Hunting For The Witches Behind Rising
Gas Prices
Issues & Insights,
by
Editorial Board
Original Article
Posted By: 4250Luis,
3/31/2026 5:11:58 AM
Gasoline prices are spiking everywhere, particularly in California, with premium coming dangerously close $9 a gallon last week in one Los Angeles neighborhood. So what’s an appointed bureaucrat to do? Find a crime, of course.
“Our team is vigilantly monitoring the retail, wholesale, and spot markets,” Tai Milder, first director of the Division of Petroleum Market Oversight (DPMO) for the California Energy Commission, announced last week, as gas prices were rising. “Any reports of unfair practices or market manipulation will be taken seriously, and we will not hesitate to refer any illegal conduct for further investigation and prosecution.”
Post Reply
Reminder: “WE ARE A SALON AND NOT A SALOON”
Your thoughts, comments, and ideas are always welcome here. But we ask you to please be mindful and respectful. Threatening or crude language doesn't persuade anybody and makes the conversation less enjoyable for fellow L.Dotters.
Reply 1 - Posted by:
Highlander 3/31/2026 5:17:11 AM (No. 2086897)
No crimes to investigate here. These boneheads will make a show about fighting high gas prices without ever looking at their own damned policies that caused it!
6 people like this.
Reply 2 - Posted by:
Strike3 3/31/2026 6:05:05 AM (No. 2086912)
It couldn't be just plain old greed with certain corporations taking advantage of a volatile situation. When the same small flyover country town can show you prices that differ by the day up to 30 cents a gallon, something is up.
3 people like this.
If California hadn't forced almost all of the oil refineries to be shuttered maybe that would've helped. The EPA and their onerous restrictions make building or upgrading a refinery a very risky and expensive venture. As for big price changes, it's the oil companies trying to predict the future, plain and simple.
9 people like this.
Reply 4 - Posted by:
Venturer 3/31/2026 7:53:38 AM (No. 2086946)
We are paying $3.99 here in Maryland, our Democrats haven't yet succeeded in passing all of California's crazy laws. It's high bit if we can make Iran into a country where they aren't trying to build terror all over the world, it will be worth it in the short term.
6 people like this.
Reply 5 - Posted by:
Red Jeep 3/31/2026 8:34:03 AM (No. 2086971)
If gas stations were closing due to lack of gas, and there were lines around the block at other gas stations, then maybe there would be a justification for rising prices but what we are seeing now is greed in my humble opinion.
3 people like this.
Reply 6 - Posted by:
red1066 3/31/2026 8:46:31 AM (No. 2086976)
High gas prices are a pain and they went up fast. Has gas ever gone down in price that fast? Since oil and gas from Iran and other places in the middle east are a small fraction of what is used in the U.S., less than 2%, the steep increase in price for gas seems like price gouging on the part of oil companies. Even if the military action in the middle east ended today, I'm guessing that oil and gas prices will remain high well past the mid-term election. The great oil/gas shortage of the seventies was BS as well. There never was a shortage of oil in this country. My father worked in a refinery and would come home and tell us the huge oil caverns under the refinery were full, and one could plainly see loaded oil tankers sitting in the Delaware river waiting to unload. The refinery just ran out of space to store it all. Gas prices as result of that farce more than doubled in price. The explanations used by oil companies and oil speculators for gas prices now are just as much BS as they were back in the 70's.
4 people like this.
Reply 7 - Posted by:
cor-vet 3/31/2026 9:47:09 AM (No. 2086990)
It's basically oil company executives emulating our congress critters, trying to get the big bucks when they get an opportunity. The only difference is, they are doing it for the shareholders while congress is doing it for themselves.
4 people like this.
Reply 8 - Posted by:
chagrined 3/31/2026 10:03:10 AM (No. 2086997)
Don't forget the scummy Enemedia's contributions on this subject. They absolutely LOVE reporting the price of gas every day faithfully so as to smear President Trump and aide DemonRats. Any reports to go along with their high gas price reporting is naturally all Trump's fault even though the price now probably isn't as high as when The Veg was Cucumber-in-Chief.
What I would LOVE to see is these same snakes report the price of gas daily, diligently when they're back down near $2/gallon. I know, I know. Won't happen. That would make President Trump look good.
2 people like this.
California's high gas prices are baked in the cake by politicians whose real desire is to eliminate gasoline-powered transportation.
2 people like this.
Reply 10 - Posted by:
earlybird 3/31/2026 12:42:07 PM (No. 2087077)
fta:
"Higher prices are a signal, warning consumers about scarcity, telling them that they need to adapt to the present circumstances. They are also a mechanism informing producers that they need to increase their output.
Producers in California, who make the only gasoline blend that can be sold in the state, aren’t positioned to do that, though, because they are being driven out by policymakers, who are the direct cause of the stiffest motor fuel prices in the country."
0 people like this.
Below, you will find ...
Most Recent Articles posted by "4250Luis"
and
Most Active Articles (last 48 hours)