This video reviews the 2010 documentary 'GasHole,' which claims oil companies deliberately suppressed fuel-efficient technologies like water-powered engines to maintain profits. The hosts, Paranoid American and Uncle Sean, analyze the documentary's claims about suppressed technologies, price-fixing, and government manipulation, ultimately rating it a 'sink' in 2026. They argue that while the documentary contains some historical truths about oil industry monopolies (like Standard Oil and Rockefeller), it fails to provide concrete evidence for its claims about suppressed technologies and instead promotes climate change narratives and electric vehicle adoption without addressing practical challenges like power grid capacity. The hosts demonstrate how conspiracy documentaries often use selective evidence, hearsay testimony, and emotional appeals to advance ideological agendas rather than presenting balanced, verifiable information.
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Deep Dive
Why Gas Companies Don't Want You Driving On Water (Gashole)Added:
You can just put water in your car, and now it's free. And they've been making it so that you can't do that because they want your money.
>> [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] >> Ahoy mateys, this is Under the Docks with Paranoid American and Uncle Shawn charting through treacherous ways of documentaries to let you know if they sink or swim. You got a doc you want us to review, contact us at paranoidamerican.com or killthemockingbirds.com. And don't forget to like, subscribe, and share the show.
And in this episode, we're going to have a Skull and Bones member tell you to drive your car off of McDonald's.
The film Gasole, a 2010 film directed and narrated by Scott D. Roberts. This came out right after the 2008 financial crisis when gas hit $4 to $5. Some people are like, has it ever went down, right? Like some depending on what part of the country you're like, it still is $5 maybe.
And people were really, really mad, and they were going after big oil at the time. Everything was, you know, oil, oil, oil. It was fresh off like, you know, the Iraq and Afghanistan stuff as well to where you're like, oh, we just went there for oil and this financial crisis and big oil is the problem.
I'm so glad we're done with all the Middle Eastern oil wars and we're out of all the financial crises. Like that's long behind.
>> [music] >> Plotting the course.
Gasole argues that oil companies and automakers and Wall Street and even government actors deliberately suppress high efficiency oil barrel prices and electronic electric vehicle technology to maintain profit control and energy.
So, they're saying that big oil may have killed alternative uh energy as far as electric cars or even solar or wind power, right? And some of the claims they make like the electric car was deliberately killed.
They talk about in 1990 California ZEV mandate passed. 1996 General Motors motor releases an EV1. And in 2003 GM repossesses and crushes an EV1 vehicle.
This is their claim of the oil companies conquering big electric cars and trying to maintain their field of which is interesting in retrospect of what has happened in the last couple of years.
Like and you're like, dang, how how things sway back and forth in the world we live in.
Well, this is 2010, right? Based on research from like the mid-2000s probably at the latest. Um and it does have a little bit of that Al Gore Inconvenient Truth feel where they're saying, yeah, it's the oil companies and they're causing all these problems, price fixing. They've they're destroying alternate fuels, they're destroying the the cars. Um and they're causing pollution that's going to make the ice caps melt and the polar bears are going to die. Like they it kind of blends all that in. And as soon as they start mentioning oil and the polar caps, I just felt like, oh my god, I like I know what year this came from, right? I remember that 5 to 10 year period when that was just the focus of everything.
I kind of was like, dang, I almost got wrapped up into that. That's how I was thinking cuz it kind of catapulted a lot of these films. Like I watched this on Netflix and this is relatively new when Netflix was new to streaming, right?
When they started streaming, maybe the first couple years of it. So, they had a lot of these like documentaries like this. And then listening to Alex Jones and and and Jordan Maxwell when it came out.
>> Yeah, I saw this when it came out. So, I was like, whoa, big oil. So, I was very easily influ- I could have been one of these crazy like anti-like oil people. Like I'm I'm not that I'm for the oil companies or anything. I mean, if they the the dollars, right? I mean, they can I can be bought, right? But >> sponsor this show, so I hope not. Yeah.
Shout out to Shell. Shout out to Shell.
