Hi Billy,

On Mar 26, 2012, at 2:21 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> Why the difference ? Supply.  The states with the lowest gas prices have the 
> most access
> to Canadian oil.

I'm not seeing the data to support your claim:

http://gasbuddy.com/gb_gastemperaturemap.aspx

Why does South Carolina have lower prices than Nebraska, but higher than 
Georgia?

Can you cite a source for your claim:

>  Keystone would add to the supply nationally and, therefore, would lower 
> prices.
> To repeat something said before, but I guess which went unread, approval of 
> Keystone
> would have an immediate impact on the futures market.

Yeah, I think I missed that.

> As soon as it was signed, but
> especially as soon as  contracts for construction were let,  gas prices would 
> start
> to come down, and it has little to do with China or India, nations that get 
> almost
> all their oil from the Mid East.

That's certainly possible, but by no means obvious.  

Why the Keystone Pipeline Won't Ease Pain at the Pump - Businessweek
R-Squared: Gas Prices & Keystone Pipeline  |  Peak Oil News and Message Boards
Keystone Oil Pipeline Seen Raising Gas Prices in Midwest: Energy - Bloomberg
Oil Moves Lower as U.S. Rejects Permit for Keystone XL Pipeline - Bloomberg
Gas Prices | Keystone XL Pipeline | Iran Sanctions | Bernie Sanders | The Daily 
Caller

Again, the actual facts may be moot, since we're talking about politics, but 
I'd love to see your data...

-- Ernie P.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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