Anonymous wrote:Buy a Tesla and problem solved.
Anonymous wrote:Good
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How else are we going to get flyover country to give up their smelly trucks?
They may think twice before rolling coal.
Cause for celebration- I would like to see $10/gas. I walk and bike nearly everywhere.
Have you ever been to the midwest, pp? Have you ever visited rural America?
Do you understand that it is not possible for everyone to bike and walk everywhere?
Do you understand that the farmers that grow your food and raise your crops need fuel for their farm equipment?
You are just clueless.
So we just give farmers gas subsidies, and make the vast majority of people, who are in urban areas, use mass transit or buy a Chevy Volt($33k)
What a simplistic clueless response.
Your "solution" does nothing for the millions of rural residents who need to drive 10+ miles to the grocery store or 30+ miles to a doctor's office or hospital.
I believe some of you urban dwellers have never stepped outside a city.
Good thing the vast majority of electric cars on the market easily get 200+ miles on a single charge. That should really help the Real Americans get to their doctor or the nearest grocery store. And even rural families have electricity!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How else are we going to get flyover country to give up their smelly trucks?
They may think twice before rolling coal.
Cause for celebration- I would like to see $10/gas. I walk and bike nearly everywhere.
Have you ever been to the midwest, pp? Have you ever visited rural America?
Do you understand that it is not possible for everyone to bike and walk everywhere?
Do you understand that the farmers that grow your food and raise your crops need fuel for their farm equipment?
You are just clueless.
So we just give farmers gas subsidies, and make the vast majority of people, who are in urban areas, use mass transit or buy a Chevy Volt($33k)
What a simplistic clueless response.
Your "solution" does nothing for the millions of rural residents who need to drive 10+ miles to the grocery store or 30+ miles to a doctor's office or hospital.
I believe some of you urban dwellers have never stepped outside a city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And the pipeline is still closed for what reason?
What pipeline are you referring to, and how does it related to auto fuel?
I love the cute Dem responses - you’re going to get wiped in the midterms and it’s well deserved.
because low information voters believe the keystone pipeline has jack to do with the cost of gas for cars
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How else are we going to get flyover country to give up their smelly trucks?
They may think twice before rolling coal.
Cause for celebration- I would like to see $10/gas. I walk and bike nearly everywhere.
Have you ever been to the midwest, pp? Have you ever visited rural America?
Do you understand that it is not possible for everyone to bike and walk everywhere?
Do you understand that the farmers that grow your food and raise your crops need fuel for their farm equipment?
You are just clueless.
So we just give farmers gas subsidies, and make the vast majority of people, who are in urban areas, use mass transit or buy a Chevy Volt($33k)
What a simplistic clueless response.
Your "solution" does nothing for the millions of rural residents who need to drive 10+ miles to the grocery store or 30+ miles to a doctor's office or hospital.
I believe some of you urban dwellers have never stepped outside a city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How else are we going to get flyover country to give up their smelly trucks?
They may think twice before rolling coal.
Cause for celebration- I would like to see $10/gas. I walk and bike nearly everywhere.
Except all.of the crap you buy at target needs to be shipped and transported. All of your food needs to be transported. It will make food prices skyrocket.
What an idiot living in a bubble you are. Hundreds of millions of people do not live in cities either.
I am literally shaking right now- is this the tone you use with your wife? You sound like a bully
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How else are we going to get flyover country to give up their smelly trucks?
They may think twice before rolling coal.
Cause for celebration- I would like to see $10/gas. I walk and bike nearly everywhere.
Have you ever been to the midwest, pp? Have you ever visited rural America?
Do you understand that it is not possible for everyone to bike and walk everywhere?
Do you understand that the farmers that grow your food and raise your crops need fuel for their farm equipment?
You are just clueless.
Vertical gardens give us access to fresh produce in the areas where we live.
The Midwest can and should be re-wilded.
Bwahahaha. You grow 100% of your own food and so does everyone else around you in the city? What a lying sack of S you are.
I bet you'd be the first to complain too about rising rents, housing crises, and housing unaffordability too if all of the sudden millions of more people started flooding into cities to live and now needed housing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How else are we going to get flyover country to give up their smelly trucks?
They may think twice before rolling coal.
Cause for celebration- I would like to see $10/gas. I walk and bike nearly everywhere.
Have you ever been to the midwest, pp? Have you ever visited rural America?
Do you understand that it is not possible for everyone to bike and walk everywhere?
Do you understand that the farmers that grow your food and raise your crops need fuel for their farm equipment?
You are just clueless.
Vertical gardens give us access to fresh produce in the areas where we live.
The Midwest can and should be re-wilded.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had almost $150/barrel oil in 2008 and the price of gas never reached $7/gallon.
Taxes change. Gas was almost $5/gallon in some spots in Washington State when we took a trip there about 5 months ago. Oil was nowhere near $150/barrel then. $150/barrel would easily send it to $7/gallon in parts of the country.
Anonymous wrote:We had almost $150/barrel oil in 2008 and the price of gas never reached $7/gallon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How else are we going to get flyover country to give up their smelly trucks?
They may think twice before rolling coal.
Cause for celebration- I would like to see $10/gas. I walk and bike nearly everywhere.
Except all.of the crap you buy at target needs to be shipped and transported. All of your food needs to be transported. It will make food prices skyrocket.
What an idiot living in a bubble you are. Hundreds of millions of people do not live in cities either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How else are we going to get flyover country to give up their smelly trucks?
They may think twice before rolling coal.
Cause for celebration- I would like to see $10/gas. I walk and bike nearly everywhere.
Except all.of the crap you buy at target needs to be shipped and transported. All of your food needs to be transported. It will make food prices skyrocket.
What an idiot living in a bubble you are. Hundreds of millions of people do not live in cities either.
I am literally shaking right now- is this the tone you use with your wife? You sound like a bully
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How else are we going to get flyover country to give up their smelly trucks?
They may think twice before rolling coal.
Cause for celebration- I would like to see $10/gas. I walk and bike nearly everywhere.
Except all.of the crap you buy at target needs to be shipped and transported. All of your food needs to be transported. It will make food prices skyrocket.
What an idiot living in a bubble you are. Hundreds of millions of people do not live in cities either.