Topic: I was correct, who will admit it?

http://www.redstate.com/2013/10/30/we-c … -says-who/

I said that drilling for oil and bringing prices down would not take 10 years, I said there was far more oil and nat gas in the United States than Barack Obama said there was.

I was correct, it took less than 4 years and prices have plummetted, DESPITE Obama stopping leases in the Gulf and Federal lands as much as he can.

Fact is this boom is happening entirely on private and State owned land.


less than 4 years, less than 4 years, where your idol, your false prophet said a decade or more.
I was right.

Who has balls enough to admit it now?

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

who the fuche cares

Turn on - Tune in - Drop out

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

Ok maybe i was a little mean, my dear Flint.

But come on, we get it. Your republican. And probably dont like Obama.
The arrogant gloating will win more democrats over to the dark side, i'm sure!

Turn on - Tune in - Drop out

4 (edited by Xeno 31-Oct-2013 00:34:25)

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

Einstein, you are deceived.





In 2008, crude was valued at an average price of 96.91 (adjusted for inflation at 2009 dollar-value).



When the price of oil spiked in 1864, just when initial supply could not keep pace with demand and prices were skyrocketing, it was priced at    $110.11 per barrel (adjusted for inflation at 2009 dollar value).

If anything prices should have become cheaper after this initial supply shortage and we would have seen a price equilibrium with form according to your 'invisible hand' free market forces.

How as it possible, then that in 2008, oil peeked at $140 per barrel?   That should have been impossible!

In fact, prices should ONLY have come down from 1864 price as we developed more efficient ways of extracting oil.  The equilibrium between supply and demand would have resulted in ever slightly cheaper prices according to your notions of the guiding invisible hand of your free market capitalism idea: your sacrosanct notion that competition would produce efficiency and lower prices forever.

I mean, if it didn't, the whole premise of your so called sacrosanct benevolent 'invisible hand' theory inherent to your very notions of the virtues of free market capitalism would be proved FALSE, and your entire economic theory would become ILLEGITIMATE.

Well, guess what happened, Einstein.  Good news. The price of oil, miraculously, did find an equilibrium (albeit an artificially-induced one which is a different discussion) and everybody could march forward in their faith sacrosanct free market, laissez-faire economic (sic. illusionary) theory.

Yes.  In fact, the price of oil did settle between $10 and $20 per barrel (adjusted for inflation at 2009 dollar value), that is until the 70s.

What happened then?  Well, we had the oil shocks of the 70's and 80's when oil prices spiked again up to near their initial supply-shortage levels of the 1860's - the $100 per barrel mark (again adjusted for inflation at 2009 dollar value).

Well, gosh, darnit, how did this happen?  Where did that guiding principle of that invisible hand of the free market go and disappear to?  Would it come back?

Well, whatever happened, it did seem to.  Phew. Everyone exhaled a sigh of relief and went back to believing in their invisible, benevolent, guiding hand of the market theory as oil prices settled back down to between $10 and $20 per barrel, that is, until 2001. 

Something went wrong then...what could that have been, I wonder?

Whatcha think, Einstein?

Anyway, whatever it was that went wrong, all the way from 2001 until 2009, oil spiked up to, well, you know, more than $100 per barrel, he highest it had ever been in history (again adjusted to inflation at 2009 dollar values).

What do you think caused that, Einstein?

Doesn't matter!  Why?  Because oil came down a bit eventually.  It was just some sort of hicup, right?  Nothing to worry about, right?

That's what we all thought when it came down to the $50 per barrel mark.

Things were looking up.

No problem.

Right?

WRONG!

It didn't come down anywhere near the $10 to $20 range that it was supposed to.  Instead, it started rising again.

What do you think happened, Einstein?

Who cares, right?  Doesn't matter, right?

Because all we've got to do is just keep buying crap and thinks will get better, right?

Don't think.  Just buy crap.

Right?

WRONG!

I know that this IS what your 'invisible hand of the market' theory indicates we should do.

And so far, Google's and Facebook-sponsored positive thinking (sic. cult) to get the economy back on track according to that notion seems to be working.  But guess what, Einstein? 

