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California Considers Tracking Your Car

dan_sdot writes "California's budget problem has led the state to consider desperate measures: taxing you based on how much you drive. The only problem is the way they propose to do it. California is now proposing to put GPS devices on all new cars to track how far people drive and tax them accordingly."

902 comments

  1. Dont they already do this? by slash-tard · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Via the very large tax on gas?

    1. Re:Dont they already do this? by cephyn · · Score: 5, Informative

      Did you read the article? oh wait, I'm not new here, so no, you didn't.

      Since a prius will drive much further on a tank than a person in an H2, if both individuals drive 100 miles, the person in the H2 pays significantly more in taxes. They're proposing to change the system so that its based on how far you drive, not how much gas you use.

      --
      Moo.
    2. Re:Dont they already do this? by Rufus88 · · Score: 4, Funny

      No, see, the problem with this suggestion is that it fails to take into account differences in fuel economy. The gas tax unfairly favors those who drive energy-efficient cars, and unfairly burdens the folks who exercise their god-given right to drive Hummers and SUVs. We need a mileage tax that levels the playing field.

    3. Re:Dont they already do this? by ke6 · · Score: 3, Informative

      The way it was said on the morning radio, KROQ's Kevin and Bean, was that this was coming about because too many fuel efficient cars meant the amount of monies recieved from gas taxes was reduced. So by taxing the number of miles driven a year, they can more accuratly pay for the roads.

    4. Re:Dont they already do this? by dbond · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Talk about overengineering! If gas/petrol was taxed higher, they could avoid this completely. I suspect what they really want to know is who's where when and how fast they are going. So the can fine you. 'Cos you speed. Just like everyone else. David

    5. Re:Dont they already do this? by LemonFire · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It would be so easy to adjust the tax rate on gas as the usage of gas goes down to compensate for this.

    6. Re:Dont they already do this? by fossa · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Exactly. And if they really wanted to tax "time on the road" rather than "fuel burned", couldn't they ask you to report your vehicle's mileage on a yearly basis? Areas with emissions testing (California?) already report mileage; it shows up in online VIN reports. Sounds somewhat less intrusive.

    7. Re:Dont they already do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heh, you think you pay a very large tax on gas? Take a look at this comparison for some other countries: Fuel Tax Rates comparison.

    8. Re:Dont they already do this? by ackthpt · · Score: 2, Informative
      Via the very large tax on gas?

      Not nearly enough, from what I see. California is supposed to be one of the most expensive places to live, with housing and taxes, but don't believe all of it.

      I judge whether the price of gas is high or not by the number of big-ass trucks and SUV's I see cruising the roads and they're still hot sellers, so the price of gas isn't too high, yet.

      In terms of taxes, Californians aren't taxed any more, on average then the rest of the country. Actually, all together taxes are fairly low in the state. Biggest problem is the way it's spent, or more importantly not spent. Schools in Cal, which were once top notch are in the bottom third nationally in terms of funding. Consider that a teacher has to be paid fairly high on average to live here (housing mostly) and you can see there's little left for school upkeep, instruction, programs, etc.

      I'm keenly aware of this as I now work for a school district in an area which has some of the richest and poorest of Californians in the same district.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    9. Re:Dont they already do this? by squidinkcalligraphy · · Score: 1

      So they're changing things to make it better to be less energy efficient? Makes sense to me...

      --
      "I think it would be a good idea" Gandhi, on Western Civilisation
    10. Re:Dont they already do this? by Traa · · Score: 1

      I am originally from the Netherlands but live in California and I can tell you that the California tax on gas is nowhere near as large as it can get. The Dutch pay at least twice as much for gas at the pump and that has not stopped them from driving. The situation is far from the same but once the state of California figures that they can get about as much tax income as they need by increasing the gas tax I bet they will. Protest will be limited to the usual grumbling and yelling on and offline without any major consequences.

    11. Re:Dont they already do this? by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 1

      You drive a big expensive car and your complaining about running costs?

      Perhaps you should be speaking to your car dealer to get something more fuel efficient.

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    12. Re:Dont they already do this? by LemonFire · · Score: 1

      Well living in California I can tell you this, any guvernor candidate offering to repeal this new tax will get elected.

      If Arnie doesn't realize that the main reason why he got elected was because he repealed the tax on car tags he'll be ousted just as fast. Any candidate promising to repeal this new car tax will win.

      We Californians love our cars a little bit too much than is good for us.

      -- Vote for Cowboy Neal, say NO to taxes on SIGs...

    13. Re:Dont they already do this? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1, Redundant

      So, they're going to start charging responsible people (i.e., Prius drivers) the same as rich assholes? Doesn't that strike anybody else as really really stupid, especially for California?

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    14. Re:Dont they already do this? by BlueFashoo · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's actually a little less than the Federal Tax on gas.

      The federal excise tax on gas 18.4 cents/gallon, whereas the state tax in 18.0 cents/gallon.

      http://www.energy.ca.gov/gasoline/gasoline_taxes .h tml

      According to this site:
      http://api-ep.api.org/filelibrary/ACF15F.PD F
      the state excise tax is .4 cents/gallon less than the national average.

      I would much rather increase the tax on gas another 5 or 10 cents than put some sort of tracking device in my car.

      --
      Nice Marmot
    15. Re:Dont they already do this? by stienman · · Score: 1

      Ah, so it's really a way to add a higher gasoline tax on more fuel efficient cars.

      In other words, they'd be shot down in an instant with a higher gas tax, but 'how many miles you drive' seems somewhat more egalitarian.

      If the tax went soley to road maintenance and traffic control then sure, go for it. But these taxes are likely used for the overall state budget.

      -Adam

    16. Re:Dont they already do this? by ExInferus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      While it doesn't apply to all non-hybrids, H2's in particular probably cause a lot more road wear and tear than a Prius would, just due to the weight difference. So unless they plan to account for that to, it still doesn't really balance out.

    17. Re:Dont they already do this? by Bullet-Dodger · · Score: 1

      People who don't get sarcasm are fun.

    18. Re:Dont they already do this? by Sancho · · Score: 2, Informative

      Doesn't work if you EVER drive out of state. You need GPS to ensure that you only tax people for the time spent on YOUR roads.

    19. Re:Dont they already do this? by hazem · · Score: 2, Informative

      couldn't they ask you to report your vehicle's mileage on a yearly basis?

      My state is toying with this too. The problem is that they don't have a legal right to tax you for time you drive on your private roads or more importantly, out of state. I live on the border of Washington & Oregon, so without either some kind of border crossing monitoring station, or a GPS system, they can't know when I'm actually driving in the state.

      If this is such a grave issue, then we should just raise the gas tax overall. Or maybe a sliding tax can be used based on the model/year of car.

    20. Re:Dont they already do this? by anakin357 · · Score: 1

      The problem with that is if you go out of state on vacation, you would be taxed for that mileage in another state, which they have no business taxing.

      Or how about someone who has a winter home in California, and drives half the year mostly in Washington or Canada but has the car registered in CA? It would not be fair to go on mileage alone.

      What would be fair is if the tax on fuel was getting less for the state because of higher efficiency in newer cars, just to raise the fuel tax more. Repairing roads can't be outsourced to India, and still costs the same amount it did last year.

      --
      http://www.fsckin.com/
    21. Re:Dont they already do this? by dmitrygr · · Score: 1

      Hasta la vista ba^H^H^Hfreedom track crs, then walking tax, and an excuse to track drivers (aka people), and what then?

      --
      -------
      1. Enjoy your job
      2. Make lots of money
      3. Work within the law

      Choose any two.
    22. Re:Dont they already do this? by Adrenochrome · · Score: 1

      If both the Prius and the Hummer's tires are filled with 35psi of air, they'll put nearly identical pressures on the road. "Nearly" because tires aren't perfectly elastic. Call it maybe a 5% difference.

      Of course, the Hummer will exert its 35 lbs on a lot more square inches at once.

    23. Re:Dont they already do this? by chochos · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I didn't RTFA either, but I don't think they will eliminate or cut taxes on gas, so maybe the system will be based on how far you drive PLUS how much gas you use...

    24. Re:Dont they already do this? by zors · · Score: 1

      It isn't that stupid. Taxes on gas are for maintaining the roads. As cars in general get more and more efficient we'll have to revamp the tax structure. Just because the cars are better for the environment doesn't make them better for the roads.

    25. Re:Dont they already do this? by walt-sjc · · Score: 2, Informative

      You have never been to California have you?

      Yes, you have some wealthy people driving hummers around. However, a Prius is frickin A expensive too! Much more so than a regular car.

      No, in California, if you are poor you can drive a POS car belching smog, and don't have to fix it. If your car is older than 25 years or so, then it's a "classic" and you don't have to pass smog checks. There are no safety inspections because that would hurt the poor.

      California's laws and regulations dealing with vehicles are insane. Frankly California in general is really fucked up which is why I left. Everyone that had a clue saw California's tax problem comming long before it was announced.

    26. Re:Dont they already do this? by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 1

      tis ok, I was ranting about the entire article.
      Just the thought of it makes my blood boil, I think its cos I'm not an American.

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    27. Re:Dont they already do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      especially for California?

      I think you misspelled "even".

    28. Re:Dont they already do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If both the Prius and the Hummer's tires are filled with 35psi of air, they'll put nearly identical pressures on the road. "Nearly" because tires aren't perfectly elastic. Call it maybe a 5% difference.

      Absolutly wrong. I don't think you understand how tire pressure works as far as it putting pressure on the road. A 5,000 lb Hummer is going to put a lot more pressure on the road than a 2,000 lb Prius regardless of tire pressure. If you dropped the Hummers tires down to 10 psi they're still supporting 5,000 lbs.

      You don't think a spare tire filled to 35 psi sitting on the road puts 95% the pressure of the Prius do you?

    29. Re:Dont they already do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you travel out of state you dont buy a new tag for entering that state so your getting a free ride there. Why shoulnd't Cali collect the tax anyway?

    30. Re:Dont they already do this? by Kallahar · · Score: 1

      Just to clarify, the gas tax is supposed to go towards road maintenance, which is more a factor of miles than of fuel efficiency. However, the miles should be multiplied by a weight factor, since a 6400 pound H2 causes a lot more road wear than a 2500 pound mini, and far less than a fully loaded commercial truck (20,000 pounds?).

    31. Re:Dont they already do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I grew up on the east coast and have been living in California for the past 3 years for work. The one thing that really strikes me out is how used to getting ripped off everyone seems to be. They even jump on you if you point it out. Example: Phone company charges taxes that don't exist, electric company double bills, educational institution hires teaches that have never used the software they are supposed to be teaching. But no one complains, if you do complain, you are told to get out of Cali if you dont like (Getting ripped off). Well... OK!


      Honestly, there is no reason to stay here unless you dont like your money. I like girls and bikinis as much as the next guy, but not enough to have every company i do business with rape me financially on a daily basis.


      They thing that kills me the most of that everyone was so up in arms about hte money lost to Enron via gray davis, but now they get JACK SHIT BACK and no one seems to care. Its totally un fucking believable, and there is no question in my mind that California will be the first state to experiece economic despair.


      You want to tax the gas AND the friggin mileage? Buh bye california, you can implode without me. Maybe you should have taken the cue when the big businesses fled your state based on some stupid fucking internet tax you could never get to work properly.


      Having lived here as well, I can attest to you that the average californian CAN NOT MULTIPLY 17 TIMES 3! This land is your land, it sure aint my land, your a fucking moron, im a fucking packing...

    32. Re:Dont they already do this? by ke6 · · Score: 1

      True, but what about people who use big gas guzzlers? They are driving the same amount of miles. You can argue that they can pay more for having the heavy weight that destroys the roads, or that they deserve it for using a gas guzzler.

      My thinking though is that it unfairly hurts people who use a light to medium weight truck for work purposes, who are using the road in a consitant amount.

      The argument for a gas tax is that it pays for the roads. The problem here is that gas consumption is not a consistent gauge of miles driven. I'm not neccesarily a fan of having GPS tracking by the state in my vehicle, but if I only got billed for those miles driven inside the state of California, it could be a real economic advantage to me.

    33. Re:Dont they already do this? by mrchaotica · · Score: 3, Informative

      A Prius is a $20,000 car (before the popularity markup), about the same as a Camry or Accord. An H2 is about a $50,000 car (also before popularity markup). So no, a Prius is not more expensive than a regular car, and emphatically not more expensive than an H2!

      Also, 25 years old would mean cars made before 1980. I don't doubt that there's a lot of '85 - '95 cars on the road, which are also less safe and more polluting, but there can't be all that many 25+ year old cars -- they would either have to have been maintained well, or they would have fallen apart by now!

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    34. Re:Dont they already do this? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Right, so a relatively lightweight Prius with small, low-rolling-resistance street tires wears out the road just as fast as a large, heavy H2 with big knobby off-road tires (that also probably drives more agressively)?

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    35. Re:Dont they already do this? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 2, Interesting

      When will we learn that punitive taxation levied upon groups that we happen to personally disagree with solves nothing, because it just gets the government in the habit of punitively taxing people, and sooner or later we will be the ones being taxed on something that we really want or need. Bad idea all around. That kind of sledgehammer social engineering I can live without, thank you very much.

      No, the problem isn't the SUV or the Hummer or the people that drive them (who I personally detest because most of them can't. Drive, that is.) The problem is the massive investment the global culture has made in the reciprocating internal combustion engine. We need to get away from this technology completely ... it has severe limitations on maximum efficiency that are simply not acceptable in the modern world. A gallon of gasoline, if consumed by, say, an eighty percent efficient engine would drive that Hummer down the road just sipping gas.

      Automobile engines are designed to accommodate the expected peak load that will be applied to them, i.e., when under heavy acceleration or when towing. Unfortunately, no-one drives their car under those conditions all the time, so most of time the engine is loafing, and is in effect oversized for the job. Efficiency suffers significantly under those conditions. On top of that, they only achieve maximum conversion efficiency within a very narrow range of RPMs.

      Penalizing the consumer for poor decisions made by the government and the automobile manufacturer is just wrong. Congress was headed in the right direction when it implemented CAFE (Corporate Average Fuel Economy) some years ago, but they simply didn't go far enough. Automakers can ship toy cars like the Neon which get excellent mileage (but don't make much money) and use those higher-mileage numbers to offset the poor efficiency of the much more profitable SUVs. Remember, it's Corporate Average Fuel Economy.

