Don't visit the SE USA, you'll be spoiled. I paid $3.15 for diesel this morning. 87 octane gas was $3.10tell me about this cheap gas?
Don't visit the SE USA, you'll be spoiled. I paid $3.15 for diesel this morning. 87 octane gas was $3.10tell me about this cheap gas?
Yup!Don't visit the SE USA, you'll be spoiled. I paid $3.15 for diesel this morning. 87 octane gas was $3.10
Inflation is one thing, but the prices have almost exactly doubled from 3 years ago on a lot of consumer items. Anyone who doesn't see it is out of touch with reality. I mean I posted in the lawn and garden section about replacing the engine on my grandfather's zero turn mower. I had price quotes from the year before because he had just started to think about replacing it back then. The price from the same company I ordered from (still the cheapest) had almost exactly doubled, and the shipping had almost tripled.
I think my original statement still gets my original point across for my intended purpose. This entire thread is about the consumers getting screwed. So because you insist. The high gas prices of today are just yet another contributing factor of our high consumer prices. (high fuel prices = high transport costs = higher consumer prices)Come on, if you are going to make a statement, say something to back it up.
I’m glad you are happy with what you feel is “cheap gas”.Guess you don't remember covid. Crude oil prices april 2020 $21.40, nov 2020 $42.30, may 2024 $81.44
ycharts.com/indicators/average_crude_oil_spot_price
In 2022 when gas and diesel was $5+ and companies tacked on fuel surcharge didn't hear anything about inflation. Companies that made multible stops a day made a killing.
Timing is everything! My company has been buying everyone in sight-I’m trying to figure out where all the money is coming from.
It wasn't the pandemic is was the government ruining the small Businesses by favoring the large corporations.Spot on. Every product and company has a life cycle and the epidemic pushed some of them into their grave.
For a company to survive over the long term, they must reinvent themselves over time.
I visited Peter Wolters (now Lapmaster-Wolters) in the beautiful north of Germany, Rendsburg. PW was founded in 1804; they made brushes to clean dirt, etc, from wool I believe. Today they are a leading manufacturer of Lapping industrial machines and other products. That's reinvention!
PW keeps the founder's large wooden desk in a display room; I was impressed beyond words.
I visit a supplier if Pforzheim Germany from time to time. Its a small town in the South of Germany. In old times they were watch and clock makers - good at making small precision parts.Spot on. Every product and company has a life cycle and the epidemic pushed some of them into their grave.
For a company to survive over the long term, they must reinvent themselves over time.
I visited Peter Wolters (now Lapmaster-Wolters) in the beautiful north of Germany, Rendsburg. PW was founded in 1804; they made brushes to clean dirt, etc, from wool I believe. Today they are a leading manufacturer of Lapping industrial machines and other products. That's reinvention!
PW keeps the founder's large wooden desk in a display room; I was impressed beyond words.