Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Oil *was* a bubble
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October 10, 2008 at 1:08 PM #285597October 10, 2008 at 1:24 PM #285265kewpParticipant
Given that the definition of ‘bubble’ is itself fuzzy this debate can never have a winner.
October 10, 2008 at 1:24 PM #285555kewpParticipantGiven that the definition of ‘bubble’ is itself fuzzy this debate can never have a winner.
October 10, 2008 at 1:24 PM #285576kewpParticipantGiven that the definition of ‘bubble’ is itself fuzzy this debate can never have a winner.
October 10, 2008 at 1:24 PM #285598kewpParticipantGiven that the definition of ‘bubble’ is itself fuzzy this debate can never have a winner.
October 10, 2008 at 1:24 PM #285607kewpParticipantGiven that the definition of ‘bubble’ is itself fuzzy this debate can never have a winner.
October 10, 2008 at 1:45 PM #285275ArrayaParticipant[quote=Casca][quote=arraya]http://postcarbon.org/end_growth
The worldwide financial crisis, and the decline in available energy, mean that we may also have seen the final year of aggregate world economic growth.
This is a breathtaking statement. I found myself uttering it yesterday at a strategy meeting of some environmental and economic justice organizations organized by the International Forum on Globalization
Growth is dead. Let’s make the most of it. A crisis is a terrible thing to waste.
[/quote]I’m sure that a lot of money was spent on your education. I’m not sure that you got value for it.
[/quote]Of course anything with the label environmental is instantly communist, right, . People that follow the sort of thing just don’t understand eCONomics which is obviously guided the world to such a state of bliss.
October 10, 2008 at 1:45 PM #285565ArrayaParticipant[quote=Casca][quote=arraya]http://postcarbon.org/end_growth
The worldwide financial crisis, and the decline in available energy, mean that we may also have seen the final year of aggregate world economic growth.
This is a breathtaking statement. I found myself uttering it yesterday at a strategy meeting of some environmental and economic justice organizations organized by the International Forum on Globalization
Growth is dead. Let’s make the most of it. A crisis is a terrible thing to waste.
[/quote]I’m sure that a lot of money was spent on your education. I’m not sure that you got value for it.
[/quote]Of course anything with the label environmental is instantly communist, right, . People that follow the sort of thing just don’t understand eCONomics which is obviously guided the world to such a state of bliss.
October 10, 2008 at 1:45 PM #285586ArrayaParticipant[quote=Casca][quote=arraya]http://postcarbon.org/end_growth
The worldwide financial crisis, and the decline in available energy, mean that we may also have seen the final year of aggregate world economic growth.
This is a breathtaking statement. I found myself uttering it yesterday at a strategy meeting of some environmental and economic justice organizations organized by the International Forum on Globalization
Growth is dead. Let’s make the most of it. A crisis is a terrible thing to waste.
[/quote]I’m sure that a lot of money was spent on your education. I’m not sure that you got value for it.
[/quote]Of course anything with the label environmental is instantly communist, right, . People that follow the sort of thing just don’t understand eCONomics which is obviously guided the world to such a state of bliss.
October 10, 2008 at 1:45 PM #285608ArrayaParticipant[quote=Casca][quote=arraya]http://postcarbon.org/end_growth
The worldwide financial crisis, and the decline in available energy, mean that we may also have seen the final year of aggregate world economic growth.
This is a breathtaking statement. I found myself uttering it yesterday at a strategy meeting of some environmental and economic justice organizations organized by the International Forum on Globalization
Growth is dead. Let’s make the most of it. A crisis is a terrible thing to waste.
[/quote]I’m sure that a lot of money was spent on your education. I’m not sure that you got value for it.
[/quote]Of course anything with the label environmental is instantly communist, right, . People that follow the sort of thing just don’t understand eCONomics which is obviously guided the world to such a state of bliss.
October 10, 2008 at 1:45 PM #285617ArrayaParticipant[quote=Casca][quote=arraya]http://postcarbon.org/end_growth
The worldwide financial crisis, and the decline in available energy, mean that we may also have seen the final year of aggregate world economic growth.
