Increase In Seriousness RSS

Very Charming

Archive

May
1st
Thu
permalink

Am I the only one who thinks gas is too cheap?

karmcity:

One year ago, when gas was around $2.60/gallon, I remember hearing interviews where the reporter asked, “How high will gas prices need to go before you’ll change your driving habits?” The answer was almost always $3/gallon. Here we are now, with gas prices reaching over $4/gallon, with not many signs of people making an effort to reduce their fuel consumption.

I have an idea. Let’s have a driving tax. It’ll be based on annual mileage, so the more you drive, the more you pay. If you live in the suburbs and commute an hour one way, you’ll be taxed heavily. If you live in the city and take the train to work, you pay nothing.

The tax will go into researching alternative energy and reducing overall gas prices. The lowered prices will reward those who don’t drive often by offering less of an up-front cost. Those who decide they need to drive an SUV with a huge V8 engine can pay a premium. The key is to make people with inefficient driving habits pay more.

With gas companies reporting record profits, it’s safe to say consumers are willing to pay exorbitant prices to continue driving. Why don’t we take some of that money and put it to use?

UPDATE:
To the rebloggers saying, “well what if people have no choice BUT to drive,” that’s what tax breaks are for.

If John drives a Civic 25,000 miles, and Gertrude drives a Hummer just 5,000 miles, is there justification in charging the Hummer owner a premium? You can’t make people pay more based on the vehicle they own. It has to be on how much gas they’re actually consuming per year.

If you’re pissed that you have to pay more so you can enjoy the scenery in the countryside, sorry, but that should be the price you pay so that scenery can keep existing.

Karm,

 i) we already have something called a ‘gas tax’, where people are taxed based on how much gas they consume. you may have heard of this, it’s been kind of a big issue lately.

 ii) some poor backwards inbred people actually live in the countryside.  i realize you are almost certainly not one of those people.

  1. thillythenny reblogged this from howtointernet and added:
    I think that’s great if you live in the city, but a ‘driving tax’ would affect 1) rents in the city b/c this policy...
  2. howtointernet reblogged this from karmcity
  3. pink-squirrel reblogged this from karmcity and added:
    said in this post, I also think higher...SHOULD sway consumers, but as evidenced here…...
  4. confidenceman reblogged this from karmcity and added:
    something called...‘gas tax’, where...heard of this, it’s...
  5. culby reblogged this from karmcity and added:
    This already exists. If you live far away from...job and/or you drive
  6. v1100110 reblogged this from karmcity and added:
    this on some points....45 minute drive to work and contemplate moving to
  7. ejronin reblogged this from karmcity and added:
    wouldn’t say that you’re...only one, but I’d say that you’re in a minority. You may be the...
  8. airhen reblogged this from karmcity and added:
    not. How much does it really cost
  9. ojacko reblogged this from karmcity and added:
    This makes no sense. Tax people for driving more? What about people who can’t afford to live in
  10. ortolano reblogged this from karmcity and added:
    What does annual mileage have...inefficient driving habits?
  11. karmcity posted this