Will You Be Shopping At Boots This...
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No best answer has yet been selected by Dom Tuk. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I agree completely with the two above comments.
I too live in a small village,our nearest supermarket/shopping area is 12 miles.The bus service is non existant,only four buses a day,and (as above) they do not go to the town,only with two changes;and no buses AT ALL on a Sunday!
My neighbour works shifts(in the town),earliest start 7am,latest finish 9pm;just how is he supposed to get to and from work(if he doesn't/can't pay the mileage charge)? A Taxi home would cost �24.00!
These politicians live in big cities,with public transport AND chauffeur driven cars.They should come into the REAL World for a change!
It's another stealth tax!
How can it be a "stealth tax" if you've been told about years before its introduction???? Not very stealth to me.
Also if you live in the countryside - won't you benefit from having the lowest charge per mile? Could be a few pennies per mile for all we know at this stage!!! Its the people in the towns and cities who all leave work in the rush hours and whos entire journey is on major congested roads who will be hardest hit in terms of cost per mile
Oh and whilst i agree with you on alistair darling, the money wouldn't be spent on public transport. It would instead by spent on widening motorways, building by-passes and creating ridiculous traffic calming schemes like in the heavily congested town where i live.
No matter how good the public transport is, a lot of people simply won't use it. Any move to better public transport would first mean introducing more roads in order to divert the traffic and allow public transport to work better. Its the congestion caused by cars, lorries etc which delays buses in the first place. So you'd have to spend a fortune first to divert traffic from towns via buses, then introduce buslanes, then watch as people still don't use public transport as they have their new bypasses to drive on until they get busy 10 years later.
People are literally going to have to be forced to use public transport. Not because the buses are dirty, late, just because they have freedom to drive and driving gets them there quicker. The benefits of driving are obvious and clear. But maybe the freedom needs to be controlled
A pay as you go system of driving? I was under the impression we already had this and called it fuel, the more you drive the more you use i.e. the more you pay! It�s a very easy system to administer and control, and very hard to get round paying... but instead we are meant to believe that launching satellites to monitor every car on the roads and then sending all the drivers a bill at the end of the month is the way forward. Have we all finally gone mad?
The system is unworkable for some very obvious reasons.
The cost of administration alone will be enormous,
Criminals will come up with a way of getting round the tax by removing or altering the tracking devise in the car, so it is only the law abiding that will be punished yet again.
It will remove the incentive to have small cost / fuel efficient cars as you will have to pay the same whatever you drive (increase pollution?)
I think that this is simply another thinly veiled attempted to monitor and control us once again, link compulsory ID cards with monitoring by satellite of everyone�s movements and I think you have to agree that our traditional civil freedoms are being eroded at an alarming rate. In fact this obviously goes hand in hand with the ID card, it is a great way to make sure the majority of the population do not move house or leave an area without informing the government e.g. they can�t lose anyone who owns a car. Obviously they will monitor the movements of individuals, issue speeding fines automatically etc.
I�m going to have to stop, the more I write the more annoyed I get. I just despair the present political system � I think I might have to get involved in it just to try and stop them / slow them down
re: the comment we already have a system which is the tax on fuel. Judging by the amount of congestion currently, it obviously doesn't work. Putting it up to a level that does just means people go out and having protests like in 2000. And i'm sure driving once a year to cornwall isn't going to break the bank. If you were regularly driving, every day for example, then its going to hurt. But a couple of times a year isn't.
If this idea was bought in and everyone could still afford to do everything they can now, and did do everything and more that they can now without second thought, it obviously wouldn't be working!
And why would you be worried about getting fines for speeding (which is issued as a result of someone breaking the law) or people knowing you and your car had changed adress?
I don't think the government would actually want to monitor everyones every movement! Why would they unless you were a suspected or actual criminal?
My maffs tell me that:
Avg mileage per year ...say 10,000
Avg cost per mile for London area say 60pence thats �6,000
Avg mpg say 50, thats 200gallons at say �4/gallon thats �800
So to do my average mileage its going to cost me the best part of �7,000 per year?????? I already spend �2,000 on public transport per year, flip me, I'm skint just thinking about it!! Someone tell me my maffs is wrong...
They know too much about us already? Well to be honest, why would the government be that bothered that they would want to know everything about ME!?! I don't flatter myself in thinking think they'd be tracking my every move etc. I'm not that special. Liberty shmiberty. As for a nation of stay ins - perhaps the nation should get out and walk a bit more often and loose some weight. I see that apparently 75% of males and 66% of women will be overweight within 5 years in thise country if trends continue. Maybe we can reduce peoples dependancy on NHS resources if people get out more. But of course its part of our rights in having liberty to be overweight, then be a burden on the NHS and then complain that the NHS is rubbish and the waiting lists are too long.
Away from that tangent, I see people mentioning high petrol costs, has it not been mooted that fuel tax will be abolished or at least heavily reduced? Surely there would rightly be uproar if both were to happen?
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