OBOMINATION: Gas Price Record Worsens: 1,245 Days Above $3 a Gallon...

Curious = we still linking performance of President to gas prices?
Yeah. The price would be under $1 if not for obama.


I know.....they'd be giving it away, if it wasn't for Obama..........:D
No, it would just be cheaper. He has stifled supply side in the US and it's production increases in the US that have occurred in places he can't prohibit that have led to this drop in price. All in spite of obama. Obama is keeping and has kept prices higher than need be since the day he took office. Actually since a few days before as speculation is based on potential circumstances.
 
Curious = we still linking performance of President to gas prices?
Yeah. The price would be under $1 if not for obama.


I know.....they'd be giving it away, if it wasn't for Obama..........:D
No, it would just be cheaper. He has stifled supply side in the US and it's production increases in the US that have occurred in places he can't prohibit that have led to this drop in price. All in spite of obama. Obama is keeping and has kept prices higher than need be since the day he took office. Actually since a few days before as speculation is based on potential circumstances.

You all just keep showing how uninformed you really are. Here....quit listening to bimbos on Faux News that don't know what they are talking about and get informed. It pains me to see so many Americans being so ignorant when it comes to gas prices rising/dropping.


Why are gas prices likely to keep falling? You can thank a variety of market forces that are working together to push prices lower. Here are four of the main ones, and how each will make it less expensive to drive in coming months.

American oil producers have been on a tear lately. Thanks to new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and the increased use of techniques like hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," on land, the U.S. is awash in crude.

Domestic oil production has increased every year since 2008, which has contributed to a growing world supply. Meanwhile, American refineries are buying fewer barrels of more expensive foreign crudes.

The increased oil supply in the U.S., combined with weakening expectations for the global economy and world oil consumption, will likely push oil prices lower in 2015. As the cost of oil falls, so will the price of petroleum products like gasoline.

One of the primary reasons your gas prices rise or fall is the fluctuation in the price of crude oil. U.S. refineries buy several million barrels of oil every day to supply the world's biggest economy, so even small price changes make a big difference.

When crude oil prices go up or down, gas prices tend to follow. And right now, oil prices are on the decline.

Oil prices have been falling for several reasons, including the increased U.S. crude production and an outlook for weaker growth in global oil demand. Meanwhile, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, decided toward the end of 2014 not to manipulate prices by restricting oil production.

Overall, government energy forecasters expect crude prices to be significantly lower in 2015. The Energy Information Administration says the U.S. benchmark price could drop to $62.75 per barrel in 2015 -- a 33 percent discount from 2014. That means refineries would pay less for crude oil, and at least some of that savings should be passed on to drivers in the form of cheaper gasoline.

That makes the Gulf a rich and perilous place for satisfying America's energy needs. But the region hasn't seen much hurricane activity in a while, and that has contributed to declining gasoline prices.

A well-placed storm can cripple thousands of oil rigs in a weekend, and occasionally one does. Gas prices usually spike in reaction, as nervous refineries and petroleum traders gauge how long the supply disruption will last.

For example, in August 2012, gasoline prices surged as Hurricane Isaac whipped through the Gulf and shuttered 1.3 million barrels per day of refining capacity. In 2005, gas prices jumped more than 46 cents in the week after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, according to government data.



Did you know that there are many different recipes for gasoline? Thanks to different state and local regulations, your neighborhood pump probably sells a different blend of gas than pumps in other states. And there are seasonal varieties, too -- summer gasoline and winter gasoline.

Winter gasoline is usually the cheapest.

4 Reasons Gas Prices Will Keep Dropping in 2015 Bankrate.com
 
Curious = we still linking performance of President to gas prices?
Yeah. The price would be under $1 if not for obama.


I know.....they'd be giving it away, if it wasn't for Obama..........:D
No, it would just be cheaper. He has stifled supply side in the US and it's production increases in the US that have occurred in places he can't prohibit that have led to this drop in price. All in spite of obama. Obama is keeping and has kept prices higher than need be since the day he took office. Actually since a few days before as speculation is based on potential circumstances.

You all just keep showing how uninformed you really are. Here....quit listening to bimbos on Faux News that don't know what they are talking about and get informed. It pains me to see so many Americans being so ignorant when it comes to gas prices rising/dropping.


Why are gas prices likely to keep falling? You can thank a variety of market forces that are working together to push prices lower. Here are four of the main ones, and how each will make it less expensive to drive in coming months.

American oil producers have been on a tear lately. Thanks to new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and the increased use of techniques like hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," on land, the U.S. is awash in crude.

Domestic oil production has increased every year since 2008, which has contributed to a growing world supply. Meanwhile, American refineries are buying fewer barrels of more expensive foreign crudes.

The increased oil supply in the U.S., combined with weakening expectations for the global economy and world oil consumption, will likely push oil prices lower in 2015. As the cost of oil falls, so will the price of petroleum products like gasoline.

One of the primary reasons your gas prices rise or fall is the fluctuation in the price of crude oil. U.S. refineries buy several million barrels of oil every day to supply the world's biggest economy, so even small price changes make a big difference.

When crude oil prices go up or down, gas prices tend to follow. And right now, oil prices are on the decline.

Oil prices have been falling for several reasons, including the increased U.S. crude production and an outlook for weaker growth in global oil demand. Meanwhile, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, decided toward the end of 2014 not to manipulate prices by restricting oil production.

Overall, government energy forecasters expect crude prices to be significantly lower in 2015. The Energy Information Administration says the U.S. benchmark price could drop to $62.75 per barrel in 2015 -- a 33 percent discount from 2014. That means refineries would pay less for crude oil, and at least some of that savings should be passed on to drivers in the form of cheaper gasoline.

That makes the Gulf a rich and perilous place for satisfying America's energy needs. But the region hasn't seen much hurricane activity in a while, and that has contributed to declining gasoline prices.

A well-placed storm can cripple thousands of oil rigs in a weekend, and occasionally one does. Gas prices usually spike in reaction, as nervous refineries and petroleum traders gauge how long the supply disruption will last.

