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Gasoline

Blame High Gas Prices on Red Tape

Oil companies won’t invest in facilities to produce gasoline until they know they’ll be allowed a future.

J.D. Tuccille | 6.17.2022 7:00 AM

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Gas station in Washington, D.C. with $5.29 per gallon sign and a red line illustrating rising prices. | Abaca Press/Gripas Yuri/Abaca/Sipa USA/Newscom
(Abaca Press/Gripas Yuri/Abaca/Sipa USA/Newscom)

Several factors contribute to soaring gasoline prices, but the greed of oil barons is an unlikely explanation no matter what President Joe Biden claims. It's not that energy companies don't want to make a buck; to the contrary, we count on their self-interest to drive the innovation and competition that puts fuel in our tanks. But it's not as if they've grown greedier in recent months. What has actually changed is that the world has become more chaotic even as overregulation and an ideological crusade against petroleum discourage investment and make it difficult for supply to catch up with demand.

In a letter to seven oil companies this week that alternated in tone between begging and berating, Biden complained that "since the beginning of this year, gasoline prices have increased by more than $1.70 per gallon." After first placing blame on Russian President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine and the resulting economic sanctions, the president pointed at "historically high profit margins for refining oil into gasoline, diesel and other refined products" which he called "not acceptable."

"To be sure, the shortage of refining capacity is a global challenge and a global concern," Biden added. "I request that you provide the Secretary with an explanation of any reduction in your refining capacity since 2020 and any ideas that would address the immediate inventory, price, and refining capacity issues in the coming months."

In response, the American Petroleum Institute, a trade association, pointed to a 10-point plan it published just the day before and sniped back: "While members of your administration have recently discussed the need for additional supplies to solve the energy crisis, your administration has restricted oil and natural gas development, canceled energy infrastructure projects, imposed regulatory uncertainty, and proposed new tax increases on American oil and gas producers competing globally."

The hobbling effect of regulatory burdens and taxes aren't a new discovery. 

"My business contacts have regularly complained of the fog of uncertainty emanating from Washington," Richard W. Fisher, then-president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, noted at a conference in 2013. "They have consistently cited fiscal and regulatory uncertainty as major impediments to capital investment and expanding payrolls."

The specific effects of red tape on refining capacity are also not a new concern.

"The refining industry is one of the most highly regulated in the country and has been struggling for years to maintain minimal profit margins," the Institute for Energy Research warned a full 10 years ago. "In the face of even more regulations from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), who are, imposing carbon-emission regulations as well as proposing overly-strict ozone regulations and other regulations, more closures are likely."

A huge part of regulatory uncertainty is the push for ending reliance on carbon-based fuels in the future. The European Union plans to ban the sale of vehicles with internal combustion engines by 2035, multiple U.S. state governments last year urged the federal government to do the same, and the Biden administration pledged itself to a clean-energy policy, including the acquisition of only zero-emission vehicles by 2035. Ending the sale of traditional cars and trucks would hugely crimp demand for gasoline. 

Last year, everybody including oil companies struggled to recover from the economic tribulations of lockdowns and suspended travel. But "New Mexico operators say regulatory uncertainty at the federal level under President Joe Biden's administration, plus the prospect of new, adverse regulations pursued by legislators in Santa Fe, is slowing recovery even more on New Mexico's side of the Permian," according to the Albuquerque Journal.

These concerns bleed over into the financial sector, where the environmental, social, and governance (ESG) movement brings a quasi-religious fervor to investment. ESG activists explicitly discourage traditional energy production in the oil industry which they see as unacceptably polluting. Corporate executives aren't stupid; they see the writing on the wall.

"US oil companies used to ramp up production at even the slightest hint of higher prices," CNN reported last November as gasoline prices rose well before Russian troops crossed the Ukraine border. "The rise of the ESG movement is forcing fossil fuels companies to rethink their futures. Pressure from socially conscious investors hit a crescendo earlier this year when activist investors won board seats at ExxonMobil (XOM), America's largest oil company. That vote sent shockwaves through the industry because it was the first proxy campaign at a major US company in which the case for change was built around a shift away from fossil fuels."

