US Gas prices hit $5 national average after rapid rise - In California, drivers are paying an average of $6.40 per gallon.

The average price of a gallon of gas nationwide exceeded $5 on Thursday, crossing the milestone after a rapid rise over the past month that has alarmed public officials and strained the budgets of everyday Americans, according to GasBuddy.

In all 50 states, the average price of a gallon of gas stood above $4.40, but costs ranged considerably across different regions, as drivers in the West and Northeast suffered the highest prices and drivers in the Southeast saw the lowest, AAA data showed.

In California, the state with the highest gas prices, drivers paid an eye-popping average of $6.40 per gallon, AAA data showed.

The rising prices owe to a summer travel boom that has brought more people to the pump, experts told ABC News late last month. The spike in demand coincides with a shortage of crude oil supply amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which prompted a widespread industry exit from Russia that pushed millions of barrels of oil off the market, the experts said.

As consumer frustration has mounted in recent months, President Joe Biden has faced criticism over his handling of cost increases in essentials like fuel and groceries. Only 37% of Americans approve of Biden's handling of the economic recovery, according to an ABC/Ipsos poll released on Sunday.
president-biden-ap-jef-220608_1654708716328_hpEmbed_3x2_992.jpg
President Joe Biden speaks about inflation in the South Court Auditorium on the White House complex in Washington, May 10, 2022.
Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP, FILE


Republican leaders in Congress have faulted Biden’s management of the U.S. oil supply for high gas prices, blasting his choice to shut down the Keystone XL pipeline last year.
As of last week, Biden was leaning toward a trip to Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter, which may offer some hope of relief for U.S. gas buyers.

In March, the U.S. and its allies announced the collective release of 60 million barrels of oil from their strategic reserves over the following months, which sought to alleviate some of the supply shortage and blunt price increases.
(This isn't in the original article but in the United States alone, apparently an approximate 17 million barrels of oil are consumed each day.)

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg on Sunday told "This Week" anchor George Stephanopoulos that inflation is Biden’s “top economic priority.”

Stephanopoulos on Sunday asked Buttigieg about the release of oil from the strategic reserves, saying it "hasn't made any difference at all." Stephanopoulos asked, "Was that a failure?"

"I don't think it's correct to say it hasn't made any difference at all," Buttigieg said. "This is an action that helped to stabilize global oil prices."

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I was hanging out in San Fran this week at RSA and on Sunday, our Uber driver from the airport to the hotel showed us a gas station and said it was the cheapest in SF… $7.09 lol.
Also we saw a dude with a Mohawk chewing on a circuit board with wire attached to it for some reason. California’s fucked up.
 
How out of touch do you have to be to continue using the term "experts say" or "according to experts" post-Covid? The term has been so thoroughly delegitimized that it's a complete joke among anyone who isn't an NPC and even in that crowd they're starting to consider it muh bad optics.

At this point, citing "experts" is just letting us know that you're making shit up and shouldn't be taken seriously. It's very convenient, to be honest.
 
I wonder how long before the economy and law enforcement are completely paralyzed by this.
Fed Minimum Wage. If and when the price of a gallon of gas nationally gets near that, then people'll legit be unable to afford to come to work.
Nigger fucking what recovery!? Things have only gotten worse.
Hey now, it's gotten better for some people! They all happen to be geriatric prostitutes that stay in northern Virginia for a good chunk of each year though.
 
Fed Minimum Wage. If and when the price of a gallon of gas nationally gets near that, then people'll legit be unable to afford to come to work.

Hey now, it's gotten better for some people! They all happen to be geriatric prostitutes that stay in northern Virginia for a good chunk of each year though.

The actual minimum wage, as in what people will actually work for, is already far above the federal minimum even in a low cost of living state like mine. Like I don't think anyone would even bother for less that $10-11 for the most bottom end job. Anything requiring even a little skill is up around $15+. I'm personally now spending nearly a 1/4 of my paycheck just driving to and from work.
 
OPEC is keeping the production of gas low as their agreement with Trump during Covid (This was the right move at the time) and a spike in Demand has inflamed the prices. US gas companies are also unwilling to increase production while having the capacity as they are making money hands over fist, and the demand will fall in a year or two. Meaning they make more money not increasing the supply.