      And that is unadulterated, pure bullshit. Politics at work. I simply don't believe that a megacorporation such as a General Motors, or a Toyota, hasn't the resources to come up with a power plant capable of burning gasoline with substantially higher efficiency than what we have now. The fact is that there's just a lot of economic inertia in the way, and frankly they're making a ton of money doing things the old way and don't really see a reason to change. But, at some point, they're just going to have to be told: "If you want to market a car in this country, it had better be 75% efficient or better. No exceptions. Deal with it." And when that happens, I won't like the people that drive those Hummers and SUVs any more than I do now, but at least I won't be able to complain about how much gas they use.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    36. Re:Dont they already do this? by whoever57 · · Score: 1
      If your car is older than 25 years or so, then it's a "classic" and you don't have to pass smog checks.
      Not true. Until this year, if a car was 30 year old, then it qualified for exemption of smog checks. Now, what has happened is that the rolling thirty year exemption has been repealed (after being in force for only a very few years) and cars with model years '74 and earlier are exempt.

      Qualification for the exemption is fixed -- it won't include model year '75 and earlier after Jan 2005.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    37. Re:Dont they already do this? by Martin+Blank · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I wish taxes on gas were used for maintaining the roads. If they were, we wouldn't have the severe congestion that gives California such a bad name in terms of traffic.

      Here's what's happening in a nutshell:

      A group of people decided that they wanted to get Californians to start using public transportation and not use their cars for so many things. So they decided to stop building freeways, on the hypothesis that if there was no more room on the freeways, people would stop coming to California. This goes back to Gov. Jerry Brown, and the idea failed miserably.

      Next, they decided to build carpool lanes, which would encourage people to, if not taking public transportation, at least get a few more people in the same car. Wrong again. They don't even have a decent state-wide model for carpool lanes: in SoCal, carpool lanes are carpool lanes 24 hours a day. In NorCal, carpool lanes are carpool lanes only during normal rush-hour traffic, and are normal lanes otherwise. Hence, some freeways have had their capacity increased by anywhere from 20% to 50%, and the lanes are not usable by the vast majority of drivers.

      So then they jacked up gas tax rates, promising to build more freeways and add lanes to the congested parts (except then governors, Democrat and Republican, including Schwarzeneggar, started "borrowing" the funds from the gas tax to pay for general fund stuff, and the roads further deteriorated and failed to get expanded). The increases was also allegedly to encourage people to buy smaller vehicles that would be more fuel efficient and cause less wear and tear on the roads. Despite past measures that had largely failed because the California car culture is basically impossible to buck, people actually did buy newer, fuel-efficient cars (but still drive them alone), and gas tax revenues (and hence funding for pet projects that have nothing to do with the roads) went down.

      So now they're in a corner. How do they get the taxes back? Why, based on mileage, of course! And with a GPS unit, they can also see when you go over the speed limit or perhaps lane change too often and send you automatic tickets or tax your auto insurance (who may also get a report on your driving habits and thus raise the rates on their own). This isn't part of the proposal *yet*, but I can imagine someone is thinking it.

      They're also talking about watching when you're using certain high-use roads, and increase the tax based on congestion, so if you go to work on the 5 through Los Angeles or Orange County at 7:45am, then you get an extra tax because you're helping to cause slow traffic. You know what the really ironic thing is? The people behind this idea are almost exactly the same people who were yelling about how toll roads were going to punish the poor people who couldn't afford them, and now they've come up with a method to not only inflict what are essentially tolls, but to inflict them potentially on every single public road and street in the state.

      (Wow, that's a big nutshell. I wonder if there's a walnut in there.)

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    38. Re:Dont they already do this? by zors · · Score: 1

      How many people actually have H2s? What about cars in between the two extremes?

    39. Re:Dont they already do this? by tho+1234 · · Score: 2, Informative

      In this country, you obey the laws of thermodynamics.

      Technology can't break the laws of physics.

      - There's no way to get around the carnot efficiency in a heat engine. Maybe if billions of dollars were invested into a hydrogen economy you might be able to get up to 40 percent efficency with fuel cells, but if the hydrogen comes from fossil fuels and you account for the losses in the H2 production process, you're better off sticking with internal combustion engines.

      - THere's no way of avoiding newton's second law- F=ma and its derivation E=1/2mv^2. Even if we could make the theoreticlaly impossible 80% engine, a 5 tonne SUV will still consume twice as much energy as a 2.5 tonne car to accelerate.

      -And once you get to speed, there's no way of avoiding fluid dynamics- The drag force is proportional to cross sectional area, so driving a giant car will always waste fuel, no matter how much technology you have.

      No, the answer isn't technology (unless cold fusion gets developed, which is highly unlikely in our lifetimes). The answer is conservation- why spend billions of dollars to develop a 300HP high efficiency SUV when a 150 HP car is enough for people's needs, and a current 150 HP car will consume less fuel than ANY 300 HP SUV made with ANY technology that could ever be developed?

    40. Re:Dont they already do this? by yog · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, that's what the FA says. The problem is that it is a poor basis for raising revenue that perpetuates unfairness. (That's leaving aside the enforceability issues and the simple cost of installing this monstrosity.)

      Consider, for example, how some municipalities make millions of dollars a year from parking fines. In Boston, that's traditionally been a major revenue source, and meter cops were encouraged by quotas to overinterpret the law and nail people who were 12 inches out of compliance with distance to the curb, or 1 minute overdue on their meter, etc. (This only began to subside a bit in the late 1980s after the infamous case of a driver in Boston who pulled over, fell out of his car, and lay on the sidewalk having a heart attack; as you can guess, a traffic cop proceeded to ticket his car WHILE HE WAS LYING THERE and the whole sorry scene was captured in a photograph for the Boston Globe's front page.)

      Anyway, just because cities and towns develop a dependency on this form of revenue does not mean it is a fair or proper way to raise money. In fact, it encourages people to have contempt for the law and for the law to have contempt for people. Stupid, stupid.

      We already pay an enormous amount of taxes to keep our cars on the road. Initial sales tax (in most states), annual excise tax based on the value of the car, automobile insurance which is highly regulated and taxed in most states, gasoline sales tax, tolls, license plate renewal fee, drivers license renewal fee, and speeding and parking fines. No doubt I'm forgetting a few things. Ted Kennedy's luxury tax if your car is > $100K?

      I believe that gasoline actually should be taxed much more than it is. Go ahead, California; raise the gas tax to $1 a gallon. It's regressive taxation, admittedly, especially for contractors who have to drive vans and pickup trucks and the like, but overall it will help spur the adoption of alternative fuels such as corn-based methanol and coal- or solar-based hydrogen, which will be tremendously beneficial long term. And dare one mention public transportation? Cities without practical bus and subway systems--well, the voters should face the music and ante up for these programs, because as the boomer population ages it's going to become ever more important. Twenty years from now there are going to be about 90 million 75-year-olds out there driving; look out, world.

      --
      it's = "it is"; its = possessive. E.g., it's flapping its wings.
    41. Re:Dont they already do this? by RandomCoil · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You've hammered away at taxes on gas but argue that CAFE-like legislation is the right direction. Consider this counter argument:

      Increasing the fuel efficiency of cars through CAFE-type legislation decreases the cost/mile required to operate them. This does not provide any incentive for a vehicle user to travel a shorter distance, rather it allows them to travel further. Legislation like CAFE alone does not work because it does not hit the end user, the consumer, in the one place where she or he will feel it: the pocketbook.

      A gas tax is a better solution in a market-driven economy. It hits the end-user where they will feel it and creates a new demand, in this case for fuel-efficient car. There's a reason that small Japanese cars became popular in the 70's and it sure as heck wasn't fuel efficiency related legislation.

      The government doesn't need to "tell" to megacorporations anything in this case: they'll go where the money is, whether it's in H2's or hybrids.

    42. Re:Dont they already do this? by kevcol · · Score: 1

      In terms of taxes, Californians aren't taxed any more, on average then the rest of the country.

      State income tax rates

      At 9.3 for the high bracket (that has a low threshold of $27k) I'd say California is on the higher end of income taxes, with most other states being in the 5-6% range. For those of us in the LA/SF/SD metro regions we also have way higher than average housing prices and the associated property taxes that accompany those (for the prop. owners). I recently exited the property market here when the economy tanked (and the work dried up) and am looking out of state now for a move. I was born here, so, it's kind of a bummer, but I look forward to new ventures elsewhere. I'm also planning a service business and I don't want to be stifled by the outrageous workers compensation insurance rates in CA.

    43. Re:Dont they already do this? by soft_guy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That's bullshit. A Prius is a tiny car. You can't compare it to a H2 or a Camary. You should compare it to a similar car in size and features - a $10K Toyota Echo.

      The Prius is enormously expensive for what you get.

      --
      Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
    44. Re:Dont they already do this? by jrockway · · Score: 1

      This is completely wrong. The PSI of the tire has nothing to do with how much weight is being put on the road.

      --
      My other car is first.
    45. Re:Dont they already do this? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      No, the old Prius was similar to an Echo. The new second-generation Prius (the popular one) is about the same size as a V6 Camry, and actually has better acceleration.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    46. Re:Dont they already do this? by cubicleman · · Score: 1

      Maybe similar in interior size, but the new Prius is a much smaller and lighter car than the Camry.

    47. Re:Dont they already do this? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Well, the amount of wear-and-tear a car causes tends to be proportional to its weight. Because of this, it still makes sense to pay for the roads through a gasoline tax, since a heavier car has lower gas milage regardless of whether it's a hybrid or not (for example, even the hybrid Ford Escape will only get about 30MPG).

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    48. Re:Dont they already do this? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      So what? Isn't interior size what matters anyway? Smaller and lighter with the same amount of room can only be a good thing! Besides, Soft Guy wanted to compare size and features -- and the features on the new Prius are nice, at least as nice as a Camry.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    49. Re:Dont they already do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so gas will be free? Didn't think so.

    50. Re:Dont they already do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please do not group all hybrid drivers into a group called responsible.

      I live in northern VA. We have multiple methods of getting to work in DC. Seperate HOV lanes (high occupancy vehicle), county and city buses, the metro, private charter buses, van pools, the rail system, and slugging[1] (yes, riding with strangers to meet the requirements of HOV). The main reason people buy a hybrid is to take the HOV lanes as they are allowed to without having three people in the car. This is not the most "responsible" method as I stated, there are many other ways to get into the city without driving at all. These people just want to drive and take advantage of the HOV requirement. They would use much less gas using any one of the other methods or even a motorcycle.
      I am kind of bitter because I have a non hybrid car that gets roughly 40-44MPG (real world equal to the average hybrid) and I still do not drive to DC, I slug or take the bus.

      News broadcasts around here report that hybrids have significantly higher sales percentages around areas that allow them to travel on HOV lanes. The sales are not linked to environmental issues, traffic issues, or price of gas. Only to take the HOV lanes and get to work faster.

      [1] It seems odd for some to ride with a stranger but thousands of people get to to and from work this way daily and have for years in the DC area. There are specific park and ride lots built to support this concept by the local counties and some have over 1000 spaces that are filled by 7:30 in the morning. Even the VA department of transportation recognizes and encourages the slugging system by building the parking lots with seperate car staging areas and even putting up electonic signs to direct drivers to the correct waiting lines. Get off the better then thou kick and accept the fact that this concept does work and it does happen regardless of how strange or weird you may think it is.

    51. Re:Dont they already do this? by ArsSineArtificio · · Score: 1
      Go ahead, California; raise the gas tax to $1 a gallon. It's regressive taxation, admittedly, especially for contractors who have to drive vans and pickup trucks and the like, but overall it will help spur the adoption of alternative fuels

      Overall it wil help spur the adoption of Nevada as the place where all of California's businesses moved to.

      --
      All employees must wash hands before seeking equitable relief.
    52. Re:Dont they already do this? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      Yeah, there are problems depending on the HOV laws. Of course, they vary between states: in Georgia (metro Atlanta), you only need two people in the car to use it (or be on a motorcycle), and there are no special considerations for hybrid or conventional economy cars.
      I am kind of bitter because I have a non hybrid car that gets roughly 40-44MPG (real world equal to the average hybrid) and I still do not drive to DC, I slug or take the bus.
      I understand completely; I drive an Accent (which doesn't have great mileage, but still gets ~30MPG). Incidentally, what do you drive? Diesel Golf? CRX?
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    53. Re:Dont they already do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      5 speed GEO Metro. Got it cheap but have had no problems in the 60k miles I've put on. I have a 8 cly Mustang also but do not drive it much ;)

    54. Re:Dont they already do this? by buswolley · · Score: 1

      how about car insurance based on mileage..
      rather, make a gas tax that provides car insurance with the fill up. If you have gas in your car, you have insurance

      --

      A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

    55. Re:Dont they already do this? by Kaboom13 · · Score: 1

      If you had the slightest grasp of engineering, you'd realize how full of shit your claims are. 80% effecient? Can you provide plans for such an engine? If such a thing were easy, or even possible at reasonable tempuratures don't you think the car manufacturers would be after it like it could turn lead into gold? First manufacturer to make a working car capable of such a thing would make a fortune. Every commercial fleet, and every broke ass college kid, would be banging at their door. There is a huge market for a massive leap in fuel effeciency. If you could make a leap large enough to overcome the conversion costs you would sell them as fast as you could make them. People have fuel inefficient cars because cost of the extra gas is overcome by the convenience of the larger more powerful car. And yes engines are designed for the maximum possible load, not the minimum. This is why cars have transmissions, to help (although not fully) alleviate the ineffeciency brought about. Only a fool builds something to meet the bare minimum. A car normally never needs to exceed MPH, but in an emergency you might need to go past that. Overcapacity is feature of cars, not a detriment. You also say we shouldn't be in the business of "sledgehammer social engineering", but then propose Congress set an arbitrary minimum fuel effeciency. Sounds kind of sledgehammer to me, you are dictating what kind of vehicles people can produce and buy. Isn't a car that uses more gas but produces less hazardous pollutants preferable? yet we can't have that car, we need to be 75% (hah!) effecient. Economics already favors fuel effeciency, why not legislate things that affect everyone like pollution, and let economics sort out fuel effeciency.

    56. Re:Dont they already do this? by Mateorabi · · Score: 1

      "They don't even have a decent state-wide model for carpool lanes: in SoCal, carpool lanes are carpool lanes 24 hours a day. In NorCal, carpool lanes are carpool lanes only during normal rush-hour traffic, and are normal lanes otherwise."

      Pshyah. That is because normal rush-hour traffic is 24 hours a day in SoCal. I've run into gridlock in LA at 4 in the freakin morning.

