Posted on 05/17/2007 5:48:48 AM PDT by cweese
I'll grant that the states don't use all of the money that they rake off from the gas tax on Road Upkeep, but the poster's point was that the gas tax is one of the few taxes that actually works correctly.
I hadn't thought about it in those terms, and I'm inclined to agree.
Someone else here said it best. “If illegal immigrants can afford gas, the price is not too high”.
I put 50K/yr on my 97 Town Car, the last true Lincoln. Fed income taxes still cost me more than gas. I however have to figure gas into my variable cost of doing business, and when I buy my next vehicle it will probably be foreign- maybe a Scion xB.
Also, I am paying outrageously for home heating.
I drive a fuel efficient car but I drive 60 miles a day back and forth to work. Every little bit extra that costs me is noticeable.
Sounds logical to me.
What did you find whiny about Boortz’s analysis?
A one minute examination of my checkbook records on Quicken show that even if gas doubled it wouldn’t amount to much in my budget.
Boortz is suffering from what I call fair tax delusion syndrome
I kind of have to agree with you on this one...
While I agree that Americans should be taking a harder look at the way gubbermint is picking our pockets, Neal fails to realize how the higher price of gasoline affects practically everything we buy.
A simple example: the price of stamps. While there have been other (significant) factors behind the recent rise in postage, the price of gasoline has been a major one.
Now, apply that to your milk, eggs, Playstation, etc.
First, the federal gas tax is $0.184 / gallon, not 18%.
Second, how do you propose to pay for the roads if not through the gas tax? Although I have problems with the way some of the gas tax money is skimmed off for public transit boondoggles and how some of the money is sequestered in the highway trust fund to hide part of the deficit, in general the gas tax is the fairest tax we have. If you burn gasoline you are 99% likely to be using it to drive on the government owned roads. Those who drive the most pay the most. This is opposed to using the "from each according to his ability" income tax or an inefficient tax per mile requiring government inspectors to check your odometer regularly.
Considering America’s technological and economic capabilities, gas prices are way too high. We have every right to complain.
I agree. I remember sitting for hours in the gas lines in the mid-1970’s in Houston. In the middle of the summer. Not fun.
This makes sense if we were only upset about the prices this year compared to last year. They were out of control last year also. Lets really compare it to where gas prices should be which is in the low $2.00 range.
New math based on his milage.
Old price $2.09 (3-4 years ago)
Current price $3.14 (here in Ohio)
Difference $1.05
Florida trip now will be 70 miles or about $74 dollars. It is high but not that much since it is a vacation. Pay it.
The problem is the monthly cost this adds getting to/from work. He stated 32 miles a day which turn into about $12 bucks a week or $45 dollars a month. In my case it is about $70 bucks a month more. I travel further.
It hurt last summer and it’s going to hurt worse this year. I like Boortz but I don’t want to be lectured by a millionaire,money it’s not that big of a deal when ya have big . He needs to wake up and step outside to where the real world lives and realize this is budget busting in many cases.
Every week we are giving $10-$30 dollars more a month to the countries that want to destroy us. Can we start drilling in Alaska already? Drop a few refineries right outside the tap also !!
You will feel the wrath of the Oil Company whores now.
I’m glad my car doesn’t run on milk ($3.58 per gal) or orange juice! ($2.72 half-gal)
Wrong. If you nattering nabobs of negativism would bother to research the subject, you'd see the truth:
He's not suffering, he enjoys it. ;)
The reason there were “gas lines” is that the prices weren’t allowed to reflect the price/demand dynamic.
The question is, would you rather pay 3.19 for all the gas you want, or have the price fixed at 1.68 and not be able to get it?
Now those suggestions make a hell of a lot more sense then Neil Boortz telling me I should ignore the man behind the curtain !!!
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