"At the same time, governments around the world are setting ambitious targets for cutting emissions," CNN added. "The oil industry has pointed to how this regulatory uncertainty is depressing its ability to invest in future projects."

In April, Netherlands-based LyondellBasell announced that it would shut down its refinery in Houston, Texas by December 31, 2023. "Our exit of the refining business advances the Company's decarbonization goals," interim CEO Ken Lane commented at the time.

Last week, Reuters reported that LyondellBasell's refinery might close even sooner and added: "At least five oil-processing plants also shut during the pandemic, leaving the United States structurally short of capacity for the first time in decades."

Is the uncertain regulatory and political environment the full explanation for rising gasoline prices? No, it's not. Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the ensuing economic sanctions converted price increases from merely painful to agonizing. Pandemic lockdowns disrupted supply chains and distorted demand in unpredictable ways. And "there's no doubt that tariffs are contributing to higher prices throughout the economy," as Reason's Eric Boehm emphasized.

But, as CNN pointed out not long ago, oil companies used to respond like other businesses to rising prices by increasing supply. Burying their industry in red tape and choking off access to capital has been a very effective signal to rethink their entire business strategy. Oil industry insiders may coast along and enjoy the profits from existing capacity, but they're unlikely to invest in facilities to meet demand for gasoline, and offset soaring prices, until they're certain their industry will be allowed a future.

The Rattler is a weekly newsletter from J.D. Tuccille. If you care about government overreach and tangible threats to everyday liberty, this is for you.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

NEXT: Review: Junk Science and the American Criminal Justice System

J.D. Tuccille is a contributing editor at Reason.

GasolineGas StationsEconomicsEnergy & EnvironmentBiden AdministrationJoe Biden
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  1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

    "No you can't drill here! Shut it down! No pipelines! No new refineries in my back yard! What? Prices are up? Drill more! Produce more! You greedy bastards, it's all your fault!"

    1. TJJ2000   3 years ago

      ^Well said..

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    2. MatthewSlyfield   3 years ago

      I wish that was sarcasm/parody, but unfortunately it's an accurate reflection of the current administration's approach to energy.

      1. HorseConch   3 years ago

        Yesterday, KJP reiterated that we don't need to drill more, we just need to refine more. Solid take from an incredibly incompetent individual.

      2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

        More unfortunately, 98% of Democrats and 50% of the general public believe that.

    3. MarMac2768   3 years ago

      One of the most "American" things we do is to blame the other guy! We don't like the high prices, but we go ahead and use our gas guzzling vehicles, we take our long trips on vacation, we put our A/C's on the lowest setting, etc. Then, when the bill comes, we scream, "GREEDY BASTARDS"! We, the consumers, hold all the cards. Supply and demand still reigns supreme in our markets.

  2. Vernon Depner   3 years ago

    Fuck Joe Biden

    1. Union of Concerned Socks   3 years ago

      Fuck Joe Biden

      1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

        You guys praying or something?

        1. Yatusabes   3 years ago

          Dont forget to socially distance 6 feet when masturbating with your friends, per Joe Biden's CDC

          https://www.cdc.gov/poxvirus/monkeypox/sexualhealth/social.html

          1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

            Thanks for the invitation to your circle jerk, but I think I'll pass.

    2. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

      Fuck the left.

    3. MatthewSlyfield   3 years ago

      Not even with Bernie Sander's dick.

  3. Union of Concerned Socks   3 years ago

    If by "Red Tape" you mean "Team Blue", then yes, that's exactly where the blame belongs.

    1. Nardz   3 years ago

      I also blame Tuccile and everyone else who campaigned against Trump

  4. Longtobefree   3 years ago

    "I request that you provide the Secretary with an explanation of any reduction in your refining capacity since 2020 and any ideas that would address the immediate inventory, price, and refining capacity issues in the coming months."

    Sure, big guy, no problem.
    First, stop taking your 10%.
    Second stop your executive branch from issuing regulations that require shutting down refineries.
    Third, reverse everything your administration has done since taking office.
    Last, resign, along with your entire cabinet, and all democratic legislators.
    Boom! Problem solved.