      --
      "You saved 1968." - Ms. Valerie Pringle to the crew of Apollo 8

    57. Re:Dont they already do this? by RandomCoil · · Score: 1
      how about car insurance based on mileage.. rather, make a gas tax that provides car insurance with the fill up. If you have gas in your car, you have insurance
      The down-side to this is, of course, that it doesn't do much to correct bad and/or dangerous drivers. I've seen proposals for this type of no-fault insurance and they're interesting. I'm just not sure I want to let the 10-ticket driver of the Prius pay less than the 0-ticket driver of a Camry for the same coverage.
    58. Re:Dont they already do this? by mdfst13 · · Score: 2, Funny

      "This does not provide any incentive for a vehicle user to travel a shorter distance, rather it allows them to travel further."

      Nah...if that were happening, we would see people moving farther and farther from the cities. First, into suburbs and then even farther, maybe to something called an "exurb." Obviously that isn't happ...

      Oh, wait. It is.

      If a gas tax causes unfairness (because the poor buy as much gas as the rich), it can always be fixed by rebates (possibly means tested but not necessarily).

      A national gas tax would also help in that prices tend to rise in a smaller amount than the tax increase due to demand changes. I.e. some of the tax is born by oil *producers*, rather than consumers (who would be Americans).

    59. Re:Dont they already do this? by soft_guy · · Score: 1

      I'll take your word for it and stand corrected. When I looked at the Prius, it was $28,000 and looked like an Echo. It seemed like an atrociously bad deal to me. If you are saying they improved it, then great.

      Still, you cannot compare it to a Hummer. A Hummer is not exactly a vehicle you buy for value - it is more of an ego vehicle.

      --
      Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
    60. Re:Dont they already do this? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Don't just take my word for it -- I want you to see how cool the new one looks. If you went to a dealer that was selling the original for $28K, they must have had a HUGE markup on the addendum sticker (the thin strip next to the real sticker, where they add b.s. dealer installed stuff, like undercoating, to jack up the price). As you can see, the MSRP for the new one is $21,415.

      Also, a Prius is an ego vehicle too, at least in California. They're popular among actresses and such who want to show off how "green" they are.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    61. Re:Dont they already do this? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Ah, now I really see why you're upset -- you couldn't carpool if you tried, since your car isn't big enough!

      [just kidding! (and people make fun of my car, too...)]

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    62. Re:Dont they already do this? by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it happens at that time, but that can happen anywhere. Jams at that hour are almost always a result of CalTrans work or a fatal accident. For the most part, traffic jams run from 6am to 9:30am in the morning and 4pm to 7pm in the afternoons (plus or minus 30 minutes for all times). The CHP on some occasions will allow open use of the carpool lanes, but usually even in construction zones where it's reduced from four or five non-carpool lanes to one, they don't allow it.

      Stupid.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    63. Re:Dont they already do this? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Actually, the smog cutoff was 1975 last I heard. There are still many drivable cars from the late sixties and early seventies out there, and the early seventies saw the birth of the first inexpensive production sports cars, like the Nissan 240Z, so some of them are even still on the road. :)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    64. Re:Dont they already do this? by Thagg · · Score: 4, Informative

      The older Prius (pre-2004) was a tiny car -- in fact, it was basically a re-engined Echo.

      The newer ones are far larger. It's quite a nice four-passenger car, with a reasonably roomy hatchback and other bits of storage space.

      And, the new ones are more powerful and more fuel efficient than the older ones. You just cannot imagine the lengths that Toyota engineers went to to get the last few percent of fuel efficieny and pollution-control. Thermos bottles to retain heat in the coolant, carbon canister to trap startup hydrocarbons, drive-by-wire braking to do only regenerative braking until below 5 MPH, fins and baffles under the car to route air more efficiently...the list is almost endless. It basic Synergy drive, which throws in for free a CVT by basically using electricity the way other cars use transmission fluid, is the best known radical system, but it's only the beginning.

      Ob-topic -- this is an insane scheme. I have to agree with the tinfoil-hat crowd that the only reason this makes sense is to get the GPS units into the cars for some other purposes -- like making it more expensive to drive through downtowns in rush hour (as they do in London, Singapore, and other rediculously congested cities.)

      There are so very many ways that the State (and the state) benefit from more fuel efficient cars, that reducing the incentive to drive them is remarkably short-sighted. Treating the fuel tax as a carbon-dioxide tax really does make sense -- those Hummers and SUV's really do impose a cost on everybody else. Reducing the gasoline-delivery infrastructure is a good thing, from reducing the number of tankers that need to port in California, reducing the number of tankers on the roads, reducing the number of leaky gas tanks under service stations...these reflect costs on everybody that the gas tax goes some part of the way to paying for. Fewer kids dying of asthma would be a good thing.

      If they want more money from the gas tax, they should just raise the tax.

      Thad Beier

      --
      I love Mondays. On a Monday, anything is possible.
    65. Re:Dont they already do this? by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      (This only began to subside a bit in the late 1980s after the infamous case of a driver in Boston who pulled over, fell out of his car, and lay on the sidewalk having a heart attack; as you can guess, a traffic cop proceeded to ticket his car WHILE HE WAS LYING THERE and the whole sorry scene was captured in a photograph for the Boston Globe's front page.)

      So what was the photographer doing?

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    66. Re:Dont they already do this? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Mmm, Z...

      It's true that there are some, even many, drivable old cars on the road, but compared to the total number of cars in California, I bet they're negligable. Moreover, I would hope that somebody with a 240Z would keep it tuned up! Of course, I also fear they would also remove the catalytic converter in hopes of gaining the 0-1HP that would provide...

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    67. Re:Dont they already do this? by Kosi · · Score: 1

      You didn't even read the post? It's about California, not Germany!

    68. Re:Dont they already do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah because size means everything!

      ding dong.

    69. Re:Dont they already do this? by EnglishDude · · Score: 1

      Heh carbon canister... can't be new as my 1992 Vauxhall Nova - cheapest possible Vauxhall car in 1992, mine was also bog standard, no extras etc, has one The engine was introduced in 1990 I think.

      But yeah the Prius does sound good, just wish it was affordable :) Although the govt has a grant for people who buy those cars - it's only £700 but still.

    70. Re:Dont they already do this? by m0llusk · · Score: 1

      It is true that money has been diverted and carpool and transit schemes have been expensive and have not always worked out, but this is an incomplete picture. Since Loma Prieta, bridges and overpasses throughout the state were reconstructed. This took a lot of effort and money. Also, many rights of way have been boxed in with development or border environmentally sensitive areas. These factors limit continuing roadway development. The differences between high occupancy vehicle lanes are interesting, but observations and models both show that these lanes get more use than casual observations indicate and this usage is increasing sharply. Getting rid of the Vehicle License Fee has put pressure on the whole tax system and that indirectly complicates the business of gas tax money being diverted.

      It is also worth noting that the remarks in the post about intent ("groups of people decided that they wanted to get Californians...") are way off. The analysis is much more basic than that and publicly avaialble. Trends in housing, employment, and transportation are analyzed to come up with predictions of where people will be moving. Then plans are made to meet people needs using available resources. The idea that it is easy and cheap to just ad more lanes and freeways is simply not supportable, and even basic investigation will confirm that. If the state were not completely broke and also cutting taxes then working out what roads to build and how and who will pay how much would all be a lot easier.

    71. Re:Dont they already do this? by EnglishDude · · Score: 2, Interesting

      We in the UK already pay much more than $1 per gallon in fuel tax. I paid 82.9p a litre a few days ago to fill up my car. Converting that to US gallons, 3.79 liters into 1 US gallon, so that's £3.14 an US gallon and in dollars that's $5.82 USD per US gallon. IIRC, 75% of the petrol price is tax, that's around $4.40 a gallon fuel tax. And do we have alternative fuels? Do we hell.

      Fair enough, we have LPG and the like but petrol stations supplying them are still rare and prices are around 38 to 40p a litre, cars needs to be converted into LPG (around £2,000 but then again in the long run it will pay itself off and there's government grants for that) and LPG isn't that much better your-run-of-the-mill petrol.

      No hydrogen powered cars, electric cars are still painfully rare, etc etc.

    72. Re:Dont they already do this? by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      So then they jacked up gas tax rates, [...], people actually did buy newer, fuel-efficient cars (but still drive them alone), and gas tax revenues (and hence funding for pet projects that have nothing to do with the roads) went down.

      Maybe the prices were not high enough to deter from driving. In Germany, there was a modest decline in vehicle use when the price exceeded 1 Euro/liter.
      At the current exchange rate of 1.30Dollar/1 Euro, that would be 4.91 dollars per gallon. Right now, prices are around 1.10 Euro/liter (5.4 dollars per gallon). Drivers are moaning and in some cases driving less, but the overall impact on traffic remains low.

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    73. Re:Dont they already do this? by kbmccarty · · Score: 1

      I suspect what they really want to know is who's where when and how fast they are going. So the can fine you. 'Cos you speed. Just like everyone else.

      Hmm, on the bright side, if this passes (and then the state starts using GPS to give everyone automatic fines for speeding), we might see an initiative to raise the speed limit to something reasonable.

      --
      - Kevin B. McCarty
    74. Re:Dont they already do this? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Removing the catalytic converter does not provide a linear benefit in performance. If you have made other upgrades to your car, the cat can be holding you back, for example a 2.5" non-high-flow cat in the middle of a 3" exhaust system. I have a 2.5" high flow in the middle of a 3", that's goofy enough :) But, it was the only cat I could afford with the proper flanges.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    75. Re:Dont they already do this? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but the solution to that is getting a 3" cat, not removing it entirely. People who remove the cat are completely irresponsible; there's no way any performance benefit they'd get would be worth the emissions.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    76. Re:Dont they already do this? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      California makes it so hard to be smog-legal that basically any automotive enthusiast who can get away with not being in compliance tends to choose to be as non-smog-legal as possible. If California would just change to doing emissions-only testing then the whole system would make much more sense. The fact is that people are going to make their cars not pass smog, and there's nothing they can do about it - it's basically just like software piracy. Unless they can control your car completely, they can't prevent you from hopping it up with bolt-ons or an engine swap, and just restoring the car to a factory condition every two years when you have to smog check. For a car like mine, where an engine swap takes about six hours tops, this is an entirely reasonable way to go about things. Personally I wouldn't be looking for ways to cheat the system if the system weren't so fucking ridiculous. I probably will install a test pipe later, when I have a turbocharged system - right now my 2.5" high-flow cat should have plenty of flow for my engine. If being the least bit out of compliance means that you fail entirely, there is no motivation (besides wanting to care for the environment - but a fuel-injected vehicle with no cat is going to run cleaner even than some vehicles with cats, if they are not computer controlled, and will certainly put out less pollution hour for hour than a leaf blower or chain saw) to try to be as close to compliance as possible. Like most systems in California, this one is broken.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    77. Re:Dont they already do this? by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

      Development and environmentally-sensitive areas are by far the minority of the reasons why the money isn't being spent, and have nothing to do with why a freeway with a rapidly decaying surface isn't being repaved. It has to do more with things like this, when $3.3 billion in gasoline tax revenue was used for general fund projects this year alone. Davis did the same thing on a fairly regular basis, as did Wilson. Even when Prop 42 was passed by California voters, mandating gasoline taxes be used solely for road projects, Sacramento got around that by "borrowing" the funds for purposes of balancing the budget, rather than cutting their projects.

      I know that freeway construction is not cheap, nor is it always easy, but the simple fact that California is still growing rapidly cannot be ignored. We either accept the fact that California has a strong car culture and spend the money on new freeways or surface rail projects (I'm still ticked that the light rail project to link several cities in Orange County was hacked almost to death), or we deal with the gridlock.

      Riverside County is a perfect example of this, where the 91 freeway is the primary artery into Orange County and significant parts of Los Angeles County. They've recently completed the process of adding a lane in each direction (for a total, IIRC, of four lanes, plus the carpool/toll lanes) through a combination of adding a few feet to each side and adjusting lane widths, but that's being done by a cooperation of the Orange County Transit Agency and Riverside County and cost several million dollars. However, even then the road is still locked up every morning, and plans exist for FIFTY THOUSAND additional homes to be built there in the next few years, with permits for nearly 20,000 already in hand. That's going to put tens of thousands more cars on those freeways, many of them on the 91, and the jobs are still mostly not in Riverside. They're off in Orange and LA Counties, meaning the still-crunched 91 and the often-jammed 15 freeways, not to mention the 215, 60, 10, and 71 (which is itself in bad shape from routing three lanes of traffic into one because of a widening project that never seems to end), will continue to be overfilled.

      The most reasonable solution I've seen so far is double-decking the freeway, but a lot of people don't like it because of what they saw after the Loma Prieta earthquake when sections of the upper Nimitz Freeway collapsed onto the lower level. Others don't like it because of cost concerns. But it's the least expensive way to handle things without taking surrounding land through eminent domain for ever-widening freeways, some of which would have to reach eight or ten lanes in each direction for a permanently smooth traffic flow.

      At the very least, let's see some of the interchanges redesigned. The 101/405 and 5/10/60 interchanges are badly in need of a complete rebuild. They did this at the 5/22/57 interchange in Orange County (not-so-affectionately known as the Orange Crush Interchange) and it really improved things by smoothing the flow, making the interchange more intuitive, and adding capacity to the individual interchanges that comprise the Crush. It took time and money to do, but when it opened, drivers were saving 10-15 minutes each way through a mere 2-3 miles of traffic.

      However, without the money from the gasoline taxes, there's really not much that can be done. The 91 project I mentioned cost a few million dollars and was spent by local governments with the permission of CalTrans. Local governments cannot, by and large, afford the scale of costs necessary for the overhaul needed of the public highway system. That money should be coming from the coffers of the state containing the gasoline taxes that we pay that are supposed to be used for this kind of thing in the first place.

      I won't be surprised if this kind of thing leads to a ballot initiat

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    78. Re:Dont they already do this? by ackthpt · · Score: 1
      For those of us in the LA/SF/SD metro regions we also have way higher than average housing prices and the associated property taxes that accompany those (for the prop. owners).

      Ah, but property taxes, for the dollar cost of the property, are very, very low. Since Prop. 13 slashed property taxes the balance of state revenues has had to be shifted elsewhere.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    79. Re:Dont they already do this? by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Carbon dioxide helps plants. Trees, lawns, and most importantly, crops, grow faster, stronger, more disease-free and drought-resistant in high CO2 environments. Carbon dioxide helps farmers.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    80. Re:Dont they already do this? by jmodule · · Score: 1

      Taking pictures, like any good photographer would be. ;-)

      But seriously since I haven't seen the picture and I assume you haven't either, we don't know if the victim was surrounded by EMS personnel or was just lying alone on the pavement. If the victim was being helped by EMS then there's no sense in the photographer getting in the way.

      However for the cop to write a ticket while all this was going on is a different matter entirely.

