Anonymous wrote:Hold on to your hats folks it’s gonna get messy.
This will cause the prices to shoot in even more and things like polyesters and other materials come from oil.
This will have a trickle down affect that will affect most Americans. Food is already shooting JP but everything from gas to clothes to food to household goods will shoot up. We’re already suffering some of the highest inflation on record due to Bidenomics. Oil prices started shouting uo well before Russia.
This is just the start folks. Stock up on water and needed supplies…or don’t and leave more for me
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hold on to your hats folks it’s gonna get messy.
This will cause the prices to shoot in even more and things like polyesters and other materials come from oil.
This will have a trickle down affect that will affect most Americans. Food is already shooting JP but everything from gas to clothes to food to household goods will shoot up. We’re already suffering some of the highest inflation on record due to Bidenomics. Oil prices started shouting uo well before Russia.
This is just the start folks. Stock up on water and needed supplies…or don’t and leave more for me
Yes, I am expecting all retail and food prices to rise sharply in the coming weeks with companies claiming they have to do it because of the cost of gas rising. Also delivery services like DoorDash and driving services like Uber will likely slap on even more service charges. It is really, really going to suck for those of us in the DMV middle class so I can't even imagine how bad it will be for others with less income.
Anonymous wrote:Republicans just make endless excuses for everything. If they had been working hard on energy efficiency rather than fighting against it then we would be well positioned to tackle the oil shortage caused by Putin. They have made sure to make us 100% dependent on fossil fuel and then they complain about that sake dependency.
Anonymous wrote:Hold on to your hats folks it’s gonna get messy.
This will cause the prices to shoot in even more and things like polyesters and other materials come from oil.
This will have a trickle down affect that will affect most Americans. Food is already shooting JP but everything from gas to clothes to food to household goods will shoot up. We’re already suffering some of the highest inflation on record due to Bidenomics. Oil prices started shouting uo well before Russia.
This is just the start folks. Stock up on water and needed supplies…or don’t and leave more for me
Anonymous wrote:Real talk: As long as oil and gas are cheap in this country, we will never do what we have to do to transition to clean energy. I'm glad Biden is seizing the chance to make a moral, foreign policy, technological, and environmental decision all at once.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Big winner: WMATA.
WMATA would be a big winner if it got its act together. A sizeable portion of its fleet is still out for repairs and rush hour is a debacle.
Wrong. Rush hour is fine. Want to experience a debacle during rush hour? Try driving down 66 every day instead.
All of the new Metro trains were recalled and are being fixed because of safety issues. How does that engender confidence in public transit when you have to recall your entire new fleet because they’re unsafe.
Some people also don’t want to deal with the growing safety issues on Metro either. Riding the DC Metro is a far cry from riding public transit on Stockholm or Hong Kong. Don’t act like Americans are spoiled because they don’t want to ride an underfunded, unsafe, crime ridden system that their counterparts in these places would scoff at.
Yes, a place like Copenhagen has higher gas prices. But it’s cycling network, urban design, and transit system blow this city’s out of the water. So why are Americans spoiled when they don’t have the same alternatives?
HAHAHA, a safety recall? Like car manufacturers do all the time, like Tesla literally recalling a half million vehicles just last month? Oh, but Metro does it and you've lost confidence. Talk about spoiled!
Also, your description of Copenhagen sounds like you're arguing for more investment and priority for non-car transit options. I agree!
You sound like a ideologue who just hates cars. There’s a reason the former COO of Metro resigned. Buying an entirely new fleet of trains only to recall them all for months because they’re unsafe is not a trivial matter. It is an embarrassing stain on a system that already was embarrassing for the capital of a developed nation.
And yes, I’m all for spending a lot more for transit, changing zoning laws to incentivize higher density next to transit, etc. Hopefully we can do it for a lower cost than is being incurred for the metro in NYC and our costs are more in line with what they pay per mile of public transit in France.
What I’m definitely not for is a bunch of privileged UMC and rich folks lecturing already financially stressed working class and middle class people about the nobility of suffering under higher gas prices while all of this infrastructure is yet to be built.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Big winner: WMATA.
WMATA would be a big winner if it got its act together. A sizeable portion of its fleet is still out for repairs and rush hour is a debacle.
Wrong. Rush hour is fine. Want to experience a debacle during rush hour? Try driving down 66 every day instead.
All of the new Metro trains were recalled and are being fixed because of safety issues. How does that engender confidence in public transit when you have to recall your entire new fleet because they’re unsafe.
Some people also don’t want to deal with the growing safety issues on Metro either. Riding the DC Metro is a far cry from riding public transit on Stockholm or Hong Kong. Don’t act like Americans are spoiled because they don’t want to ride an underfunded, unsafe, crime ridden system that their counterparts in these places would scoff at.
