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Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.
Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.






		GreecePwns wrote:Since the word "Okay." will not immediately translate into "you have to go back and look at what you've written and question whether or not you know what you're saying," in your mind (I forgive you; sarcasm doesn't translate well on the internet) I will write everything out which I thought immediately before writing the word "Okay."
I'll toss aside your statement that it "correlates both ways," since it's clear you don't know the definition of the terms positive correlation and negative correlation.
GreecePwns wrote:The viability of alternative energy sources for automobiles has increased over time, and more specifically over a more recent time frame. Using the historical inflation-adjusted prices is irrelevant in this discussion because the conditions of 1918 or 1958 do not apply to our discussion. The conditions in 1958 are not the same as in 2012: gas driven cars did not have to compete with electric cars/hybrid cars/hydrogen cars. This competition determines the price elasticity of gasoline. Since gas was a necessary good to drive cars in 1958, another near-necessity in 1958, gas prices in 1978 (or even now) are inelastic. Price changes don't affect quantity demanded. In 2012, the conditions are not the same. These new technologies directly affect the necessity-ness (for lack of a better word) of gasoline, and therefore quantity demanded and elasticity of the price of gasoline. You saying "well this is what has happened over 100 years" doesn't mean it will happen forever. The $2.49 comes from an entire century where there was no competition for gas-powered cars, making gas a necessary and price-inelastic good. The next century won't be like that, so let's not pretend it will.
GreecePwns wrote:On top of that, your statement implies both a positive correlation and a definite causation between gas prices and the economy. Your math would have to be a bit fuzzy to find a definite positive correlation in the first place (notice the percentage change during the Great Depression is smaller than the percentage change in 2008-12), but let's say that is the case. You'd still be very hard-pressed to say that those particular gas prices caused periods of growth and periods of recession. C'mon man, do you ever hear high gas prices as a reason for the current recession? Or the Great Depression? Or the Dot Com Bubble? Do you realize what you're saying implies?






























		GreecePwns wrote:Since the word "Okay." will not immediately translate into "you have to go back and look at what you've written and question whether or not you know what you're saying," in your mind (I forgive you; sarcasm doesn't translate well on the internet) I will write everything out which I thought immediately before writing the word "Okay."
I'll toss aside your statement that it "correlates both ways," since it's clear you don't know the definition of the terms positive correlation and negative correlation.
Telling us to "go back and look" is not an argument, when your argument is irrelevant.
The viability of alternative energy sources for automobiles has increased over time, and more specifically over a more recent time frame. Using the historical inflation-adjusted prices is irrelevant in this discussion because the conditions of 1918 or 1958 do not apply to our discussion. The conditions in 1958 are not the same as in 2012: gas driven cars did not have to compete with electric cars/hybrid cars/hydrogen cars. This competition determines the price elasticity of gasoline. Since gas was a necessary good to drive cars in 1958, another near-necessity in 1958, gas prices in 1978 (or even now) are inelastic. Price changes don't affect quantity demanded. In 2012, the conditions are not the same. These new technologies directly affect the demand for gasoline, and therefore quantity demanded and elasticity of the price of gasoline. You saying "well this is what has happened over 100 years" doesn't mean it will happen forever. The $2.49 comes from an entire century where there was no competition for gas-powered cars, making gas a necessary and price-inelastic good. The next century won't be like that, so let's not pretend it will.
On top of that, your statement implies both a positive correlation and a definite causation between gas prices and the economy. Your math would have to be a bit fuzzy to find a definite positive correlation in the first place (notice the percentage change during the Great Depression is smaller than the percentage change in 2008-12), but let's say that is the case. You'd still be very hard-pressed to say that those particular gas prices caused periods of growth and periods of recession. C'mon man, do you ever hear high gas prices as a reason for the current recession? Or the Great Depression? Or the Dot Com Bubble? Do you realize what you're saying implies?

















			ViperOverLord wrote:Obviously both given the previous discussion. Go back and look at it and you'll figure it out (unless you want to just exercise common sense and then you'll figure it out anyways).








		AndyDufresne wrote:Timminz wrote:ViperOverLord wrote:GreecePwns wrote:The historical inflation-adjusted average is not relevant. There were no viable or near-viable alternative energy sources for the operation of automobiles in, say, 1918. Using this measure counts 1918 as equal to 2012 in our discussion, which is irrational in a discussion of future conditions.
Your argument that there has to be more than one energy source is irrelevant. The price of gasoline (the lowest costing automobile fuel) directly correlates with the state of the economy. Eventually that may change (as other automobile energies become more viable). But what is true in 2012 was true in 1918 in regards to that.
What alternatives to petroleum products were available for powering cars in 1918? Were there coal-powered cars sold back then?
I don't think coal powered cars made it into production ever, but I am not automobile buff. Steam cars, however, were around in the early years of automobiles (building off the momentum of Steam Locomotives). It faced some hurdles, but also had some advantages as well. Wikipedia.
--Andy




















		Lootifer wrote:ViperOverLord wrote:Obviously both given the previous discussion. Go back and look at it and you'll figure it out (unless you want to just exercise common sense and then you'll figure it out anyways).
I know exactly whats going on in here. You guys are faffing about oil prices like they have some material basis in reality. Pity it's just not true.
Oil prices are tied to retarded speculation and long term (ie long before Obama/Bush/etc) arrangements of political capitalists. The easiest way consumers to fix this is by elastic demand, pushing the suppliers (and politicians) to change their model.
The previous model worked because you could trip over and find/produce oil, this isnt true anymore; regardless of how much there still is in the ground, it is more exspensive [to find and produce].

















			







		





























		





























		







		Lootifer wrote:Dont be a dick, i was asking genuinely.






























		
















			BigBallinStalin wrote:Clarity, dude.
I like how he has to grade himself. It reminds me of China's monopoly on cigarettes, and how that same business is also responsible for analyzing the health effects of cigarette smoking. (link? I dunno, I can't remember from where I read this).






























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