For example, in August 2012, gasoline prices surged as Hurricane Isaac whipped through the Gulf and shuttered 1.3 million barrels per day of refining capacity. In 2005, gas prices jumped more than 46 cents in the week after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, according to government data.



Did you know that there are many different recipes for gasoline? Thanks to different state and local regulations, your neighborhood pump probably sells a different blend of gas than pumps in other states. And there are seasonal varieties, too -- summer gasoline and winter gasoline.

Winter gasoline is usually the cheapest.

4 Reasons Gas Prices Will Keep Dropping in 2015 Bankrate.com
It was in the dead of winter 2009 that prices began to rise under obama due to his reimposing of offshore drilling restrictions. Recent price drops have occurred in spite of his economically choking energy policy.
Why do you obama sheeple insist on not thinking?
 
As much as our messiah has done to bring down gas prices, I think we need a Clinton to get prices below $1


Don't you know.....Obama was only responsible for making gas prices go up.....not for making them come down....(the conservative logic)....:)
The funny part is how quick they'll be to blame Obama should this drop in oil prices lead to deflation.
 
As much as our messiah has done to bring down gas prices, I think we need a Clinton to get prices below $1


Don't you know.....Obama was only responsible for making gas prices go up.....not for making them come down....(the conservative logic)....:)
The funny part is how quick they'll be to blame Obama should this drop in oil prices lead to deflation.
I wouldn't worry about that. The economy is already finally beginning to rebound because of the low(er) energy prices. The hack will try to take credit for that and his moronic, ultra-stupid followers will believe his lie, not realizing things are still worse than they need to be all because of obama energy policy and its devastating effect on the economy.
 
Curious = we still linking performance of President to gas prices?
Yeah. The price would be under $1 if not for obama.


I know.....they'd be giving it away, if it wasn't for Obama..........:D
No, it would just be cheaper. He has stifled supply side in the US and it's production increases in the US that have occurred in places he can't prohibit that have led to this drop in price. All in spite of obama. Obama is keeping and has kept prices higher than need be since the day he took office. Actually since a few days before as speculation is based on potential circumstances.

You all just keep showing how uninformed you really are. Here....quit listening to bimbos on Faux News that don't know what they are talking about and get informed. It pains me to see so many Americans being so ignorant when it comes to gas prices rising/dropping.


Why are gas prices likely to keep falling? You can thank a variety of market forces that are working together to push prices lower. Here are four of the main ones, and how each will make it less expensive to drive in coming months.

American oil producers have been on a tear lately. Thanks to new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and the increased use of techniques like hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," on land, the U.S. is awash in crude.

Domestic oil production has increased every year since 2008, which has contributed to a growing world supply. Meanwhile, American refineries are buying fewer barrels of more expensive foreign crudes.

The increased oil supply in the U.S., combined with weakening expectations for the global economy and world oil consumption, will likely push oil prices lower in 2015. As the cost of oil falls, so will the price of petroleum products like gasoline.

One of the primary reasons your gas prices rise or fall is the fluctuation in the price of crude oil. U.S. refineries buy several million barrels of oil every day to supply the world's biggest economy, so even small price changes make a big difference.

When crude oil prices go up or down, gas prices tend to follow. And right now, oil prices are on the decline.

Oil prices have been falling for several reasons, including the increased U.S. crude production and an outlook for weaker growth in global oil demand. Meanwhile, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, decided toward the end of 2014 not to manipulate prices by restricting oil production.

Overall, government energy forecasters expect crude prices to be significantly lower in 2015. The Energy Information Administration says the U.S. benchmark price could drop to $62.75 per barrel in 2015 -- a 33 percent discount from 2014. That means refineries would pay less for crude oil, and at least some of that savings should be passed on to drivers in the form of cheaper gasoline.

That makes the Gulf a rich and perilous place for satisfying America's energy needs. But the region hasn't seen much hurricane activity in a while, and that has contributed to declining gasoline prices.

A well-placed storm can cripple thousands of oil rigs in a weekend, and occasionally one does. Gas prices usually spike in reaction, as nervous refineries and petroleum traders gauge how long the supply disruption will last.

For example, in August 2012, gasoline prices surged as Hurricane Isaac whipped through the Gulf and shuttered 1.3 million barrels per day of refining capacity. In 2005, gas prices jumped more than 46 cents in the week after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, according to government data.



Did you know that there are many different recipes for gasoline? Thanks to different state and local regulations, your neighborhood pump probably sells a different blend of gas than pumps in other states. And there are seasonal varieties, too -- summer gasoline and winter gasoline.

Winter gasoline is usually the cheapest.

4 Reasons Gas Prices Will Keep Dropping in 2015 Bankrate.com
It was in the dead of winter 2009 that prices began to rise under obama due to his reimposing of offshore drilling restrictions. Recent price drops have occurred in spite of his economically choking energy policy.
Why do you obama sheeple insist on not thinking?
Yes that offshore drilling restriction sure did keep us from becoming an major oil producer...
 
Curious = we still linking performance of President to gas prices?
Yeah. The price would be under $1 if not for obama.


I know.....they'd be giving it away, if it wasn't for Obama..........:D
No, it would just be cheaper. He has stifled supply side in the US and it's production increases in the US that have occurred in places he can't prohibit that have led to this drop in price. All in spite of obama. Obama is keeping and has kept prices higher than need be since the day he took office. Actually since a few days before as speculation is based on potential circumstances.

You all just keep showing how uninformed you really are. Here....quit listening to bimbos on Faux News that don't know what they are talking about and get informed. It pains me to see so many Americans being so ignorant when it comes to gas prices rising/dropping.


Why are gas prices likely to keep falling? You can thank a variety of market forces that are working together to push prices lower. Here are four of the main ones, and how each will make it less expensive to drive in coming months.

American oil producers have been on a tear lately. Thanks to new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and the increased use of techniques like hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," on land, the U.S. is awash in crude.