Yes, a place like Copenhagen has higher gas prices. But it’s cycling network, urban design, and transit system blow this city’s out of the water. So why are Americans spoiled when they don’t have the same alternatives?
HAHAHA, a safety recall? Like car manufacturers do all the time, like Tesla literally recalling a half million vehicles just last month? Oh, but Metro does it and you've lost confidence. Talk about spoiled!
Also, your description of Copenhagen sounds like you're arguing for more investment and priority for non-car transit options. I agree!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Breaking news: Biden is about to announce a US ban on Russian oil.
https://www.cbsnews.com/live-updates/biden-russia-oil-ban-ukraine-watch-live-stream-today-2022-03-08/
This will further raise oil prices and the Right will criticize Biden even more, despite clamoring for a Russian oil ban.
I voted for Biden but he is digging his own grave.
In what way?
He needs to make a better case for why another far off war in a distant place should necessitate American incurring the sacrifices he is asking them to make in the near term and combine it with a cogent explanation of why such a sacrifice is necessary given that we had a bunch of oil and energy independence under Obama and Trump, along with lower gas prices. His challenge is that the risks of climate change and "fall of democracy" seem remote and attenuated(despite apocalyptic language), while the pain of inflation and gas prices are very imminent, very tangible, and very real.
This.
Don't forget that he won the last election by a few points. It was not a landslide. People's memories are very short and they will tire of high gas prices very quickly and forget about the people of the Ukraine.
We're banning all imports of Russian oil and gas and energy," Biden said in remarks from the White House. "That means Russian oil will no longer be acceptable at U.S. ports and the American people will deal another powerful blow to Putin's war machine."
The president warned that the move would probably increase gas prices in the U.S., but that it was necessary to ramp up sanctions pressure on Russia's economy for its war on Ukraine.
“Putin's war is already hurting American families at the gas pump," Biden said. "I’m going to do everything I can to minimize Putin's price hike here at home.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I look at the Ukrainians people fighting and showing incredible grit, and then I see Americans whining about the price of gas, which is lower than it's ever been in virtually all other developed countries. Couple that with the whining about masks and a very safe vaccines, and Americans are looking very, very soft. It really is embarrassing
A lot of these countries have far more robust mass transit systems than the US and their cities were designed around mass transit. This country is much more car dependent.
I’d agree with your sentiment if it didn’t primarily hurt working and middle class people who can’t afford a home 1/2 mile from a Metro, which are priced at a premium. A lot of the essential workers people appropriately laud do not have access to public transit that provides them with a reasonable commute to their job that doesn’t take 1+ hours.
Spend trillions in infrastructure and build a transportation network like they have in Japan, some European countries, and China and then come back and talk about how the average American living paycheck to paycheck is soft for caring about gas prices. Until then you sound arrogant, entitled, and out of touch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Big winner: WMATA.
WMATA would be a big winner if it got its act together. A sizeable portion of its fleet is still out for repairs and rush hour is a debacle.
Wrong. Rush hour is fine. Want to experience a debacle during rush hour? Try driving down 66 every day instead.
All of the new Metro trains were recalled and are being fixed because of safety issues. How does that engender confidence in public transit when you have to recall your entire new fleet because they’re unsafe.
Some people also don’t want to deal with the growing safety issues on Metro either. Riding the DC Metro is a far cry from riding public transit on Stockholm or Hong Kong. Don’t act like Americans are spoiled because they don’t want to ride an underfunded, unsafe, crime ridden system that their counterparts in these places would scoff at.
Yes, a place like Copenhagen has higher gas prices. But it’s cycling network, urban design, and transit system blow this city’s out of the water. So why are Americans spoiled when they don’t have the same alternatives?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Big winner: WMATA.
WMATA would be a big winner if it got its act together. A sizeable portion of its fleet is still out for repairs and rush hour is a debacle.
Wrong. Rush hour is fine. Want to experience a debacle during rush hour? Try driving down 66 every day instead.
All of the new Metro trains were recalled and are being fixed because of safety issues. How does that engender confidence in public transit when you have to recall your entire new fleet because they’re unsafe.
Some people also don’t want to deal with the growing safety issues on Metro either. Riding the DC Metro is a far cry from riding public transit on Stockholm or Hong Kong. Don’t act like Americans are spoiled because they don’t want to ride an underfunded, unsafe, crime ridden system that their counterparts in these places would scoff at.
Yes, a place like Copenhagen has higher gas prices. But it’s cycling network, urban design, and transit system blow this city’s out of the water. So why are Americans spoiled when they don’t have the same alternatives?
This is really nonsensical. The risk of safety issues in traffic is much, much higher than on metro. There's no comparison. There is no perfect safety, but Metro is way safer than regular car commuting.