There's just one small problem with it: it's false.

But that's just my understanding, and I'm not going to try and convince you of it.  In fact, let's assume just for the sake of argument that your fantasy-like invisible hand of the market theory is in effect after all. 

Wouldn't a continued rise in price indicate that we have reached peak oil?

Well, yes, in fact, it would, you should say.

And, yet such a rise we have experienced.  The price of oil, after going down to about $50 has stayed up around $100.

Pure logic dictates there are two possible explanations for this:

1.  Either the invisible hand theory of yours is a fantasy and the price of oil has been manipulated all along.
2.  Your invisible hand theory is correct and we've reached peak oil.

Pick one.

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

3: Xeno's understanding of what an "equilibrium" is is fundamentally flawed.

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

The Great Eye wrote:

3: Xeno's understanding of what an "equilibrium" is is fundamentally flawed.

Okay, I'll bite.  Please explain.

7 (edited by The Great Eye 31-Oct-2013 02:16:47)

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

1: Gee, I wonder what caused the spike in oil prices between the 70's and 80's... normal market economic models of an equilibrium argue the market is efficiently producing when there are competing sellers.  We all know the oil market is entirely competitive.  It's not like there's some sort of Oil and Petroleum Export Commission controlling 2/3 of the world oil supply that has quarterly meetings on the amount of oil that is exported... an organization which people like Flint, myself, and most people on both the right and left dislike specifically due to their market-manipulating nature.

Note: This is an exception, not the norm.  Generally, these types of organizations are stupid impossible to organize.  The unity against Israel made a big effort to make that unity happen, however.  Moreover, the actions of the US in drilling for new oil acts as a method of busting OPEC (the most effective method of busting a trust is to build a competing industry that can fill the supply a trust or monopoly is denying the market).

2: Your analysis ignores the existence of aggregate changes in supply and demand.  Large-scale demographic shifts change what would be considered an "equilibrium price" by changing the ratio of supply and demand.

A good example of this... roses!  Generally the same price year after year, with little change.  With just one little exception.  Every February, the price of roses jumps.  Is it a deviation from the equilibrium?  No.  There's just, at this moment, a larger amount of people buying a larger amount of roses, changing what would be the equilibrium for that month.

In the same way with oil, such factors as the discovery of new oil, the growth of developing economies such as China and India, the tapping out of various oil wells, seasonal changes, increased insurance costs associated with transporting petroleum through at-risk regions, disruption of oil wells, the opening and closing of embargoes, and just higher overall individual use of energy create new equilibriums.

In short, it's just unfair to say the economic system fails because the price here isn't the same as it was in a time when only a ridiculously low fraction of even developed nations owned a car.

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

All Hail Ming!

/bows to Obama

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

Let us see, Democrats since the election of Bush have balked at drilling here, trying hard to stop it.
The most famous rally point was a 10 year quote for it to affect the market.

If those Democrats had gotten out of the way OPEC would have billions of dollars less, the United States and the EU both would be far better off financially and Russia would not have parts of Europe under an energy threat


Further ye troll, the lower prices would most significantly assist the low income people of our nations and would increase our economic growths. In fact Hoffman the current economic woes in both Continents might not exist if the United States had authorized massive amounts of drilling.

So Hoffmam, we should all care.

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

Zarf, so regarding #1 you are saying that although there was no authentically free market providing for an equilibrium of prices and rather that the 10-20 $value of oil that previous generations enjoyed was artificially low due to manipulation by OPEC; and that the higher price of $80 to $100 is the new equilibrium, as it has adjusted due to the opening of new sources of oil, correct?

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

Xeno wrote:

Zarf, so regarding #1 you are saying that although there was no authentically free market providing for an equilibrium of prices and rather that the 10-20 $value of oil that previous generations enjoyed was artificially low due to manipulation by OPEC; and that the higher price of $80 to $100 is the new equilibrium, as it has adjusted due to the opening of new sources of oil, correct?

You're oversimplifying again.