Domestic oil production has increased every year since 2008, which has contributed to a growing world supply. Meanwhile, American refineries are buying fewer barrels of more expensive foreign crudes.

The increased oil supply in the U.S., combined with weakening expectations for the global economy and world oil consumption, will likely push oil prices lower in 2015. As the cost of oil falls, so will the price of petroleum products like gasoline.

One of the primary reasons your gas prices rise or fall is the fluctuation in the price of crude oil. U.S. refineries buy several million barrels of oil every day to supply the world's biggest economy, so even small price changes make a big difference.

When crude oil prices go up or down, gas prices tend to follow. And right now, oil prices are on the decline.

Oil prices have been falling for several reasons, including the increased U.S. crude production and an outlook for weaker growth in global oil demand. Meanwhile, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, decided toward the end of 2014 not to manipulate prices by restricting oil production.

Overall, government energy forecasters expect crude prices to be significantly lower in 2015. The Energy Information Administration says the U.S. benchmark price could drop to $62.75 per barrel in 2015 -- a 33 percent discount from 2014. That means refineries would pay less for crude oil, and at least some of that savings should be passed on to drivers in the form of cheaper gasoline.

That makes the Gulf a rich and perilous place for satisfying America's energy needs. But the region hasn't seen much hurricane activity in a while, and that has contributed to declining gasoline prices.

A well-placed storm can cripple thousands of oil rigs in a weekend, and occasionally one does. Gas prices usually spike in reaction, as nervous refineries and petroleum traders gauge how long the supply disruption will last.

For example, in August 2012, gasoline prices surged as Hurricane Isaac whipped through the Gulf and shuttered 1.3 million barrels per day of refining capacity. In 2005, gas prices jumped more than 46 cents in the week after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, according to government data.



Did you know that there are many different recipes for gasoline? Thanks to different state and local regulations, your neighborhood pump probably sells a different blend of gas than pumps in other states. And there are seasonal varieties, too -- summer gasoline and winter gasoline.

Winter gasoline is usually the cheapest.

4 Reasons Gas Prices Will Keep Dropping in 2015 Bankrate.com
It was in the dead of winter 2009 that prices began to rise under obama due to his reimposing of offshore drilling restrictions. Recent price drops have occurred in spite of his economically choking energy policy.
Why do you obama sheeple insist on not thinking?

I see.....the experts are wrong, and you and the rest of the Fauxbots are the ones with the knowledge.................bwahahahahaha......:D
 
Curious = we still linking performance of President to gas prices?
Yeah. The price would be under $1 if not for obama.


I know.....they'd be giving it away, if it wasn't for Obama..........:D
No, it would just be cheaper. He has stifled supply side in the US and it's production increases in the US that have occurred in places he can't prohibit that have led to this drop in price. All in spite of obama. Obama is keeping and has kept prices higher than need be since the day he took office. Actually since a few days before as speculation is based on potential circumstances.

You all just keep showing how uninformed you really are. Here....quit listening to bimbos on Faux News that don't know what they are talking about and get informed. It pains me to see so many Americans being so ignorant when it comes to gas prices rising/dropping.


Why are gas prices likely to keep falling? You can thank a variety of market forces that are working together to push prices lower. Here are four of the main ones, and how each will make it less expensive to drive in coming months.

American oil producers have been on a tear lately. Thanks to new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and the increased use of techniques like hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," on land, the U.S. is awash in crude.

Domestic oil production has increased every year since 2008, which has contributed to a growing world supply. Meanwhile, American refineries are buying fewer barrels of more expensive foreign crudes.

The increased oil supply in the U.S., combined with weakening expectations for the global economy and world oil consumption, will likely push oil prices lower in 2015. As the cost of oil falls, so will the price of petroleum products like gasoline.

One of the primary reasons your gas prices rise or fall is the fluctuation in the price of crude oil. U.S. refineries buy several million barrels of oil every day to supply the world's biggest economy, so even small price changes make a big difference.

When crude oil prices go up or down, gas prices tend to follow. And right now, oil prices are on the decline.

Oil prices have been falling for several reasons, including the increased U.S. crude production and an outlook for weaker growth in global oil demand. Meanwhile, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, decided toward the end of 2014 not to manipulate prices by restricting oil production.

Overall, government energy forecasters expect crude prices to be significantly lower in 2015. The Energy Information Administration says the U.S. benchmark price could drop to $62.75 per barrel in 2015 -- a 33 percent discount from 2014. That means refineries would pay less for crude oil, and at least some of that savings should be passed on to drivers in the form of cheaper gasoline.

That makes the Gulf a rich and perilous place for satisfying America's energy needs. But the region hasn't seen much hurricane activity in a while, and that has contributed to declining gasoline prices.

A well-placed storm can cripple thousands of oil rigs in a weekend, and occasionally one does. Gas prices usually spike in reaction, as nervous refineries and petroleum traders gauge how long the supply disruption will last.

For example, in August 2012, gasoline prices surged as Hurricane Isaac whipped through the Gulf and shuttered 1.3 million barrels per day of refining capacity. In 2005, gas prices jumped more than 46 cents in the week after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, according to government data.



Did you know that there are many different recipes for gasoline? Thanks to different state and local regulations, your neighborhood pump probably sells a different blend of gas than pumps in other states. And there are seasonal varieties, too -- summer gasoline and winter gasoline.

Winter gasoline is usually the cheapest.

4 Reasons Gas Prices Will Keep Dropping in 2015 Bankrate.com
It was in the dead of winter 2009 that prices began to rise under obama due to his reimposing of offshore drilling restrictions. Recent price drops have occurred in spite of his economically choking energy policy.
Why do you obama sheeple insist on not thinking?
So you're saying that oil production decreased in the winter of 2009??
 
Yeah. The price would be under $1 if not for obama.


