 Indeed, I remember when gas was $1.96 near me, now it's $2.85. I don't know what to think about it. Regarding gas war, these types of situations look into differential accumulation by Jonathan Nitzan. I've linked it up before, I've talked a lot about it and it basically states that when oil and gas prices come down, become very cheap, centralized power, capital as power, starts creating chaos around the world to create wars or whatever they might be, so the price of energy will go up, so they will rake in trillions of dollars. And there's a really good correlation between the price of oil dropping and wars beginning in conflicts and stuff like this. It's just mathematics. Is correlation causation? Dang right. According to my analysis, without even reading this, you knew that this trick goes on. If you follow the oil markets and Wall Street and know a little bit about history for the last 25 years or so, if you've lived it, you know that is exactly what happens.