There were WAY more factors that create the equilibrium.  In particular, note that the 90's had a mix of OPEC not engaging nearly as much in the outright prohibition of exports (i.e., they weren't pulling any '72 embargo stunts at the time), while at the same time the world had just barely begun to see China and India, two nations representing over 2 billion people, entering a period of real oil consumption.  Setting everything else aside, the development of China and India is incredibly strongly correlated to the increase in gas prices between the '90's and the 2000's.

Don't forget about the Iran-Iraq war as well!  You had a decade-long war between two of the biggest global petroleum suppliers... right in the middle of the Strait of Hormuz... a small stretch of water through which about 25% of the world's oil supply passed.  The 80's had this little specter hanging over oil shipments perpetually, forcing insurance rates up for shipping through the region (and thus raising the cost of the transit of oil).

That, along with other conflicts, subsided in the '90's.  With less conflict, oil shipping becomes easier, and thus the oil becomes cheaper.




But no, I'm not citing any single factor as "the cause" of particular prices at any given time.  Looking for that one "silver bullet" cause misses the whole point of supply and demand... it's a multitude of forces competing.  There is no "cause."  There are "causes."

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

Your examples of increased demand would have resulted in increases in supply to fulfill such demand.  Why has this not occurred?

1. no invisible hand of the free market
2. peak oil

13 (edited by Little Paul 31-Oct-2013 10:22:07)

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

hence oil is little cheaper and prices will decrease a while. It will mean economic growth soon, followed by prices above 120$ before you know it.

On topic, I think the independence from the Russian autocracy is a welcome side-effect in any case.

14 (edited by The Great Eye 31-Oct-2013 18:19:37)

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

Xeno wrote:

Your examples of increased demand would have resulted in increases in supply to fulfill such demand.  Why has this not occurred?

1. no invisible hand of the free market
2. peak oil

3: Xeno oversimplifying economics again.

Remember, no sane person is saying the petroleum market is the model perfectly competitive market.  There are both legal and practical barriers to entry.  Oil extraction can be prohibited by national law (think ANWR) or international dispute (the South China Seas may have more oil than the Middle East, but international disputes over water rights have stalled any development).  Practically, extraction of oil requires ownership of the petroleum (so not everyone can just wake up one morning and decide they want to be an oil tycoon) and the existence of the extraction technology.

Moreover, although those new extractions are occurring, they still have to deal with extraction costs.  For the past 100 years, the world has been basically running on the simplest, easiest oil that can be drilled, because it's the most profitable.  Why would you drill for 1 million barrels of oil you were going to sell for $20 a barrel if the cost of research and extraction is $30 a barrel?  Particularly when your competitors are extracting the same end resource, but at only $8 a barrel?  Anyway, once the price of oil begins to increase, it gives incentives to begin researching those more expensive extraction methods.  When oil creeps up to $90 a barrel, suddenly extraction at $30 a barrel becomes profitable.  (Note: These numbers are being pulled out of nowhere.  Just using it as a demonstration).  Supply increases.  It may not return to the original point because if extraction costs the business $30 a barrel, that business would again have no reason to keep manufacturing if the price dropped to $25 a barrel.

Long story short, the oil market is VERY nuanced in its inherent political and geographic limitations on entry into the market.  The market does what it can to shift in the direction of a competitive market (i.e., the United States researching and releasing new oil, as described in the OP, which is inherently a market competitive activity), but there's limitations.  However, this in no way means the oil market is an example of the success or failure of market economics.  OPEC is the exception, not the norm.

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

15 (edited by The Great Eye 31-Oct-2013 19:43:57)

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

[Edit: Inappropriate]

"Sticks and stones may break my bones, but i am Jesus"
"Nothing is worse than a fully prepared fool"

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

Banned huh fool? can you even contemplate not trolling?

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

17 (edited by Xeno 01-Nov-2013 02:15:42)

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

The Great Eye wrote:
Xeno wrote:

Your examples of increased demand would have resulted in increases in supply to fulfill such demand.  Why has this not occurred?

1. no invisible hand of the free market
2. peak oil

3: Xeno oversimplifying economics again.