I know.....they'd be giving it away, if it wasn't for Obama..........:D
No, it would just be cheaper. He has stifled supply side in the US and it's production increases in the US that have occurred in places he can't prohibit that have led to this drop in price. All in spite of obama. Obama is keeping and has kept prices higher than need be since the day he took office. Actually since a few days before as speculation is based on potential circumstances.

You all just keep showing how uninformed you really are. Here....quit listening to bimbos on Faux News that don't know what they are talking about and get informed. It pains me to see so many Americans being so ignorant when it comes to gas prices rising/dropping.


Why are gas prices likely to keep falling? You can thank a variety of market forces that are working together to push prices lower. Here are four of the main ones, and how each will make it less expensive to drive in coming months.

American oil producers have been on a tear lately. Thanks to new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and the increased use of techniques like hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," on land, the U.S. is awash in crude.

Domestic oil production has increased every year since 2008, which has contributed to a growing world supply. Meanwhile, American refineries are buying fewer barrels of more expensive foreign crudes.

The increased oil supply in the U.S., combined with weakening expectations for the global economy and world oil consumption, will likely push oil prices lower in 2015. As the cost of oil falls, so will the price of petroleum products like gasoline.

One of the primary reasons your gas prices rise or fall is the fluctuation in the price of crude oil. U.S. refineries buy several million barrels of oil every day to supply the world's biggest economy, so even small price changes make a big difference.

When crude oil prices go up or down, gas prices tend to follow. And right now, oil prices are on the decline.

Oil prices have been falling for several reasons, including the increased U.S. crude production and an outlook for weaker growth in global oil demand. Meanwhile, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, decided toward the end of 2014 not to manipulate prices by restricting oil production.

Overall, government energy forecasters expect crude prices to be significantly lower in 2015. The Energy Information Administration says the U.S. benchmark price could drop to $62.75 per barrel in 2015 -- a 33 percent discount from 2014. That means refineries would pay less for crude oil, and at least some of that savings should be passed on to drivers in the form of cheaper gasoline.

That makes the Gulf a rich and perilous place for satisfying America's energy needs. But the region hasn't seen much hurricane activity in a while, and that has contributed to declining gasoline prices.

A well-placed storm can cripple thousands of oil rigs in a weekend, and occasionally one does. Gas prices usually spike in reaction, as nervous refineries and petroleum traders gauge how long the supply disruption will last.

For example, in August 2012, gasoline prices surged as Hurricane Isaac whipped through the Gulf and shuttered 1.3 million barrels per day of refining capacity. In 2005, gas prices jumped more than 46 cents in the week after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, according to government data.



Did you know that there are many different recipes for gasoline? Thanks to different state and local regulations, your neighborhood pump probably sells a different blend of gas than pumps in other states. And there are seasonal varieties, too -- summer gasoline and winter gasoline.

Winter gasoline is usually the cheapest.

4 Reasons Gas Prices Will Keep Dropping in 2015 Bankrate.com
It was in the dead of winter 2009 that prices began to rise under obama due to his reimposing of offshore drilling restrictions. Recent price drops have occurred in spite of his economically choking energy policy.
Why do you obama sheeple insist on not thinking?
Yes that offshore drilling restriction sure did keep us from becoming an major oil producer...
Yeah, it did. It slowed the process by six years and is preventing the process from improving more as we speak.
 
Yeah. The price would be under $1 if not for obama.


I know.....they'd be giving it away, if it wasn't for Obama..........:D
No, it would just be cheaper. He has stifled supply side in the US and it's production increases in the US that have occurred in places he can't prohibit that have led to this drop in price. All in spite of obama. Obama is keeping and has kept prices higher than need be since the day he took office. Actually since a few days before as speculation is based on potential circumstances.

You all just keep showing how uninformed you really are. Here....quit listening to bimbos on Faux News that don't know what they are talking about and get informed. It pains me to see so many Americans being so ignorant when it comes to gas prices rising/dropping.


Why are gas prices likely to keep falling? You can thank a variety of market forces that are working together to push prices lower. Here are four of the main ones, and how each will make it less expensive to drive in coming months.

American oil producers have been on a tear lately. Thanks to new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and the increased use of techniques like hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," on land, the U.S. is awash in crude.

Domestic oil production has increased every year since 2008, which has contributed to a growing world supply. Meanwhile, American refineries are buying fewer barrels of more expensive foreign crudes.

The increased oil supply in the U.S., combined with weakening expectations for the global economy and world oil consumption, will likely push oil prices lower in 2015. As the cost of oil falls, so will the price of petroleum products like gasoline.

One of the primary reasons your gas prices rise or fall is the fluctuation in the price of crude oil. U.S. refineries buy several million barrels of oil every day to supply the world's biggest economy, so even small price changes make a big difference.

When crude oil prices go up or down, gas prices tend to follow. And right now, oil prices are on the decline.

Oil prices have been falling for several reasons, including the increased U.S. crude production and an outlook for weaker growth in global oil demand. Meanwhile, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, decided toward the end of 2014 not to manipulate prices by restricting oil production.

Overall, government energy forecasters expect crude prices to be significantly lower in 2015. The Energy Information Administration says the U.S. benchmark price could drop to $62.75 per barrel in 2015 -- a 33 percent discount from 2014. That means refineries would pay less for crude oil, and at least some of that savings should be passed on to drivers in the form of cheaper gasoline.

That makes the Gulf a rich and perilous place for satisfying America's energy needs. But the region hasn't seen much hurricane activity in a while, and that has contributed to declining gasoline prices.

A well-placed storm can cripple thousands of oil rigs in a weekend, and occasionally one does. Gas prices usually spike in reaction, as nervous refineries and petroleum traders gauge how long the supply disruption will last.

For example, in August 2012, gasoline prices surged as Hurricane Isaac whipped through the Gulf and shuttered 1.3 million barrels per day of refining capacity. In 2005, gas prices jumped more than 46 cents in the week after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, according to government data.



Did you know that there are many different recipes for gasoline? Thanks to different state and local regulations, your neighborhood pump probably sells a different blend of gas than pumps in other states. And there are seasonal varieties, too -- summer gasoline and winter gasoline.

