.
The internal combustion engine gives most of it's energy off as heat. So lets stop using fossil fuels all together, and invest in electric cars. They're more powerful, quieter, more durable and have no foreseeable power cap. Tesla baby.
True, it would be a good idea to go to electric cars. Unfortunately, it is a short term solution to a long term problem.
We have the technology and the know-how to redesign the engine to get well over 50 miles per gallon or higher. Hell, I read an article at Yahoo about a car that can get over 3,000 miles to the gallon (three wheeled car with a much different design) from a French team. This is one example of a car that can get massive amounts of energy. If one group can do this, then why can we not get this into the everyday cars?
I also heard that combustion engines only use 31% of the energy that it could be using. I'm not sure the validity of the statement and I would love to learn more about it.
I offer this solution that will help the market and get rid of the gas guzzling vehicles.
Offer better tax and insurance breaks to the owners of cars and the companies that get all of there vehicles over 50 mpg. This will offer money back to the owners of such cars and send over tax breaks to the companies that get rid of ALL cars in their lines that get below 50 mpg. With higher gas mileage, theoretically demand will go down. I have a general gist of the supply/demand.
comic_relief
P.S. we must diversify our energy needs. I know that oil is the most powerful product out there at the moment, but putting all of our eggs in one basket is a disaster