      --
      The jModule
    81. Re:Dont they already do this? by kevcol · · Score: 1

      I do understand that (I was in HS when that prop was passed) but the inflated property values mean the taxes aren't cheap- just cheaper percentage-wise of the value. My $400k house was costing about $3500 a year in property taxes. It certainly was helpful that the taxes were not double that, but it was still quite a big chunk to chew when my income dropped after a couple layoffs. With other higher costs of goods and services, I would still submit that life in metro-CA is significantly more expensive than other places.

      Good article in today's SF Chronicle
      And in the San Diego Union-Tribune

      Honestly, I'm not the only one in the situation. :-) It took me longer than normal to want to settle down (travel, career changes, etc.), so I am paying for it by being behind the market.

    82. Re:Dont they already do this? by ibis · · Score: 1

      Right, if they just wanted the mileage, they could require that it be read at each registration renewal and your tax based on that...

    83. Re:Dont they already do this? by ackthpt · · Score: 1
      My $400k house was costing about $3500 a year in property taxes.

      Back in 95-96 and 96-97, I paid about the same in property taxes on a $92,000 house in a small city in rural Michigan.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    84. Re:Dont they already do this? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      We need a new moderation option: "-1: Ignorant"

      However, this particular post is so completely ignorant of middle-school-level physics that it needs a "-3: Stupid"

    85. Re:Dont they already do this? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      We need a new moderation option: "-1: No sense of humor"

    86. Re:Dont they already do this? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      The answer is conservation- why spend billions of dollars to develop a 300HP high efficiency SUV when a 150 HP car is enough for people's needs, and a current 150 HP car will consume less fuel than ANY 300 HP SUV made with ANY technology that could ever be developed?

      However, you can't put a 150HP engine in an SUV and expect a huge increase in fuel economy. It'd be extremely slow, and still get poor economy because of the basic requirement of energy to get that much mass moving.

      Now if you mean getting rid of SUVs altogether and everyone just having cars, that won't happen either. Americans are in love with their SUVs, and are perfectly willing to vote this way too, even when it means sending troops to war to make sure we have an unobstructed flow of cheap oil to fuel our SUV obsession.

      Therefore, conservation is NOT the answer. There are two answers: technology, or economic collapse. Either we make technology which allows us to have our monster trucks and drive them with less fuel, or we continue on our present path of excessive fuel consumption and foreign wars, and when something in this house of cards falls (either the oil runs out, or the power balance is tipped away from the US), the whole thing will come crashing down causing a complete collapse of the US economy, at which point no one will be able to afford to drive any kind of vehicle anywhere.

    87. Re:Dont they already do this? by Adrenochrome · · Score: 1
      http://departments.weber.edu/physics/schroeder/phs x2010/ps9.pdf

      Please complete question 7 of the problem set, then get back to me.

      7. For this exercise you need an inexpensive tire pressure gauge, which you should always carry
      with you anyway if you drive a car. If you don't have one, please borrow one. Then find a
      parked car (either your own or a friend's), and measure the tire pressure. Also measure the
      approximate area of each tire that is in contact with the road surface. Use this information to
      estimate the weight of the car, explaining your reasoning completely. You might as well work
      in English units (force in pounds and area in square inches). If possible, check your answer
      against the number printed in the owner's manual. Otherwise, record the make and model of
      the vehicle so you can check later whether your answer is reasonable.


      For bonus points, answer question 8 too.
    88. Re:Dont they already do this? by soft_guy · · Score: 1

      Considering the features, price, and what you are saving on gas, it seems like it probably meets my criteria of being a "practical" vehicle.

      (I don't own any "practical" vehicles, myself - a Saab, a Vespa, and a Ford 150.)

      --
      Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
    89. Re:Dont they already do this? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I see what you're getting at, but it's still wrong from a reality standpoint.

      Yes, according to theory, assuming the H2 and the Prius both have their tires inflated to 35 psi, the H2 will put the same pressure on the road at any given point under the tires, and the only difference is that the area of the contact patches is 3 times greater for the H2.

      However, 1) as you pointed out, tires are not perfectly elastic, and in fact are very far from it, considering they have a very specific shape; a tread with steel belts, and a sidewall, and only the tread only touches the ground unless your tire is seriously underinflated. I think 5% is a gross misunderestimation of the difference between simplistic theory and reality here. And 2) the pressure at any point is only part of the problem, the other is the overall amount of weight. And of course, the H2 still weighs 3 times what the Prius does. Now I don't know how nonlinear the relationship between overall weight and apparent road damage is (assuming identical tire pressures), but this might be a factor as well.

      But for a real-world demonstration, try this: get on a road bike with the tires inflated to 100 psi (this is actually a little low for road bikes now), and run over your friend's foot. Also look for any road damage. There probably won't be any road damage at all, even under a microscope, and your friend might get a little bruise but that's it. Now, get in a tractor-trailer, and run over your friend's foot with the front tire, and then, with the truck stopped, turn the wheel from one lock to the other. First, your friend probably won't have much of a foot anymore. Second, you'll probably find that the road now has holes in it where the tires have scraped up the pavement (I've actually done this). You still want me to believe an H2 causes no more damage than a Prius? Yes, the weight difference is less than the difference between a tractor-trailer and a bicycle, but it's still 3 times greater.

      BTW, your link seems to be broken.

    90. Re:Dont they already do this? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Well, it can be practical and an ego vehicle at the same time, I suppose -- it's all about why you bought it.

      Also, I would consider your Vespa and F150 to be practical (as long as you use the truck bed regularly)

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    91. Re:Dont they already do this? by buswolley · · Score: 1
      You are right of course, but lets look at it again this way.

      I believe it is a statistical fact that larger, heavier vehicles causes more deaths than a light weight economy model. With insurance from the pump, dangerous gas guzzlers will pay a larger 'premium' than joe blo with the economy model.

      This also provides greater incentive to improve gas mileage.

      Another benefit is that everyone IS insured. Uninsured motorists today cause many economic difficulties for victims of accidents. If a driver is said to be unfit for driving let them take their liscense away. Or give a tax credit to good drivers at the end of the year. I just think that it is criminal that many who can't afford car insurance are left to illegally drive their cars to work.. We all know that in some places mass transit is not a real option.. Its not NY everywhere in the U.S.

      --

      A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

    92. Re:Dont they already do this? by RandomCoil · · Score: 1
      I believe it is a statistical fact that larger, heavier vehicles causes more deaths than a light weight economy model.
      An interesting point that had not occurred to me.

      Cheers!
    93. Re:Dont they already do this? by diabolo-nerd · · Score: 1

      Yes they do; however, that soes not mean that they couldn't change the system if they wanted to.

      --
      "there is nothing to fear but fear itself"- Franklin Delano Roosevelt
  2. Oregon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oregon has considered this as well. California is not unique in that respect.

  3. Mm, air! by Nicholas+Evans · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Next think you know, Mr. Calleeforneeya will want to put a tax on air. And to properly measure the amount of air you intake, chips will be implanted in every citizen. As a side effect, the feds know where you are at all times.

    I support the Caleeforneyan AIR TAX!

    1. Re:Mm, air! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you not realize that you are making a mockery of the man because of his accent? He was born in Austria, and his accent stuck with him. Get over it.

    2. Re:Mm, air! by smclean · · Score: 1
      It's funny he would have his name anywhere near this proposition, when his most successful and oft-played political ads him saying something:

      I AM IN PRINCIPLE AGAINST TAXING, BECAUSE I FEEL THAT THE PEOPLE OF CALIFORNIA HAVE BEEN PUNISHED ENOUGH. FROM THE TIME THEY GET UP IN THE MORNING, THEY GO AND GET COFFEE, THEY'RE TAXED; THEY GET INTO THEIR CAR, THEY'RE TAXED; THEY GO TO THE GAS STATION, THEY'RE TAXED. AND THIS GOES ON ALL DAY LONG. TAX, TAX, TAX, TAX, TAX.

      Forgive the caps, its a copy/paste job. Hopefully this disclaimer will be enough to appease the lameness filter.

      --

      "'Yrch!' said Legolas, falling into his own tongue."

  4. Gentlemen, start your engines! by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 1

    Time to get the fuck out of DodgeCalifornia.

    --
    You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    1. Re:Gentlemen, start your engines! by somethinghollow · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And, damnit, I JUST moved to Cali a few months ago. But, I seriously doubt they can get everyone to have government installed GPS in their car due to privacy concerns. If whatever-car-rental company can't give me a speeding ticked based on GPS because that is invasion of privacy, this method will not fly.

    2. Re:Gentlemen, start your engines! by Atario · · Score: 1
      Time to get the fuck out of DodgeCalifornia.
      I thought it was DaimlerChryslerCalifornia?
      --
      "A great democracy must be progressive or it will soon cease to be a great democracy." --Theodore Roosevelt
    3. Re:Gentlemen, start your engines! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why in the hell would you choose to move to CA unless you were already some ultra liberal, raise taxs whenever possible Democrat? It's not like CA has changed recently, so you must have known what the politics are like there.

    4. Re:Gentlemen, start your engines! by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      As a native Californio, your offer is mightly tempting.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    5. Re:Gentlemen, start your engines! by Sime208 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Don't bet on it. This has been suggested over in the UK too, and while not a popular suggestion, it's something that WILL happen here and where you are. If not tomorrow, then at some point in the future.

      That privacy you think you have is quietly being eroded, and as the majority of your country has shown recently, you just don't care.

      If the only purpose of these devices was to tax you based on how many miles you drive, wouldn't a milometer do? Sure the old mechanical ones can be fiddled, but aren't manufacturers capable of creating one that can't be? If they aren't, how are they capable of creating a GPS unit that can't be modded to make it look like the car has never moved from the driveway?

      The powers that be won't be happy until they know exactly where you are all the time. To introduce it, they'll tell you how it'll benefit you tax-wise first. If that doesn't work, they'll tell you it'll help fight terrorism. ("Hey, if we had GPS units in cars we'd have been able to track the terrorists to within a square yard!"). The point that terrorists would probably use a stolen/rental car, bus or taxi will be skated over.

      It won't be for a few years yet (there's no infrastructure to bill people even if the units were fitted), but it won't be long. If you get away with paying a tax based on how far you drive, your kids won't.

  5. Great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now I have to drive only in tunnels & under thick trees.

    1. Re:Great... by cujo_1111 · · Score: 1

      Or buy some lead shielding for the GPS receiver :)

      --
      If I point out that you are incorrect, making me a foe does not make you any more correct.
  6. I blame Proposition 71. by Kenja · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I will never understand why we passed Proposition 71 which calls for three billion in bonds over the next few years to fund stem cell reasearch given that our state is broke. Ah well, I dont drive so I guess I dont much care.

    --

    "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    1. Re:I blame Proposition 71. by 77Punker · · Score: 3, Insightful

      OH, but you should care. Pretty soon they'll be tracking your computer to see how much the heat generated by it affects global warming. Okay...that's a bit far-fetched, but I'm sure you get the idea. The more power you let them have, the more they'll try to take. They act like a bunch of drug addicts, high on authority.

    2. Re:I blame Proposition 71. by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      Bicycles and public transportation should be included and taxed at the same rate as cars. Same goes for your sneakers.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    3. Re:I blame Proposition 71. by ElectricRook · · Score: 2, Insightful
      That was all about people expressing that they believe in Stem Cell Reseach. Most people were under the impression that the President Bush was outlawing stem cell research. When instead, he was limiting federal funding based on right to life concerns.

      I'm all for stem cell reasearch, but highly aginst pork-barrel research programs which seem to be concerned with garnering more research money.

      --
      - High Tech workers, please say NO to Union Carpenters, their Union sees fit to control our compensation.
    4. Re:I blame Proposition 71. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Most people were under the impression that the President Bush was outlawing stem cell research.

      Not surprising when you had Kerry/Edwards lying about it to the camera and microphone every chance they got.

      And they don't understand why most people didn't want people who lie when they could tell the truth and change positions based on who they were talking to instead of on what they actually believed.

    5. Re:I blame Proposition 71. by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      That's just retarded. Individual cars pollute WAY more than buses do. Let's see bus gets like what 10 maybe 20 MPG. Your humvee gets about 7. The bus holds 55 people the humvee holds only you [loner status enabled].

      Yeah, tax public transportation. That's smart.

      Why not just rip out your lungs in advance and say "no more oxygene for me!"

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
    6. Re:I blame Proposition 71. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "By Far, the Vast Majority of My Tax Cuts Go to Those at the Bottom."

      GWB

      Now. What were you saying about lying? Btw for the record I think Cheney saying that if you didn't specifically elect Bush that we were going to be attacked possibly by nukes, was far worse than any exaggeration Kerry might have made on Bush's stem cell research position.

      Boy I hope there is a Hell because if there is those who claimed to be doing "God's work" are going be in for a real surprise.

      I wonder what they will say when God asks "Why did you murder all of those innocent people instead of working for peace?"

      Your backing the wrong horse my friend and this goes well beyond Right and Left.

    7. Re:I blame Proposition 71. by xstonedogx · · Score: 1

      I will never understand why we passed Proposition 71 which calls for three billion in bonds over the next few years to fund stem cell reasearch given that our state is broke.

      I see you are new here.

    8. Re:I blame Proposition 71. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can blame it everything if you take it that way. If everyone (including corporations and other groups) pays their fair share of taxes we would a little more money in the budget. Also if the state government would not to be so bloated to take so much money out of budget. We have bureaucrats giving themselves pay raises in middle of the budget crisis while they are trying to get us to pay for it.
      In short, the real problem in the state of California we have too many bureaucrats taking too much money for their own purposes. This budget crisis didn't just appear overnight. We were doing well in the late 1990 and the state thought the boom would never end and budgeted so. When the boom busted we had all of these "wonderful" programs started but no money to pay for them and we are now in the crisis of the bureaucrats making. The most bureaucrats feel they don't have any responsiblity for anything they do so they can spend our money in anyway they wish. Now add lobbyist and special interest and you have a real mess.
      The simple solution is to make bureaucrats have real responsibilty for anything they do and remove all special interest and lobbyist so we can have our government back to the people.
      Maybe I need a vacation....

    9. Re:I blame Proposition 71. by lounger540 · · Score: 1

      Maybe they should just tax people for having no sense of humor. You know that was a joke right? Or it'll cost ya. Also, seeing as public tranpertation is funded by the state, why would it tax itself?

      --
      LOOP1: MOV CX,2 LOOP LOOP1
    10. Re:I blame Proposition 71. by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      Well if you want to tax pollution, then a gas tax would make sense. But California decided it wasn't fair that people with Suburbans and Humvees have to pay more in taxes than someone with a hybrid car or motorcycle.

      The proposed tax is mostly about charging people for using the roads. But heck, why stop at taxing automobiles that use the roads.

      btw- Carbon dioxide is a major green house gas, and you're releasing tons of it right now. And that only goes up when you operate your bicycle or sneakers.