Uh then they explore a couple of these inventors, right? We've always hear nowadays about the combustible engine and and water being used. And they go through the reference the whole film starts out with in the 1920s and 50s around that time frame that people were making and designing engines to like run off 100 miles for 1 gallon of gas. And then we're like, hey, this is 34 miles to the gallon, pretty good, man. So, it it it struck me at the time even so like relevant where I'm like, dang, at that time we were only getting like 22 like 23 miles per gallon. You're like, how did this guy already get 100 miles to the gallon? And then he sells the patent to Shell, and then we don't hear nothing about it. Right. And then he turns up dead in the desert or something. Or that was someone else. But that's So, the collect So, I think just the surface what the ultimate claim is that they're making is that oil companies could make more efficient cars even though the oil and the car companies So, now you have to have all car manufacturers in the in bed with all oil manufacturers. And the car guys are being like, look, we'll make our cars really inefficient so they have to buy more gas and use more oil. So, the oil company's like, yes, do that because we want to sell more oil and more gas. And that if something were to come onto the market that's like, hey man, you don't have to fill up anymore. You can just You can get 100 miles out of this tank.
And again, like we're in 2026 now. Do I I swear I just saw like a like a Volvo ad that that said something like 600 miles to a gallon, right?
But they're saying that the reason that the gas companies were not allowing any of this to come out because it would hurt their sales. And ultimately, that for over 100 years, the car companies and the gas companies and I think logically you would say any any energy company, anyone that uses energy at all, have all been suppressing the idea that you can get 100, even 200 miles to a gallon on gas or hell, even water. You can just put water in your car, and now it's free. And they've been making it so that you can't do that because they want your money.
And part of for me like the argument is that it's going to that they're suppressing technologies that could surpass us whether it's electric. That's what In the first part, they do what a lot of these documentaries do where you're like, they're like, this guy was mysteriously killed, right? Or he mysteriously died. And then you start it perks you up, right? So, you're like, yeah, well, they do kill people over knowing things. And I think they don't answer some of the questions. Like like if it can run off water, one question I've always had with my brother, we talk about living in a cold state. I'm like, what happens when it freezes? Like, right? Like what happens when the car freezes at night overnight and you're running this water? Like sometimes your windshield wipers the spray to clean your windows will freeze if it gets too cold. It happened to me. And I have a brand new car, right? The brand new It's not like, oh, it's been old. It froze over. So, I think sometimes they kind of are misleading in these directions. I understand, but they had me at first with they talk about like Tom Ogle in the 80s who who invented comes And he mysteriously dies. And then they talk about another guy who was like, yeah, I was also working on that. And then they started giving me weird looks. And I was like, you know what? I'm just going to stay away. Like they paint this picture of government manipulation and big oil stepping in and killing people for these technologies, which is believable. Don't get me wrong. I think that I wouldn't hold anything against anybody.
But sometimes they don't explain the full picture.
There's a a couple specifics. So, they bring up um a guy called David Blackmore. And it's like, retired Shell scientist. They say it really fast.
They're like, he worked at Shell for 5 years. And then I was like, wait a minute, did you say only 5 years he worked here? Okay. I mean, that's not bad, but uh this he was an old dude, so I'm sure he worked at a million other places, and he had a short little stint there. But this is the appeal to authority. Like, oh, here's a guy that worked at the company. So, and he said that the um there was a 1947 Studebaker that got 150 miles to a gallon. And that it was based on a prototype from a 1939 that had 50 miles to a gallon. And then he said that the a thousand a thousand mile per gallon barrier was broken in the late 1970s. So, he makes all those claims. Um but they just kind of stay like that as claims. Then they interview a guy called Ken Koontz. Um which doesn't have any proof, but he does know about a thing a guy told his dad 50 years ago. And now he's repeating what his dad told him to you so that you'll repeat it to someone else's dad. You know what I mean? Like a lot of the evidence and the proof here is like, ah man, you know, I had this buddy 20 years ago that knew this other guy 20 years before that that like had a car that could get 1,000 miles per gallon. It's crazy, you know? And then so like some some of the proof is like, a guy told me a guy told me a guy.
Yeah, my dad told me that he was helped to architect the whole internet back in like the 40s and so And then it's just this like you got to believe me. Believe this guy that told and then you know the telephone game where you're like I don't know how much of that has been embellished over the years because once a story because one thing people forget is once a story becomes good and people like telling it, they tell it multitude of times and they can see which parts their brain starts uh uh condensing it into the point of where you're like, oh this is the best part.
