WASHINGTON, May 12, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Gas may be down from its peak, but for working Americans, it still hurts to fill the tank.
SUV owners. Long-distance commuters. Families scraping by. Even at $3 a gallon, the pain at the pump is real.
But help could be on the horizon.
“We could see gas prices fall to $2… maybe even $1 — and not through subsidies or gimmicks,” says Jim Rickards, former CIA advisor and White House consultant.
Instead, Rickards says, this new push could come from a $150 trillion asset buried beneath U.S. soil — one that, until now, Washington never touched.
A LEGAL BREAKTHROUGH OPENS THE DOOR
At the center of this shift is the 2024 Supreme Court decision that dismantled the Chevron Doctrine — a ruling that clipped the …