You are hung up on using beliefs as a measure of things, which doesn't work. 74% of Americans believe in God. That doesn't prove God exists. 14% believe Bigfoot exists. That doesn't make Bigfoot real.
Facts don't care if anyone agrees with them or not. You can disagree all you want that 2+2=4. Hell, you could get 90% of the country to agree with your disagreement, but it doesn't change the mathematical fact that 2+2=4.
I have been arguing nothing but facts all along, and continue to do so, but you immediately launch into your confrontational
"I don't care what graphs you pull out of your ***" as if the numbers are made up and your personal belief changes the reality.
So let's argue what is happening and has happened to the country as a whole, not your personal beliefs or microcosm of experiences. Those don't represent what is happening to everyone or even the average person.
The numbers I present are what has actually happened to the average American, which is how our government is supposed to deal with things, and how the economy affects things.
Maybe your income didn't go up in the past 10 years and the price of gas is crushing you. That puts you outside the average. Other people saw a 400% increase in their income, which makes them outliers too. But outliers don't change the average radically, or else they wouldn't be outliers.
There is absolutely no denying the gas price history, and the inflation history in our economy. They are set in stone. Those two datasets show that gas prices have dropped over time, even though they rose at times and fell at times. That's the nature of the beast.
The mathematical fact is that today's national average nominal gas price of $3.08 is pretty damn good when you consider where it has been for the past, and even during the Trump administration (unadjusted prices from $2.25 to $2.75).
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If you live in an area where gas was below the $2.25 average that we hit for a few days, then you live in an area where the rest of the local economy matches that price. Affluent areas don't see low gas prices when compared to non-affluent areas. It's just how business works.
For example, in 2022, the median income in Kentucky was $57,000; in California it was $77,000. So in Kentucky you got to pay $1.86 for gas for a day, but California paid $2.25.
Do I know how much you paid per gallon, to the penny? No. But I do know that all gas sold in America gets calculated into the average pricing, and that all gas stations follow the price as it moves nationally and locally. I CAN say that you didn't pay a huge difference from the average. That's just how the math works.
I also know that the average American driver uses 40 gallons a month. If you look at the adjusted pricing, that's a cost of $160 per month under Trump. The chart only goes to 2022, which shows $4.25. That's an increase of $10 PER MONTH comparing 2022 to 2018. A 6% increase over 4 years.
The median wage in America is 10% higher in 2022 than in 2018.
That means gas was actually cheaper to the average American in 2022 than in 2018.
And the nominal price has dropped daily since 2022, which make it even cheaper NOW than in 2022.
Now, you may not be the average American who has seen a wage increase in the past six years. That definitely makes rising prices tougher on you, but that indicates a problem other than the rising prices. And doesn't represent the average American's situation.
It may be cause for introspection as to why you haven't moved forward financially in a way that allows you to stay ahead of your expenses.