Oh, people react to this. So, you kind of change and embellish things over the time to kind of really cuz this is a drunk story that you go around at the well yeah yeah my granny, you know, she used to know this guy that had a combustible engine running off of vegetable oil, right? Like that's where it all started and then they they kind of I think one of the peaks to me the claim that they make and this is also a claim that I'm like yeah, I can stand behind this. I think a lot of this whole film is almost Edward Bernays-esque as if you think of like cigarettes, right? When he wanted to try to get everybody smoking and he attached himself to the the women's liberty movement where he's like yeah, women can't smoke like that's crazy like women should be able to smoke and then was able to boost the prices. I think it this when they talk about the 2008 oil prices being artificially inflated, I think they used this as their catapult to be like yeah, we should go everything electric, we should go solar, we should this green new deal. This and it reminds you that this is the beginning states of the green new deal. So, you can see these seeds being planted. They took something of the time that they knew was relevant and they're like yeah, everybody's pissed off about these gas prices. Let's push them towards the green new deal.
Yeah, so this documentary goes through a few different phases. So, like the very first part of the documentary, it's basically about the suppression of technology, uh water being used for cars, propane being used for cars, all sorts of vapor systems that convert the the gas into a vapor before it goes into the carburetor and like does all. Um so, it a lot of it is about the suppressed technology. And there was there was two other ones. The you already mentioned Tom Ogle who apparently had this car that could get like 150 mi to a gallon.
There was a article he did it in his Ford Galaxy um nine in like 1970 and he sold the patent. He immediately lost all the money on the patent in a pool game apparently um and then he's found dead in the desert on a drug overdose. And and that's that's the last you hear Tom Ogle, but it's like did the industry do that? Did the big oil do that? Did the Ford company do that? And then there's a guy that knew Tom Ogle or knew someone that knew Tom Ogle and his name's Ernest Pierce who's just a retired mechanic.
He's like your friend's dad, right? That like has stories. Um and he's like I saw it, man. I saw that with my own eyes and he showed me how it worked and he was like here, let me let me show you something.
He opens up the hood of a car and I was like hell yeah, finally they're going to talk to one person in the entire world that's like and here's the car that runs on water or propane or or whatever, right? Here it is. He opens it up and he's like now this is just a normal car, but if you imagine and I was like oh, come on, man. This is the documentary. You're the guy saying that you knew a guy, you just went and opened up a hood. Don't tell me use your imagination. You know, it's like well, if you had some propane here and a vapor system, you'd be getting 150 mi a gallon in this car right here and my first thought was like and if you put wheels on grandma, she'd be a bike, but like but like none of that makes any sense right now.
Yeah, and you you get a lot of that throughout this film where they're like they are it's you got to believe me cuz even then when they talk about like the I think it was Tom Ogle where they're like and his family doesn't want to be on camera and you're like or they just didn't want to maybe they disagree with your premise, right? Cuz maybe they do know him. They know him there is this thing that happens when people die too that people that are not in that tight circle are like well, and they must have been killed by big oil and then the family knows hey, he had a problem, right?
did have a problem. Maybe he was an alky. Maybe And then and then what's the response going to be? It's like oh, they got to you, man. The tab is stuck in the dude. They got to you.
And that's kind of like where there's bait and switch of like that you have to believe me like kind of deal cuz you have to believe what they're saying throughout this thing to really kind of go over the timeline and when it kind of concludes, there's their more conclusion of it is that like the way we go move forward is going green, right?
Getting electric cars, pushing these in there. Throughout the film there's again, the first half is kind of trying to hook you in by like look, did the government suppress this with the help of oils >> yeah, could we could be getting 1,000 mi a gallon, but the government killed this man and left him in the desert? And then they show you examples of all these multitudes of people that they're like look, this guy died. This guy died. This guy was looking up this. And then they kind of show you some of the vague things that have gone over time and then they're just like all right, now we should get electric cars and uh get solar panels and and windmills and they're talking about all this and I think at the time I might have bought into it. I know I did buy into that, but now I'm like over time that I'm like ah, you guys didn't see what happened in the past 16 years and all this stuff that we didn't think about. They don't address any of that in this film. They just give you this hope and this dream of like if you build it, they will come kind of like if you get electric cars, we will save the planet cuz they start little by little nudging you into that climate change zone.
