$3.87 in Connecticut. Fucking sucks.
I want American prices![]()
And what if public transport is non-existent, impractical or otherwise unavailable? What do those people do?But many people don't need their car [...]
Besides, car owners are leeches on society anyway, with double or triple the gas tax they would pay a fairer share of the costs they inflict on the tax payer.
You think it’s bad where you live? Try being without a car in Los Angeles. It’s like having your legs cut off.Around here, public transit is great if you need to go to New York City. Anywhere else? Well, tough shit.
So I'm assuming you're gonna ditch your car, right?At my nearest gas station:
1,469/L Regular
1,449/L Diesel
I want American prices![]()
I don't. Gas prices can't be high enough as far as I'm concerned, encourages people to use alternative transportation instead of stinking up the city.![]()
And what if public transport is non-existent, impractical or otherwise unavailable? What do those people do?But many people don't need their car [...]
Besides, car owners are leeches on society anyway, with double or triple the gas tax they would pay a fairer share of the costs they inflict on the tax payer.
What a ridiculous - and dare I suggest, Eurocentric - generalisation. See Holdfast's post above, which is an excellent response to such a laughable assertion.
Is that in euros or did you convert it to US dollars?$8.41 per gallon.
Hmmm. So half of "construction and maintenance" comes from the taxes I pay, and the other half of "construction and maintenance" come from the taxes I pay.gas taxes only cover half of highway construction and maintenance. There's ~$100 billion a year in subsidies.
46% of adult Americans don't pay taxes, your point?In Milwaukee, according to the 2000 census, 21% of households didn't have a car.
How many of that 16.5% eat food that arrived in the city by truck? Sound like the portion of their taxes that subsidize the road system was well employed.Even "car-centric" cities like Los Angeles have large populations without cars (16.5% in LA)
Okay, if the majority of people gave up their personal vehicles and began riding public transportation (ie buses), that mean that we would need many more buses, not just to carry the extra people on existing routes, but also to cover previously un-serviced areas, where buses never went before. And the buses would have to cover these areas 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, because America is a 24/7 society.The health care costs from air pollution
And how much of that subsidy come from people who both have cars and also pay taxes, most?free parking reflects a subsidy to drivers of much more than $100 billion a year
In Seattle it's only 23%. Largest percentage comes from property taxes, taxes from people who in some cases don't ride buses.currently, transit likely gets a greater proportion of its revenue from direct user fees
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