  5. TJJ2000   3 years ago

    PROBLEM ------>>> Government dictated markets....
    I.e. The Nazi(National Socialist) take-over of the USA...

    What excuse did it take to conquer the USA??
    Get this......... No, Seriously....... The Excuse; "weather changes"...

    1. VifYazerke   3 years ago

      The Communist (Democratic Marxist) take-over of the USA. See Biden's historically Jewish cabinet. Their acts of civilization vandalism resemble Bolsheviks

      1. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

        "See Biden's historically Jewish cabinet."

        Here's the current cabinet, you stupid fuck.

        1. Claptrap   3 years ago

          Two Jews is two too many.

          Blinken and Yellen are arguably the least objectionable ones, as they are utterly conventional Democratic establishment figures. Strange to point to them as the source of what ails the government. But nobody ever said that fringe politics had to make sense.

  6. Yatusabes   3 years ago

    Big oil is to blame for elevated gas prices like SARS-CoV-2 virus is to blame for the death of the elderly who fail to get vaccinated and boosted, wear masks 24/7, and employ social distancing.

    Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, tested positive for COVID-19 Wednesday. Fauci, 81, tested positive on a rapid antigen test and was “experiencing mild symptoms,” the National Institutes of Health said in a statement. The NIH noted that Fauci was fully vaccinated and has received two booster shots.

    https://nypost.com/2022/06/15/dr-anthony-fauci-tests-positive-for-covid-19/

  7. OpenBordersLiberal-tarian   3 years ago

    Reason's leading economics expert told me the Biden economy is amazing and anyone complaining about it is just spreading wingnut.com disinformation.

    #DefendBidenAtAllCosts

    1. Yatusabes   3 years ago

      Biden's medical experts make Jocelyn Elders MD look brilliant

      ...

      https://www.cdc.gov/poxvirus/monkeypox/sexualhealth/social.html

      If you or your partner have (or think you might have) monkeypox and you decide to have sex, consider the following to reduce the chance of spreading the virus:

      Have virtual sex with no in-person contact.
      Masturbate together at a distance of at least 6 feet, without touching each other and without touching any rash or sores.
      Consider having sex with your clothes on or covering areas where rash or sores are present, reducing as much skin-to-skin contact as possible.
      Avoid kissing.
      Remember to wash your hands, fetish gear, sex toys and any fabrics (bedding, towels, clothing) after having sex
      Limit your number of partners to avoid opportunities for monkeypox to spread.

      1. Claptrap   3 years ago

        Government sex advice. Always a treat.

      2. NOYB2   3 years ago

        Good god, those faceless, flat people are really creepy.

      3. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

        When does this get pushed down to elementary school?

  8. jimc5499   3 years ago

    "zero emissions vehicles" There's no such animal.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

      My unicorn disagrees. (To be honest, we could count the jelly beans he poops out as emissions, but I give them to the neighborhood kids who seem to like them.)

  9. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

    I feel like I wrote this two days ago. When you can go through all of the government red tape, buy up the land, pay off entities concerned about development (like Native American tribes) and invest thousands of man hours and years of effort to put in a pipeline, only to have the government come shut you down before the project is complete, you've removed all incentives for companies to actually invest in more infrastructure and more drilling. They know the government is not going to cooperate with them no matter how hard they try to comply with everything. They are not interested in getting 4 years into a 5 year project, only to see a President shut them down by decree in an election year.

    The Imperial presidency has effectively murdered the Free Market. The only way to fix it is to get government completely out of the way and let the market pressures dictate what oil companies need to do. If demand for their product drops, they will drill less. If demand remains high, they will continue increasing their production. If they're facing lawsuits from pollution and spills, they will work hard to clean up everything to avoid those costs. It's shocking how the market can respond to everything so much better than a regulatory state.

    1. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

      The European Union plans to ban the sale of vehicles with internal combustion engines by 2035, multiple U.S. state governments last year urged the federal government to do the same,

      Am I the only person who finds this a little bit terrifying? Governments around the world working to tell you what you can't own? That's fucking medieval: "No, Peasant, you are not allowed to have that sword."

