• Dead_or_Alive@lemmy.world
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    35 minutes ago

    I stuck one on a gas station in Texas today. Gas was over $4 a gallon.

    It feels good to travel through red states and shit on their orange god.

  • FlexibleToast@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    $3.99 for E0 gas is a fucking steal. Normally you pay more for E0, this is below the country average right now.

  • delikt@lemmy.zip
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    9 hours ago

    Gas Price per Gallon atm in Austria: 8 Dollar

    Befor this Bullshit it was at around 4,50 Dollar

    • tigeruppercut@lemmy.zip
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      9 hours ago

      Currently about 605 yen ($3.90 USD) in (rural) Japan. That only seems cheap in dollars because the yen has tanked in the past few years. 5 years ago when there were somewhat similar gas prices it would’ve been about $5.75

  • Hanrahan@slrpnk.net
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    16 hours ago

    Unleaded 88, wtf ? Does the US have gasoline with such a low octane ? or is it the price in inch pounds per linear whatsadoodle ?

    • JK_Flip_Flop@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      The US uses a slightly different Octane rating system that averages slightly lower than the more common RON. The system they use averages RON with MON which is measured under different engine conditions. The pump is labeled with (R+M)/2 to indicate this in the image. According to Wikipedia, 88 is equivalent to 95 RON.

      No idea why they feel the need to be different.

      • Geobloke@aussie.zone
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        12 hours ago

        I still don’t understand, can you compare that to something completely arbitrary like bourbon, Coke or football ovals?

    • KnoLord@lemmy.zip
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      15 hours ago

      The US uses a weird mix of RON and MON ratings (printed on the buttons) - 88 on their rating would be 91 RON, which is still very low for more modern engines, but not gut-wrenching at least.

  • danc4498@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Sad thing is he absolutely did do that. Unlike Biden who was blamed for the chaos that came from the pandemic.

    • wheezy@lemmy.ml
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      13 hours ago

      Well, Biden did blow up a pipe line that supplied Russian gas to Europe. He also did nothing to improve the horrible situation in Venezuela that Trump started. He actually just doubled down on it.

      Not on the level of what Trump has done. But every US president is consistently working to ensure US oligarchs have control of the oil supply. And that doesn’t always mean literally stealing oil. It’s more about control.

      Sometimes that brings domestic gas prices down. Sometimes it makes them go up. Sometimes that means blowing up pipelines. Sometimes that means kidnapping a countries elected leader.

      The president WANTS domestic gas prices to be low. It helps their approval ratings and party elections. But, the president is subject to the wishes of the oil and war oligarchs. And they are fucking thirsty right now.

      Edit: I’ve broken through with a positive upvote (for now) making a comment about Democrats and Bidens failures to combat Trump. I have faith in you Lemmy.

      Edit2: Had to brag. Reminded people to downvote.

      • Thebeardedsinglemalt@lemmy.world
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        19 hours ago

        The price spike under Biden was more the orange kid-diddler’s doing. Threatening to without military funding for Saudi Arabi unless they cut down on oil output during COVID. Which when supply chains were firing back up under Biden they had t ramped production back up yet. Biden got blamed for some he had nothing to do with. Aka the repugnican method.

        • wheezy@lemmy.ml
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          18 hours ago

          Bidens biggest failures were not undoing a lot of the things Trump did in his first term.

          I think it was a false belief in that the US should remain consistent and not back peddle on bad policies. So, instead of working with Iran to restore the JCPoA (that they continued to abide by via the UN) he continued to push sanctions. Similar situation with Venezuela. Hell, he even kept a lot of Trump’s awful border policy. He absolutely failed in restoring faith in America, on the world stage, after Trump’s first term. He needed to push hard in the opposite direction and have actual material changes that Trump (or any Republican) could not undo again.

          Now, one could say this is because they didn’t think they would lose again to Trump. But, that, in itself, was also a major failure for Biden/Harris. They had no major material improvements to point to as an achievement.

