It does not seem like math is one of your strengths so I will try to make this easy to understand. The graph does show moments in time when oil is one price and gas is another. For instance, on a certain day, oil is say $110 a barrel and gas is $3.22 a gallon. 2 months later, oil is $110 a barrel but for some reason, gas is well over $4 a gallon. That doesn't seem "closely".Jim this would be alot easier if you just
answered yes or no instead of letting the hamster run wild on the wheel. The graph shows moments in time. But if you take the average the price of oil and gas over a period of time follow each other closely.
Do you understand this Y/N?
If yes we can move on to my first yes or no question you answered with commentary.
Your answer to my first yes or no question-
"Trump warned about allot of things. Of course, when he made that warning, the oil industry was already crashing. Oil wells had been shut down as had oil refineries all under his watch. It was the largest reduction in oil production in US history. Agin, $80 billion in losses and over 600 oil companies filing bankruptcy. Again, all under his watch."
Did Trump warn the governors of the states that were shutting down "the cure can't be worse than the problem itself" on 3/23/20. Y/N?
Yes, Trump did warn governors not to shut down but what does that have to do with the oil industry almost collapsing? Do you really think if the governors kept everything open that people would not have stopped flying or going on cruises. Just because those last people were not aloud off the cruise ship and were stuck in a floating tomb of death doesn't mean they didn't enjoy themselves. I am sure everyone would have traveled across the country to visit granny and if it killed her, they would have to had driven back so they used even more gas.
This may confuse you but this was global as in the whole wide world. No one on the planet was flying, taking cruises, or traveling.