Friday, April 05, 2013

Why Abundant Oil Hasn't Cut Gasoline Prices

Why Abundant Oil Hasn't Cut Gasoline Prices - Businessweek
With competition fierce for limited pipeline capacity, producers have begun moving crude on barges and trains, adding as much as $17 a barrel to the price of domestic oil. 
That extra cost eventually makes its way to the price at the pump. 
Ethanol requirements have backfired. 
The idea was to stretch a limited oil supply, cut reliance on imported crude, and make use of abundant corn harvests. 
But today the ethanol program is raising costs for refiners even as the price of oil has fallen 10 percent over the last year.

Complicating the equation is a 1920 law called the Jones Act, which requires any cargo shipped between U.S. ports to be carried by vessels that are based in the U.S., made in the U.S., and crewed mostly by U.S. citizens. The law was intended to protect U.S. shipping interests but has made it more costly to move fuel between U.S. ports. This in particular hurts the Northeast, which is struggling to meet its fuel needs after several refineries closed in the last two years. According to Ed Morse, chief commodity analyst at Citigroup (C), those constraints add between $6 and $8 a barrel to transport costs. As a result, it’s often cheaper for a Gulf Coast refiner to send gasoline to Brazil than to New York.

In late 2011 the U.S. quietly surpassed Russia as the largest exporter of such refined products as gasoline and diesel. Canada’s fuel imports from the U.S. jumped 15 percent in 2012. Brazil’s demand for U.S.-made fuel rose 6 percent. China’s leapt 17 percent. Exports to Venezuela and India more than doubled. Without realizing it, U.S. drivers are competing for American-made gasoline with consumers in Latin America and Asia, where demand is rising. “Americans don’t think about their prices being impacted by a global market,” says Morse. “The American public just thinks about the rising price at the pump.”

The Senate Trouble-Maker in Waiting

The Senate Trouble-Maker in Waiting - NationalJournal.com:
"Not long ago, the idea of someone like Amash clearing the primary field in a Senate race would have been unthinkable. 
An outspoken libertarian with views that often run counter to recent GOP orthodoxy (he led a failed coup against Speaker John Boehner earlier this year), Amash has minimal support among the Republican political class.
He’s also only 32 years old, serving his second term in Congress, and has little name recognition—even across Michigan.
But in modern GOP politics, as shown by the examples of Sens. Paul, Marco Rubio of Florida, and Ted Cruz of Texas—all of whom were opposed by the establishment in their primary races—conservative outsiders have an inside track to the upper chamber."

Gun Grabbers’ Latest Gambit

PJ Media » Gun Grabbers’ Latest Gambit:
“A contingent of liberal Democrats in Congress is proposing a new federal gun control idea: mandatory liability insurance for gun owners.”
Gun purchasers without such insurance would face a fine of “as much as $10,000″ if the “Firearm Risk Protection Act” introduced in March by New York’s Carolyn Maloney and seven other Democratic congressmen were ever to become law."

Social Programs Face Cutback in Obama Budget

Social Programs Face Cutback in Obama Budget - NYTimes.com:
"Mr. Obama’s budget will propose a new inflation formula that would have the effect of reducing cost-of-living payments for Social Security benefits"

Question of the Day: Should Michigan change its high school graduation requirements to eliminate Algrebra II and foreign languages?

Question of the Day: Should Michigan change its high school graduation requirements to eliminate Algrebra II and foreign languages? | MLive.com:
"Supporters of the requirements say that changes already allow students to customize their curriculum and that the changes aren't needed.
What do you think?
Should students be required to take Algebra II and foreign languages to get their high school degree?
Does it better prepare them for a career?"

Outrageous!… Dem Rep. Degette Mocks Senior Citizen – Says “You’d Probably Be Dead Anyway” if Confronted by Armed Criminals (Video)

Outrageous!… Dem Rep. Degette Mocks Senior Citizen – Says “You’d Probably Be Dead Anyway” if Confronted by Armed Criminals (Video) | The Gateway Pundit:
"During the question and answer period a concerned Denver citizen asked Democratic Representative DeGette how he was supposed to defend himself under the new Colorado gun laws.
DeGette smirked and mocked the senior citizen saying,
“The good news for you, you live in Denver. The Denver PD would be there within minutes. (laughing) You’d probably be dead anyway.”
Really?
That’s the Democratic response to concerned homeowners?
To mothers?
To seniors protecting their homes?
“You’d probably be dead anyway.”"

First Amendment Victory! | Ottawa County Patriots

First Amendment Victory! | Ottawa County Patriots:
 "Update:  April 4th. 12:00PM
To the applause of a standing room only crowd in court, Judge Servass, dismissed the case against the owner of Verium Farms in Gaines township as unconstitutional."

Obama: Newtown Shooter Gunned Down 20 Children With 'Fully Automatic Weapon'

Obama: Newtown Shooter Gunned Down 20 Children With 'Fully Automatic Weapon' | The Weekly Standard:
"-- by a fully automatic weapon in that case, sadly."
According to the prosecutor, Stephen J. Sedensky III, the killer, Adam Lanza, "killed all 26 victims inside Sandy Hook Elementary School with a Bushmaster .223-caliber rifle before taking his own life with a Glock 10 mm handgun.
He says Lanza had another loaded handgun with him inside the school as well as three, 30-round magazines for the Bushmaster," ABC previously reported.
Each of the guns used is a semi-automatic weapon, and not one is an automatic weapon."

The Coming Global Warming Voter Backlash

Articles: The Coming Global Warming Voter Backlash:
"The volcanic eruption of Mount Pinotubo in the Pacific belched as much greenhouse gases into the atmosphere in a few weeks as 1,000 years of humans driving automobiles. 
Similarly, the production of methane gas -- a more powerful greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide (CO2) -- from herds of wildebeest in Africa far exceeds the greenhouse gas emissions of the largest U.S. cities.
The only scientific data we ever had is this: over the geological history of the Earth, when temperature increased, 800 years later we see a rise in atmospheric CO2. 
Higher temperatures are not caused by carbon dioxide in the air. 
CO2 cannot cause a warmer climate, because warming occurs 800 years on average before any increase in CO2 levels. 
(It is suspected that CO2 dissolved in the oceans escapes as the oceans grow warmer.) "

33 things you should never say to a TSA agent

No humor zone: 33 things you should never say to a TSA agent:
"During a bag search, a Flint (FNT) traveler stated: "Be careful, there's a bomb in my bag."

Tell youngsters the truth: the UK needs you to work not go to university

Tell youngsters the truth: the UK needs you to work not go to university - Telegraph:
"The horrible truth is that central planning never works: just as the authorities cannot possibly know how many widgets an economy ought to produce, or what the “right” price for goods will turn out to be, they cannot possibly know many decades in advance what skills will be required, or what percentage of school-leavers should go to university. 
It is hard to fathom what Tony Blair was thinking when he promised that half of 18-year-olds would go to university.
The result has been betrayal, broken dreams, graduates working in coffee shops, a business community that still cannot find the right people with the right soft and hard skills, and a generation of young people crumbling under ever larger student debts.
It’s a social catastrophe for which nobody has yet paid the price; even worse, it remains politically unacceptable for those in a position of power to point any of this out."

What could go wrong? Obama asks banks to offer risky loans

Harsanyi: What could go wrong? Obama asks banks to offer risky loans:
"Think about this statement.
The administration is asking banks – banks that Washington bails out; banks that Washington crafts regulations for — to embrace risky policies that put the institution and its investors (not to mention, all of us) in a  precarious position.
So precarious, in fact, that banks have to ask government if they can be freed of any legal or financial consequences."