Bruce Calls Out Brandon

#51
#51
Yep, all true. Shouldn't have done any of that and because he did he screwed us and himself. Still doesn't negate the fact the UT's lawyers should have told him the NCAA had the photos.
I think they wanted him gone at any expense due to Ramar Smith and some other recruits. It apparently got way out of control with the gang influences and one former ball player that may have had a hand in a murder off campus. UT wasn’t going to be able to hush everything up with the direction it was heading.
 
#52
#52
I don't recall the whole story but it seems like I remember his show cause was due to lying about the bbq, not having it.
But also calling Aaron Crafts dad to get their stories straight. Mr. Craft if I recall was not going down that road and BP said it would be their word against him and his guys word.
 
#54
#54
That 800k was supposed to be starting in 2023. I'm asking about prices now.
Anticipated production affects prices and supply. Mere hint of a hurricane jacks up prices. So shut down a pipeline in an already volatile industry? What was being done differently under Trump? “It woulda happened anyway” doesn’t hold up.
 
#55
#55
Anticipated production affects prices and supply. Mere hint of a hurricane jacks up prices. So shut down a pipeline in an already volatile industry? What was being done differently under Trump? “It woulda happened anyway” doesn’t hold up.
Valid. The speculation and futures market has a great deal of influence on the at-the-pump price. We are currently seeing the pump price scale higher than expectations based on the price per barrel. This is the effect of speculation.

Any activity (or lack of activity) perceived as reducing supply to consumers will inflate price.
 
#56
#56
I don't recall the whole story but it seems like I remember his show cause was due to lying about the bbq, not having it.

He lied about it because the player was a junior and wasn't supposed to be there.
 
#57
#57
Anticipated production affects prices and supply. Mere hint of a hurricane jacks up prices. So shut down a pipeline in an already volatile industry? What was being done differently under Trump? “It woulda happened anyway” doesn’t hold up.

But a hurricane affects prices because it threatens existing production. This was not existing production.
 
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#59
#59
But a hurricane affects prices because it threatens existing production. This was not existing production.
“Threatens”…indeed. So shutting off a pipeline does what…?
 
#60
#60
Anticipated production affects prices and supply. Mere hint of a hurricane jacks up prices. So shut down a pipeline in an already volatile industry? What was being done differently under Trump? “It woulda happened anyway” doesn’t hold up.
Only when you are talking about anticipated production in the short run.

Two important things to note here :

1) The current production of oil wasn't halted by cancelling the Keystone Pipeline.

2) If the Keystone Pipeline hadn't been canceled, it would not have been completed until the fall of 2023.
 
#64
#64
Only when you are talking about anticipated production in the short run.

Two important things to note here :

1) The current production of oil wasn't halted by cancelling the Keystone Pipeline.

2) If the Keystone Pipeline hadn't been canceled, it would not have been completed until the fall of 2023.
Cancelling oil and gas leases compounded the crisis Biden created.
 
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#65
#65
Cancelling oil and gas leases compounded the crisis Biden created.

I think you overestimate the canceled gas leases impact.

Less than 10% of all of the oil and gas that’s being produced in the U.S. comes from federal land. Not only that, but energy companies aren’t even drilling on the federal land they’ve already got access to.

Nonetheless, Biden did open more federal land leases for drilling in April.

It's symbolic as no one believes that the openings will in any way impact the cost of refined gas.
 
#68
#68
I think you overestimate the canceled gas leases impact.

Less than 10% of all of the oil and gas that’s being produced in the U.S. comes from federal land. Not only that, but energy companies aren’t even drilling on the federal land they’ve already got access to.

Nonetheless, Biden did open more federal land leases for drilling in April.

It's symbolic as no one believes that the openings will in any way impact the cost of refined gas.
K. All this is a figment. Easily fixed whenever he decides, I guess. 😴
 
#71
#71
Would have been by now. Shutting down the project and denying oil and gas leases dating back to January also aren't concidental in this crisis.

Heck Keystone XL goes back a decade now before Obama blocked it. It would of been online by now
We can chalk it up to a decade of hostility
 
#72
#72
Biden is overcooked goose. He's done. The midterms will be a failure for democrats.

This was predicted when they started taking charge. They have no good domestic agenda. And they've never been accused of being foreign policy experts.
The party has become a group of sexuality/climate activist. Their “solutions” are birthed from a desire to assert absolute authority and sexualize 4 year olds for political gain. Decent folk are finally waking up to their nonsense.

I agree. The midterms will be brutal for the lefties.
 
#75
#75
Guess we disagree strongly.

Disagree with this:

Here's a study that shows that the XL would have actually created higher gas prices.

https://www.consumerwatchdog.org/sites/default/files/resources/keystonexl_cwd.pdf

Could the Keystone XL pipeline help lower U.S. gas prices?

"Keystone XL, an expansion of an existing North American pipeline, would have carried 830,000 barrels of crude oil from Alberta, Canada, to Nebraska daily at its peak. At the time Mr. Biden halted its construction, the $8 billion expansion was only about 8% complete, according to Reuters.

Yet many experts agree that moving ahead with the pipeline wouldn't have prevented U.S. gas prices from climbing to a record high. Expanding the Keystone would have increased global oil production by less than 1%, an amount, they explained, is "almost negligible."

"I can see why people make that connection," Nemet said."But in terms of gasoline prices and global oil prices, it's just something it's better to just ignore because it would have no impact."
 

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