Well, so it goes through the three phases. The first one is the technology suppression. Then it gets into price fixing and that how the oil industry raises prices unfairly and they keep production down so they can charge more and that's all these political monopoly like anti-trust monopolies going on which I mean yeah, 100% all that's true. Of course. Yeah, the Rockefellers monopolized the industry and they did price fixing and they went to court over it and then they had to be split up. That's happened to Microsoft, it happened to Bell Laboratories. It's hap it happens all the time everywhere always. And the and the whole premise too of like um them just not being fair like it's it's not moral the way that the oil industry operates. There was a couple examples where one of them is like yeah, well they they made this oil or they made this guy they refined the oil and they made the gasoline and then Katrina hit and now the production cost went up, but why are they charging us more? Because they made it when it was cheaper and it's like these guys haven't heard of just standard accounting and like first in first out or last in first out accounting where you evaluate the value of your inventory based on the latest cost of good. I'm not going to get into a whole thing, but like that's how normal businesses operate. They don't they don't look at it like man, we had that thing made, you know, 5 years ago and 5 years ago it cost this. So, I guess we can just sell it for a lot cheaper even though if I had to replace it today, it would cost me three times as much. I'm not saying that's how that works, but to use that as the example of they're being so unfair to us, man.
They're they're overcharging us and none of that's really illegal. Um and then and then the third part, so it goes from technology suppression to oil companies are mean and unfair to and biodiesel and electric cars are going to solve everything. And I think they even lean harder into the biodiesel than they do into the electric car angle cuz again this is 2010 and the electric car like no one knew how to solve that, but everyone was like man, but you're saying I could just take my used oil from like when I deep fried my turkey on Thanksgiving and I can just drive around on that? Man, they're trying to suppress this. Like I don't know you like people I've known people that converted their car that could run on biodiesel and they did the thing where you would like drive to restaurants and ask them for their old oil and they'd put it in their car and they drive around. You could like smell them coming and going.
Yeah, it it it also focuses on the biofuel aspect of they're like see, they are suppressing it. It was at this gas station and then they bought it. And this guy and then the guy that's telling you is like his dad I'm like well, why didn't you buy it from your dad? Why didn't you work something There's obviously some reason you don't want to run the guy He's like yeah, that sucks, man. Like what can I do, man? My dad's selling it. It's like well, couldn't you keep it? Like he doesn't have to sell it. If it's this big old conspiracy where you truly believe in this biofuel, then why wouldn't you like find a way to find another company that could buy it, right? If your dad's dad's just selling it for money.
>> [music] >> Hidden treasures and overboard moments.
I do think there is hidden treasures in here. I I I do think differently looking through the 2026 lens compared to 2010 Sean, right?
Like the the lens is different. Like I'm putting it on a scope and I I I like where they break down like some of the oil prices and and and just devolving into Rockefeller. I think it's always good to throw Rockefeller's name out there and big oil.
But I do have a lot more overboard moments. So, I'll let you go with the hidden treasures first.
>> [laughter] >> Uh I mean the mention of Rockefeller and Standard Oil is the biggest hidden I guess hidden so hidden like if you haven't heard about Rockefeller and oil companies being a thing yet. But anyways, that was big. And then I do like that it does kind of give you a reference for all the different claims of people that said that they've made cars that had hundreds or thousands of miles you know, per gallon efficiency or could run it on vapor, could run it on water. You kind of get a decent index of all those different claims early on in this movie.
So, that's and then also one of the experts that they have on the screen is a kid from Mighty Ducks. So you know whatever he says has got to be true.
And then in the overboard moments, obviously the easy low-hanging fruit, the beginning This is maybe a hidden treasure as well depending on how you look at it. This beginning propaganda of climate change. This is the beginning seeds and obviously at the time I had not really thinking about it. I know they were talking about cuz at that time it was still global warming, I think, right? It wasn't fully labeled and branded as climate change. It was "Hey man, it's going to be so hot we're all going to die." Now it's climate change where it could be anything.