Remember, no sane person is saying the petroleum market is the model perfectly competitive market.  There are both legal and practical barriers to entry.  Oil extraction can be prohibited by national law (think ANWR) or international dispute (the South China Seas may have more oil than the Middle East, but international disputes over water rights have stalled any development).  Practically, extraction of oil requires ownership of the petroleum (so not everyone can just wake up one morning and decide they want to be an oil tycoon) and the existence of the extraction technology.

Moreover, although those new extractions are occurring, they still have to deal with extraction costs.  For the past 100 years, the world has been basically running on the simplest, easiest oil that can be drilled, because it's the most profitable.  Why would you drill for 1 million barrels of oil you were going to sell for $20 a barrel if the cost of research and extraction is $30 a barrel?  Particularly when your competitors are extracting the same end resource, but at only $8 a barrel?  Anyway, once the price of oil begins to increase, it gives incentives to begin researching those more expensive extraction methods.  When oil creeps up to $90 a barrel, suddenly extraction at $30 a barrel becomes profitable.  (Note: These numbers are being pulled out of nowhere.  Just using it as a demonstration).  Supply increases.  It may not return to the original point because if extraction costs the business $30 a barrel, that business would again have no reason to keep manufacturing if the price dropped to $25 a barrel.

Long story short, the oil market is VERY nuanced in its inherent political and geographic limitations on entry into the market.  The market does what it can to shift in the direction of a competitive market (i.e., the United States researching and releasing new oil, as described in the OP, which is inherently a market competitive activity), but there's limitations.  However, this in no way means the oil market is an example of the success or failure of market economics.  OPEC is the exception, not the norm.

Right, so, ...ummm... I'm seeing no disagreement here.  We both seem to agree that there's no invisible hand of the free market, and that we've reached peak oil.

I mean, you know as well as I do that oil and gas prices are the prime indicator of inflation / deflation, and so if the oil and gas market isn't operating by free market principles, there is no free market.

Also, you seem to see as I do that we've reached peak oil.  It's getting more expensive to extract oil because the majority of easily accessible deposits have been exhausted.

BTW simplifying things is a good, not bad (especially when it comes to economics).  IMHO, anyone who can't simplify the topic doesn't understand it well enough to explain it.

18 (edited by The Great Eye 01-Nov-2013 04:22:56)

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

Xeno wrote:

Right, so, ...ummm... I'm seeing no disagreement here.  We both seem to agree that there's no invisible hand of the free market, and that we've reached peak oil.

The difference is that I recognize oil as an exception, not the norm.  We both agree that the free market in oil is kind of screwed up.  Hell, Flint probably agrees too.

There's one more difference, however.  You present the analysis as if it's a disproving of the theories of economics.  In contrast, I would argue it simply means the market is not a perfectly competitive market, and we can strive to make it more competitive.  Flint's stance is one which works to correct the problem.  Drilling of oil by the United States helps correct the problem because it adds another competitor into the market.  Increased competition in oil, just like increased competition in any market, is the quickest way to force a trust like OPEC to falter because it undermines their ability to profitably drive prices up by withholding exports.  Long story short, you should be on Flint's side in this particular thread.  tongue

If you haven't noticed, nobody in this thread is defending OPEC.  You're the one that decided to pick that strawman to beat up.

Xeno wrote:

I mean, you know as well as I do that oil and gas prices are the prime indicator of inflation / deflation, and so if the oil and gas market isn't operating by free market principles, there is no free market.

An indicator?  Yes.  The primary indicator?  Not even close.

Xeno wrote:

Also, you seem to see as I do that we've reached peak oil.  It's getting more expensive to extract oil because the majority of easily accessible deposits have been exhausted.

Lemme ask you... what is "peak oil"?

Xeno wrote:

BTW simplifying things is a good, not bad (especially when it comes to economics).  IMHO, anyone who can't simplify the topic doesn't understand it well enough to explain it.

There's a fine line between "simplification" and "oversimplification."  Explaining a complex concept through methods which the average person can understand is simplification.  Explaining a complex concept in such a way that nuances of the concept are utterly eroded to the point where your explanation doesn't accurately reflect the complex concept... that's when a problem occurs, because it creates the impression that you don't actually know what the concepts you're discussing actually are, while at the same time reducing the actual debate to simply one of comparative slogans.

