A bunch of useless crap
When will it cost too much?
Published on August 20, 2006 By MasonM In Blogging
It seems that no matter how high gasoline prices soar the roads are no less crowded. I still see just as many SUVs, motor homes, campers, and pickups pulling boats as ever. Obviously the oil companies are correct in their assumption that they can charge whatever they like and people are still going to be buying and wasting just as much as ever.

Today, Sunday, the interstates were jammed with traffic. Not just a lot of local traffic, but license plates from all over. All of these travelers with vehicles loaded down with luggage, bicycles, boats, campers, etc., are still out there burning up gasoline at an incredible rate. How can these people afford it? Where are they going that's so important to them that they are willing to spend literally hundreds of dollars for gasoline?

Here's a clue for the RV folks. There's a hotel at nearly every exit. Drive something easy on gas, get hotel rooms or rent a vacation rental, and you're likely to save a fortune. The price of the RV alone would pay for hotels for a year.

I am happy to see more hybrids on the road, but they are still a small minority among all of the SUVs and other gas guzzlers which are sadly in the majority these days. Hybrids aren't perfect but their fuel economy is far better than that Hummer cruising down the highway at 75mph.

At what point will fuel prices become too high for all of this unecessary traveling? $4.00/gal? $5.00? I really wonder about that. It would seem that even if it were to hit $10.oo/gal people would still stubbornly take out a 3rd mortgage on their homes to pay for the fuel to travel someplace they don't really need to go.

I know everyone enjoys going on a vacation trip or weekend holiday, but at some point you have to ask yourself if it's not better to stick closer to home. After all, there are people who come to your neck of the woods to vacation too.


Comments (Page 1)
2 Pages1 2 
on Aug 20, 2006

Simply put, Gas is just now catching up with inflation.  and while it is costly, it is a part of living.  So no one (or very few) have actually cut back.  My wife and I have.  But you  are right.  We are an exception, not a rule.

With mortgages going for $2k a month, food at $400 per month (or more) what is a gas bill of $200/mn?

$4/gal will see  drop, But not a lot.  Get it up to European levels and then you will see conservation!

But not until then.

on Aug 20, 2006
#1 by Dr. Guy
Sun, August 20, 2006 3:57 PM



[Dr. Guy]

Simply put, Gas is just now catching up with inflation. and while it is costly, it is a part of living. So no one (or very few) have actually cut back. My wife and I have. But you are right. We are an exception, not a rule.

With mortgages going for $2k a month, food at $400 per month (or more) what is a gas bill of $200/mn?

$4/gal will see drop, But not a lot. Get it up to European levels and then you will see conservation!

But not until then.


I really wonder if even $4 will do it. Americans are addicted to car exhaust, that's the only conclusion I can draw.
on Aug 20, 2006

We've started to curb our gasoline expenditure.  We don't make unnecessary trips into town like we used to, and at the $3 a gallon mark Dave started to ride his bike to work. 

I see the same thing as you, Mason. I see people at the pumps almost crying over how much fuel is, but they don't seem to understand that if they don't run all over town or the state at the weekends or after work they won't use as much gas.  Americans are slaves to the pumps and to big oil companies - if people just started to conserve fuel it'd make a dent in the sales of gasoline, and if Americans really wanted to send a message of 'we're tired of you fucking us over' to said companies all they'd have to do is start walking, biking or using public transportation instead of their own vehicles - resulting in a drop of gasoline sales.  I'd really like to see big oil's reaction to something like THAT.

I don't think it'll ever happen, though. 

on Aug 20, 2006
really wonder if even $4 will do it. Americans are addicted to car exhaust, that's the only conclusion I can draw


No, Euorpean levels are $6-7 bucks a gallon. SO even $4 will not change things. Except for some of us. But not enough.
on Aug 20, 2006
#3 by dharmagrl
Sun, August 20, 2006 4:26 PM



[dharmagrl]

We've started to curb our gasoline expenditure. We don't make unnecessary trips into town like we used to, and at the $3 a gallon mark Dave started to ride his bike to work.

I see the same thing as you, Mason. I see people at the pumps almost crying over how much fuel is, but they don't seem to understand that if they don't run all over town or the state at the weekends or after work they won't use as much gas. Americans are slaves to the pumps and to big oil companies - if people just started to conserve fuel it'd make a dent in the sales of gasoline, and if Americans really wanted to send a message of 'we're tired of you fucking us over' to said companies all they'd have to do is start walking, biking or using public transportation instead of their own vehicles - resulting in a drop of gasoline sales. I'd really like to see big oil's reaction to something like THAT.

I don't think it'll ever happen, though.


