~How's Your Gas??~

Dabs

~Unpredictable~
May 13, 2011
8,144
1,481
48
~Tennessee~
Not your body gas, you fucking gross assholes :lol:
But your gas prices....where you live!
I am delighted that gas prices are slowly creeping down in my part of the country......right now, most gas stations are at $3.12........and one is even at $3.11.
But I can travel 10 miles down the road, and the prices at those pumps are around $3.29.
It helps that I live right off the interstate I reckon......but I doubt they will go down much more, but still.......I like paying $3.12 better than paying $3.29, and at times....it was way higher.
How is it in your area??
 
Just put in $30 worth at $3.349
I've quit filling my tanks and just do $30 at a time.
Sometimes I get pissed because no matter how hard I try, bam- $30.01 or $30.02.
 
Just put in $30 worth at $3.349
I've quit filling my tanks and just do $30 at a time.
Sometimes I get pissed because no matter how hard I try, bam- $30.01 or $30.02.

~LoL~
I hear you on that one!
It happens to me all too often...try as I may, to get the damn thing to STOP at a specific amount - as you mentioned when you do $30 at a time.....I always go over by a penny or two *grrrrr*
 
$3.64...lowest in my area.
BUT the price has gone down and I do get a few discounts cause I 'know people'...har... LOL
so it would really be $3.44 locally for me.
 
It is impossible to buy an even gallon of gas.

How ould I pay 3.249?

They fuck you at the gas pump.
Just like they fuck you at the drive thru.

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRP8Tl4BsUQ&feature=related]Leo and the Drive Thru - YouTube[/ame]

Well, stay your happy ass in the bedroom, then you won't be so embarrassed when getting fucked! :tongue:
 
Natural gas is waaay up here this fall.
I wish those bastiges would come and drill my well. I have the permit and the free market will not drill it.
 
Gas is going up 40 cents here today!

Some stations are still at $3.12 but others have raised prices to the $3.49 - $3.55 range.

Don't know why.
 
Ahmeanerdeanerjad causin' gas prices to go up...
:eek:
Why Iran sanctions are pushing up oil prices
November 22, 2011 - Oil prices rose above $108 per barrel in the wake of new sanctions on Iran. The US, Canada, and Britain announced new sanctions on Iran's energy and finance sectors.
Brent crude futures rose above $108 a barrel on Tuesday as fresh sanctions on Iran raised the prospect of political instability in the region, offsetting the effect on the oil price of worries about the health of Western economies and their fuel demand. The United States, Britain and Canada on Monday announced new sanctions on Iran's energy and financial sectors, ratcheting up pressure on Tehran to stop its nuclear program. ICE Brent crude January futures rose $1.45 to $108.33 a barrel by 1445 GMT, after falling for four consecutive sessions. Brent has risen 13 percent this year, and is set for a third annual gain. U.S. January crude futures were $1.52 firmer at $98.44 a barrel by the same time, having risen to an intra-day high of $98.49 a barrel, after three sessions of losses.

"There is geopolitical risk after Western countries intensified pressure on Iran, cutting financial links and also putting sanctions on the oil industry," Commerzbank oil analyst Carsten Fritsch said. "This increases the risk of supply disruptions either directly from Iran or transported via the Strait of Hormuz, which carries one third of seaborne oil." Investors fear oil prices could spike in the event of air strikes on Iran's nuclear sites, which could cut supply from OPEC's second largest crude producer and disrupt trade in the Strait of Hormuz, the world's most important oil transit channel. "I don't expect at all to see Israel coming out with some action here at the end of the day; I read it more as a political play," said DNBNOR's Torbjrn Kjus.

He said the saber rattling was to get more Western countries to unite behind further sanctions. The uncertainty has supported prices, under pressure from the worsening debt crisis in Europe and the United States that is expected to hurt economic growth. Analysts expect that liquidity in the oil market will however dry up ahead of the long U.S. holiday weekend. "Over the next two days the main input is likely to be Thanksgiving. Liquidity should gradually dry up as we go into a very long trading weekend," Petromatrix's Olivier Jakob said.

GEOPOLITICAL RISK RETURNS
 

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