Winter gasoline is usually the cheapest.

4 Reasons Gas Prices Will Keep Dropping in 2015 Bankrate.com
It was in the dead of winter 2009 that prices began to rise under obama due to his reimposing of offshore drilling restrictions. Recent price drops have occurred in spite of his economically choking energy policy.
Why do you obama sheeple insist on not thinking?

I see.....the experts are wrong, and you and the rest of the Fauxbots are the ones with the knowledge.................bwahahahahaha......:D
No, no Fox News issue here. I rely on my own experience and not what any left wing brainwashers tell me as you obama sheeple do. I drove cross country on jan 11, 2009 and watched the impact of obama drilling restriction pronouncements happen. $1.35 on jan 11, $1.80 (and rising) by jan 23.
 
Yeah. The price would be under $1 if not for obama.


I know.....they'd be giving it away, if it wasn't for Obama..........:D
No, it would just be cheaper. He has stifled supply side in the US and it's production increases in the US that have occurred in places he can't prohibit that have led to this drop in price. All in spite of obama. Obama is keeping and has kept prices higher than need be since the day he took office. Actually since a few days before as speculation is based on potential circumstances.

You all just keep showing how uninformed you really are. Here....quit listening to bimbos on Faux News that don't know what they are talking about and get informed. It pains me to see so many Americans being so ignorant when it comes to gas prices rising/dropping.


Why are gas prices likely to keep falling? You can thank a variety of market forces that are working together to push prices lower. Here are four of the main ones, and how each will make it less expensive to drive in coming months.

American oil producers have been on a tear lately. Thanks to new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and the increased use of techniques like hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," on land, the U.S. is awash in crude.

Domestic oil production has increased every year since 2008, which has contributed to a growing world supply. Meanwhile, American refineries are buying fewer barrels of more expensive foreign crudes.

The increased oil supply in the U.S., combined with weakening expectations for the global economy and world oil consumption, will likely push oil prices lower in 2015. As the cost of oil falls, so will the price of petroleum products like gasoline.

One of the primary reasons your gas prices rise or fall is the fluctuation in the price of crude oil. U.S. refineries buy several million barrels of oil every day to supply the world's biggest economy, so even small price changes make a big difference.

When crude oil prices go up or down, gas prices tend to follow. And right now, oil prices are on the decline.

Oil prices have been falling for several reasons, including the increased U.S. crude production and an outlook for weaker growth in global oil demand. Meanwhile, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, decided toward the end of 2014 not to manipulate prices by restricting oil production.

Overall, government energy forecasters expect crude prices to be significantly lower in 2015. The Energy Information Administration says the U.S. benchmark price could drop to $62.75 per barrel in 2015 -- a 33 percent discount from 2014. That means refineries would pay less for crude oil, and at least some of that savings should be passed on to drivers in the form of cheaper gasoline.

That makes the Gulf a rich and perilous place for satisfying America's energy needs. But the region hasn't seen much hurricane activity in a while, and that has contributed to declining gasoline prices.

A well-placed storm can cripple thousands of oil rigs in a weekend, and occasionally one does. Gas prices usually spike in reaction, as nervous refineries and petroleum traders gauge how long the supply disruption will last.

For example, in August 2012, gasoline prices surged as Hurricane Isaac whipped through the Gulf and shuttered 1.3 million barrels per day of refining capacity. In 2005, gas prices jumped more than 46 cents in the week after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, according to government data.



Did you know that there are many different recipes for gasoline? Thanks to different state and local regulations, your neighborhood pump probably sells a different blend of gas than pumps in other states. And there are seasonal varieties, too -- summer gasoline and winter gasoline.

Winter gasoline is usually the cheapest.

4 Reasons Gas Prices Will Keep Dropping in 2015 Bankrate.com
It was in the dead of winter 2009 that prices began to rise under obama due to his reimposing of offshore drilling restrictions. Recent price drops have occurred in spite of his economically choking energy policy.
Why do you obama sheeple insist on not thinking?
So you're saying that oil production decreased in the winter of 2009??
The potential for enhanced supply was stifled by obama in the winter of 2009. Right when he took office.
 
I know.....they'd be giving it away, if it wasn't for Obama..........:D
No, it would just be cheaper. He has stifled supply side in the US and it's production increases in the US that have occurred in places he can't prohibit that have led to this drop in price. All in spite of obama. Obama is keeping and has kept prices higher than need be since the day he took office. Actually since a few days before as speculation is based on potential circumstances.

You all just keep showing how uninformed you really are. Here....quit listening to bimbos on Faux News that don't know what they are talking about and get informed. It pains me to see so many Americans being so ignorant when it comes to gas prices rising/dropping.


Why are gas prices likely to keep falling? You can thank a variety of market forces that are working together to push prices lower. Here are four of the main ones, and how each will make it less expensive to drive in coming months.

American oil producers have been on a tear lately. Thanks to new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and the increased use of techniques like hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," on land, the U.S. is awash in crude.

Domestic oil production has increased every year since 2008, which has contributed to a growing world supply. Meanwhile, American refineries are buying fewer barrels of more expensive foreign crudes.

The increased oil supply in the U.S., combined with weakening expectations for the global economy and world oil consumption, will likely push oil prices lower in 2015. As the cost of oil falls, so will the price of petroleum products like gasoline.

One of the primary reasons your gas prices rise or fall is the fluctuation in the price of crude oil. U.S. refineries buy several million barrels of oil every day to supply the world's biggest economy, so even small price changes make a big difference.

When crude oil prices go up or down, gas prices tend to follow. And right now, oil prices are on the decline.

Oil prices have been falling for several reasons, including the increased U.S. crude production and an outlook for weaker growth in global oil demand. Meanwhile, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, decided toward the end of 2014 not to manipulate prices by restricting oil production.