You see the seeds being planted and then when they come to the solution, which is I have no problem with electric cars, but they didn't propose any of the problems that that may as well bring us.
Like even to this day, 2026, people can't answer the question like what happens if everybody goes electric? What happens to the power grid? I mean, I have some speculations what will happen and I'm thinking that where I'm headed is pretty close because our infrastructure's not great. So if everybody comes out work at 5:00 p.m.
and plugs in their car, which we will probably see in California shortly cuz I know they're supposed to be in 2030 everybody's supposed to have electric vehicles. You're probably going to lose power all the time. So they don't talk about any of the problems.
They just say make it paint as their solution is the answer because big big oil is suppressed and when there's probably like a middle ground. I've always personally thought like they should have stick with like the hybrids, right? Partially electric, partially gas, getting on the best but no, each side is like no, you either go this way or that way. Also, some of the claims that they make like the 1,000 mi per gallon. They're They're They don't super prove it to me.
They're like, "Yeah, this guy look there's this document. Let me All right, there it goes." And you're like, "Go in detail."
>> Someone wrote about it in the paper in 1973. Look, they wouldn't just write this two-paragraph article if this wasn't true and there was no pictures or proof or evidence or anything else.
>> Oh yeah, just believe them and that's that's a like throughout this film you get a lot of that like it just you got to take my word for My My My grandpappy wouldn't lie to me, right? That's what you kind of get in this.
And it's it's such a binary true or false thing. Either you can make an engine that does this or you can't, right? And I'm not going to go on a whole tangent on like how batteries and like it You don't fix a battery, you replace a battery. Well, now that battery is out in nature, you know, like some dolphin's going to choke on a battery at some point. Like you're you're swapping one problem for another. But So my overboard moments have nothing to even do with what they're suggesting as solutions.
So the the biggest one uh actually I don't even know if I can put them in order biggest. They all have their own problems. So one of the problems is they're talking about how Standard Oil was doing these unfair business practices where they would sell their oil for less than they could even get it for. So they would lose money on selling it just to put their competition out of business. Cuz if I'm losing a dollar on everything I sell and I'm the best at it and the biggest, then I know you're going to be losing three or four dollars. And if I can keep that up for months or years, you're just going to use all your savings, all your everything, go out of business and then after you're out of business, then I can hike my prices back up to what they should have been. And it's like this is horrible and this is antitrust. Like dude, do you not use Amazon? Like Amazon literally does this to every major product. They'll Oh, toilet paper's selling really well. Hell, we should make our own toilet paper and sell it for cheaper than Like that literally happened. You know how Uber works at a loss where they lose money in order to make sure that you order their their service and then once delivery drivers stop being able to get jobs, then they're like, "Okay, well now we're going to hike the price up and there's no other Like this happens in every single industry. It's always been happening. It's never not going to happen. So none of that's unique to the oil industry. The other big one too is the as I'm If you were watching this in 2010 and you're on this like they killed the electric car cuz of big oil and Bush and you know, Halliburton and all this, then you might miss the logic on like, "Bro, it's Engines are way more than in just cars, right? Like anything that needs to generate energy is using either natural fossil natural oil, natural gas, oils, they're using propane, they're using all this technology." If there was something out there that let you get 100 mi per gallon on water, that would be used in every factory across in in you know, everywhere. Like it would be used everywhere. Like right now even in 2026, the way that they're doing like AI training and they spin up graphics cards and they do all this calculation and stuff, like that's also not using water.
You don't think that China wouldn't be like generating AI data off off water if there was a cheaper way to do it. They don't care about pollution.
And they're still using the same thing.
So all of that was kind of a an overboard for me cuz none of it gets addressed at any point. None of the claims they make about these 100 to 100 mi per gallon engines from the '30s and '70. None of those you see any evidence of other than like here's a image of some patents. I looked those patents up.
There's people that have tried to reproduce it and they're just not efficient. And then at the end, they start making this pitch towards biodiesel and they're like, "Here's the new way. It's It's biodiesel. It's clean. It's efficient. We're reusing our waste. It's better for the environment."
None of that's true, right? Biodiesel is not better for the environment. It still creates particulates that are going to go and clog some squirrel's eyes somewhere, right? Like animals still die the same way. It still has the same inefficiencies.