      One day I will invent a poop meter, so we can tax pets based on how much they poop.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    11. Re:I blame Proposition 71. by lew3004 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, right. And GWB is the only American president in history to go to war based on supposed American ideologies; religious or not. Grow up. Backing the 'right' horse in a presidential eletion essentially boils down to voting for the candidate you despise least. They are, after all, poloticians. Besides, I think just by BEING a polotician automatically gets you a ticket to hell.

      --
      I still can't get the screen shots of Castle Wolfenstein for the Apple IIe out of my head.
  7. Cue GPS hackers... by mOoZik · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Right. Then we'll get a few smart people to develope a means of faking the mileage and paying next to nil. Not only will it not work, but it's not fair. I live in CA and am frankly sick of all the car-related restrictions that we have to abide by!

    1. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by GreatBollocksOfFire · · Score: 0

      As your first act of civil disobedience, I suggest that you disable your automotive emission controls - http://robrobinette.com/egr.htm

    2. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by ForestGrump · · Score: 4, Funny

      And in 5 years when you trade in your car.
      Dealership: Your odometer says you have 100k miles.
      You: Yea, so appraise me for 100k mile then.
      Dealer: But your in-car GPS reports 20k mi.
      You: oh cra...oh, blame the aftermarket wheels. screwed up the circuference.

      --
      Is it true that more people vote for the winner of American Idol, than vote for the president? -Ali G.
    3. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spent alot of time out-of-state did you ?

    4. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't even need to do anything fancy. Just block the radio signal to the State's receiver. "Oh, yes, I loaned my car to my friend for a long out-of-state trip."

    5. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by museumpeace · · Score: 1
      But if you don't do something to get people to drive less, you are going to get sick anyway physically sick, not just sick and tired. Your befuddled state should be trying to get people to drive less. This ain't the way to do it. Lets count the stupidities here:
      1. The aggrevation you endure,
      2. the unfair dispensation this measure would grant to obscene gas guzzlers like H2 [vs say, Prius, as others have pointed out] ,
      3. The state needs more money so they would hope you will be driving more not less.
      4. I pay $500 for a gps unit in my car and its not addressible like On-Star. WHO is paying for universal gps installations? the beleagured driver or the cash-strapped state?
      5. The gps companies are the only winners I see here
      If your governator has anything to do with this idiotic idea other than vetoes, it will be another rock to throw at him when he pushes his bid to be the nations first fuhrer, er I mean Austrian president, er well, there are a lot of other ammendments we need more than Ahnold's.
      --
      SLASHDOT: news for people who can't concentrate on work or have no life at all and got tired of yelling back at the TV.
    6. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by builderbob_nz · · Score: 1

      I live in CA and am frankly sick of all the car-related restrictions that we have to abide by!

      Sure I live in another country so don't know your full story there but seriously, what about public transport or even (god forbid) walking or cycling?

      I would have to say though that such a change in the taxing process would have two sides. The side where the wear and tear of the road is covered by those who use it the most, and the side where we are no longer encouraged to save our lungs by using energy efficient cars.

      --

      Karma? Hey I just call it as I see it.
    7. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by theLOUDroom · · Score: 1

      Right. Then we'll get a few smart people to develope a means of faking the mileage and paying next to nil. Not only will it not work, but it's not fair. I live in CA and am frankly sick of all the car-related restrictions that we have to abide by!

      Actually there already is a way to fake it, it's called a "satellite constellaion simulator."

      As far as the GPS receiver knows it's seeing real satellites, but it's really just cabled into a very complex Rf generator. The only problem is it will set you back a quarter of a million dollars, and takes up six full-length 19" rack spaces. Still, it's possible though.

      Using one of those, I've made a GPS receiver believe that it's 1994 and halfway around the world. Heck, you could even fake errors (telling the GPS unit you driving at mach 2 while in low earth orbit).

      I live in CA and am frankly sick of all the car-related restrictions that we have to abide by!

      I feel for you. California has the stupidest rules I've every heard of (CARB). Your politicians are completly out of their fucking minds. You can't even modify your fricking AIR INTAKE there.

      I'd almost be tempted to help design a cheap SCS just to help screw over these asshole politicians. In quantity, you could probably knock down both the size and cost of the device by orders of magnitude since it wouldn't need to be mil-certified test equipment anymore.

      --
      Life is too short to proofread.
    8. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in CA, and I'm sick of all the traffic. If they want to charge by the mile, fine by me. I drive less than average, but still pay outrageous registration fees. I wish they'd adjust that too.

    9. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      Better idea than the simulator. Just build a small miliwatt jammer. Power it off of you cigarete lighter. You'll have way more than enough power to jam the RF dignals from the GPS sats and make it so that it can't tall where you are. Simpler to build too.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    10. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why go through all the trouble of faking the signals? GPS in line-of-sight to the satellites and goes out every time you go under a bridge or into a parking garage, or even under trees and between tall buildings. Just simply interfere with the signals and the data/device becomes useless.

      If we had 100% reliable wireless communication, we'd have much better phone and wireless data than we have today, so this simply can't work in all areas.

      I am ashamed that all this crazy legislation is starting to come out more and more that tries to wedge itself into our legal structure to undermine more and more of our basic freedoms.

      -ZenCow

    11. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      "Sure I live in another country so don't know your full story there but seriously, what about public transport or even (god forbid) walking or cycling?"

      Ummm.... I don't know where you live, but I'm going to assume it's in a relatively built up area. A lot of people in the U.S. live in places where it's 5 miles at the least to the closest grocery store. And that is not even in the country side. I live in suburbia, the closest grocery store/gas station is two miles down the road. Those were recently put in. When we moved here the closest ones were at least 10 miles away (20 years ago). There are other places of the country where you have to go 20 miles to the closest town. Walk to the store? The food would spoil before you got back. And you can't bike easily in some areas of this country due to some things called hills and mountains. Hell, there are people that have to fly (literaly the family vehicle is a plane) to get into town. The energy efficient cars start at $20,000. That is a sizeable chunk of most peoples paychecks (start with 80% and work your way down).

      As for public transportation, it won't pay for itself in places outside of the cities. Not enough people in a small enough area. It may work for Cities, but not outside of them. The only reason people in this area take the train system is to avoid the hassle of trying to park. My daily on the city train costs $4.60 each day. I could buy two gallons (8 liters) of gas for that. I'd save more money by driving to work. If I parked at the train station it would be another $3 a day. And this is a government train system.

      The closest bus stop to where I live is two miles down the road. I can't bike to work due to work being 20 miles away as the bird flies.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    12. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by theLOUDroom · · Score: 1

      Better idea than the simulator. Just build a small miliwatt jammer. Power it off of you cigarete lighter. You'll have way more than enough power to jam the RF dignals from the GPS sats and make it so that it can't tall where you are. Simpler to build too.

      A jammer would be illegal to build, operate, or sell (throughout the entire US). A simulator could be freely sold. Even if California banned them, you could sell them in Oregon.

      --
      Life is too short to proofread.
    13. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by MemoryAid · · Score: 5, Funny
      For once, a tinfoil hat will actually come in handy...for the GPS antenna. Just cover the latter with the former to block the signal, and it won't be able to receive the satellites. That should probably just be done for the long trips, leaving it uncovered for believable mileages near where the man thinks you live.

      Disclaimer: I may or may not live in California.

      --
      Language students: Don't try to learn English here. This ain't it.
    14. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by Engineer+Andy · · Score: 1

      IANAL, or an electrical engineer, but it would not be that hard to put your little GPS unit / antenna for said GPS unit inside a metal box / farraday cage and no jamming would be needed.

      Do the FCC / assorted government / state department care about the electromagnetic emissions you have inside your car? I always thought there was a lower bound on what you were allowed to do with radio before the FCC cared (and if you have it right next to your GPS then it should be enough to drown it out)

      --
      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World" 1 John 4:14
    15. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by Engineer+Andy · · Score: 1

      Ever thought about driving to the bus stop to get to and from work? Not meaning to troll, but whenever I've lived far enough away from a public transport line I've driven to the local stop, and taken it from there.

      For me it is the cost of parking and the fact that public transport here (in Australia) works out cheaper for me (a week on the train / bus is cheaper than two days parking in the city).

      For grocery shopping, I'll agree that it makes sense to take the car, but there is no need to have a large car to drive the kids to school (cite the proliferation of SUVs that NEVER go near dirt, and are driven by soccer mums to move kids to school).

      THere are always going to be those who live a long way from public transport lines (I have no idea what messed up city planner would put suburbs with 10 miles to shops, but that is pretty messed up), but for those who could make it work, there is no reason why a bus or train trip can't work for you at least some of the time.

      --
      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World" 1 John 4:14
    16. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by theLOUDroom · · Score: 1

      IANAL, or an electrical engineer, but it would not be that hard to put your little GPS unit / antenna for said GPS unit inside a metal box / farraday cage and no jamming would be needed.

      But that's so obvious it seems like they'd have some way to get you for it. An easy way would be tapping the vehicle speed sensor. How are you going to explain driving 1,000 miles and never getting GPS recption? That's one long tunnel.

      --
      Life is too short to proofread.
    17. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by G-funk · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I know it's a radical idea, and won't catch on with the american dickheads who think it's god's will to drive a humvee, but here's a tip: TAX THE FLAMIN PETROL PER LITRE! It's not hard, you can't cheat it as easily as messing with something in your car, it actually taxes the people causing the problems, etc etc etc.... Ferchrissake.... GPS??? Solution in search of a problem much?

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money!
    18. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by surprise_audit · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Didyou look at the image linked in the article header, that shows how Oregon proposes to implement such a system?? It seems to be saying that whenever you fill up with gas, the Service Station will interrogate your car for a mileage report. The simple fix for that system, for people living near enough to the state line, would be to drive out-of-state to fill up. And take a couple of 5-gallon gas cans along as well, in case they get caught short too far from the state line...

    19. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Don't forget that modern vehicles probably keep track of mileage in the computer, they've been keeping more and more nonvolatile data and a lot of cars sold today have a tattletale in them. It's become pretty popular since around 2000. So, if they suspected you of tampering, they could find out how far your car thought you went. OBD-II vehicles do a comprehensive sensor monitor, which includes sanity checking, so there's no way to fool the computer without (eventually) lighting the malfunction light.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    20. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by hobo2k · · Score: 1

      If the tax is paid at the pump and based on the car you happened to drive up in, will a common garden hose become a method of tax evasion? Will people who write explanations of how to siphon gas from one car to another be jailed for DMCA violations?

    21. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by sllim · · Score: 1

      What happens when an out of state driver fills up in Oregon?
      They don't get taxed.

      The circumvention to this system is a joke. Just cover up the antennas and don't worry about it. If anyone asks you about it just say you are out of state.
      If they look at your plates then just punch them in the face. See problem solved.

    22. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by malsdavis · · Score: 1

      I agree, its an amazing testament to the Oil industries stranglehold over US national & state government the way gas is barely or not at all taxed.

      Taxing fuel is surely one of the best ways (not to mention A FAR LOT easier to impliment unlike the proposed idea) to ensure relativly fair payment towards road infastructure costs, while helping to encourage uptake of more efficient vehicles (which are undenaiably better in terms of overall-cost-to-society and the enviroment and everyone except the Oil industry shareholders).

    23. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by kt0157 · · Score: 1

      Hmmn. High taxes per liter of gasoline like in the UK.. which also wants to track vehicles via GPS. What a brilliant idea - TWO tax schemes running parallel. And with ID cards too, there's the Government tracking where you live and where you go. Fantastic! Mind you, the US pioneered the running of parallel tax schemes - Alternative Minimum Tax.

    24. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by handorf · · Score: 1

      You got one part wrong though... it's best for everyone INCLUDING the Oil Industry Shareholders. Their kids are getting more childhood asthma too... their air has more CO2 and Sulfur and everything else in it too...

      The problem with capitalisim is that it relies on ENLIGHTENED self interest. Wave some cash in front of people and they become about as enlightened as the back-side of the moon.

      --
      -- IANAEG - I am not an elder god.
    25. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm amazed that they have a device with a GPS receiver _and_ a satellite uplink transmitter for only $100.

      If you use the tinfoil over the transmit antenna, you could probably blow-out the transmitter. Otherwise, just pull the fuse to the device, or the wire that tells it to turn on when you're driving. Instant device failure, and no more tracking. :-)

      Regards,
      David

    26. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by DoctorPepper · · Score: 1

      The circumvention to this and other similar problems is even simpler: Get a grass-roots effort started. With enough support, this crap won't go through. And to finish it off, vote the asshole that thought of this tax out of office next time elections come up.

      If the voters start sending the politicians a message, in the form of a pink slip, they will start to listen!

      --

      No matter where you go... there you are.
    27. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by DCheesi · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure they already tax the gas in CA. Some of the gas stations out there actually post a breakdown that shows how much of the gas price (per gallon) goes to various taxes & fees. The numbers are shockingly high, as are the overall gas prices (compared to other states).

      Of course it's been a few years since I was out there long enough to buy gas, etc. So YMMV (no pun)...

    28. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by Jens_UK · · Score: 1
      Gas tax is already exceeds 20% of the purchase price in the US. What is a fair amount?

      Also, taxing gas is highly regressive. I suppose if you hate poor people, then it's a wonderful idea. Of course, with higher taxes, they can't afford to buy newer cars, which means they continue to the drive the bottom 5% of vehicles that cause 95% of the pollution.

    29. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by MacGod · · Score: 1

      Also, taxing gas is highly regressive. I suppose if you hate poor people, then it's a wonderful idea. Of course, with higher taxes, they can't afford to buy newer cars, which means they continue to the drive the bottom 5% of vehicles that cause 95% of the pollution.

      It's fine and dandy to oversimplify the issue with glib assertions like "if you hate poor people...", but look at alternate possibilities: perhaps the government could increase the sin tax on Hummers, Suburbans etc, and offer price-reduction tax breaks on smaller, fuel-economic cars. Make that Echo hatchback an $8000 car, and it will become much more appealing.

      Furthermore, if people are driving these old, polluting cars, then the increase in gas tax will hit them harder, providing further incentive to upgrade. Hell, if you really wanted to be progressive, offer assistance (zero-interest loans etc) to people trading an old, polluting car in for a new, efficient one.

      There are stunningly high gas taxes in Europe, and one of the results is that you just don't see old cars on the road. The poor in those countries somehow manage to afford to upgrade, we North Americans can do it too!

