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Gas prices won’t be as volatile in 2023 as they were in 2022, but motorists can likely expect high gas prices this year.
As colder weather approaches the U.S., many Americans are being faced with a new worry: how to pay to heat their homes this winter.
President Biden and congressional Democrats want to increase the cost of fossil fuels to implement a “zero-carbon” energy system.
Rather than increasing American energy production, Democrats are threatening retaliatory measures against Saudi Arabia, like the NOPEC bill.
Do you find yourself asking, “is the end of days near?” Kat Anderson gives her take on 2022 and the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse,
Inflation rose more than expected in August, leaving Americans facing even higher prices on a range of everyday purchases.
Gas prices are on the rise again just as the Strategic Petroleum Reserve hits a low point that many say is a problem.
Let’s embrace the fact that the global warming alarmists in the 1st World (a multiple redundancy) don’t live their worries about the planet.
Inflation rose again in August, despite an anticipated decrease from economists, with the Consumer Price Index (CPI) rising 8.3% from a year ago, up 0.1% from the previous month.
Rather than impose higher taxes, those in the energy industry proposed 10 actions policy makers can take right now to reduce costs.
The media, via the Washington Post, has an an epiphany. The earth – like the planet – “wants” high gas prices.