Anyone ever see the movie "The Last Chase" ? ... 1981... .. It was about future United States where the only transportation that was available was public transportation and you could not own, or even possess a vehicle.
Anyone ever see the movie "The Last Chase" ? ... 1981... .. It was about future United States where the only transportation that was available was public transportation and you could not own, or even possess a vehicle.
Kinda opted until now not to get in on this thread, but I'm at least going to chime in a bit here
Don't think the Coke machine analogy is entirely apt here. First, the vendor wants to put those machines where he's going to make money, and rarely is the person hosting the machine paying for it. Its often the other way around - the vendor offers a cut of the proceeds to the person providing the vending space. Clearly, the guy buying the Coke has no fiscal relationship to the vending machine per se. The only "service" a road provides is, well, "access," and as we're not (yet) tolling all the roads, we're obviously not paying literally to get on that road, so we're not directly "paying for the product." Guy buys a coke, he gets it, he walks away. But the taxpaying (and even non-taxpaying driver, if such a person is primarily only theoretical) driver has ad-hoc access to the road (excepting tolled private state highways, etc., which I assume is a given in the discussion).
The point is that if the monies I remand to the government that are used for highways, it isn't "purely for the soda in the machine" because if I don't put in fifty cents, I don't get a soda. But that doesn't hold true for highways. Whether I've paid a dime or a $1M in taxes, my access to those roads is unfettered. So, yes, technically, you are absolutely right in that I do not "own/have title to" the highway, but I have (or should have) a great deal more influence over its management by virtue of my tax monies than the guy in the office building who tells the Coke guy to put the machine in the break room, and never gives it a second thought...until it jams and doesn't give him a soda.....whereupon a contemporary of Mayor Bloomberg swoops down on him and has him imprisoned for drinking a Coke in the first place....(sarcasm).
As far as the broader issue of mandatory, ubiquitous government monitoring of vehicle movement, I believe its reprehensible. We now already have the ability to track and remote-stop a vehicle, which is great for stolen cars. Not so for someone doing nothing of consequence living in a society of presumed innocence.
A collection of essays by the late automotive journalist David E. Davis Jr. came with a foreword by P. J. O'Rourke, which I am happy to endorse despite my support for streetcars and such:
David knows what every sixteen-year-old knows, but what no elected official, self-appointed quality-of-life advocate, or double-domed social visionary seems to — that cars confer upon us the ultimate and most important of human freedoms. We can leave.
My total vehicular costs (regular maintenance such as tires, oil changes etc. + car insurance + gas money) is around $84/week for a paid off car. Doesn't sound like much, but I am a regular working class individual who brings home about $400 a week. When you total up your transportation costs, it costs a lot to drive. I couldn't imagine having a several hundred dollar a month car payment on top of the O&M cost.
It does indeed cost a lot to drive -- more than some folks are willing or able to shell out. (I once figured that my previous car cost me 59 cents for each and every mile.) Hence, transit options.
If we had a decent transit system, I wouldn't eliminate my car altogether, but even reducing my driving by a half would reduce my cost by about 30 bucks a week net saving. (Transit also costs to use) around an extra $1600 a year I could use for other things.
ah-ha, that is the crux of the dilemma. What if the car didn't allow you to leave?
I maintain that walking is the most important of human freedoms. If you take away my ability to walk - through Euclidian zoning segregation you have in essence denied me my most basic of rights and force me to own an expensive automobile while at the same time taxing me even more to pay for a place to drive it, and on top of that a tax on the fuel that makes it go. How is that for 'freedom of the automobile'?
I wonder how the tea party feels about this.
This doesn't restrict you from moving somewhere that you can walk for everything.
I like both options. I like the ability to drive, and want to live and work in a place where I'm not required to drive everywhere. I don't see why I can't have both.
Building a city that is entirely reliant on the automobile just doesn't make good sense.
So in 77,000 sq miles the only place with true freedom of movement is a tiny 8 block area.
Fair enough - so let's say there are 80 Deep Deuce type places in Oklahoma (and of course we know there isn't). So in 77,000 sq miles there are only 640 blocks where freedom of movement actually exist? Everywhere else I would have to buy my freedom of movement which depending on location and income can be anywhere from 35% to 50% of take home pay. Does the Tea Party know about this hidden mandate?
Gotta be honest, there is no bigger advocate for public transit than me, but I love a great looking car.
I wish the Tesla Model S was cheaper. In lieu of that, I may get a Mustang. LOL
Mustang..... Vette..., it's amazing what a few curves w/ horsepower can do. The Tesla Model S is there too. They are definately hitting the mark of what the consumer wants.
No, you can walk anywhere you like (private property excepted). But there is a cost in time and effort. With a car you are paying for convenience, not freedom. Your freedom doesn't go away because its inconvenient. The same holds true regardless of whether you travel by car, horse & buggy, jet, etc.
I'll be sticking with my '07 Ford Five Hundred for a bit. it gets decent gas millage and my wife love driving it. If I could buy new I would get a '14 Taurus.
I have always bought a "practical car". The motorcycle took up the slack. But after driving various cars, the Mustang is for me. If the Tesla was at $30,000 $35,000, I would do that.
Curves, nice engine, Brembo brakes.... and maybe a glass roof for non-hail raining days.
But yeah, if your going to drive around in a bubble, you might as well pick the right bubble for you.
I would opine on which streetcar models are sexy, but that would directly feed into all of the MAPS 3 Transit conspiracy theories propogated by Ed & Company.
I think you could cut fuel consumption, gridlock and pollution in half if not down to a quarter. Just by teaching people better driving habits and steering away from the bankers hours schedules that so many businesses run on these day. Not every business needs to run on a 8-4 or 9-5. In fact many would probably be more profitable if they opened later in the day because more people are out and about.
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