Comments by "Shawn R" (@shawnr771) on "MeidasTouch" channel.

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  50. What you see behind Texas Paul is not an oil well. It is called a pump jack or well head. The actual oil well is usually rather large and might be serviced by multiple pump jacks. Each drawing a certain amount of crude per day from the well. When a shaft is drilled into the rock, it is not like drilling into a milkshake or pool of oil. The oil is trapped in the fissures of the shale. The shaft is drilled a bit deeper than the bottom depth of the oil in the shale. Then high pressure injections of salt water in other parts of the field force oil out of the shale and into the shaft to be pumped. Some oil is relatively easy to get to flow into the shafts some takes more coercing. Regardless only a certain amount of oil flows into the area around the base of the pump jack pipe a day to be pumped. This could be anywhere from as little as 20 gallons to whatever. That is why many timea pump jacks are sitting idle. They have pumped all they can for the day, week, month etc. Now as far as our oil ending up on the global market. Texas Paul is absolutely correct. Whoever buys it gets it. A better response to Tuckeo Rose and Margerine Trailer Park is to ask What happened to the 300 million barrels of oil sold from the Strategic Reserve that were sold in 2017? Look up the Strategic Reserve on Wikipedia and there is info about 7 special sales where the T** administration quietly sold 100 million barrels of oil to help pay down the national debt. This started in 2015. Here is a link. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strategic_Petroleum_Reserve_(United_States) It also kept fuel prices depressed on the global market. So what is their outrage at the weakening of America?
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