      --
      "Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one " -Albert Einstein
    30. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      Easiest way to put this. The closet place to park near a mass transit is where I park. I can then take the bus somewhere or the train. Train goes direct to my workplace, not idea where the busses go. The closet bus stop has no parking for mass transit. As for the city planner, we never had one. Just like most of the US. There are very few pre-planned communities and even the cities never had one originally. I'd say that at least %70 of the pupulation lives in areas that grew organicly with out any planning other than where the sewer, water and power lines are going.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    31. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by OhHellWithIt · · Score: 1
      but here's a tip: TAX THE FLAMIN PETROL PER LITRE!

      That'll never work here. We don't burn petrol, we burn gasoline and a little diesel. And we don't measure it in litres or even liters, but in gallons. Never mind the fact that Congress committed us to convert to S.I. almost 30 years ago. It's just part of our mentality. We believe because we are Americans, we are not bound by common sense, economics, or even by the rules of physics, and that for any new, expensive technology, there is a problem to be solved with it.

      Actually, in some places, it would be very easy to implement without GPS. In many areas of the U.S. -- including the congested areas where people are wont to drive fuel-efficient cars like the Prius, there is a mandatory exhaust emissions test, usually every two years. In Virginia, where I live, the results of the emissions test are sent electronically to the state DMV. I have to take that test, or I cannot register my car. It would be a simple matter for the mechanic performing the test to read the odometer and to verify that it had not been tampered with, inspecting some hypothetical seal. For all I know, he may already collect the mileage information -- I don't have the inspection certificate in front of me. Voila! The information needed for collecting the tax is available, without GPS, and my tinfoil hat cannot protect me.

      Mind you, I'm not arguing for distance-based taxation -- just pointing out that it can be done cheaply, without satellites.

      --
      "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past." -- George Orwell
    32. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by rotor · · Score: 1

      20% + whatever the state tax is. I believe I pay 46% total.

      --
      Addlepated - punk & metal
    33. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      perhaps the government could increase the sin tax on Hummers, Suburbans etc, and offer price-reduction tax breaks on smaller, fuel-economic cars.

      Actually, it would probably help a bit if (in some instances) the government would stop SUBSIDIZING the purchase of those big, gas-guzzling vehicles...

    34. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by Phred+T.+Magnificent · · Score: 1

      20% + whatever additional the state tacks on. I belive it ends up around 50% here.

      --
      Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?
      Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?
    35. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by Zaphod+B · · Score: 1

      Gasoline is taxed on a federal and state level per gallon. Federal excise tax is 18.4c/gal for straight gasoline and 15.4c/gal for ethanol blend. California's excise tax is 18.0c/gal regardless of composition.

      If you had bothered to Google for ten seconds...

      --
      Zaphod B
      When duplication is outlawed, only outlaws will have /bin/cp
    36. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by MonkeyCookie · · Score: 1

      The only problem is that Americans like their cars and hate high gas prices. There would probably be a huge backlash against any politicians that tried to significantly increase gas taxes.

      Recently, Californians were so angry at yearly car tax (which in my opinion wasn't that bad) that they cut it so that it's now a third of what it used to be. Making gas significantly more expensive would be political suicide, especially since car is the only reasonable form of transportation for a lot of people in California.

      When I lived in Europe, I wasn't even interested in having a car because public transportation got me everywhere. In California where I live now, not having a car would make things difficult. Everything here is designed around the automobile: you even have to drive a ways to get to a food store because they are all clustered in large shopping centers surrounded by huge parking lots.

      In Europe where I lived (southern Germany), there was *always* at least a food store within walking distance and other stores could be reached by a long walk or a short bus/train ride. I sure liked that.

    37. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by G-funk · · Score: 1

      And? It's like 50-70% in england / australia.

      And to all the "californians refuse to pay extra for their petrol" posters, are these people are so fucking stupid that they refuse to pay a "gas tax" but they'll pay a per-mile tax that's enforced via gps- and that they'll pay extra income tax / whatever to pay for the gps device??? If so, then perhaps the entire state should be neutered.

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money!
    38. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      The suburbs in alot of american cities arent planed. they are areas outside the city limits were people migrate to in order to get away from the chaos, filth and somtines bad elements. once this area build up so much, the city sometimes decides to anex it so they can colect the tax income and property tax money. this is a situation were you have a virtualy city growning up with no oversight and then once incorperated into the city it becomes a bitch to work around. There have even been situations were little cities have been anexed into larger cities and because of differences in the building codes you have situations like this.

      Public transportation works best when the last 50 years or more have been developed around it. Newyork, los angelas and the likes have always had some sort of public transportation and alot of the industries have flurished close to the rail heads and bus stops. I would say the east coast cities are the most eficient in this mannor with the west coast cities comming in a close second. Here in ohio (midwest) the comunity subsidises the bus system (in columbus) and there is no light rail. The people who take the bus usually have to leave a couple hours ealy to coordinate the bus schedule with thier work schedule. Even with then it costs more to rid the bus to work then to buy an old beater car that get poor gas milage.

      In all, it kinda of gets sumed up like the single mom babysitter situation. They usualy don't make enough money to pay the babysitter so they end up working for $20 a week after expenses. It is cheaper mentaly and phisicaly in some situation to not work at all. but thats another story.

    39. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Actually the gas is already taxed. I guess not having it over taxed so we can do things we want is one of the small things that still make us feel more free then other countries. When you tax the gas too much you end up only letting the people with money drive. the poor get nothign. maybe other countries like it that way. doesn't sound too free to me though..

    40. Re:Cue GPS hackers... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      probably not, if they incude useing a styrophome cooler as a holding device.

      but really, would it be tax evasion if it didn't avoid the tax from being paid, just who is paying it?

  8. Yeah, I already got the letter about this one... by Skyshadow · · Score: 5, Funny
    Yeah, I got a letter about this one a few days ago:

    --------

    State of California
    1 Aahnold St.
    Sacramento, CA

    Dear Skyshadow,

    While we in the state of California appreciate your interest in our state and the contributions you've made while living here the last fours years, it has become increasingly apparent that you're not getting the message. So, let us be direct:

    Get the hell out.

    Frankly, all of you refugees from Jesusland are seriously overpopulating our state, and we can't afford it anymore. We figured you might have gotten the hint after we destroyed our public school system with Prop 13. We thought you would have put it together when we started referring to pet owners as "guardians" like they were our fucking kids or something. And, really, we're stunned that electing the guy from "Commando" as our governor didn't make you reassess living here.

    C'mon, how much is nice weather, a neat bridge and decent wine really worth? A crappy 900 sq. ft. house in Walnut Creek with a postage-stamp sized yard is a steal at $400k because of all you idiots flooding in! Go home!

    Anyhow, by now we're sure you've read about our plan to implant a GPS tracker on your car and tax you for every mile you drive. We're proud of that one -- we know you're driving an hour each way to and from work because of the sky-high housing prices around the Bay Area (again: your fault), and we figure that nicely conveys our point. And frankly, if this doesn't get our message across, we're going to have to resort to simply grabbing you out of your bed in the middle of the night and feeding your to that Great White we have on display down in Monterey. Don't think we won't. Hell, we'll feed her your goddamn cheesehead cats, too. Try us.

    Move back to Wisconsin. We're not kidding.

    Love, California

    --
    Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
  9. What's next,.... by GestaltPhoenix · · Score: 4, Interesting

    taxing walking to cover pavement depreciation? this kind of stuff scares me...

    1. Re:What's next,.... by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      I would rather not have pavement at all in that case.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    2. Re:What's next,.... by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 1

      But do you tax the Segway owners more or less than pedestrians? Oh wait, they banned the Segway, didn't they...

    3. Re:What's next,.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about levying traffic fines?

      Your travel history could easily be read off at the filling station and compared with local regulations.
      Then they could charge you any asstastic rate they want for going too fast, too slow, not stopping long enough, etc. Parking along a rural stretch of road for an inappropriate duration after dark could even flag you for 'special' attention.

    4. Re:What's next,.... by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Are they gonna fine bums who piss in parking stairwells by the length of their dicks? Chick bums have it made.

  10. space age taxes by loid_void · · Score: 1

    It is government measures like this that will continue to drive the traffic to the internet, but of course, the tax man will eventually find his way here, unless...

    --
    Anyone seen my jagged little pill?
    1. Re:space age taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "the tax man will eventually find his way here, unless..."
      [PAYMENT OVERDUE: CONNECTION TERMINATED]

    2. Re:space age taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is government measures like this that will continue to drive the traffic to the internet, but of course, the tax man will eventually find his way here, unless...

      We shoot the tax man?

    3. Re:space age taxes by ackthpt · · Score: 2, Informative
      It is government measures like this that will continue to drive the traffic to the internet, but of course, the tax man will eventually find his way here, unless...

      Little do you know, we're already paying taxes for the internet. Not to our ISP, but to those who run the line. There are creative naming conventions for taxes, such as 'telecommunications fee'

      Back when my college couldn't raise tuition and couldn't get enough from taxes, they added ta-da fees! Learning resources fee, high cost (of instruction) fee, and so on. It was really an increase in tuition, just like is happening to taxes.

      BTW, we had a slough of tax proposals this Nov. 2 which, all together, would have made our local sales tax ~ 10% (it's 8.25% at the moment, IIRC) Bush or Governator cut income tax? No worries. We'll just pay through another tax system. New fee schedules, you know?

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    4. Re:space age taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't wait until I can drive my car on the internet.

  11. They were poking around trying to get it here by mr_jrt · · Score: 1

    ...in the UK. Not sure where that one went actually.

    --
    Boo.
    1. Re:They were poking around trying to get it here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait till after the election next year. Tony & Gordon will hit us with all their "radical" ideas after that. Gotta get as much money as possible out of the proles, see..
      Ain't socialist government great?

  12. GPS Blackbox by fembots · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Wouldn't it be easier and less privacy-intruding if there's a blackbox in the car with GPS, which determines if the car has crossed a state line, and record mileage accordingly?

    This way car owners can go to a fee-station any time to pay whatever tax whatever state wants to charge per mile travelled.

    1. Re:GPS Blackbox by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 1

      Wouldnt it be easier to simply wear a sticker:

      "Yes, you can pound me in the ass"

      I sincerely hope your suggestion never sees the light of day.

      [/tin_foil_hat]

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    2. Re:GPS Blackbox by dhakbar · · Score: 1

      People in San Francisco already sport those fashionable stickers.

    3. Re:GPS Blackbox by Osty · · Score: 1

      This way car owners can go to a fee-station any time to pay whatever tax whatever state wants to charge per mile travelled.

      Your state can't tax me if I'm not a citizen. It goes along with that old concept of, "No taxation without representation." I don't reside in your state, nor can I vote in your state (ignoring being barred from voting by age or legal issues), so you can't tax me.

      Usually this isn't a big concern, but ask folks from states with no sales tax (Oregon) and they'll tell you. If you live in such a state, you only need to prove that you live there (driver's license is usually enough) and you should not be charged sales tax in any other state. This usually works smoothly in border areas (for instance, Portlanders going to Vancouver, WA), but all states are supposed to honor it. Similarly, if you buy something in Oregon but live in a sales tax state, you're supposed to declare it on your yearly tax return and pay your state taxes on it. Most states don't care about minor purchases (oh, crap, I need to register that pack of gum I bought down in Oregon ...), but they do enforce large purchases like cars. Mail-order purchases are a bit of a gray area, but most larger retailers like Dell have started to charge you tax based on your state, even though they don't have a presence in your state. That's why I used to buy books online from Barnes and Noble rather than Amazon, because B&N isn't based in Washington.

  13. Must be... by RayDude · · Score: 1

    Time to Move to Nevada. Tahoe here I come! Raydude

    1. Re:Must be... by ForestGrump · · Score: 1

      uh, bunny ranch is in southern nevada. Aim for vegas instead.

      --
      Is it true that more people vote for the winner of American Idol, than vote for the president? -Ali G.
  14. GPS antennas? by GreatBollocksOfFire · · Score: 0

    How susceptible are GPS antennas to interference and multi-path effects these days? My handheld GPS can't do much when I'm in the trees, but maybe a bigger unit is better? Anyone know? What happens if the unit can't relay your movement data for a while?

    1. Re:GPS antennas? by El · · Score: 1

      What happens if you "accidentally" break the antenna off, and don't realize it's gone for a year?

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

  15. Can you spell.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Hey, can you reset my "taxometer""

    "Yeah no problem, just leave the car in the garage..."

  16. New Revenue Source ... For Me by Mad+Martigan · · Score: 5, Funny

    So, does that mean that if I run my car in reverse, the state will start sending me checks? Hmm, no ... that doesn't sound right ...

    1. Re:New Revenue Source ... For Me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GPS has no concept of "reverse".

    2. Re:New Revenue Source ... For Me by Herschel+Cohen · · Score: 1

      What about those that live near the state line?

      Only pay that state's flat tax and nothing in the home state?

      Why not a fence around the state that reads your milage as you pass (<I>or gives you a ticket as you pass driving in reverse</I>) and you get billed monthly on your total in state milage?

    3. Re:New Revenue Source ... For Me by gatzke · · Score: 1


      Why not just increase the gas tax?

      The bigger (less efficient) your car, the more your drive, the more you pay in tax.

      Simple and easy to collect.

      For that matter, gas tax should be percent based rather than volume based. Higher gas prices = higher tax collection.

      I guess CA has some zero and low emissions cars, but they get a break on tax, like I would assume CA would like to encourage.

    4. Re:New Revenue Source ... For Me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't you see Ferris Bueller's Day Off?

    5. Re:New Revenue Source ... For Me by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      the state will start sending me checks?

      In Soviet California?

    6. Re:New Revenue Source ... For Me by Dun+Malg · · Score: 2, Insightful
      For that matter, gas tax should be percent based rather than volume based. Higher gas prices = higher tax collection.

      That's a bad idea. The price of gas has no bearing on either the amount of pollution or the amount of wear and tear on the roads. It'd be just one more reason for the state to look the other way while the oil companies rob us blind.

      "Oh, you're closing another profitable refinery to reduce the gasoline supply and drive prices up? Good! That makes our %5 tax bring in more!"

      no thanks

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    7. Re:New Revenue Source ... For Me by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The tax is not a percentage, it's a price per gallon. The gas tax is the same no matter what the price of gas is. Right now, it's eighteen cents per gallon. (from the article... the last paragraph before the gas tax table.) Way to fail to RTFA.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    8. Re:New Revenue Source ... For Me by robyannetta · · Score: 1
      So, does that mean that if I run my car in reverse, the state will start sending me checks? Hmm, no ... that doesn't sound right ...

      It didn't work for Ferris Bueller.

