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Corrupt Government Title: Here Comes the Tax Per Mile (And with it more anti-driver tyranny) Oregon home of things uber trendy has become the first state to begin dunning motorists by the mile rather than by the gallon. The pilot program begins July 1 and will be implemented by the Oregon DOT in partnership with something called Sanef ITS Technologies America and Intelligent Mechatronic Systems. Sounds a lot like Cyberdyne Systems from the Terminator movies, doesnt it? And the similarities run a lot deeper than that. To make this work (for Uncle) your car must be fitted with some type of real-time monitoring device that keeps track of your mileage and reports it to Uncle (well, his helpers) who will then either send you a bill or perhaps automatically debit your account. Kind of like federal tax withholding on wheels. In Oregon, this means a little widget like the one you may have seen the white-coated Progressive Insurance Lady hawking. It plugs into the Onboard Diagnostics (OBD) port that all cars manufactured since the mid-1990s have. Then ties into your cars computer, where the data about your mileage and (cue Darth Sideous voice) many other things are stored. Including your speed, rate of acceleration, whether youre wearing a seatbelt. You probably can see where thats headed. In addition, the device has the ability to act as a locator beacon relaying data about where you are, where youre headed. And, of course, where youve been. Were talking send and receive capability here, too. If they can upload your mileage (and other data) they can also transmit instructions to your cars computer to shut er down as punishment for not having paid a traffic ticket, for instance. Or just because they can. Uncle and his acolytes are big fans of just because they can. Keep in mind that this wasnt put to a vote. It was simply decided. (You Chimp fans out there, take note. You bear a heavy burden of guilt for cheering decidership at the national level, which made it increasingly acceptable at the state level.) No one elected the Flos within the Oregon DOT; like the EPA (and the NHTSA) they legislate and decree regardless. So much for consent of the governed, which cant be said with a straight face these days by any person not a blithering idiot (or a partei ideologue). Anyhow, the point is this vehicular eTyranny is going to spread. Oregon is merely a kind of Beta testing ground. Other states will follow. The feds will incentivize the recalcitrant. Within five years, it will be a nationwide regime. And then they will argue that owners of cars built before OBD which do not have the ability to plug in (and be monitored/taxed) arent paying their fair share. These older car owners will then be told their cars must be retrofitted with the necessary electronics or taken off the road. If you cant feel this coming in your bones by now, I cant help you. And you can thank (ironically enough) the governments fuel economy fatwas and its pushing of hybrid and electric vehicle technology for all of it. Remember when we were soothed that such things would be good things because theyd save us money? Fewer fill-ups! Go farther, spend less to get there! Well, instead of being chokeholded by ExxonMobil, were going to be chokeholded by Uncle. Who is pissed because hes been shorted, as he sees it. The increasingly fuel-efficient fleet is using less gas, which means less gas tax collected. This is bad. Less tax extracted being always bad. So, the argument goes, there must be a way to rebalance the scales (in Uncles favor). That way is taxing em by the mile. And so, here we are. But they had to have foreseen this. The reduced revenue stream from the motor fuels taxes as a result of wait for it cars that use less fuel. Which begs a question, or at least makes one wonder
. Could it have been the object of the exercise all along? To use a lateral to get the populace to accept having their driving electronically kept track of? To end-run the pesky resistance of a certain segment of the population to driving cars without OBD ports, computers and black box data recording capability? Could Uncle and his acolytes be that clever? I think so, yes. As has been observed before, when alleged stupidity always (always!) seems to trend in one direction, it implies something other than stupidity. The stupid are all over the place. The smart traject consistently. This, then, is merely another brick in the wall. Driving and the ownership of a car has long been a conditional privilege. No longer a right. This business will simply make it more so. Uncle (and Flo) will be riding shotgun henceforth. But its merely the capstone, a fait accompli. Unless you drive a really old car pre-1970s you already drive the kind of car they want you to drive. With the features and equipment they insist youll have. You are no longer allowed to have the kind of car you want. Not for decades. The drivers license, meanwhile, has become a real ID
your internal passport, without which you become an unperson right now (unable to travel by airplane, car or train) and perhaps much worse down the line. The net cinches tighter. I read recently that something on the order of one-third of all young people in the 16-25 demographic have never had a drivers license and dont want one, either. They appear to have done the math. Cars driving its not what it once was. It used to be about freedom about fun. Now its about being controlled and dunned. No wonder the love affair is headed for divorce court.
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#4. To: Deckard (#0)
They don't need tech to do this. They could just require odometer reports with annual registration, and tax on a per-mile basis. 1 cent per mile. Drive 1000 miles, pay $10. Drive 10,000 miles, pay $100. This makes all roads toll roads, in effects, and lets the toll booths be taken down. This is a simpler user tax. Seems like a good way to do it. I don't see the need for tech though. Just do annual odometer reports.
1 cent per mile. Drive 1000 miles, pay $10. Drive 10,000 miles, pay $100. This makes all roads toll roads, in effects, and lets the toll booths be taken down. This is a simpler user tax. Seems like a good way to do it. I don't see the need for tech though. Just do annual odometer reports. That might be a good model for the future as cars use less gas or even no gas so that the gas tax becomes insufficient.
I think it's a good model for right now. Money is fungible. The gas tax doesn't "go to the roads". It goes into the general fund. All money goes into the general fund, in effect. Send millions in "educational aid" to Israel, to pay for their schools, and that frees up cash for them to pay for weaponry. A dollar is a dollar is a dollar. A penny a mile taxes "the wear on the roads", and provides a good standard way to raise money on every care and motorbike, without reference to age. And gathers taxes from every road, not just toll roads. The gas tax taxes consumption of a pollutant. So, one tax "pays for the roads", while the second tax "pays for the damage to the common air"
and truth is, it's all just raising revenues from an inelastic source (people have to drive) in order to try to balance the budget. A dollar is a dollar.
Larger, heavier vehicles exert greater wear and tear on our roadways, highways & bridges, so I'd suggest taxing them at a progressively higher rate:
Very logical.
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