FLCC> Is the NY State Senate nuts?
bianchitt at stny.rr.com
bianchitt at stny.rr.com
Thu May 8 12:26:39 EDT 2008
I do not know how old any of you are, but this has been a forgotten issue in Wash. since the gas crisis during Carter's time in office. All they are doing is putting out the fire and not dealing with the problem and or cause of what is going on. The average person will be hurt no matter what is done for the average wage earned does not rise as fast as everything else. We are not looking at a recession folks, but a depression. The *&%$* has hit the fan and we are getting it right in the face.
Wayde---- rob at cginy.net wrote:
> >>This is the main reason imho why the tax reduction is madness. Gas taxes
> >>should be *increased* to address the true issues.
>
> I don't necessarily agree. That's a rather short-sighted solution.
>
> While it's very true that we pay FAR less than many other 1st world
> countries for gasoline, our society is SO car-dependent that simply
> raising the prices to where we can't afford to drive is not. If the tazes
> are raised that cost will not only hit you at the gas pump, it will hit
> you at the grocery store/department store/hardware store/pub because
> food/clothes/hammers/beer will cost that much more to transport to a
> retailer near you. No matter what, the poor schlub barely making ends
> meet will be the one to bear the brunt of that burden.
>
> I totally agree that something needs to be done, should have been done
> years ago, to limit our dependence on oil but huge drastic changes to the
> cost could ripple out to disrupt the entire economy as gas prices dictate
> part of the cost of almost every thing we need or want. Simply punishing
> the consumer isn't an effective answer. We need to work from the top
> down, not the other way.
>
>
>
> --
> "Carpe Diem, quam minimum credula postero"
> -Horace
>
> > Mike F wrote:
> >> You said
> >> > the waste of an opportunity to let the market, for once, work
> >> > its so-called magic in the right direction.
> >>
> >> Do you really think that anything resembling a free market applies to
> >> the handling of gasoline or oil in our economy?
> > Whether free or not, if gas is expensive enough it *will* lead to
> > reduced use of gas. In this sense, the market would lead to desirable
> > consequences in this case.
> >
> > This is the main reason imho why the tax reduction is madness. Gas taxes
> > should be *increased* to address the true issues.
> >
> > Andrejs
> >
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> >
>
>
>
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--
Wayde E. Herneisey
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