Wavy,
I guess I only qualify as a Butt Head as I drive a 210 HP Ford Exploder that 
only gets 20 MPG highway. As has been mentioned, a big part of the problem is S 
& D. With China, India and Russia demanding more oil and gasoline, the supply 
can't keep up. I feel a little pain but I am with Philip in that I am just glad 
that I can buy the gas. It was about 1974 or 75 when it was so scarce that I 
had to know a local official in Hondo to be able to buy gas there for a caving 
trip further west.  I don't have the solution but I still believe that it is in 
the best interest of all US citizens that congress open all accessible areas to 
environmentally safe drilling.
Happy Motoring, as one of the major oil companies used to advertise.
Fritz

________________________________
From: Don Cooper [mailto:wavyca...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, July 18, 2008 12:43 AM
To: Philip L Moss
Cc: texascavers@texascavers.com
Subject: Re: [Texascavers] OT- gas prices

No - but I would give my left nut to go back to the days that gas was 1.05 a 
gallon, when I was making only $19.00 an hour with excellent health benefits 
and rent, including paid utilities were only $500 a month.
Basically, you can blame a lot of the current energy situation, worldwide, on 
assholes who feel like they are ENTITLED to drive 350hp giant SUVs everyday 
everywhere for anything.
-WaV
On Thu, Jul 17, 2008 at 6:14 PM, Philip L Moss 
<philipm...@juno.com<mailto:philipm...@juno.com>> wrote:
Do you want your income to revert to what it was when gas was $0.699/gal. also? 
 Personally, I find it less painful to fill up today than I did in the 
mid-1970s.

BTW - gas prices in some places in the US in 1906 was $1.06/gallon.  Inflation 
calculators say that is equivalent to over $25/gal. in 2008 dollars.  1906 was 
the first year anyone drove from coast to coast in the US and it the trip cost 
about $8,000 in 1906 dollars (fuel, food, maintenance, and a mechanic's salary 
for the trip).  There is a movie called "Horatio's Drive" about the trip.  
Energy prices have been high before, just not much in living memory.

BTW - we do have subsidized gas prices in the US.  There are numerous tax 
breaks specifically for oil companies, their waste is never treated as 
expensively as the same waste from other industries, and I don't believe that 
the American people are getting fair market royalties for oil produced from 
public lands.

Philip L. Moss
philipm...@juno.com<mailto:philipm...@juno.com>

Louise Power <power_lou...@hotmail.com<mailto:power_lou...@hotmail.com>> writes:
>snip<
Yipes! I remember when I thought I was being ripped off at $0.699/gal. Gimme 
back those days!!!


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