          • ShaggySnacks@lemmy.myserv.one
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            7 hours ago

            I think it was a false belief in that the US should remain consistent and not back peddle on bad policies.

            The pinnacle failure of centrists. Regressives have no issues throwing out good policy.

          • Thebeardedsinglemalt@lemmy.world
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            9 hours ago

            I do believe they honestly tried, but the damage done was not something which could easily be solved in a weekend. I even said in arguments that most of his first term would be trying to repair the US’s reputation on the world stage which he did make strides at. But as for passing anything, Moscow mitch even openly said that they’d fight against everything they could just to make Biden look like he wasn’t capable of new laws or policy.

            The first things Biden had on his plate when he took office were dealing with COVID to get the country and economy running again, fallout from the January 6th insurrection, and the time bomb of the military withdraw from Afghanistan.

        • Nautalax@lemmy.world
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          18 hours ago

          Tbh Biden did set himself up for trouble on gas prices specifically. He had that make Saudi Arabia a pariah initiative he was giving speeches on when he first got elected, it was going OK while the US held the cards… but after the Ukraine war started and the supply was reduced, gas prices became a giant glowing weak spot that the Saudis could vengefully mash just in time for mid-terms. Biden recognized the danger then and visited hat in hand to ask for forgiveness and more production, but it was too late after making very public positions and statements that the Saudis REALLY didn’t like at all so the trip didn’t amount to much other than embarassing news articles about him crawling back to the guy he had been calling a murderer.

    • protist@retrofed.com
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      7 hours ago

      *war in Ukraine

      Edit: You people are insane with these downvotes. Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24, 2022. Look at a graph of gas prices and see what happened right after that. The war in Ukraine was directly responsible for the gas price spike in 2022

      • takeda@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        13 hours ago

        Both, supply issues causes by economy restarting from covid as well as was in Ukraine that putin started.

        Ironically that also supposed to be very quick as the one with Iran.

        • protist@retrofed.com
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          7 hours ago

          The sudden spike in prices that immediately followed Russia invading Ukraine had almost nothing to do with the economy

          • takeda@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 hours ago

            I didn’t down vote you but, want to address your edit. You are absolutely right that war in Ukraine contributed to the price. And you are right that this spike had not much to do with the economy, but keep in mind that the restrictions were lifted I think in February as well pretty much simultaneously in all countries.

            During restrictions people traveled less, so the demand for oil was lower, so in 2020 oil fields reduced output.

            Now restrictions were lifted so demand increased, sanctions on Russia were imposed so demand on Persian Gulf also increased.

            It takes few months to restart production from oil wells that were shut down, and then there’s also few weeks delay as the tankers are transporting the oil.

            I think both contributed to the spike.

            • protist@retrofed.com
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              57 minutes ago

              Do you have a source on Feb '22 being some kind of turning point regarding covid restrictions? Having lived through COVID as a healthcare worker, I recall the timeline pretty acutely, and my memory is lockdowns were almost universally over by summer '20, the first vaccines were administered on a large scale in December '20, and activity increased progressively throughout 2021.

              Meanwhile, the gas price spike occurred immediately after Russia invaded Ukraine, and concerns about oil supplies were plastered all over the financial news of the day

    • khannie@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      That’s high for over there.

      I think before the war kicked off it was averaging $3.50 a gallon (3.78L) and now is averaging about $4.50. American mongo cars use a lot more petrol but it’s not taxed nearly as high as they’re a fuel producer.

      Meanwhile after emergency tax cuts here it’s running about €1.83 a litre or $8.30 a gallon for unleaded or near $10 for diesel.

    • GarboDog@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      Over here in Spain (where almost everything is pretty much cheap) gas is ~9$usd/gallon Heard a friend in Germany (whom also doesn’t drive (anymore)) say it’s minimum ~11$usd/gallon over there (Edit: we did the math to convert from €eur/Liter to $usd/gal and rounded to closest .50¢ (both were rounded down lol) it’s not average for the entire countries just the two prices for where we live and our friend lives) Anywho it’s gone up that’s for sure but we’re not heavily impacted