rScotty
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2001
- Messages
- 9,592
- Location
- Rural mountains - Colorado
- Tractor
- Kubota M59, JD530, JD310SG. Restoring Yanmar YM165D
"but the stations are saying that some oil rigs in the gulf had to shut down for the hurricane and it raised the price of oil and drove their prices up. If this is true, it raised the price of your gas too even if you are far away from the hurricane threatened area. For those of you who live hundreds of miles from the gulf, did your gas go up 40 cents a gallon last night?
- Tallyho8"
Sounds like at least part of what you are hearing is a story. Just so that you will know, here in Colorado our gas actually went down a bit this weekend. And it didn't go up following Katrina or 9/11, so I doubt it will for Gustav. My brother lives in southern Okla, and gas down there went up a dollar during the first two events and he is betting that it will for this one too.
One "maybeso" is that profiteering from someone else's misfortune is more acceptable legally and socially in some places than others. Another idea is simpler: In the western US with small towns and a thinner population everybody knows who owns the local gas station and so there is instant accountability. ---- YMMV, rScotty
Sounds like at least part of what you are hearing is a story. Just so that you will know, here in Colorado our gas actually went down a bit this weekend. And it didn't go up following Katrina or 9/11, so I doubt it will for Gustav. My brother lives in southern Okla, and gas down there went up a dollar during the first two events and he is betting that it will for this one too.
One "maybeso" is that profiteering from someone else's misfortune is more acceptable legally and socially in some places than others. Another idea is simpler: In the western US with small towns and a thinner population everybody knows who owns the local gas station and so there is instant accountability. ---- YMMV, rScotty