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Gas is cheap again -- let's waste it!

Posted Oct 27 2008, 10:52 AM by Donna Freedman
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I paid $2.65 a gallon at the pump over the weekend. Not that long ago, the same station was charging $4.67. Every day as I wait for the bus, I check the gas station signage, and every day it drops a little lower. Compared with the hue and cry about how expensive gas was getting, I've barely heard a peep about the tumbling prices.

Then again, the current economic upheaval continues to demand attention. No wonder nobody seems to notice that the average price of gas has come down about $1.47 since mid-July-- and a lot more than that in some areas. In fact, it's gone below $2 in many places. 

AAA’s Daily Fuel Gauge Report’s overnight survey yesterday found a 40th straight day of declining prices, with a national average of $2.67, the lowest in 19 months. That’s a 35% decline from the July 17 peak of  $4.14 a gallon.  

But prices have fallen to $2 or less in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas, many parts of Oklahoma and near Kansas City, Mo. Try out MSN Autos’ Gas Prices tool: It’ll show you the cheapest station in your area, with prices updated nightly by the Oil Price Information Service. Another place to check before you leave the house: GasBuddy, which uses readers’ reports.

Some experts say that Americans won't change their behavior, though -- that they'll continue to carpool, use public transit, consolidate errands and look for other ways to save gas. A specialist in consumer motivational psychology interviewed by The Associated Press predicted there would be no "significant, sudden change in behavior" just because prices have dropped.

I agree. I think it'll take at least six months before we're back to our gas-guzzling ways.

How quickly we forget
We've seen this before. Remember the gas shortages and rationing of the 1970s, and the concomitant fear that gas prices that might soon reach a dollar a gallon? At the time, that was unbelievable.

Our national nightmare faded quickly in the artificial light of the conspicuous-consumption '80s and the self-indulgent '90s. All the gas we wanted! And those little fuel-efficient cars were so 1976. The SUV became the symbol of affluence and the Humvee a symbol of aggressive affluence.

Everybody wanted a car. Everybody needed a car. Parents I knew talked about "having" to get cars for their kids as soon as they got their licenses, as though this were some inevitable right of passage -- or the inalienable right of every American teen.

The fact is, you probably did need a car if you lived in a city with poor or nonexistent public transit. If you lived in a suburb many miles from your workplace, you probably needed a car, too.

Drive, baby, drive
I was feeling similarly jaded a couple of months ago, when I wrote an essay called "How long will the 'new frugality' last?" My point was that frugality is now "in" but that it might be out once more as soon as times were better.

If the price of fuel keeps dropping, I think we as a nation will get complacent again. I hope we won't. But I bet we will.

We'll go back to driving everywhere, even to places that are within an easy walk. We'll quit consolidating our errands. And yeah, I know that carpooling doesn't work for everyone, but how many people do you know who even try it?

We won't care about conserving gas because we won't have to -- it will be affordable once more. But for how long? And more to the point, why don't we think about long-term solutions vs. how much it will cost us to fill up this week?

The trouble with us as a nation is that we expect everything to go our way, all the time. We want cheap gas. We want big cars. We want fast cars -- if you want to see some road rage, try suggesting a lower speed limit.

Where is it written that just because we want something we should have it? Even the Declaration of Independence says only that we have the right to the pursuit of happiness.

That means we have to do the work. In this case that means smarter choices. It doesn't mean putting the pedal to the metal. And it sure doesn't mean driving three blocks to the store for a pack of gum, no matter how cheap regular unleaded is this week. 

Comments

 

Regardless of your party affliation, we have gotten away from the practical and modest consumption of earlier generations. I'm hoping that whoever wins next Tuesday will ask us to make small manageable sacrifices that will make us more mindful of what we use. Gas, water, food, whatever it is.

I thought a blog was for the purpose of reading others opinions and expressing your own - not name calling and personal attacks on people just because you don't agree with their point of view. But then again, I am an uneducated DUM BASS.

And yes, I agree that on a whole Americans are wasteful but to judge me and make generalized assumptions about me because of MY CHOICE of vehicle is no different than if I were to do the same to you because of the way you look.

And before you call anyone else wastful, you may want to take a look around your own home. I'm sure that over the years you have afforded yourself a few "luxuries" that seriously fall into the catagory of being wasteful.

I need to go now before my DIAL-UP internet connection kicks me off again because someone is trying to call me on my LAND LINE.