And as soon as they lead to that conclusion, my first thought was like, "Bro, what about the 1,000 mi per gallon water engine? Like why are you saying like look, here's the best way to fight the system is to get that same 20 mi per gallon on french fry oil versus hey, what about that 200 mi per gallon thing that created no waste? Like why aren't we hyper fixating on that? Why are we talking about french fries?" And you don't have one person with a built engine when we've seen and heard throughout the internet ages of like this guy died. Like the one of the shootings in I think Buffalo in the grocery store where the guy did a mass shooting and killed people. They're like you didn't know that one of those guys he had a water engine. And I've always heard and I've seen people build it online. Like you can watch it, but I'm like you couldn't even give us an example. You couldn't even throw and fool us around. This is 2010 and you couldn't have an engine a little bit running off water and I'm like, "Dang, that is true." And And And if you think they could have make money off of it, you think they wouldn't sell it to the military industrial complex? You think they're not going to have tanks that could just like go so fast on like the little amount of oil and and run for days on end?" They would love that, man.
Then they could just They could take everything they wanted. So yeah, there's a lot of holes in their story and this is like a socialist nut job climate change >> [laughter] >> seeding cloud seeding.
I can't wait to see if you think this is a sink or swim.
It's about that time. Sink or swim.
Look, I'm not just saying this because this show is sponsored literally by the Shell Corporation, which I'm contractually obligated to mention is the 1890 Royal Dutch Petroleum Company that then turned into 1897 Shell Transport Company, which owns Jiffy Lube, Pennzoil, and Quaker State. They all sound really American, right? Well, it's a Dutch company. The logo represents sun worship. It's actually the sun coming over the horizon. It's not a shell. Funny it's called the Shell Company. Anyways, they sponsor this show, so I have to give this one a sink.
Otherwise, they'll kill me.
For me, I I like some of the aspects I think like you can get with like the Rockefeller and the big oil companies.
Like there is some good information there. It's like you got to dig for it.
My problem is if it was 2010, Sean, it would be a swim probably cuz I would be so hyped up. I was young, partying. I'm like, "You can't believe big oil's taking over everything." But now being 2026, I'm I got to give it a sink. I just think that it fails to meet the requirements that we're looking for and it's more of a propaganda puff piece if you really think about it. It's not something that I'm going to suggest to somebody because I think it would lead them down the wrong road even though there is information and kernels in there they could get. Think people will get swept back into it and be like, "See, that's why we should have been electric cars years ago." And they don't They're not solving or addressing any of the problems. But for you, please don't be a gas hole yourself. Go to paranoidamerican.com, killthemockingbirds.com.
And if you got a something you suggest we should watch, don't forget to contact us.
Till our next voyage under the docks, sink or swim.
>> [music] >> Under the [music] docks.
Yeah, under the docks.
There are people who are breaking the laws.
Footage [music] got clipped. They erase all the shots.
They collect the dots.
Under the docks. [music] Under the docks. Yeah, under the docks.
>> [music] [music] >> Under the docks. [music] Yeah, under the docks.
>> Just buy [singing] something.
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>> [music] >> Paranoid.
Uh-huh.
Yo.
>> [music] >> I scribble my life away. Driven to write the page. Will it ignite the brain? Give you the flight my plane. Paper the highs and lows. Somewhat [music] amazing feel when it's real to real. You will engage it. Your favorite applause the lord of an arrangement. I gave you the proper results to hit [music] the pavement. If they get emotional, hey. Maybe your language a game how they playing it well without Lakers of fame. [music] Then whatever the cause they out of shape.
[singing] [ __ ] Snakes get decapitated.
Matters the apex. Execution of flame you out. [music] Nuclear bomb distributed at war. Rather gruesome for eyes to see.
Maximum out then I light my trees. Blow it off in the face. You're despising me for what though? Calculated [music] and rather cutthroat. Paranoid American must be all the blood smoke for real. Lord give me a day and wave. [music] Okay.
They wait around to hate whatever they say. Matters not in the least bit. We get heavy rotate when a beat hits. So thank you. Well, [ __ ] them [ __ ] for real. [music] You're welcome. [singing] They ain't never had a deal. You're welcome. Man, they lacking appeal.
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