You know, sort of like how everyone here who interacts with you simply generalizes you as socialist!  They end up wrong, but people buy what they say, and your message gets degraded in the process, forcing you to waste time explaining nuances!  Moreover, it's a waste of time when we on the politics forum are interested in actually critically thinking about and analyzing these concepts.

Additionally, as someone who has a long history of engaging with you on debates of economic theory and has demonstrated on these forums more than a little understanding of the basic concepts of microeconomics, I find it slightly insulting that you feel the need to "simplify" such basic microeconomic concepts as supply and demand in your communications with me.  I'd think you've known my a bit more by now!  tongue

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

Peak oil can have 2 meanings, matters who you speak to.

1) that half the actual oil in the world has been consumed

2) that we have maxed out how many barrels of oil can be drilled per day/year in the World.

Some use both but that is less common.


Problem is BOTH ARE UTTERLY FALSE AND ARE USED TO CREATE PANIC. It is a bunch of lies

World production is actually increasing and we have identified far more oil than we have used, enough for hundreds of years.


The sad thing is due to Democrats the United States is the only nation on Earth that does not quickly exploit easily drilled oil when it finds it (not including the fracking method which a number of nations suffer delusions it is unsafe due to lies perpetuated by environmentalists and people like Xeno)

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

20 (edited by Xeno 01-Nov-2013 05:08:08)

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

Einstein wrote:

Peak oil can have 2 meanings, matters who you speak to.

1) that half the actual oil in the world has been consumed

2) that we have maxed out how many barrels of oil can be drilled per day/year in the World.

Some use both but that is less common.

Peak oil for me is when production cannot (for whatever reason) keep pace with increases in demand.  We've been at peak oil for quite a while.  Why is this even an issue.  You mean you didn't know?  It's clear from a quick google search. 

http://www.petrostrategies.org/Graphs/W … Demand.htm
http://www.energyinsights.net/cgi-scrip … 000085.htm

"According to the IEA's 2013 projections, growth in global oil demand will be significantly outpaced by growth in production capacity over the next 5 years." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peak_oil

Zarf wrote:

An indicator?  Yes.  The primary indicator?  Not even close.

Actually, I'd argue that oil prices are the major determining factor of costs of production and distribution of everything, and, as such, the major determinant of all prices.

My opinion is that this outpacing of demand over production is resulting from peak oil, and that this is causing rising prices while the downturn in the economy continues.  In other words, an outright depression caused by peak oil.  And as this gives rise to increasing uncertainty and tentativeness among investors, which only exacerbates the problem with the economy.

Collaborative efforts by nations to print money their way out of this 'recession' are futile.  Investors simply aren't buying it, you see, because they know what's going on.   

And the kicker is that all of this provides oil forecasters their justification for forecasts of lower future demand for oil, giving them a way to coverup of the fact that they can't increase production because we've reached peak oil.

In other words, peak oil occurs, resulting in demand outpacing production, causing the global economy to stagnate as it has been, allowing forecasters who are funded by oil producers to justify speculation that continued problems with the economy will lower demand for oil, just the justification for not increasing production that oil producers paid for.

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

Xeno wrote:
Zarf wrote:

An indicator?  Yes.  The primary indicator?  Not even close.

Actually, I'd argue that oil prices are the major determining factor of costs of production and distribution of everything, and, as such, the major determinant of all prices.

So currency doesn't matter anymore?  You were the one that posted that whole hour and a half long video about currency manipulation by banks causing inflation.  hmm

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22 (edited by Xeno 01-Nov-2013 05:09:59)

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

Currency manipulation is a symptom of the larger problem of producers' inability to keep pace with demand for resources.

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

How so?

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

Except that demand is flexible according to price, and the price in the United States has dropped, and we are passing Saudi Arabia as the biggest producer of oil in the world.

With Brazil, Ecudor, Australia and many more tackling new fields (and with a major increase around the world in fracking) the advent of not enough oil is not happening.

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

25 (edited by Xeno 01-Nov-2013 06:12:31)

Re: I was correct, who will admit it?

look, i'm watching this movie again atm

It had a lot of insights into the situation as I recall...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JeufX6S-Q_s