This is capitalism and a good business strategy from their side.

this will take around 2-3 years to stabilize as Europe sources new supplies and build infrastructure.

Just in time for Trump to take credit, heh Biden is fucked.
 
The actual minimum wage, as in what people will actually work for, is already far above the federal minimum even in a low cost of living state like mine. Like I don't think anyone would even bother for less that $10-11 for the most bottom end job. Anything requiring even a little skill is up around $15+. I'm personally now spending nearly a 1/4 of my paycheck just driving to and from work.
America is not built to handle $7 gas.
 
i ain't one of them cryptobros or musk asskissers but i get the feeling people with electric cars may have made a lucky decision
 
Have you tried canned beans, cheap meat paste and no netflix subscription?
Less Avocadoes on toast or what ever they usually say.
Just in time for Trump to take credit, heh Biden is fucked.
Yes Micro Penis, but the problem is the systemic issues within the US economy are not going to be addressed so chances are you will not have a recovery as the fuels prices now might trigger the meltdown, but they are not the meltdown it self.
 
Less Avocadoes on toast or what ever they usually say.

Yes Micro Penis, but the problem is the systemic issues within the US economy are not going to be addressed so chances are you will not have a recovery as the fuels prices now might trigger the meltdown, but they are not the meltdown it self.

You are saying this crisis is just smaller one compared to the cracks and faults it opens in entire economy. How bad it is ? USA killing ?
 
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You are saying this crisis is just smaller one compared to the cracks and faults it opens in entire economy. How bad it is ? USA killing ?

Basically the population is extremely, to a slavsquatter, are almost unimaginably spoiled.

Peak good times weak men.

Hungary did well in the early middle ages as it was a farmland surrounded by mountains, so defended and full of food, great for making well fed soldiers who bash others in the head with maces. Didn't work when industry and trade became a more important factor.

USA is set up very well for a 18-19th century ethnostate.
Lots of small mining and food making towns that the bri'ish can't easily decapitate. Lots of self sufficient farmers making new, strong lads to use muskets.

But now the bugmen hives and corporatism and diversity are fouling the workings. Big corpo monofarms aren't helping, but I would not write off small towns with nearby natural resources, food or coal or iron, and a proper yankee population, even in a full collapse. Maybe a good idea for local mayors to butter up nearby amish freedom comrades.

The bugmen hives are in trouble if anything happens though. This maybe same for western europe. At least slavlands usually got 1 bughive capital and that's it.
 
You are saying this crisis is just smaller one compared to the cracks and faults it opens in entire economy. How bad it is ? USA killing ?
No it is not a US is "doomed", but you have a situation where a lot of employed people are running out of elasticity in there personal budgets.

Now this have a lot of different factors.
You have the problem with under-employment where people have one or two jobs, but with to few hours. This is a product of how corporate taxes work and how in some cases hiring in this way they can keep the wages low. So instead of full time employment you have 3 people working the same job so you can use it to pay less taxes and if any one wants more money fire them as they employment is limited.

Then you have the secondary facts feks, Americans pay less in taxes then EU counterparts, they also pay more in healthcare, insurance and to a host of things. This remove elasticity in there finances as they have less capital to work with. If i don't want health insurance or could not afford it i still have healthcare to a decent level if and America get sick he will be fucked in the ass by the health care department increasing his debt.

Then there are the speculations in the market. We see that with housing, natural resources and so on. This create a volatility in the market that can not be limited.
Then there are the situation with the banking system where they are over-op heating like crazy and we might see another crash as they are speculating in different shit loans again.

After that we have the outside factors, Europe, China, Africa and so on. Where things in those regions could trigger a US meltdown of it's economy.
 
I saw 93 surpass diesel this morning at $6.17 over $6.09 a gallon. It was as horrifying as going into Safeway and seeing most cuts of chicken jumping another dollar in price from when I last looked on Sunday. No, they were not on sale or organic or free range, rather dirt regular store brand chicken breasts are $6.49lb. B/S thighs are $5.39lb. I'll have to look on Monday what Costco is selling them for now. Since about the beginning of the year, Costco was one of the more expensive places to buy chicken. Seems like other retailer are starting to catch up to them.
 
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