Category Archives: Pedantry

Fuel for the Fire

Gas prices by county

Many are angered when they look at the price for a gallon of gas these days. Personally I just feel a bit old. I rememberpeople getting upset about paying a dollar for a gallon, when ten bucks was enough to get my poorly-maintained Buick Century down to Berkeley and back. GasBuddy.com has put up a great map that shows prices broken down by counties all across the 48 contiguous states. A couple of clear trends crop up: the Northeast, California, and the upper Midwest have high gas prices, an the flyover has relatively low prices.

I’ve heard claims in the past that California pays extra for gasoline due to the strict emissions standards imposed by our state government. The idea here is that we can only use gas produced specifically for California, that we do not benefit from the market competition that includes all the other states. I’m not aware of any meaningful market competition driving down fuel prices anywhere else in the world, so I too a quick look at another colorful map, this one from API:

Gasoline taxes by state

It is like a fuel-pricing Rosetta Stone. California’s state gasoline tax is fully $0.255 higher than that in Texas, $0.315 higher than in Wyoming. Gas prices in California were as low as $3.93 in some parts of California for the day shown (Memorial Day), and as high as $3.81 in parts of Wyoming, only $0.08 less after taxes. On the further end of the spectrum, we see $3.81 per gallon gas in most of Texas and $4.11 in most of California (the Bay Area and Los Angeles numbers). Adjusting for the state tax difference, Texans win out by a measly five cents.

So Wyoming, benefitting fully from the splendors of market competition, saves eight cents per gallon by taxing 32 cents less in tax, Texas saves thirty cents per gallon by taxing 25 cents less in tax. The difference? Texas is also a major source of the fuel. California has oil fields too, no doubt, but the biggest differentiating factor here looks like it’s happening at the state capitols, not on the spot markets.

Oregon is a bit of an anomaly, but they don’t let people pump their own gas there. All the other prices are presumably self-serve.

Hat tip to Infosthetics for the GasBuddy link.

Rounding out the ticket

It takes two wings to fly

There has been a lot of talk recently about possible vice-presidential picks for the likely Democratic nominee for the office of the president of the United States. At some point, Barack Obama has to make his choice. Much of the talk has been focused on notables such as senator Hillary Clinton as a form of bridge-building reconciliation between the two warring tribes that the Democratic party has fractured into during the nominating process. Others have proposed senator John Edwards as a possible pick, citing working-class appeal, a southern appeal, and a general reinforcement and amplification of senator Obama’s core message of change. Other names like Biden and Dodd have been raised as possible bulwarks against accusations of naïvité on foreign policy issues. This is just among the other contenders for the nomination. Kathleen Sebelius is another name I keep hearing, as is Jim Webb. Each have certain regional or topical strengths.

But people don’t vote for the vice president when they show up to the polls in November. The name will be on the ballot, but it’s the top of the ticket that draws the greatest scrutiny and consideration. As an opportunity to help secure the election, the choice of a running-mate has more to do with the news cycle during which it is announced, a minimal bump or hit in the polls after any vice presidential debates, and fundraising. As for the actual duties of the office, the vice president is to inquire daily as to the health of the president, and be available for tiebreaker votes in the Senate.

I just don’t know who would be truly useful for fundraising. Presumably Clinton would be strong in this area, as she has already raised and spent a stupendous amount in pursuing the nomination herself. For amplifying a message of change and a new direction unifying the country and setting aside the divisive politics of the past twenty years, though, I humbly suggest an alternative that may be mentioned frequently as a possibility for John McCain: governor Mike Huckabee.

That’s right, the Arkansas Baptist minister turned cultural-conservative second-place contender for the Republican nomination. Let us consider the upside:

  • He has executive office experience as governor. This could help offset potential claims that the ticket lacks leadership experience.
  • His public service experience includes working together with a Democratic-controlled state legislature. We know he can function when surrounded by crazy left-wingers.
  • His conservative credentials are centered almost entirely around cultural wedge issues. These are the major symptoms of the cancer that Barack Obama claims to be seeking a cure for before it kills our body politic. Inviting him onto the ticket is a major gesture towards spanning a multi-decade political divide.
  • His record on the actual operation of government is quite moderate, having implemented government programs and tax policies in a pragmatic manner that makes led many fiscal conservatives to turn their back on him. This man can work with Democrats on their key issues of trade, education, infrastructure, and health care.
  • He’s got a band. They’re not that great, really, but they do a passable cover of “Freebird,” and could save the campaign a few shekels on campaign-stop entertainment expenses.
  • Dude is seriously charming. Actually listen to him for more than six seconds and you may have diametrically-opposed policy views with him but probably won’t dislike him. Not a lot of people can do that any more.

These are all positives. I also suspect that inviting this specific man to be a running-mate would result in roughly three quarters of the Washington media punditocracy to crap their drawers and run screaming into the woods. Experts that once forecast a Clinton vs. Giuliani main event would likely spend no less than a month huddled up in a fetal position, rocking themselves an sobbing into empty Jack Daniels bottles. Multiple fire and brimstone preachers and vociferous atheists would wander the streets in a muddled daze. Very little could happen for several days that could knock this off the forefront of the political news cycle short of a foreign invasion.

The negatives are all too obvious:

  • He is a Republican. This means he is likely to no accept the position, and many Democratic party insiders would get their panties in a bunch over this gesture.
  • He has endorsed John McCain. This almost certainly means he would not accept the position at first blush. Senator Obama is a persuasive man. Get the two in a room together and let some magic happen.
  • He is strongly against abortion. He does not want Roe vs. Wade overturned, he wants a constitutional amendment. This isn’t really an issue, as it isn’t the purview of the vice president to revise the constitution.
  • He joked about somebody pointing a gun at senator Obama. Considering that being his veep would put him a bullet away from the presidency, this would be especially tasteless and probably require him to commit seppuku should something of the sort actually happen.

I don’t think that the negatives outweigh the benefits here. Every right-wing claim that Obama is some kind of radical Islamic Secularist Leftist (if such a worldview is even possible) would ring hollow to even the most credulous audience. An Obama-Huckabee ticket would win in New York and California, in Illinois and Arkansas, in Iowa, Virginia, and the Carolinas. It would beat McCain in most of the South, and force him to fight hard to keep even Utah and Texas on board.

TL;DR: we should let the funny southern guy back into the political limelight.

Deterring Spammers & Epileptics

Completely Automated Turing test to Piss Me the Hell Off

JkCaptcha has to be a strong contender for most hideous regression in web development for 2005. What use is keeping automated systems from creating accounts on your web-based service (whatever it is) if it’s going to make your site look this bad? I have no idea why it took me so long to come across this very clever atrocity.

Picture above is just a random one from Rapidshare because I refuse to sully my site with the evils JkCaptcha produces.