      Freedom is scary, but it's even more scary when it's gone.

      1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

        People wouldn't stand for government telling them what they are allowed to own.
        They get around that by telling businesses what they may manufacture and sell, and sell it by saying they're protecting the people from evil profiteers who are trying to kill the planet.

        1. TJJ2000   3 years ago

          ^BINGO ------- !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
          Exactly to a T this..... Paint the resource providers as "evil" and then there is no end to the amount of 'slavery' and dictation the people will use to justify their ?gas chambers? of death.

    2. Karen24   3 years ago

      Have any of you been following the news about this year’s historic heat waves? Oil IS a filthy industry. We do have to stop using it and high gas prices are the most effective way to keep idiots like my accountant neighbor fro buying an F-350 to use his commuter vehicle. (And because you’ll ask, I do drive a gas-stingy car and avoid using it as much as possible.)

      Further, the price of a barrel of oil peaked in July 11, 2008 at $147. That’s $31/ a barrel higher than it as of 7:45 am CDT today. Gas was $4.81/ gallon that day in dollars worth $0.31 more than today. Were there fewer regulations then? Was the profit margin lower on that $31/ per barrel?

      The issue is that oil companies demand that we continue providing a market for their product regardless of the consequences. Getting weaned from our petro-heroin is absolutely essential for humanity to have a future at all. If it costs ExxonMobil and the Saudi princes their lifestyles, so be it.

      1. Union of Concerned Socks   3 years ago

        Fuck off, slaver.

      2. Claptrap   3 years ago

        The issue is that oil companies demand that we continue providing a market for their product regardless of the consequences. Getting weaned from our petro-heroin is absolutely essential for humanity to have a future at all.

        They don't have to "demand" shit. The entire modern world depends on petrochemicals, and there are vanishingly few substitutes.

        If it costs ExxonMobil and the Saudi princes their lifestyles, so be it.

        It's not going to cost them their lifestyles; it's going to cost me mine, and cost us a free society. Ecofascism may appeal to you intellectually, but you still won't get invited to the party.

        1. MJBinAL   3 years ago

          It is clear that the real problem is too many greedy people on the planet using resources. The simple solution is for the people most concerned to die, thus relieving the burden on the planet.

          I propose we kill all Democrats, Social Democrats, Socialists, and Communists and consider the problem solved.

      3. NOYB2   3 years ago

        You could eliminate all gasoline cars in the US and it would make no difference to climate change. You could reduce US emissions to zero and it wouldn’t make any significant difference. Reducing carbon emissions to try to stop climate change is not going to work.

        You know what works in heat waves? Air conditioning. You know what prevents deaths from sea level rise? Dikes.

        The way to deal with climate change is to have sufficient economic growth around the world that it doesn’t matter.

        People like you are going to be responsible for the deaths of hundreds of millions

      4. But SkyNet is a Private Company   3 years ago

        You are in the wrong place, you brain dead simp

      5. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

        Tell it to my manager, Karen24.

      6. Nardz   3 years ago

        Eat a bullet, Karen.

      7. TJJ2000   3 years ago

        "oil companies demand" --- That's pretty rich sense they aren't the one's packing around Gov-Guns.... Is that like how 'disarming' and 'weakening' people with gun control enforced by GUNS is going to make GUN packing criminals stop shooting kids???

        Try....................... THINKING................. For a change.

        1. TJJ2000   3 years ago

          Heck; Why doesn't your almighty wisdom put that perfect energy source onto the open market... Surely if your reasoning is that your neighbor bought an F-350 when gas prices are low and how that is so "evil" you could easily drop your 250hp magical energy invention onto the market and everyone would buy it...

          No matter what B.S. game you want to play... If you need Gov-Guns and there isn't any criminal act in sight; YOU ARE THE CRIMINAL....

      8. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

        Find another planet.

      9. Longtobefree   3 years ago

        Did you type that on a device made with any plastic?
        Is it powered by electricity?
        Are you wearing clothes?
        Did you eat any food in the last 24 hours?
        Was anything you own ever delivered by a truck, ship, or train?
        You too, are an energy hog. Please report for re-education.

