This week, Americans around the country have been asking why their government is pushing gas prices to soar on purpose. Some claim that, as part of the Great Reset and the United Nations Sustainability Project, the White House is collaborating with globalists to get the world to zero emissions by 2050 or sooner.
President Joe Biden began targeting folks in the oil and gas industry from the outset of his term. The White House put a stop to oil and gas corporations expanding, as well as scrapping projects that were already underway.
The Keystone XL pipeline project has been halted, and drilling permits on federal property and leases in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge have been suspended by the Biden administration.
As the price of oil approaches record highs, the White House, in accordance with the globalists, rejected the idea that they should enhance domestic oil production to help cut gas prices.
The radical green deal administration is refusing to budge, despite crude oil prices surging to $130.50 a barrel on Sunday evening.
Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary, issued a set of talking points on social media, advocating against an emphasis on increasing US oil output.
Psaki reacted angrily to Republican calls for more domestic oil production.
She claimed that while domestic oil output had increased following the coronavirus pandemic, the US was still vulnerable to global oil markets.
As Russia’s current Ukrainian onslaught has disrupted oil markets, President Joe Biden’s administration is considering diplomatic moves with oil-producing countries such as Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, and Iran.
Biden admitted that gas costs were growing in his State of the Union address, but proposed electric car subsidies as a remedy.
He asked Congress to assist him in lowering the cost of electric vehicles, which will save you an additional $80 per month because you will never have to pay at the gas pump again.
Biden also stated that he would continue to release oil from America’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve, despite the fact that this has had virtually no effect on reducing supply shortages.