      --
      - Just my $0.02, take with a grain of salt, your mileage may vary.
    9. Re:New Revenue Source ... For Me by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Not quite. According to a tax breakdown that used to be posted at many service stations, here in California we ALSO pay state sales tax on gasoline. So the state does indeed have a motive to look the other way as the gas companies rob us blind -- the higher the price of gas, the more sales tax it brings in.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  17. how many square feet... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    of tinfoil will the average californian driver require for their car?

  18. Hrmmm... by spin2cool · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Shouldn't this one be filed under "Your Rights Offline?

    Just saying is all...

    1. Re:Hrmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, we're discussing "your rights", and we're talking about them "online", so I think the YRO tag is appropriate.

    2. Re:Hrmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All my posts are valid XHTML. Too bad Slashdot isn't./I.

      Yeh, valid XHTML - except for the fact your posts have no tags what-so-ever.

    3. Re:Hrmmm... by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      No, it's online! 'Cause it's about starting/stopping the mileage count as they cross the state line....

  19. Shouldn't that be... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... I support the Caleeforneyan AIR TAAAAAAAAAAAAAAX! ?

  20. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 3, Funny

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  21. For once... by poofyhairguy82 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I was happy I live in Texas instead of California. At least here, we only obsessively track our children.

    1. Re:For once... by Omega1045 · · Score: 1
      I highly doubt such a thing will happen anyway. The ACLU, EFF, Libertarian Party and about 20 other groups will sue, and win, a lawsuit to stop this based on privacy issues.

      Still, I would rather live here in Austin Texas than in almost anywhere in California. No income tax, I am only paying $1.70/gallon for unleaded righ now, and I own a nice 1700 sq ft house and paid less that $125k. I live about 45 minutes for more live music per square mile than anyplace on the planet, and have a good job in a somewhat healthy local tech economy. I am not a native Texan so I don't have that "Don't mess with Texas" attitude. However, I think it is a much better place to live than much of Cali. There are parts of Cali I really like (just visited the redwoods - awesome!). But this would seriously be a reason for me to leave the state if I lived there.

      --

      Great ideas often receive violent opposition from mediocre minds. - Albert Einstein

  22. That's the way California... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Drop your support for Electric Vehicles, zero emission vehicles and the like... and instead put GPS units on all new vehicles so the Governator can find Sarah Connor at will.

  23. What cali needs to solve its problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dramatic increases in puffy pants taxes. And a new tax on being Austrian.

  24. Odometer by Rufus88 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why not just report your odometer reading each year? It could even by done by the service station that performs your annual inspection.

    1. Re:Odometer by El · · Score: 2, Informative

      Because they only want to bill you for the miles you actually drove within California, not the trip you took to New York...

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    2. Re:Odometer by chris_mahan · · Score: 1

      They already do that. But then people would not get their cars inspected if they did not have the money to pay.

      --

      "Piter, too, is dead."

    3. Re:Odometer by ForestGrump · · Score: 1

      Isn't it no inspection for the first 5 years?

      I think...

      Then insurance companies are always happy to give your info away, if the law (which now does) says they have to.

      --
      Is it true that more people vote for the winner of American Idol, than vote for the president? -Ali G.
    4. Re:Odometer by physicsnerd · · Score: 2, Informative

      Because that assumes that you only drive in California. Which isn't a bad assumption for most people in California. However, a good chunk of my driving is cross country. I may put 5,000 miles on my car in california and another 10,000 miles out of state in a year. I'm sure that there are many other people in my situation.

    5. Re:Odometer by Tackhead · · Score: 4, Insightful
      > Why not just report your odometer reading each year? It could even by done by the service station that performs your annual inspection.

      California is only entitled to tax you for miles you drive in the state of California. The minute you cross the border into Nevada, Oregon, or Mexico, you can't be taxed.

      Therefore - if you're going to tax by the mile, you must use a GPS tracking device to ensure that only miles taxable within your jurisdiction are taxed. Otherwise you're one judge's gavel away from having your tax law thrown out. Don't fuck with the Interstate Commerce Clause.

      Of course, taxing by the mile is an asstastic idea to begin with - but even in the "green" People's Republic of Kalifornia, it doesn't matter how green the idea of "tax the H2 more than the Prius" might be... the only green that matters to a politician is the color of his subjects' money. (and/or the money of the GPS device manufacturers' lobby :)

    6. Re:Odometer by nbert · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's a good idea, but there are various ways to manipulate this device. From the good old days when a borer was all you needed to get past 999999 to digital odometer manipulation, which requires more knowledge, but some people make a living out of it for sure... But I guess manipulating GPS devices isn't much harder. I bet that transmitters, which outshine regular GPS signals, will be in stores ~3 months after this bill is passed.

    7. Re:Odometer by moby11 · · Score: 1

      RTFA - They want to measure how many miles you drive within the state. Simple odometer readings would not account for my weekly trips to Vegas.

    8. Re:Odometer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then you don't get your registration renewed, and you stop driving that car, or take the chance of getting pulled over and hit with a huge fine.

    9. Re:Odometer by Marc_Hawke · · Score: 1

      It's easy...Just tell the people looking for fruit to write down your odometer as you leave and enter the state. That way you can even tax the visitors to California that don't have GPS cars.

      It would go along nicely with the overly intrusive and potentially oppressive government theme they are starting up there.

      --
      --Welcome to the Realm of the Hawke--
    10. Re:Odometer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Odometer readings do not support the more advanced taxation policies. The GPS readings (time, location) are needed because charges will vary according to:
      1) the road used
      2) the time on which it was used.

      Following elementary economic considerations, charges for congested roads and peak-hour use will be higher than for off-peak use.

    11. Re:Odometer by bug506 · · Score: 1

      In California, there are no annual inspections. (In some states, you have to get your car inspected to make sure the lights work, etc., but not here.) There are smog inspections that happen every two years after your car is more than four model years old. http://www.dmv.ca.gov/vr/smogfaq.htm

    12. Re:Odometer by nero4wolfe · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Note that nothing says they can't make the per-mile tax dependant on say, the empty weight of the car (on the principle that heavier cars put more wear & tear on the road).

      If that's done, then a heavier vehicle like a Hummer would still pay more taxes than a lighter car like a Prius.

    13. Re:Odometer by mark-t · · Score: 2, Informative
      How are they "entitled" to anything?

      If the roads are costing the state too much to maintain, and they don't want all residents to shoulder the burden equally, then they need to increase the tax on gasoline... plain and simple. People who do sufficient amounts of their driving outside the state of Calif. will probably be able to regularly fill up outside the state and therefore won't have to pay the higher taxes.

      Not that I'm a proponent on high gasoline taxes, but only someone without the slightest grip on reality should fail to see that putting a GPS in a car to measure how far a car travels within the state is, when all is said and done, overcomplicating things waaaaaaay too much. Adding complexity to a system brings addition possible points of failure to that system and this idea would be almost certain to bring with it more problems than it would really solve.

    14. Re:Odometer by IBeatUpNerds · · Score: 1

      AFAIK, California does not require an annual state vehicle inspection like some (most?) other states do. They just screw you with the smog tests instead.

    15. Re:Odometer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RTFA - They want to measure how many miles you drive within the state. Simple odometer readings would not account for my weekly trips to Vegas.

      The odometer won't record those. Remember, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas.

    16. Re:Odometer by fireboy1919 · · Score: 1

      I would assume they're trying to taxing you based upon how much they have to maintain the roads/pay for other miscellaneous public transit expenses on your account.

      So...what if you've got a ranch, and you drive 10 miles a day without leaving it? Obviously California's not maintaining that. Why should you pay for it? And what about the roads that they just plain don't bother to manage because there aren't enough people on it? Or are they going to replace all the pot-hole infested dirt roads in the state with asphalt?

      They already have a system that lets them tax based upon road usage: tolls.

      If they really want to tax people for road usage without having to set up and man booths, they should implement something like e-pass, and make it manditory.

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    17. Re:Odometer by demonbug · · Score: 1
      California is only entitled to tax you for miles you drive in the state of California. The minute you cross the border into Nevada, Oregon, or Mexico, you can't be taxed.


      It is a little-known fact that California now owns Arizona. Those of you living in Arizona, please begin sending your state income tax forms to:

      Franchise Tax Board
      PO Box 942840
      Sacramento 94240-0002


      Thank you.
    18. Re:Odometer by Low+Key · · Score: 1

      Why bother? The GPS signal is very weak. All you'd have to do is hinder the antenna's clear view of the sky and it won't work anymore.

      0 miles = 0 tax

    19. Re:Odometer by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      Why not just report your odometer reading each year? It could even by done by the service station that performs your annual inspection.

      California doesn't do annual inspections. Cars are just assumed to be safe. There are smog checks every two years after the first four (new cars are assumed to be non polluting), but nobody would be able to afford two year's worth of "road tax". Really, even one year's worth of tax would probably be too much for people.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    20. Re:Odometer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what about visitors? They can certainly rack up a lot of miles on California roads. For example, a salesman who lives just across the state line in Reno, NV, can drive a lot of miles in CA without paying this use tax.

      Also, what about truckers whose rigs are registered out of state?

    21. Re:Odometer by Daniel · · Score: 1

      You can make it from California to New York on a tank of gas? Can I have your car? :)

      Daniel

      --
      Hurry up and jump on the individualist bandwagon!
    22. Re:Odometer by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
      California is only entitled to tax you for miles you drive in the state of California.

      Why is that? They certainly tax their citizens on money they earn out of state. Why not the miles they drive? Seems like they could pass pretty much whatever tax they want. There are plenty of taxes that have no particular justification.

    23. Re:Odometer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      eh, did he say anything about gas?

    24. Re:Odometer by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "Therefore - if you're going to tax by the mile, you must use a GPS tracking device to ensure that only miles taxable within your jurisdiction are taxed."

      Pull over at the last weigh station before the border and report your odometer. When you enter the state again, report your odometer again. Problem solved.

      "Don't fuck with the Interstate Commerce Clause."

      Actually, you're talking about the so-called Dormant Commerce Clause. Try to find a part of the constitution that says that states can't affect interstate commerce in any way, shape or form.

      (You're right, a federal judge would throw it out, but that doesn't make the judge right.)

    25. Re:Odometer by ForestGrump · · Score: 1

      thanks for the link.
      I'm reading it and it mentions that gas/electric hybrids are exempt from smog till 2011.

      I remember digging through hybrid groups and owners (east coast) were complaing that their cars were not passing smog inspections.
      The reason: too clean to be detected.

      --
      Is it true that more people vote for the winner of American Idol, than vote for the president? -Ali G.
    26. Re:Odometer by JohnHegarty · · Score: 1

      We tax by the mile a very easy way here in ireland... massive petrol taxes.... plus road tax too....

    27. Re:Odometer by Rufus88 · · Score: 1

      Really, even one year's worth of tax would probably be too much for people

      Well, that really depends on the tax rate, doesn't it?

    28. Re:Odometer by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      Really, even one year's worth of tax would probably be too much for people

      Well, that really depends on the tax rate, doesn't it?

      If it has to replace the current per-gallon tax, it needs to be pretty high. A driver who only fills a 14 gallon tank once a week will have to pay at least $131 a year to equal the current $.18/gal excise tax. That's a good chunk of cash to some people.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    29. Re:Odometer by RmanB17499 · · Score: 1

      "Don't fuck with the Interstate Commerce Clause."

      Disagree: California can tax its own residents on how many total miles they drive, globally and universally, since it is a sovereign state.
      Just like US Federal income taxes apply to all US citizens no matter where they make their money (even if you make all your income overseas). Taxes of a sovereign usually follow citizens unless the government specifically exempts it. Non-sovereigns can't. Sovereign governments that only want to tax local "domestic" income/property can do so, but only at their discretion.

      Just like New Jersey income taxes apply to people who live in NJ, but work in New York City or Upstate New York. Now, DC can't do this for people who work in DC, but live in VA or MD since DC is not sovereign and Congress has disallowed it.

      CA can even tax non-residents for miles they drive in California.

      Just because it's legal - doesn't make it right: I'm still against this idea.

    30. Re:Odometer by chris_mahan · · Score: 1

      If you have no money, you have no money. You just don't have any options.

      --

      "Piter, too, is dead."

  25. Another tax on the working class by wembley · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Who has to drive the furthest? People who can't afford to live in the houses they clean. People who run small businesses and have to deliver product themselves. People who deliver pizzas.

    This really won't bother your Hummer drivers. They are already getting hit with gas-guzzler taxes.

    --

    Share and Enjoy!

    1. Re:Another tax on the working class by geg81 · · Score: 1

      That's why we should keep the current system of gas taxes and actually increase gas taxes: the poor can drive fuel efficient cars and get whereever they need to get, while the rich can drive whatever they want to.

    2. Re:Another tax on the working class by NardofDoom · · Score: 1
      That won't work anywhere outside of New York or Chicago, or any other city with a public light rail system, be it elevated or underground.

      And it especially won't work in California. Poor people buy older cars. Older cars get worse gas mileage, therefore poor people pay more taxes. Yeah, the new H3s or the SUVs based on semis get worse mileage, but most of the middle class can't afford it.

      It's a chicken and the egg problem. You can't raise gas taxes until you have public transportation, but you can't get public transportation (real public transportation) without money from gas taxes.

      But the short-term idiots in power only think of the next election, not the next generation, and so we're stuck with the car, one of the most inefficient methods of transportation, as our primary method of moving people, even in cities.

      --
      You have two hands and one brain, so always code twice as much as you think!
    3. Re:Another tax on the working class by geg81 · · Score: 1

      Poor people buy older cars. Older cars get worse gas mileage, therefore poor people pay more taxes.

      There are plenty of older, fuel-efficient cars. The Honda Civic HF got 50 mpg in 1986, without fancy hybrid technology. There are plenty of other fuel efficient vehicles as well. Fuel efficiency has actually gotten worse over the last few years.

      It's a chicken and the egg problem

      Not really. If you gradually raise gas prices and stop building large numbers of new roads, the problem takes care of itself without causing any big problems: people will gradually and slowly switch to other technologies and pick more sensible places to live (closer to work, etc.).

    4. Re:Another tax on the working class by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm guessing you're not from California. I'm not a Californian either, and in my state the working poor and even many unemployed poor people typically have crappy cars. From what I've seen of CA, the poor often don't have cars, they take public transit, or stand around in nomadic groups waiting for an employer of some sort to pick them up.

      As for pizza delivery, that's a business expense for which market forces will ostensibly quickly adjust. So pizzas will cost more, or delivery areas will be reduced, and people will order a bit fewer pizzas. But that's kind of what this tax is about: minutely discouraging driving, while raising tax revenue. Obviously they want money, but they could tax many other things; they chose this to discourage driving. If people shop at grocery stores and buy several meals in one outing, and order pizza deliveries less, the goal of discouraging driving will have been met.

