WhatâÂÂs happening isnâÂÂt just random. ItâÂÂs plain wrong. [John Fetterman] Hi {NAME}, itâÂÂs John. In PA + across the country, people are getting squeezed, {NAME}. WeâÂÂre paying more at the grocery store, more at the pump, and more almost everywhere. đđđ Of course, my opponent, millionaire celebrity Mehmet Oz, doesnâÂÂt feel a change in price when heâÂÂs filling up his gas tank, if he even pumps his own gas at all (they donâÂÂt let you do that in OzâÂÂs native New Jersey). He doesnâÂÂt have to worry about his gas or grocery bill, and doesnâÂÂt even notice if itâÂÂs more than it used to be.Ă When I fill up my Dodge RAM, itâÂÂs costing a *hell* of a lot more than it did a year ago. When Gisele + I go shopping for groceries at Giant Eagle, almost everything we buy costs more. So many families are dealing with this. In May, the Consumer Price Index saw the largest jump in consumer prices in 41 years, with inflation at 8.6% compared to the previous year. Inflation is hitting families across the commonwealth.Ă But whatâÂÂs happening isnâÂÂt just random. ItâÂÂs plain wrong. LetâÂÂs talk about gas prices. Just last week, gas prices hit a record high of $5.07 per gallon in Pennsylvania, an outrageously high price that is impacting families across Pennsylvania. But the truth is, if it wasnâÂÂt for the greed of oil companies, prices likely wouldnâÂÂt be this high. This past week, crude oil was going for around $120 a barrel â the highest price we've seen since mid-2014. But back then, a gallon of gas only cost about $3.50. Oil companies donâÂÂt need to be charging this much for gas â theyâÂÂre just doing it to make excess profits. đ°đ°đ° While people across Pennsylvania are paying more than $5 a gallon for gas, companies such as Shell, Chevron, BP and ExxonMobil are all raking in record-breaking profits, lining their CEOsâ and shareholdersâ pockets. In just the first three months of 2022, 28 of the largest oil and gas producers made over $100 billion in profits. ItâÂÂs hard to even conceptualize how much money that is.Ă But donâÂÂt just take it from me, take it from the companies themselves. Chevron says the company is âÂÂgenerating excess cashâÂÂ; Exxon says itâÂÂs getting an âÂÂadvantage from the marketâÂÂ; and BP says that the rising price of oil is helping its bottom line. What does that actually look like? In the past year, ExxonâÂÂs profits doubled; ShellâÂÂs tripled; and ChevronâÂÂs quadrupled. ThatâÂÂs what I mean by record profits. ItâÂÂs gross, and *deeply* unpatriotic, for the big oil companies to be rolling around in cash while charging us $5 per gallon for gas. Instead of raising costs at the pump, these oil companies should be working to help drive prices down, even if it means their CEOs make a little bit less. Or â God forbid â just make the same millions of dollars as they made last year. đ And if weâÂÂre going to be serious about bringing down gas prices, we need to suspend the federal gas tax to provide immediate relief for people at the pump. We should also continue to use American oil â and produce and invest in more American energy. But inflation isnâÂÂt only impacting us at the pump. ItâÂÂs everywhere. So itâÂÂs not just energy we should be making here at home. ItâÂÂs everything. More American energy, more American manufacturing, more American goods, and more American jobs. đşđ¸đşđ¸đşđ¸ We should be ramping up production across industries, increasing capacity + supply to bring down prices across the board. Making more stuff here in America would mean prices wouldnâÂÂt spike every time thereâÂÂs a problem overseas. We donâÂÂt need to be outsourcing any more jobs + production to China. and we donâÂÂt need to be shouldering the burden when other countries enter into conflicts or declare deranged wars, such as RussiaâÂÂs Vladimir Putin did in Ukraine, which contributed to prices skyrocketing. We can use American energy to drive down prices at the gas pump for American workers, and we can use American workers to drive down the price of everything, for everyone. This isnâÂÂt a radical proposal. ItâÂÂs basic common sense. PennsylvaniaâÂÂs workers can compete with anyone in the world. We can do it all right here: drive down prices, create good-paying union jobs, and finally stop our dependence on foreign sources of energy and production. But hereâÂÂs the catch, {NAME}: To get these common-sense solutions, we need real leaders who get it. And letâÂÂs be clear: Mehmet Oz is not connected to the struggles that Pennsylvanians are facing every day. HeâÂÂs a millionaire television doctor who is a resident of New Jersey. While paying an extra $10, $20 or $30 for gas means nothing to him, it matters to the rest of us. Pennsylvania deserves better. We deserve a senator who actually gets it, a real Pennsylvanian who understands the pain that families are feeling across this commonwealth. We need real solutions â not a celebrity vanity project â because right now, Pennsylvania families canâÂÂt afford anything less. [{NAME}, make a donation of any amount today to help defeat Dr. Oz and send me to the U.S. Senate. Your donation comes with a promise: I will fight like *hell* for you + your family â and that includes bringing down sky-high prices.]( [Donate now ĂÂť]( Thanks, John [Donate]( [Like on Facebook]( [Follow on Twitter]( [Follow on Instagram]( Email us: info@johnfetterman.com This email was sent to [{EMAIL}](#).Ă Email is the most important way we keep in touch with people like you, so thank you for reading to the end. 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