• Re: Left-wing politicians, environmentalists responsible for high gas p

    From S&P 500 Worst In 50+ Years - Thanks@21:1/5 to democrat_failures@latimes.com on Sat Apr 30 05:57:44 2022
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.obama.faggots, alt.politics.democrats
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    In article <rcof5i$2vl9$3@esteban.tulanet.com>
    S&P 500 Worst In 50+ Years - Thanks Democrats!
    <democrat_failures@latimes.com> wrote:


    Like Hitler, I too have shocking table manners,

    (From Sixth District Congressman Sam Graves)
    When I went to fill up my truck last weekend, I paid over $3.80
    a gallon. That’s almost unheard of in Northwest Missouri. The
    record high average gas price just down the road in St. Joseph
    is just $3.89 a gallon.

    The bad part is, we’ve been relatively fortunate here in North
    Missouri. Across the country, gas prices are average $4.27 a
    gallon today. If you happen to live in Northeast Missouri and
    have to travel across the river to Illinois, make sure you fill
    up your tank before you cross the river. Gas is running over
    $4.50 a gallon in Illinois.

    All of this is putting a hurting on families. It’s been hard
    enough to make ends meet with rising inflation, skyrocketing gas
    prices are making it almost impossible. This isn’t just
    impacting folks directly, but indirectly too. Virtually every
    link in the supply chain depends on fuel to get products to
    market and when fuel prices skyrocket like this, it impacts the
    price of virtually everything.

    That’s especially true for farmers. A friend of mine over in
    Salisbury filled his one-ton feed truck up the other day and it
    cost him $300.

    On top of that, prices for fertilizer, seed, and other inputs
    have skyrocketed with inflation as well. That’s created a lot of
    problems. Even though farmers are looking at record high prices
    for their products, the price of production has risen even
    higher, putting the squeeze on family farms everywhere.

    The real shame is that all of this could have been avoided. Even
    though President Biden likes to blame Russia’s invasion of
    Ukraine for the high prices we’re seeing at the pump right now,
    prices were rising long before then. This isn’t a problem weeks
    in the making, it’s a problem years in the making.

    On his first day in office, President Biden cancelled the
    Keystone XL Pipeline, which promised to bring in more crude oil
    from our ally Canada than we had been importing from Russia.
    That’s just one example. Left wing environmentalists and
    politicians have been obstructing pipeline and drilling projects
    for years—driving down oil production and driving up costs at
    the pump in the name of climate change.

    Enough is enough. It doesn’t have to be this way. We can and
    should make America energy independent. Until we do, we’re going
    to keep feeling this pain at the pump.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From S&P 500 Worst In 50+ Years - Thanks@21:1/5 to democrat_failures@latimes.com on Thu May 12 04:36:39 2022
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.obama.faggots, alt.politics.democrats
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    In article <su1grc$158nl$2@news.freedyn.de>
    S&P 500 Worst In 50+ Years - Thanks Democrats!
    <democrat_failures@latimes.com> wrote:


    Like Hitler, I too have shocking table manners,

    (From Sixth District Congressman Sam Graves)
    When I went to fill up my truck last weekend, I paid over $3.80
    a gallon. That’s almost unheard of in Northwest Missouri. The
    record high average gas price just down the road in St. Joseph
    is just $3.89 a gallon.

    The bad part is, we’ve been relatively fortunate here in North
    Missouri. Across the country, gas prices are average $4.27 a
    gallon today. If you happen to live in Northeast Missouri and
    have to travel across the river to Illinois, make sure you fill
    up your tank before you cross the river. Gas is running over
    $4.50 a gallon in Illinois.

    All of this is putting a hurting on families. It’s been hard
    enough to make ends meet with rising inflation, skyrocketing gas
    prices are making it almost impossible. This isn’t just
    impacting folks directly, but indirectly too. Virtually every
    link in the supply chain depends on fuel to get products to
    market and when fuel prices skyrocket like this, it impacts the
    price of virtually everything.

    That’s especially true for farmers. A friend of mine over in
    Salisbury filled his one-ton feed truck up the other day and it
    cost him $300.

    On top of that, prices for fertilizer, seed, and other inputs
    have skyrocketed with inflation as well. That’s created a lot of
    problems. Even though farmers are looking at record high prices
    for their products, the price of production has risen even
    higher, putting the squeeze on family farms everywhere.

    The real shame is that all of this could have been avoided. Even
    though President Biden likes to blame Russia’s invasion of
    Ukraine for the high prices we’re seeing at the pump right now,
    prices were rising long before then. This isn’t a problem weeks
    in the making, it’s a problem years in the making.

    On his first day in office, President Biden cancelled the
    Keystone XL Pipeline, which promised to bring in more crude oil
    from our ally Canada than we had been importing from Russia.
    That’s just one example. Left wing environmentalists and
    politicians have been obstructing pipeline and drilling projects
    for years—driving down oil production and driving up costs at
    the pump in the name of climate change.

    Enough is enough. It doesn’t have to be this way. We can and
    should make America energy independent. Until we do, we’re going
    to keep feeling this pain at the pump.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)