      10. Libertius III   3 years ago

        The issue is that there is no viable alternative - one cannot be legislated into existence.

        ICYMI:
        A viable alternative cannot be legislated into existence.

  10. Miller Smith   3 years ago

    The price of gas is due almost solely to the auction price per barrel.
    Go to https://www.marketwatch.com/investing/future/crude%20oil%20-%20electronic

    You will discover that price per gallon of gas has an almost perfect correlation to the price paid per barrel of oil.

    How about Biden forbid the purchase price of oil above, say $50 per barrel? Just put out an executive order.

    Fantasy land you say? So is the premise of the Reason artcle.

    1. Claptrap   3 years ago

      How about Biden forbid the purchase price of oil above, say $50 per barrel?

      Oh yeah, that's never been tried before.

      1. MarMac2768   3 years ago

        Hmmm ..... isn't that what communism is all about? Hmmmm .......

    2. Longtobefree   3 years ago

      Sarcasm is also prophecy. Be careful what you type.

    3. Libertius III   3 years ago

      Throw down!
      Don't be surprised, however, when no $50/bbl oil appears up on the block.

  11. Ragnarredbeard   3 years ago

    The price isn't a supply problem. Refineries are making enough. There are two basic issues.

    1) political assholes keep getting in the way. One day its "here are some leases to explore and drill", and the next its "leases rescinded". You can't make long-term plans as an industry with stupid assholes like that, so you incur increased costs trying to maintain aging refineries instead of building new ones, etc.

    2) Oil is treated as a commodity on the market. People buy it months in advance and any little economic or political shock will send the price up or down. Right now, the price of a barrel is hovering around $120 per barrel. In Jan 2021 it was $50 per barrel. This is partially from assholes like Biden denying drilling permits and partially world events like Russia invading Ukraine.

    A barrel has 42 gallons of oil. If you're using light crude oil you might be able to refine 19 or 20 gallons of gas out of that. You also get fuel oil of various grades and other chemicals like acetone. At $120 a barrel, a gallon of crude oil is about $3. But you only get about %40 of that as gas; add in costs of shipping to the refinery, refining it, mixing it with a dozen other chemicals, storing it, transporting it to the distributor, and delivering it to the station. Then we add taxes and profit margin for each part of the chain. The gas station is probably making 4 or 5 cents a gallon, with similar amounts for the distributors and refiners. After you do the math, you figure out the oil companies basically sell gasoline as a loss leader and make up the difference selling all the other chemicals like acetone, asphalt, etc.

    Get the political assholes to have a real energy policy and the oil companies can work with that. But put dolts like Biden and the Demorats in charge and you get $5 a gallon gas. And it will go up more this summer.

    1. chemjeff radical individualist   3 years ago

      What would a "real energy policy" look like from your perspective?

      1. Claptrap   3 years ago

        For starters: rescind federal income taxes for a carbon tax; reform the environmental review processes; end the ability of a new administration to revoke previously granted approvals for infrastructure projects (Biden's Keystone decision was not necessarily a travesty as a policy matter, but the increased appropriation risk it represents absolutely kills the attractiveness of any similar endeavor); review options to potentially expand access to nuclear, by greenlighting new technologies, or maybe changing the regulatory/liability burdens.

        1. TJJ2000   3 years ago

          I.e. CUT the power of the Nazi's who have invaded this Nation....

  12. Spiritus Mundi   3 years ago

    Pressure from socially conscious investors hit a crescendo earlier this year when activist investors won board seats at ExxonMobil (XOM)

    Activist investors = Blackrock

  13. RanditeMan   3 years ago

    I blame government spending. We have to pay for all those stimulus checks and PPP dollars.

    1. GroundTruth   3 years ago

      Stimulus and PPP may be the basis of 8 or 10 % inflation in general (see Friedman monetary equation), but the problem with petroleum is about bad regulations and promises to completely shut them down very soon in the name of climate change.