This is a breathtaking statement. I found myself uttering it yesterday at a strategy meeting of some environmental and economic justice organizations organized by the International Forum on Globalization
Growth is dead. Let’s make the most of it. A crisis is a terrible thing to waste.
[/quote]I’m sure that a lot of money was spent on your education. I’m not sure that you got value for it.
[/quote]Of course anything with the label environmental is instantly communist, right, . People that follow the sort of thing just don’t understand eCONomics which is obviously guided the world to such a state of bliss.
October 10, 2008 at 3:47 PM #285300donaldduckmooreParticipantI wonder who these “oil experts” are? I believe they are somewhat related to the oil industry. Anyway, oil industry always has their stupid excuses to jack up the price. A while ago they always use refineries need to be maintained. Then the newer excuse is they are maxing out their production. That is their trick to inflate the price. Nothing more than that. A good example is if a builder wants to sell the houses they built fast and profitable, they always release news that most of the units are sold and only a few left during the bubble time. And there are flocks of ppl go buy the houses. They share a lot of similarities.
Arraya: “Dude, production has been stagnant for 4 years. Let me put it another way, they can’t pump at a higher flow rate. Wake up and smell the peak it’s all downhill for here.”
Of course they don’t want to pump at any higher flow rate because they want to exchange their dark gold with our real gold. This is called market manipulation or price fixing. Do you really listen to them?
October 10, 2008 at 3:47 PM #285590donaldduckmooreParticipantI wonder who these “oil experts” are? I believe they are somewhat related to the oil industry. Anyway, oil industry always has their stupid excuses to jack up the price. A while ago they always use refineries need to be maintained. Then the newer excuse is they are maxing out their production. That is their trick to inflate the price. Nothing more than that. A good example is if a builder wants to sell the houses they built fast and profitable, they always release news that most of the units are sold and only a few left during the bubble time. And there are flocks of ppl go buy the houses. They share a lot of similarities.
Arraya: “Dude, production has been stagnant for 4 years. Let me put it another way, they can’t pump at a higher flow rate. Wake up and smell the peak it’s all downhill for here.”
Of course they don’t want to pump at any higher flow rate because they want to exchange their dark gold with our real gold. This is called market manipulation or price fixing. Do you really listen to them?
October 10, 2008 at 3:47 PM #285611donaldduckmooreParticipantI wonder who these “oil experts” are? I believe they are somewhat related to the oil industry. Anyway, oil industry always has their stupid excuses to jack up the price. A while ago they always use refineries need to be maintained. Then the newer excuse is they are maxing out their production. That is their trick to inflate the price. Nothing more than that. A good example is if a builder wants to sell the houses they built fast and profitable, they always release news that most of the units are sold and only a few left during the bubble time. And there are flocks of ppl go buy the houses. They share a lot of similarities.
Arraya: “Dude, production has been stagnant for 4 years. Let me put it another way, they can’t pump at a higher flow rate. Wake up and smell the peak it’s all downhill for here.”
Of course they don’t want to pump at any higher flow rate because they want to exchange their dark gold with our real gold. This is called market manipulation or price fixing. Do you really listen to them?
October 10, 2008 at 3:47 PM #285634donaldduckmooreParticipantI wonder who these “oil experts” are? I believe they are somewhat related to the oil industry. Anyway, oil industry always has their stupid excuses to jack up the price. A while ago they always use refineries need to be maintained. Then the newer excuse is they are maxing out their production. That is their trick to inflate the price. Nothing more than that. A good example is if a builder wants to sell the houses they built fast and profitable, they always release news that most of the units are sold and only a few left during the bubble time. And there are flocks of ppl go buy the houses. They share a lot of similarities.
Arraya: “Dude, production has been stagnant for 4 years. Let me put it another way, they can’t pump at a higher flow rate. Wake up and smell the peak it’s all downhill for here.”
Of course they don’t want to pump at any higher flow rate because they want to exchange their dark gold with our real gold. This is called market manipulation or price fixing. Do you really listen to them?
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