I think we should all look at the T.Boone Pickens energy plan to get away from foreign oil and the OPEC cartel. Not only will it allow us to be energy independant but will also create thousands of new jobs. It doesn't matter who is elected on Tuesday, red or blue we are all in this energy crisis together and we need a fix! I'm afraid that big oil has beaten us up so much with 4.00 plus gas not to mention 5.00 diesel that we are now feeling like 2.65 is quite a bargain. I would encourage anyone who hasn't read the plan to do so and if it makes sense to you sign up....please. www.pickensplan.com

I agree with the part about teens not needing cars, but if their parents think they earned it, who cares?  It's not like the money's coming out of your pocket, Donna.  In terms of us having the right to whatever we want, this is the way it is - if we earned the ability to get what we want, there's absolutely nothing wrong with having it.  The first two items I addressed were bad enough for you to have foamed at the mouth about, but when you wrote the suggestion that Americans "only have the right to the pursuit of happiness," you crossed the line.  Maybe you should move to Cuba or communist China.  I'm sure you'd be happier there.  By the way, once you're in a country that doesn't allow you to do more than pursue happiness (if at all), why don't you post some blogs.  It would be nice to read what you think of a place that feels just right, Goldilocks.  

I believe many have a hard time seeing beyond the end of thier own nose or pocket book to understand the concept of how world economy actual works. Cheaper gas prices here, is going to cause un-employment...US drilling rig count is on the decent... leaving many without jobs.  Many companies are heading out of the country for oil and gas exploration..(south to Mexico, north to Canada).  Everytime a company takes jobs out of the country, or close down a company in the states. it is because they want to make for money, or in their term have a thicker  bottom line.  When in reality they are cutting their own throat, meaning:  the people here in the states have LESS money to spend on the products. But they can not see beyond the end of their nose, or their bottom line.  Everyone wants their cake and to eat it too.  Iti s a vicious cycle that needs some regulation, i.e. OVER paid CEO's.  Don't be STUPID spread the wealth, so EVERYONE can SPEND. Some one between the farmer and the grocery store is becoming very wealthy, check the price of wheat.  Just a very good example.

The problem with "MY CHOICE" of vehicle - when that vehicle is wasteful of a scarce resource that we depend on - is that sooner or later that choice is going to be rudely and abruptly taken from you by the harshest judge of all...the free market. Apparently $4/gal gas was not enough to wake people up to the realization that this attitude compromises our:                                                                                    

                        -national security

                        -our economy

                        -our jobs

                        -our cost of living

                        -our very way of life

The next time our selfish FREE CHOICE of transportation drives prices over $4/gal and everyone starts their crying and whining again, who do we blame? EXXON MOBIL seems to be a good scapegoat. Perhaps China and India. WOW- 2.4 billion scapegoats !!!  SWEET !!! Anything but blame ourselves. People need to get a clue that wasting something that is important to our lives is suicide.

I have a van. I have too with my job working on a house. A car will not do the job and they only diler so far. I live 60 miles from any hardware store or Drs. so I know how this people fell. If you have to drive 60 miles from home to do ever thing you would to drive a van to get it in all one trip. there is nothing in my town but bars and houses and that is it.

Just wondering...

How many people placing posts in this blog who are  bashing SUV owners own a dish washer? Take less than 10 min. showers? Read a newspaper lately & threw it away? Recycle ALL of their glass, plastic, metal, & paper? CARPOOL OR USE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION?

People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones. Just remember, your feet don't walk on water either.

"Just wondering...

How many people placing posts in this blog who are  bashing SUV owners own a dish washer? "

Ah Ha! Just as expected the upcoming attacks on our dishwashers. For your information modern household dishwasher are far more efficient than hand washing. Thousands of gallons of freshwater are saved every year, much of the saved water would of been hot water which waste our precious oil and gas, and causes global warming. The messiah will not get his socialist marxist hands on my dishwasher because I have disguised it a minature mosque. And I wrote Hillary's name in on the ballot. NoBama4Me

    One must remeber that in a purely free market driven society(one without any government intervention) the consumption of any product is driven by the wealth or lack thereof  of the consumming  members in that society....wealthy or well off individuals who can afford  larger more expensive vehicles that consume large amounts of fuel  will continue to do so regarless of the cost of the fuel  simply because they can afford it and it doesen't affect their lifestyles and could probably care less if that means there is less fuel for the rest of us....for example Arnold , the gov. of CA claims to own at least 5 Hummers....he is well off financially and probably could care less if  most of the residents in his state drove old clunkers....then at the other end of the economic spectrum are the poor working class (or non-working as the case may be) who drive old beater large  sedans that are of vintage 80's or early nineties that get piss poor fuel economy, but that is all they can afford. Those vehicles are probably paid for ...depreciated out and no auto insurance(remember no government intervention here).....Anybody who owns a new car no matter what it is will probably pay on average over $20,000 and will take a huge hit in depreciation in the first couple years....most will finance and pay some interest and most will pay for full coverage in auto insurance no matter  if your state government  doesn't  require it....It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure all those costs of new car ownership  can buy alot of fuel even at $4.00 to even say ...$7.00 a gal...We will continue to consume fuel until the free market begins to weed out those who cannot afford 15 to 20 bucks a gal....in that case it will be only the wealthy who will still be driving...at least petroleum based fueled vehicles....that is reality folks...

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