      1. TJJ2000   3 years ago

        Nazi-Gods control the weather... Right, right??? /s

        It never ceases to amaze me how the left worships [WE] mob Gov-Guns as-if they were almighty Gods. Then again; that just about summarizes unlimited "Democracy" ( Gang-Power-Mad )...

        The USA is NOT a "democracy" it is a CONSTITUTIONAL Union of Republican States.

  14. NOYB2   3 years ago

    Red tape is an accident. This isn’t. This is the deliberate destruction of the US energy sector through regulation. Biden ran on this and he is executing it.

    1. justme   3 years ago

      exactly right. he even said during his so called campaign that he'd shut down the oil industry. and yet 51% voted for the senile old fart. anyone who voted for him has no right to complain about the economy -- they're all complicit.

      1. TJJ2000   3 years ago

        Nazism (>>>National<<< Socialism).. And one thing is VERY clear. They don't want to shut down their oil at the city or state level where they themselves have to PAY the cost of such idiocy.. They want their retardedness done NATIONALLY.

        Nothing speaks Nazism better than pushing one's own idiocy consequences on everyone else.

  15. GroundTruth   3 years ago

    Grampa Joe, Lieawatha and the rest of them need to be informed that the saying "the flogging will continue until morale improves" is a commentary on bad management, not instructions on how to get something accomplished.

    Let's go Brandon!

  16. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

    "Red tape"?

    When the national government threatens to end your industry to fulfill a holy mandate?

    I guess what the Nazis did was also just red tape.

  17. sonicfilter   3 years ago

    Recent Fed survey in Texas of oil companies.

    59% holding up new drilling because investors.

    8% say it's government regulations.

    Opinions aside.

    1. Yatusabes   3 years ago

      Wasnt a problem under Trump till Biden's handlers took over the White House. What changed? I'll wait

    2. Claptrap   3 years ago

      59% holding up new drilling because investors.

      And the investors are holding off because...?

      Oil prices took off like a rocket the very day it became clear that Biden won the election, with nary a break for profit-taking since. These people aren't stupid.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

        Moron/troll only invests (spends) other people's money, so does not need to understand that investing in ventures with 5 to 50 year payout sounds unattractive when the government announced it will prohibit your business (and your customers) in a fraction of that.

    3. NOYB2   3 years ago

      59% holding up new drilling because investors.

      Why in the world would anybody invest a dime in fossil fuel infrastructure if a Democrat president can just swoop in and destroy the value of your investment at the stroke of a pen?

      Investors aren't investing because of government regulations

      Investors aren't investing because of Biden's actions.

  18. Liberty Lover   3 years ago

    Reason is changing it's name:
    "The Biden Excuse Reason Magazine"

    The cause of high gas prices is Biden shutting down all oil and gas operations on federal lands and offshore, failure to renews leases and shutting down the Keystone pipeline construction.

  19. George Reeves   3 years ago

    Why would anyone invest in oil and refining capacity when it is government policy to end oil consumption by ending manufacture and sale of vehicles with fuel tanks.

  20. Alan@.4   3 years ago

    One wonders, among other things, as to how much of a bite current inflation rates, motor fuel prices in particular, will take out of Biden & Co. come Election Day this November.

    1. TJJ2000   3 years ago

      After Obama got elected for a second term. It wouldn't surprise me one bit if Biden gets elected for a second term...

      Democrats... Ya they really are that stupid and/or corrupt.

  21. Liberty Lover   3 years ago

    Biden's red tape that caused refinery shutdowns. Didn't have a red tape problem with the previous President that Reason called a Dictator.
    Biden's executive order shutting down all gas and oil operations on Federal areas.
    Biden's executive order stopping the Keystone pipeline.
    Biden's refusal to renew or open new leases and drilling permits.
    Biden shutting down Alaskan oil leases before they expired.
    Biden has blamed Trump. Biden has blamed Putin. Biden has blamed the oil companies. Biden has blames private gas station owners. Biden has blame his staff.
    Biden has lied. He said it is lack or refining capacity. Then Biden begged the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela to pump more oil. What good would that do if we lack refining capacity? What a moron. FJB

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