Has the US actually achieved oil independence or is MBS and the Emirates spineless cowards? What's up with that.

  • chickentendrils [any, comrade/them]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Vehicle fuel is a sensitive thing, TPTB still prefer stability for the professionals automating the war machines and surveillance technology they need in the future, and that translates into some version of unsustainable stability in the US/Canada and to Europe/Australia for now. It would be untenable for gas prices to hit that in North America right now, it's one of very few outcomes that any US institutions try to prevent. Approximately 70,% of households in the US and Canada more or less require automobiles to acquire food, of that share of the population the avg distance to a grocer is 7 miles.

    • ZWQbpkzl [none/use name]
      hexagon
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      I think I should be clearer. Why haven't the gulf states started jacking up prices like Ibin Saud did in the Yom Kippor war? Does that lever not work anymore, do they just not give a shit about Palestinians, or are they afraid to?

      • WayeeCool [comrade/them]
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Saudi Arabia isn't the only nation with a lever to pull which can manipulate global fossil fuel markets. The US also has a lever and is the largest producer on earth, able to punish nations like Saudi Arabia whose entire economy depends on oil being profitable enough and whose oil infrastructure is the only thing they have that can bring income into their nations. This is exactly what the US has been doing under the Biden administration, pushing its own oil production to record levels higher than any other nation in the history of the world while stroking instability (wars, coups) in oil production regions of the world. Remember that the US has the capacity to produce enough oil to meet its own domestic and export needs while maintaining the ability to start destroying the oil infrastructure of smaller nations. What makes the US different from other major petroleum producers is the US government can only increase their own production (or blow up other nations production capacity) while most other governments maintain the ability to decrease their own oil production rather than merely increasing it.

        Everyone thinks about gulf states when it comes to oil production but the US is actually the largest player in petroleum. The US can produce more than enough oil domestically to meet its own needs, international markets only effect the US domestic price of fuel because the US government allows their oil companies to maximize profits within reason. Those US firms like Exxon and Chevron understand this, that there are unspoken limits. The US cares about nations like Saudi Arabia to ensure oil prices on the international market stay high enough for US oil firms to be profitable but still within enough reason that the US government can maintain the pretense of free market economics.

        This is also why many people who say US wars are about oil are still wrong. They tend to believe the US destroyed Iraq or Libya because they wanted cheap oil, when the real reason was to control global supply and ensure US oil stays profitable. The two levers are increasing US domestic oil production or ordering the US military/CIA to destroy the oil production infrastructure of nations who don't play ball.