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DesertDrifter

03/06/22 2:50 PM

#404434 RE: Lime Time #404433

Typical paranoid crap. Who is taking away your guns? You are hallucinating. You dipshits have been using that whine for decades. Don't you have an asteroid or something to worry about?
Do you have a boebert poster on your wall?
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blackhawks

03/06/22 3:08 PM

#404437 RE: Lime Time #404433

YOUR graphic is in the public domain which means it's fair game for me or anyone else to appropriate and ridicule for the moronic claim it makes. Thanks for another display of your ignorance.

You're not the only one who has worked hard for freedom and no one is coming for your guns. You dumb bastards cry about that every time a Dem is in the WH.

F your freedom denying desire to tell other people what they can drive.

Russian oil flowed here under Trump, and if it is banned from the U.S what's the next whiny ass complaint about our response to Russia that you're going to post?

As for getting inside my head? Don't make me f'ing laugh. Meanwhile I get to reside rent free inside your studio sized head.

And the ball? Yeah, I just kicked it directly into your tiny nut sack.

Read an weep you ill-informed hysteric.

The push to ban Russian oil is gaining steam. Here's what that means for US energy prices


Analysis by Matt Egan, CNN Business
Updated 4:30 PM ET, Fri March 4, 2022

New York (CNN Business) — There's growing momentum in Congress to ban US imports of Russian oil.

"I'm all for that. Ban it," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said this week.

A bipartisan bill, unveiled this week by Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Republican Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, would do just that.

Note that this is very different from the more sweeping step of imposing sanctions on Russian oil, a move that would prevent virtually all nations from using Russian oil.

Related Article: Russian oil isn't sanctioned, but nobody wants to touch it anyway

Strictly banning US imports of Russian oil would most likely not have a dramatic impact on prices at US gas pumps, which surged this week to the highest level in nearly a decade.

That's for a simple reason: Unlike Europe and Asia, the United States doesn't really use much Russian oil.

Russia delivered just 90,000 barrels per day of crude oil into the United States in December, according to the most recent US government statistics.

That pales in comparison with oil that the US gets per day from Iraq (223,000), Saudi Arabia (472,000) and Mexico (492,000), let alone the 4.1 million imported from Canada each day.

https://www.cnn.com/2022/03/04/business/russian-oil-ban/index.html

"It's not mission critical. Canada, Mexico, Saudi Arabia — those are the big boys," said Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis at the Oil Price Information Service. "Russia is a bit player."

Gas prices surge overnight -- biggest jump since Hurricane Katrina

Related Article: Gas prices surge overnight -- biggest jump since Hurricane Katrina

Some US refineries use unfinished Russian oil, blending it with other barrels to churn out gasoline, jet fuel, diesel and other products. But even by that broader measure, Russia is far from a huge player in the United States.

Russia exported just 405,000 barrels per day of crude oil and petroleum products into the United States in December. That represents less than 5% of total US crude oil and product imports



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zab

03/06/22 3:23 PM

#404439 RE: Lime Time #404433

Good for you,you whiney little shithead, freedom is freedom, yours mine or anyone who comes to America and creates their own version of freedom. Freedom is defined by everyone who seeks it, our fire fathers did it with a quill on a piece of paper, it's called the constitution.
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Zorax

03/06/22 4:37 PM

#404458 RE: Lime Time #404433

Why don't you take your handgun, load it up, cock it and look down the barrel to see if it lined up right.

You don't do computers much do you.
Library station?