I honestly don't think it will happen either. People are just so enamoured of being able to travel in a car that the idea of actually walking or riding a bicycle someplace is foreign to them. Of course that's why there are so many obese and heart attack victims too.

Hell, these days people panic when the battery dies in the remote because they can't even consider the possibility of getting their fat ass off the couch and walking over to the television to change the station.
on Aug 20, 2006
#4 by Dr. Guy
Sun, August 20, 2006 4:32 PM



[Dr. Guy]
really wonder if even $4 will do it. Americans are addicted to car exhaust, that's the only conclusion I can draw


No, Euorpean levels are $6-7 bucks a gallon. SO even $4 will not change things. Except for some of us. But not enough.


I agree it wouldn't change habits all that much. They'd starve their kids in order to feed their Hummer.
on Aug 20, 2006
I walk my children to and from school instead of taking the car, but that's about as far as I'm willing to go with it.

I have a sedan that I fill up with gas about 1.5 times a month. I spend less than $100/mo on gas.

I don't live in Texas anymore, though. If I did, I can guarantee I'd be driving a hell of a lot more.

If that makes me a bad person, so be it. Convenience is worth something to me.
on Aug 20, 2006
#7 by Texas Wahine
Sun, August 20, 2006 5:09 PM



[Texas Wahine]
I walk my children to and from school instead of taking the car, but that's about as far as I'm willing to go with it.

I have a sedan that I fill up with gas about 1.5 times a month. I spend less than $100/mo on gas.

I don't live in Texas anymore, though. If I did, I can guarantee I'd be driving a hell of a lot more.

If that makes me a bad person, so be it. Convenience is worth something to me.


Sounds like you're doing what you can.

Bad person? Bad person?

Who said anything about bad people? Geez, I'm the last person in the world to call someone else a bad person. If there were a 'bad people' list, I'm sure I'd make the top 100 at least.

I'm just wondering out loud, in cyberspace as it were, what motivates these people to spend so much money on gas to go places they really don't need to go.
on Aug 20, 2006
I hear ya M. I see them out there and I wonder that myself. I'm only out there because I've got to drop off or pick up my child. When we do anything else, it's to the grocery and back. We keep it to the basic, work, school, home. On saturday mornings I go to the gym which is 3 miles away otherwise I would walk, but I usually go to the gym after dropping my oldest daughter at work.

We don't even venture too far because of the gas situation. It costs too much! Thank heavens for us everything is in a 2-5 mile radious!
on Aug 20, 2006

We don't even venture too far because of the gas situation. It costs too much! Thank heavens for us everything is in a 2-5 mile radious!

Yet you still drive.  That is the crux if it.  Untill you start cycling or walking, they still have you.

on Aug 20, 2006
#9 by foreverserenity
Sun, August 20, 2006 5:35 PM




I hear ya M. I see them out there and I wonder that myself. I'm only out there because I've got to drop off or pick up my child. When we do anything else, it's to the grocery and back. We keep it to the basic, work, school, home. On saturday mornings I go to the gym which is 3 miles away otherwise I would walk, but I usually go to the gym after dropping my oldest daughter at work.

We don't even venture too far because of the gas situation. It costs too much! Thank heavens for us everything is in a 2-5 mile radious!


Seems like a three mile walk or bike ride would be the perfect warm up for the gym.

It's good when everything is close. I don't fault the folks who are just trying to go about their daily lives. A bicycle is great trtansportation around town, unless of course you have children to haul around. More people should bike in my opinion, but I doubt that's gonna happen any time soon.

It's the idiots in their huge motor homes traveling across country at an absurdly low fuel mileage that I have to question.
on Aug 20, 2006
#10 by Dr. Guy
Sun, August 20, 2006 5:38 PM



[Dr. Guy]

We don't even venture too far because of the gas situation. It costs too much! Thank heavens for us everything is in a 2-5 mile radious!

Yet you still drive. That is the crux if it. Untill you start cycling or walking, they still have you.


I agree that human powered transportation is a perfect alternative for the around town stuff as long as you don't have some kids in tow. More people should buy bicycles and use them. THen they could thumb their noses at each gas station they pass.
on Aug 20, 2006
We vacationed here in Ohio this year - and enjoyed it!
We make stops on the way to & from work to cut down on extra trips to the store & such.
Otherwise we stay close to home.

Where the frack are they going? Back & forth - humans are nutty people.
on Aug 20, 2006
humans are nutty people

Insulting nuts now are we?
on Aug 20, 2006
they can't even consider the possibility of getting their fat ass off the couch and walking over to the television to change the station.


OMGoodness!!!

You can change the channel using the television set?

You're kidding right?

That's, well, that is barbaric!
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