Justin,
I think the article is fairly spot-on. Americans view cheap gas as a right and are very selfish and jealous of that perceived right. I think this quote from the article sums it up nicely:
"Anger is probably more tied up with a wider sense of decline and also a loss of privilege. Cheap gas has been one of the prerogatives of the American Empire so people have become accustomed to it in a way which is somehow associated with our ability to wield our will around the world."
Despite years and years of people prodding that we need to reduce our dependance on foreign oil, and on petroleum in general, Americans still do nothing to shorten the amount of time they spend driving, put little money into alternative means of public transportation, and continue to spend lots of money buying huge gas guzzling automobiles.
Another telling quote is this:
"And worryingly for the faltering economic recovery - and the president - they said they were being forced to cut back on other spending to pay for gas."
Notice it doesn't say they were being forced to cut back on driving their automobiles or finding alternate means of transportation. They don't even consider that as an option. They will cut back on other expenditures to maintain their addictive need to drive their automobiles as much, as far, and as often as they desire. God forbid you should take a bus or a train or a bike to work.
The article is also correct that Americans generally don't have a clue or care what goes on in the rest of the world.
"Americans are not aware of what the rest of the world pays for gas. We are a very big, inward-looking domestic market. "
In general, we tend to be very self-centered, selfish, and uneducated about the rest of the world. And, unbelievably, stubbornly proud of those facts. And yes, there are a lot of people over here angry that we have spent trillions of dollars propping up puppet regimes in the middle east, and invading, destroying and then rebuilding Iraq, but we don't have an endless supply of cheap gas to show for it.
As for the relevance of English taxes on petrol usage, the oil consumption by the U.S. is 694 barrels per person per day, while consumption in the U.K. is 291!
Source Hmmm, let's see. Your taxes make your price double ours, and your use is slightly less than half ours. This really isn't rocket science. Maybe Dr. Chu is on to something here.
Also, for those of you following Palin's mantra of drill, baby, drill, you are simply fooling yourselves. The price of oil is set on the commodities markets by speculators, not by country of origin. Oil drilled in the U.S. sells for the same prices in the market as oil drilled in Saudi Arabia, and the benefactors of that price are not we the people, but the oil companies that did the drilling. And the measly amount we can add even with increased drilling is not enough to affect supply in an appreciable amount. So drilling more here isn't going to drop the price one iota. The only thing that is going to make gas cheaper is using less of it. Because the only thing that drops price in a free market is significantly added supply or significantly decreased demand.