Overall, government energy forecasters expect crude prices to be significantly lower in 2015. The Energy Information Administration says the U.S. benchmark price could drop to $62.75 per barrel in 2015 -- a 33 percent discount from 2014. That means refineries would pay less for crude oil, and at least some of that savings should be passed on to drivers in the form of cheaper gasoline.

That makes the Gulf a rich and perilous place for satisfying America's energy needs. But the region hasn't seen much hurricane activity in a while, and that has contributed to declining gasoline prices.

A well-placed storm can cripple thousands of oil rigs in a weekend, and occasionally one does. Gas prices usually spike in reaction, as nervous refineries and petroleum traders gauge how long the supply disruption will last.

For example, in August 2012, gasoline prices surged as Hurricane Isaac whipped through the Gulf and shuttered 1.3 million barrels per day of refining capacity. In 2005, gas prices jumped more than 46 cents in the week after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, according to government data.



Did you know that there are many different recipes for gasoline? Thanks to different state and local regulations, your neighborhood pump probably sells a different blend of gas than pumps in other states. And there are seasonal varieties, too -- summer gasoline and winter gasoline.

Winter gasoline is usually the cheapest.

4 Reasons Gas Prices Will Keep Dropping in 2015 Bankrate.com
It was in the dead of winter 2009 that prices began to rise under obama due to his reimposing of offshore drilling restrictions. Recent price drops have occurred in spite of his economically choking energy policy.
Why do you obama sheeple insist on not thinking?
So you're saying that oil production decreased in the winter of 2009??
The potential for enhanced supply was stifled by obama in the winter of 2009. Right when he took office.
You didn't answer my question ... are you claiming oil production dropped in the winter of 2009?
 
No, it would just be cheaper. He has stifled supply side in the US and it's production increases in the US that have occurred in places he can't prohibit that have led to this drop in price. All in spite of obama. Obama is keeping and has kept prices higher than need be since the day he took office. Actually since a few days before as speculation is based on potential circumstances.

You all just keep showing how uninformed you really are. Here....quit listening to bimbos on Faux News that don't know what they are talking about and get informed. It pains me to see so many Americans being so ignorant when it comes to gas prices rising/dropping.


Why are gas prices likely to keep falling? You can thank a variety of market forces that are working together to push prices lower. Here are four of the main ones, and how each will make it less expensive to drive in coming months.

American oil producers have been on a tear lately. Thanks to new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and the increased use of techniques like hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," on land, the U.S. is awash in crude.

Domestic oil production has increased every year since 2008, which has contributed to a growing world supply. Meanwhile, American refineries are buying fewer barrels of more expensive foreign crudes.

The increased oil supply in the U.S., combined with weakening expectations for the global economy and world oil consumption, will likely push oil prices lower in 2015. As the cost of oil falls, so will the price of petroleum products like gasoline.

One of the primary reasons your gas prices rise or fall is the fluctuation in the price of crude oil. U.S. refineries buy several million barrels of oil every day to supply the world's biggest economy, so even small price changes make a big difference.

When crude oil prices go up or down, gas prices tend to follow. And right now, oil prices are on the decline.

Oil prices have been falling for several reasons, including the increased U.S. crude production and an outlook for weaker growth in global oil demand. Meanwhile, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, decided toward the end of 2014 not to manipulate prices by restricting oil production.

Overall, government energy forecasters expect crude prices to be significantly lower in 2015. The Energy Information Administration says the U.S. benchmark price could drop to $62.75 per barrel in 2015 -- a 33 percent discount from 2014. That means refineries would pay less for crude oil, and at least some of that savings should be passed on to drivers in the form of cheaper gasoline.

That makes the Gulf a rich and perilous place for satisfying America's energy needs. But the region hasn't seen much hurricane activity in a while, and that has contributed to declining gasoline prices.

A well-placed storm can cripple thousands of oil rigs in a weekend, and occasionally one does. Gas prices usually spike in reaction, as nervous refineries and petroleum traders gauge how long the supply disruption will last.

For example, in August 2012, gasoline prices surged as Hurricane Isaac whipped through the Gulf and shuttered 1.3 million barrels per day of refining capacity. In 2005, gas prices jumped more than 46 cents in the week after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, according to government data.



Did you know that there are many different recipes for gasoline? Thanks to different state and local regulations, your neighborhood pump probably sells a different blend of gas than pumps in other states. And there are seasonal varieties, too -- summer gasoline and winter gasoline.

Winter gasoline is usually the cheapest.

4 Reasons Gas Prices Will Keep Dropping in 2015 Bankrate.com
It was in the dead of winter 2009 that prices began to rise under obama due to his reimposing of offshore drilling restrictions. Recent price drops have occurred in spite of his economically choking energy policy.
Why do you obama sheeple insist on not thinking?
So you're saying that oil production decreased in the winter of 2009??
The potential for enhanced supply was stifled by obama in the winter of 2009. Right when he took office.
You didn't answer my question ... are you claiming oil production dropped in the winter of 2009?
I already answered very pointedly and specifically. Go ask a non-democrat to explain it to you if you don't get it. I'm not going to repeat myself.
 
You all just keep showing how uninformed you really are. Here....quit listening to bimbos on Faux News that don't know what they are talking about and get informed. It pains me to see so many Americans being so ignorant when it comes to gas prices rising/dropping.


Why are gas prices likely to keep falling? You can thank a variety of market forces that are working together to push prices lower. Here are four of the main ones, and how each will make it less expensive to drive in coming months.

American oil producers have been on a tear lately. Thanks to new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and the increased use of techniques like hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," on land, the U.S. is awash in crude.

Domestic oil production has increased every year since 2008, which has contributed to a growing world supply. Meanwhile, American refineries are buying fewer barrels of more expensive foreign crudes.

The increased oil supply in the U.S., combined with weakening expectations for the global economy and world oil consumption, will likely push oil prices lower in 2015. As the cost of oil falls, so will the price of petroleum products like gasoline.

One of the primary reasons your gas prices rise or fall is the fluctuation in the price of crude oil. U.S. refineries buy several million barrels of oil every day to supply the world's biggest economy, so even small price changes make a big difference.

