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Wednesday, June 13, 2012

OBAMA, TRUMP, SAUDI OIL - HE'S THEIR BOY - THE MUSLIM CHOICE


A comment from my emails this a.m. about Oil, Obama and Saudi...Obama's Their Guy!


If the bully pulpit, the massive media spending, the full engagement of all departments of the Executive Branch, NAACP, Hollywood, La Raza, the Education Establishment, Unions, etc....all marching in lockstep to re-elect our first (failed) Marxist president.......were not enough, we now have geo-political special interests to contend with. It's clear that it is in the commercial interests of Saudi Arabia and other oil exporting nations to help re-elect an American president who would deny his own nation the use of our own fossil fuel resources so that we remain dependent on THEM for our supplies. Meanwhile, the outflow of trade dollars not only prop up their undemocratic regimes but moves us inexorably closer to the day when our own economy will collapse. When that happens, Obama's 'transformation' of America will be complete. No wonder why he bows to the Saudis.....


Read on....
~J
P.S. Just announced. The Federal deficit increased nearly $ 125 Billion just during the month of May. Somehow, the prO-bama media spin-machine will still blame Bush 43 for this current fiscal horror show. Meanwhile, the 1/2 of Americans who derive their "livelihood" off these deficits are understandably happy that the federal spending orgy goes on unabated.

Trump: Saudis Pumping More Oil to Lower Prices, Re-elect Obama

Tuesday, 12 Jun 2012 11:51 AM
By Forrest Jones
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OPEC member Saudi Arabia has been pumping hefty amounts of oil to lower prices and do what it can to ensure that President Barack Obama is re-elected this November, says billionaire real estate mogul Donald Trump.

Saudi Arabia has ramped up production this year to offset any supply disruptions that could result from a military conflict between the West and Iran.

The U.S., Israel and Europe accuse Iran of enriching uranium to develop a nuclear weapons program, a charge Tehran denies.
Disputes earlier this year escalated to the point Iran threatened to close off the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway connecting oil-rich Persian Gulf nations with the rest of the world, which sent oil prices soaring.

Iran has agreed to talks with delegates from the U.S., U.K., China, France, and Russia and Germany, which has brought prices down to around $82 today from over $110 earlier this year.

"I think Saudi Arabia is doing Obama a big favor. I think he is saying 'look, you have to do me a favor, I have to get elected, and you can't keep doing like you've been doing the last three years driving it up to $150 because that's where it was going,'" Trump tells CNBC.
"I think Saudi Arabia is doing Obama a big fat favor. I think he asked for the favor and prices are coming down, but also the economy's going bad so maybe it won't help that much," Trump adds.

Trump has criticized the Obama administration in the past of not doing enough to address OPEC influence on prices.

If Obama wins reelection, expect the Saudis and other OPEC nations to curtail production in order for prices to rise.

"Assuming if Obama got elected, you're going to see something with oil like you've never seen before, it will go through the roof. The favor will be repaid many times over," Trump says.

OPEC oil ministers are meeting in Vienna to address production levels and determine if prices are too high, too low or just right.

At a December meeting, OPEC nations agreed to hold output steady at 30 million barrels a day.

Member nations remain divided, with one camp headed up by the Saudis favoring increased production and lower prices, the idea being that higher prices can cool global economies and cut into demand.

Another camp, bolstered by Iran and Venezuela, favor less output and higher prices.

Politics aside, such hawkish OPEC members may want to hold off on major output cuts in light of the fragile European economy, experts say.

"To a large extent, oil policy appears to be on a watching brief for the rest of the quarter until the Greek and Iranian issues have more clarity," says Barclays Capital analyst Paul Horsnell, according to the AFP newswire.

"Unless OPEC is pushed towards action by a sharp lurch down in prices, the status quo of watch-and-see is likely to continue and ... an end to (prices above $100) ... does not seem sufficiently provocative in itself to produce action."

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