Posted on 07/07/2002 10:52:42 AM PDT by John Jorsett
Edited on 04/13/2004 3:29:34 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
SACRAMENTO - Tapping into the outrage among conservatives about recently approved legislation to reduce tailpipe emissions, Republicans plan to attack Democrats for a string of policy moves they say amounts to a "war on drivers."
Gov. Gray Davis has backed more than doubling vehicle license fees, borrowing money from the state's highway account and forcing automakers to lower greenhouse gases produced by their vehicles, a measure automobile manufacturers say will boost the cost of cars.
(Excerpt) Read more at bayarea.com ...
Believe me, they've tried. They've been flushing gas tax money down the toilet of public transit for years, to no avail. Governor Davis, at the dedication ceremony of a new section of freeway a few years ago, declared that it was the last one that would be built in California. Yet no matter what they do: diamond lanes, trolleys, subways, buses, yada yada yada, people just insist on driving their cars. It's time those idiots in government face reality and start spending the money on building more roads and relieving congestion.
True story: I was commuting from downtown San Jose to northern Santa Clara, a distance of about ten miles. I was taking one, major bus up one line to get to work, no transfers or anything. Well, the buses proved to be so unreliable that I started leaving earlier and earlier to be sure I got to work on time. I was finally getting out to the bus stop TWO HOURS early, hoping to get one that wouldn't break down or run out of gas(!) on the way to my job. This to travel ten miles, a distance I could drive (at the time) in about fifteen minutes.
The net effect was to not only drive me into owning a car, but to ensure my perpetual hostility to all forms of mass transit. Mass transit is socialized transit. Socialized ANYTHING results in poor, unreliable service, with no-one to be held accountable. To this day you couldn't pay me to ride a bus, I'd rather walk.
Otherwise known as concerned tax paying consumers.
Yeah, right. They have the Republicans best interests at heart- you bet.
His liberal elitism is showing. If you don't agree with him, you are uneducated. I guess it's the liberals own fault they have to live with us conservatives since they failed to educate us properly in their socialist school system.
One can look at the outrage over license fees in Virginia to see just how touchy this subject can become.
This is the sleeper issue of 2002. It is an issue that litterally affects, personally, millions of Californians.
And the Democrats are on the wrong side of it.
This is because the Democrats are beholden to the radical greens in their midst. Forget jobs. Forget transportation. Forget unions. Forget the economy. For Democrats, what matters over everything (including putting food on your table every night) is that "the environment" be protected (even if humans pay the price with their lives).
Probably not, but then again...
If they were REALLY concerned about the environment they would invest more heavily in mass transit and provide a viable alternative to owning a vehicle.
California has the toughest emission standards in the U.S., which makes it more viable to own a less polluting vehicle. While SoCal has a long way to go on mass transit, BART is one of the best systems in the country. It's not ideal, but it's not bad.
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Yes, it's pretty bad. How much Bart riding do you do? I avoid Bart's strangely damp sticky seats as much as possible.
Yes, they need to be very resourceful. Supporting all those illegals can be pretty costly.
Just where do they expect this power to come from and what makes them so sure that the generation of that energy source won't cause pollution (nuclear waste, smoke from coal, etc.).
Quite a bit, back in the day but I left the area. BART occasionally sucked badly. More often, it ran on time and got the job done, and it's far better than buses for longer distances.
I avoid Bart's strangely damp sticky seats as much as possible.
Probably a good move. I never paid as much attention to seat humidity, evidently.
BTW, I've got no problem with fuel-efficient commuter cars. Single-occupant SUV's are a bad joke, not to mention that most of them handle like crap.
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