When crude oil prices go up or down, gas prices tend to follow. And right now, oil prices are on the decline.

Oil prices have been falling for several reasons, including the increased U.S. crude production and an outlook for weaker growth in global oil demand. Meanwhile, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, decided toward the end of 2014 not to manipulate prices by restricting oil production.

Overall, government energy forecasters expect crude prices to be significantly lower in 2015. The Energy Information Administration says the U.S. benchmark price could drop to $62.75 per barrel in 2015 -- a 33 percent discount from 2014. That means refineries would pay less for crude oil, and at least some of that savings should be passed on to drivers in the form of cheaper gasoline.

That makes the Gulf a rich and perilous place for satisfying America's energy needs. But the region hasn't seen much hurricane activity in a while, and that has contributed to declining gasoline prices.

A well-placed storm can cripple thousands of oil rigs in a weekend, and occasionally one does. Gas prices usually spike in reaction, as nervous refineries and petroleum traders gauge how long the supply disruption will last.

For example, in August 2012, gasoline prices surged as Hurricane Isaac whipped through the Gulf and shuttered 1.3 million barrels per day of refining capacity. In 2005, gas prices jumped more than 46 cents in the week after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, according to government data.



Did you know that there are many different recipes for gasoline? Thanks to different state and local regulations, your neighborhood pump probably sells a different blend of gas than pumps in other states. And there are seasonal varieties, too -- summer gasoline and winter gasoline.

Winter gasoline is usually the cheapest.

4 Reasons Gas Prices Will Keep Dropping in 2015 Bankrate.com
It was in the dead of winter 2009 that prices began to rise under obama due to his reimposing of offshore drilling restrictions. Recent price drops have occurred in spite of his economically choking energy policy.
Why do you obama sheeple insist on not thinking?
So you're saying that oil production decreased in the winter of 2009??
The potential for enhanced supply was stifled by obama in the winter of 2009. Right when he took office.
You didn't answer my question ... are you claiming oil production dropped in the winter of 2009?
I already answered very pointedly and specifically. Go ask a non-democrat to explain it to you if you don't get it. I'm not going to repeat myself.
That you seek to avoid answering it with that bullshit bluff informs me you're clueless. My question should have resulted in a "yes" or "no" answer, yet no such answer can be found in your post.

Next question you'll probably run away from ... what event led to Obama restricting offshore drilling?
 
Food & Gas Prices are soaring. So tell me again how the Dear Leader is saving the World?


Memorial Day weekend drivers will continue to take a hit as gasoline prices remain high.

May 20 marks the 1,245th straight day that the national average for a gallon of regular gasoline costs more than $3 a gallon, according to AAA data. That's nearly three-and-a-half years above $3 a gallon.

USA Today reported last September that, for the first time ever, gas prices had been higher than $3 a gallon for 1,000 consecutive days - beginning Dec. 23, 2010, through Sept. 17, 2013. Unfortunately, that awful record streak of sustained highs has not been broken. Gas prices dipped in the fall, down to $3.179 (Nov. 12), but surged again.

The national average on May 20, 2014, for regular gas was $3.642 a gallon, slightly less than the $3.653 a gallon average one year earlier.

On May 18, USA Today turned to the issue of gas prices again writing that "rumors about the demise of U.S. gasoline demand have been greatly exaggerated." Javier E. David of CNBC wrote for USA Today that international factors were keeping prices high and "defied the gravitational pull" of factors "that should blunt demand."

AAA's Memorial Day forecast predicted 31.8 million people will be driving over the holiday and that gas prices will be "relatively similar" to where they were Memorial Day 2013.

ABC, CBS and NBC morning and evening news shows haven't spent much time on gas prices, lately. A Nexis search yielded only 11 stories mentioning what was going on with gas prices in the past three months.

Gas Price Record Worsens: 1,245 Days above $3 a Gallon | CNS News
DRUDGE REPORT 2014®

Tell us now how much you appreciate "Obamagas"
 
It was in the dead of winter 2009 that prices began to rise under obama due to his reimposing of offshore drilling restrictions. Recent price drops have occurred in spite of his economically choking energy policy.
Why do you obama sheeple insist on not thinking?
So you're saying that oil production decreased in the winter of 2009??
The potential for enhanced supply was stifled by obama in the winter of 2009. Right when he took office.
You didn't answer my question ... are you claiming oil production dropped in the winter of 2009?
I already answered very pointedly and specifically. Go ask a non-democrat to explain it to you if you don't get it. I'm not going to repeat myself.
That you seek to avoid answering it with that bullshit bluff informs me you're clueless. My question should have resulted in a "yes" or "no" answer, yet no such answer can be found in your post.

Next question you'll probably run away from ... what event led to Obama restricting offshore drilling?
I answered you very clearly. Why you refuse to acknowledge that is beyond me. Did someone drop you on your head?
What led obama to his drilling restriction mandate is the green energy, global warming scam.
 
I know.....they'd be giving it away, if it wasn't for Obama..........:D
No, it would just be cheaper. He has stifled supply side in the US and it's production increases in the US that have occurred in places he can't prohibit that have led to this drop in price. All in spite of obama. Obama is keeping and has kept prices higher than need be since the day he took office. Actually since a few days before as speculation is based on potential circumstances.

You all just keep showing how uninformed you really are. Here....quit listening to bimbos on Faux News that don't know what they are talking about and get informed. It pains me to see so many Americans being so ignorant when it comes to gas prices rising/dropping.


Why are gas prices likely to keep falling? You can thank a variety of market forces that are working together to push prices lower. Here are four of the main ones, and how each will make it less expensive to drive in coming months.

American oil producers have been on a tear lately. Thanks to new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and the increased use of techniques like hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," on land, the U.S. is awash in crude.

Domestic oil production has increased every year since 2008, which has contributed to a growing world supply. Meanwhile, American refineries are buying fewer barrels of more expensive foreign crudes.

