[quote name='mykevermin']I just drove out to buy dog food, and passed 4 gas stations to get to the store I go to (I'm a Eukanuba snob, or, rather, my dog is; anyone who buys this stuff knows that it's somewhat hard to find in grocery stores and the like, thus my passing 4 gas stations to get to the store that carries it).[/QUOTE]
Wow. I paid 17 bucks for 30 lbs of food for my dogs. You must be rich to buy that stuff. Do you buy bottled water and Starbucks coffee too? You should be taxed extra for those 'luxuries'.
2 of them had $3.09; I filled up on Sunday evening, and I'm going to see if I can make it two weeks without refilling (luckily, it is possible for me).
The other 2 had taken their prices down; I guess they're either lazy (and don't want to continuously change them), or they prefer the element of surprise (you don't know the price until you pull up to the pump and get out).
That I don't like. I won't stop at a gas station that doesn't post their prices easily visible.
I think their ought to be a $10.00 surcharge on all SUV fillups; if you're enough of a

ing piece of asshole selfish wasteful shit to own one of these needless behemoths, then

you, you can pay for your largesse, asshole.
There is a surcharge. It's called greater use of gas, more tax dollars paid on that same gas, etc. I think there ought to be a surcharge on people who drive out, using up gas and harming my precious environment, just to buy *dog food*, and expensive snobby dog food at that.
Hell, surcharge on *all* cars--don't forget, vans, sedans, trucks, etc, are also bad on mileage. And many people *could* do without a car, at least some of time, by carpooling, working at home, bussing, taxi, etc.
The same 'logic' could be applied to videogames--they are technically 'needless' luxuries, and of course they use lots of gas to ship them around and produce them etc. And they cause people who live on a cheap game message board to drive around to multiple game stores in hopes of finding a game for 5 bucks less than elsewhere.
Oh, by the way. I own an SUV, though I personally drive a BMW [I must be rich!]. Before that, I owned a station wagon. Before that, another SUV. Before that, a pickup truck. Enjoyed each of them [except that wagon, it was a lemony piece of shit]. Drove each of them. And I think that we'll take the SUV out this weekend instead of my car, just because.
The government should release restrictions on the companies so *they* can research other forms of power. Hell, nuclear power works, and is relatively safe, but the MSM has got this big Three Mile Island/Chernobyl fear going on, we'll never be able to 'use' it like we should. And as I've said before, if people as a whole *want* alternate fuels [and are willing to pay for them], the companies or some industrious scientist/inventor/student/researcher will make it happen. As evil as some people seem to think the profit motive is, it is one of the surest ways to get results efficiently.
"Gasoline is a fungible, global commodity, its price subject to the ordinary forces of supply and demand. No amount of consumer gimmickry and showmanship will lower its price in the long run; only a significant, ongoing reduction in demand will accomplish that goal. Unfortunately, for many people achieving that goal would mean cutting down on their driving or opting for less desirable economy cars over less fuel-efficient models, solutions they find unappealing."
http://www.snopes.com/politics/gasoline/nogas.asp