The increased oil supply in the U.S., combined with weakening expectations for the global economy and world oil consumption, will likely push oil prices lower in 2015. As the cost of oil falls, so will the price of petroleum products like gasoline.

One of the primary reasons your gas prices rise or fall is the fluctuation in the price of crude oil. U.S. refineries buy several million barrels of oil every day to supply the world's biggest economy, so even small price changes make a big difference.

When crude oil prices go up or down, gas prices tend to follow. And right now, oil prices are on the decline.

Oil prices have been falling for several reasons, including the increased U.S. crude production and an outlook for weaker growth in global oil demand. Meanwhile, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, decided toward the end of 2014 not to manipulate prices by restricting oil production.

Overall, government energy forecasters expect crude prices to be significantly lower in 2015. The Energy Information Administration says the U.S. benchmark price could drop to $62.75 per barrel in 2015 -- a 33 percent discount from 2014. That means refineries would pay less for crude oil, and at least some of that savings should be passed on to drivers in the form of cheaper gasoline.

That makes the Gulf a rich and perilous place for satisfying America's energy needs. But the region hasn't seen much hurricane activity in a while, and that has contributed to declining gasoline prices.

A well-placed storm can cripple thousands of oil rigs in a weekend, and occasionally one does. Gas prices usually spike in reaction, as nervous refineries and petroleum traders gauge how long the supply disruption will last.

For example, in August 2012, gasoline prices surged as Hurricane Isaac whipped through the Gulf and shuttered 1.3 million barrels per day of refining capacity. In 2005, gas prices jumped more than 46 cents in the week after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, according to government data.



Did you know that there are many different recipes for gasoline? Thanks to different state and local regulations, your neighborhood pump probably sells a different blend of gas than pumps in other states. And there are seasonal varieties, too -- summer gasoline and winter gasoline.

Winter gasoline is usually the cheapest.

4 Reasons Gas Prices Will Keep Dropping in 2015 Bankrate.com
It was in the dead of winter 2009 that prices began to rise under obama due to his reimposing of offshore drilling restrictions. Recent price drops have occurred in spite of his economically choking energy policy.
Why do you obama sheeple insist on not thinking?
Yes that offshore drilling restriction sure did keep us from becoming an major oil producer...
Yeah, it did. It slowed the process by six years and is preventing the process from improving more as we speak.
What was Bush's excuse?
 
No, it would just be cheaper. He has stifled supply side in the US and it's production increases in the US that have occurred in places he can't prohibit that have led to this drop in price. All in spite of obama. Obama is keeping and has kept prices higher than need be since the day he took office. Actually since a few days before as speculation is based on potential circumstances.

You all just keep showing how uninformed you really are. Here....quit listening to bimbos on Faux News that don't know what they are talking about and get informed. It pains me to see so many Americans being so ignorant when it comes to gas prices rising/dropping.


Why are gas prices likely to keep falling? You can thank a variety of market forces that are working together to push prices lower. Here are four of the main ones, and how each will make it less expensive to drive in coming months.

American oil producers have been on a tear lately. Thanks to new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and the increased use of techniques like hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," on land, the U.S. is awash in crude.

Domestic oil production has increased every year since 2008, which has contributed to a growing world supply. Meanwhile, American refineries are buying fewer barrels of more expensive foreign crudes.

The increased oil supply in the U.S., combined with weakening expectations for the global economy and world oil consumption, will likely push oil prices lower in 2015. As the cost of oil falls, so will the price of petroleum products like gasoline.

One of the primary reasons your gas prices rise or fall is the fluctuation in the price of crude oil. U.S. refineries buy several million barrels of oil every day to supply the world's biggest economy, so even small price changes make a big difference.

When crude oil prices go up or down, gas prices tend to follow. And right now, oil prices are on the decline.

Oil prices have been falling for several reasons, including the increased U.S. crude production and an outlook for weaker growth in global oil demand. Meanwhile, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, decided toward the end of 2014 not to manipulate prices by restricting oil production.

Overall, government energy forecasters expect crude prices to be significantly lower in 2015. The Energy Information Administration says the U.S. benchmark price could drop to $62.75 per barrel in 2015 -- a 33 percent discount from 2014. That means refineries would pay less for crude oil, and at least some of that savings should be passed on to drivers in the form of cheaper gasoline.

That makes the Gulf a rich and perilous place for satisfying America's energy needs. But the region hasn't seen much hurricane activity in a while, and that has contributed to declining gasoline prices.

A well-placed storm can cripple thousands of oil rigs in a weekend, and occasionally one does. Gas prices usually spike in reaction, as nervous refineries and petroleum traders gauge how long the supply disruption will last.

For example, in August 2012, gasoline prices surged as Hurricane Isaac whipped through the Gulf and shuttered 1.3 million barrels per day of refining capacity. In 2005, gas prices jumped more than 46 cents in the week after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, according to government data.



Did you know that there are many different recipes for gasoline? Thanks to different state and local regulations, your neighborhood pump probably sells a different blend of gas than pumps in other states. And there are seasonal varieties, too -- summer gasoline and winter gasoline.

Winter gasoline is usually the cheapest.

4 Reasons Gas Prices Will Keep Dropping in 2015 Bankrate.com
It was in the dead of winter 2009 that prices began to rise under obama due to his reimposing of offshore drilling restrictions. Recent price drops have occurred in spite of his economically choking energy policy.
Why do you obama sheeple insist on not thinking?
Yes that offshore drilling restriction sure did keep us from becoming an major oil producer...
Yeah, it did. It slowed the process by six years and is preventing the process from improving more as we speak.
What was Bush's excuse?
He dragged his feet, pandering to the green shits and it wasn't until $4 crisis mode that he made a move, realizing part of the drilling moratorium was an EO put in place by his old man and an order he had the authority to reverse. Congress acquiesced and allowed the moratoriums to expire at the end of Sept 2008 for a period of no less than six months and the price dropped like a rock.
In steps obama and right back to where we were.
 

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