    5. Re:Another tax on the working class by daft_one · · Score: 0

      Yeah... People can just live closer to work! Maybe if they live in the supply closet AT work... with a roommate. Do you think people drive an hour or two each way every damned day FOR FUN?

    6. Re:Another tax on the working class by Da+Web+Guru · · Score: 1
      Not really. If you gradually raise gas prices and stop building large numbers of new roads, the problem takes care of itself without causing any big problems: people will gradually and slowly switch to other technologies and pick more sensible places to live (closer to work, etc.).


      I work downtown and have to commute about 25 minutes each way. (Compared to most people it is a fairly light commute.) For me, riding a bicycle 20 miles is not feasable. There are no subways or light rail within at least 4 hours of my city. Buses don't run at midnight when I go to work. I would love to live closer to my job so that I can avoid dealing with traffic and never-ending road construction. Unfortunately, I can't do so because I can't afford it. The only decent residences that are closer to my job are $1500 - $4000 apartments that they pass off as luxury condominiums. I really hadn't planned on spending over half of my paycheck on rent. Even with the longer commute it would actually be cheaper to move further away from my job...

      --

      --guru

    7. Re:Another tax on the working class by ErikZ · · Score: 1
      And it especially won't work in California. Poor people buy older cars. Older cars get worse gas mileage, therefore poor people pay more taxes. Yeah, the new H3s or the SUVs based on semis get worse mileage, but most of the middle class can't afford it.


      Maybe this was a problem in the 80's, and your old used car was from the 70's. But my last "Old used car" was a plain mazda 626, it got 30Mpg hwy. And that isn't an economy car.

      They made economy cars in the early 90s. Just great for the working poor.
      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    8. Re:Another tax on the working class by EnglishDude · · Score: 1

      Older car gets worse gas milage? My car can easily get 450 miles out of 35 liters of petrol (~50mpg) and it's a cheap crappy 12 year old car with 122,000 miles on the clock. I could buy this car for £400 easily. Engine is actually worth £20 2nd hand. Admittingly that's when I drive at 55mph on motorways, it's realistically more like 350 miles at 75-80mph on motorways (~40mpg). Urban mileage sucks at 250 miles from 35 liters though (~30mpg). My car's engine was designed with only fuel economy in mind and it's still true today. After all, I once accidentally left the engine running overnight for 10 hours (don't ask me how...) and it only used less than 1/12th of a tank - around 3 liters.

      I drove from Bristol to Inverness and back in July, total 1,100 miles and only had to fill up two times - total 105 liters of petrol, average 47mpg. I only paid £30 return as 2 other people came with me. Not bad really.

    9. Re:Another tax on the working class by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah but thest cars wern't just economy on gas milage they are economy on construction, that unibody shit (just strong enough support to save weight and money) just hit 10 years old and is now getting rusty. Just a little bit of rust can damn near cause the uni-body to fail, and you NOT repair a failed or failing uni-body (without exceding the value of the car). Lets not forget those sensors (for EFI) are all just waiting to fail at any time because they have all exceded their expected lifetime, keeping up on these while on a tight budget is next to impossible. That slightly rusty 1979 Mercury with a 5.0 is looking better and better.

    10. Re:Another tax on the working class by geg81 · · Score: 1

      Sounds like the problem is that your company has chosen to locate its offices in an expensive area but isn't currently paying you the necessary salary to allow you to live nearby. If their employees start having difficulties getting to work, they could move their offices to a location where employees could afford to live nearby at current salaries, they could pay you more so that you can afford to live nearby, or they and you could use your influence to create decent public transportation in your city. If change happens gradually, any of those measures doesn't have to be disruptive.

      But the way it currently works is that the tax payer supports the consequences of your company's poor choice of location. I.e., we all pay for the unnecessary roads, gasoline, and pollution just so that you can live far away from work.

    11. Re:Another tax on the working class by geg81 · · Score: 1

      Do you think people drive an hour or two each way every damned day FOR FUN?

      Of course, they do it FOR FUN. In most professions, you can get a job in medium-sized town with decent housing prices and short commutes. If you choose a location, job, and home that forces long commutes on you, you make that choice FOR FUN. What's annoying is that you want other people to pay the price for your choices: the roads, the wasted gasoline, the pollution, the war in Iraq, ...

  26. Distance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heck, charge them by the ammount of time they spend in their car, they could tripple the ammount of tax income through this! Note I said in their car, not driving. Driving would indicate motion.

  27. I remember "Privacy"... by TechNit · · Score: 1

    I remember back in the day when "Privacy" actually MEANT something!!!!

    --
    Sig?! Sig?! We don't need no stinking sig!!
  28. Simpler and Cheaper Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't live in California, but I'm going to operate under the assumption that they require yearly car inspections. Why not just have the your milage recorded on every inspection?

    It seems like it'd be a rather expensive hassle to get all cars in Cali equipped with this GPS.

    1. Re:Simpler and Cheaper Solution by slugo3 · · Score: 1

      "I don't live in California, but I'm going to operate under the assumption that they require yearly car inspections"

      they dont although you have to get it smogged like every other year

    2. Re:Simpler and Cheaper Solution by fanboy19 · · Score: 1

      Actually, Californai DMV only requires an inspection every three or four years. I can't remember which but its been at least 2 years for me now with no required inspection. Plus, once a car is 25 years old it becomes smog exempt and therefore never requires an inspection.

  29. Could somebody explain this to me? by Jonas+the+Bold · · Score: 4, Interesting

    California being in debt is a huge problem, gets lots of attention, in need of desperate measures and so on, but the federal government being MASSIVELY in debt isn't.

    Is there a reason for this or is it just because republicans haven't been successful with the federal budget? (not trolling)

    --
    Everything seemed to be going so nice
    'till the end of all beings punched right through the ice
    1. Re:Could somebody explain this to me? by hopemafia · · Score: 4, Interesting

      States debts get more attention since they don't make the money...literally. The feds can do pretty much whatever they want to give themselves more money, but the states have less power, and thus have less options to cover their debt.

      Also many states are required by their own laws to balance their budgets.

      --
      If God had had a computer it would have taken him 7 months to create the earth...if he even bothered to do it at all.
    2. Re:Could somebody explain this to me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The federal govt can just print money to get out of debt. California can't.

    3. Re:Could somebody explain this to me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you ask the germans how well that works?

    4. Re:Could somebody explain this to me? by Monkelectric · · Score: 1

      It's because the federal government is stealing all our money. California recieves something like 40% of the tax money it pays to the federal governemnt, back. Which means we're financing quite a lot of the federal government. In addition, the cost of illegal aliens to the state is about ~8 billion a year, which california legally can do nothing about since the borders are a federal problem. Personally, I think a revolt is coming. Id like to see the entire state stop paying its income taxes until washington gets the picture.

      --

      Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

    5. Re:Could somebody explain this to me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not saying it's a good thing. It's just what they do.

    6. Re:Could somebody explain this to me? by lelio98 · · Score: 1

      The California debt isn't used to manage the world's economy. It is used to provide wasteful, overbudgeted, useless services to the citizens of California. A balanced federal budget doesn't provide enough monetary flexibility to maintain a stable economy, therefore it isn't a big deal.

    7. Re:Could somebody explain this to me? by superflippy · · Score: 1

      Also many states are required by their own laws to balance their budgets.

      South Carolina, where I live now, is one of those states. For a while, we had a governor who didn't care and the state had a huge financial crisis. So we elected a governor with a reputation for being a penny pincher and, two years later, it looks like the budget is getting back on solid ground.

      I'm originally from California, so I have some sympathy for the state, especially since most of my family lives there. We'll be done with our governor in 2010, and if things are still bad out there maybe you can borrow him for a few years. Just make sure you keep him well-supplied with grits and cheap khakis. Oh, and he may need a couple of live pigs if the state legislature gets out of hand.

      --
      Your fantasies contain the seeds of important concepts.
  30. Tried that over here by Killjoy_NL · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In the Netherlands they tried something similar a few years back. It stranded long before implementation. And since the American populace loves to drive and loves their cheap gass price, I don't think that the government will be able to do this successfully. (Pardon my typos and possible bad grammar, I'm dutch, so english isn't my first language)

    --
    This is the sig that says NI (again)
    1. Re:Tried that over here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      (Pardon my typos and possible bad grammar, I'm dutch, so english isn't my first language)
      You're doing better with your second language than many Americans do with their first (and only) language. ;)
    2. Re:Tried that over here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, don't worry; most of the people on the Internet are typical Americans, so your English stands out... in a good way.

    3. Re:Tried that over here by zakezuke · · Score: 2, Informative

      And since the American populace loves to drive and loves their cheap gass price, I don't think that the government will be able to do this successfully

      It's not so much the fact that we love to drive. It's the fact that we lack useable public transportation. Many cities had fabulous rail and light rail systems 100 years ago but in our wisdom they tore up the tracks. For many of us, the car is the only option.

      That being said, only a complete moron would even consider taxing a car that weighs in over 3000kg the same as a car that weighs in at 1100kg. To me this is total non-sense. I looked the article and saw that the Hummer, an off road vehicle, is taxed twice as much as an average sized car, which is taxed about twice as much as tiny sub average sized car. This to me is more than fair.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
  31. Wow... by JoeLinux · · Score: 5, Funny

    Can they figure out any OTHER way to try to drive out business out of this state?

    We have some of the highest sales tax, the highest standards of living, permits are required to do anything short of wiping my ass and whacking off.

    I propose a tax on ravers. We have enough of them. San Francisco could wipe out our debt in and of itself. It's simple to do it too: if the number of dead glowsticks in your apartment/mom's basement weigh more than your furniture, you get taxed. They certainly have the money for it. If they can afford those E hits....

    Just a thought,

    Joe

    1. Re:Wow... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      whoa, you don't need a permit to whack off in cali... that guy totally screwed me out of $1,000...

    2. Re:Wow... by OrangeTide · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Once we can tax people for having to live out in cheaper areas because they make too little money to afford a home downtown, we can move onto bigger and better things:

      We should tax all LLCs 110%. I'm tired of having small businesses that sell furniture, dialup internet, food and liquor. Also I'm sick of all those icky poor people these kinds of places seem to attract.

      Also it would be nice if we taxed trucks $1/mile, since they pollute the most, cause the most road wear and deliver things to stores like Wal-Mart. Also truck drivers dress like poor people.

      Also we should require additional taxes on bottled water imported to the state. I'm tired of seeing ugly people drink the same brand of water as I do. The milky white city water should be plenty good enough for them.

      We should also tax mops and other cleaning supplies. There are a lot of janitors that aren't paying their fair share. We can use these funds to create a wildlife preserve to protect animals from Lysol.

      If that doesn't drive out all the poor people, I don't know what will. (if you didn't notice, California's state goverment hates poor people)

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    3. Re:Wow... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

      "the highest standards of living"

      Perhaps you are unaware that a high standard of living is a good thing. Just thought I'd let you know that before you continue ranting and, uh, raving, about it.

      Maybe you might not be so happy with that tax on raving you propose...it could come back to haunt you.

    4. Re:Wow... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do people not drink tap water in California? The only time I buy water here is if I am out somewhere and have no choice - and even so, I would be more likely to buy juice instead, since it is an actual product. In Vancouver we put our tap water thru a Brita filter, although we don't really need to. I think it's mostly convenience of having cold water in the fridge rather than an actual filter (don't ask me why we didn't just use a jug).

      I'm in Ontario right now at the University of Waterloo, and the water here isn't as great as Vancouver but still more than drinkable. I find that filtering here is beneficial and serves to make the water taste, well... good.

      But yeah I had friends go to Cali this summer (lord knows I tried to convince them against it - "save for Europe!" I cried), and they said it looked as if people... only drank bottled water. Very strange.

    5. Re:Wow... by cicadia · · Score: 1

      In Vancouver, we drink the tap water for the free Prozac

      --
      Living better through chemicals
    6. Re:Wow... by ZedmanAuk · · Score: 1

      Umm, I drink tap water (here in Pasadena). In fact I prefer the taste of tap water to that of most bottled water or filtered water (we have a Pur pitcher that my wife uses since she doesn't like the taste of tap water). In fact I think the water here tastes much better than it did in Denver, where I used to live, and did use a filter for all my drinking water.

      It doesn't seem to have harmed me yet...

      --
      -ZA
    7. Re:Wow... by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      I usually get sick if I drink tap water here. Also it tastes "sandy". Seems to be fine for cooking though.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  32. In Russia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    ...cars track you!

  33. First "Get Over It" Post by Le+Marteau · · Score: 0

    Put on your Tin foil hats.

    Nobody interested in you and where you go.

    Only criminals would need to worry.

    Get over yourself.

    Get a life.

    --
    Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
    1. Re:First "Get Over It" Post by El · · Score: 1

      Nobody interested in you and where you go. Right. Like my wife isn't going to scan the GPS database every week to see if it contains the coordinates of any strip clubs... or as if I won't use it to check if she's been buying shoes and purses behind my back again!

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    2. Re:First "Get Over It" Post by i_want_you_to_throw_ · · Score: 1

      For the record, it's not tin foil, it's ALUMINUM FOIL. Tin and Aluminum are distinctly different things. Sorry but someone FINALLY had to point this out.

  34. Perfect! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. Tax automobile use.
    2. ???
    3. Profit!

  35. Odometer? by RaguMS · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why not just use odometer readings? There are already laws and measures in place to prevent tampering.

  36. Two other problems by Otter · · Score: 1
    One problem, if you RTFA, is that such a plan is actually heading into a trial run in Oregon, while it's just a proposal in California.

    The other is that, as the FA notes, a gasoline tax also taxes mileage, in probably a better way. The complaint is that the lower tax per mile on a Prius than an Explorer is good from an environmental point of view but unfair in terms of road wear -- I'm no expert on asphalt but wouldn't an SUV with knobby tires (because you need them to drive to the mall, you know) be running up greater road damage roughly in proportion to its greater fuel consumption?

    1. Re:Two other problems by TwicK80 · · Score: 1
      "Hybrids are great. They use less fuel but take up exactly the same space on the road as a Hummer"
      Well they seem to think all vehicles are the same, even though you can fit like 3 hybrids inside a hummer. The hybrids probably weigh about 1/3 as much as the hummer also. Might as well tax the guy riding his bicycle on the street, those take up just as much space as a hummer also.....
    2. Re:Two other problems by silentbozo · · Score: 1

      I'm no expert on asphalt but wouldn't an SUV with knobby tires (because you need them to drive to the mall, you know) be running up greater road damage roughly in proportion to its greater fuel consumption?

      Absolutely. In fact, in many residential roads, SUVs of a certain weight or above (say, a H2) are illegal, precisely because they fall into commercial class weight. Taxing a fuel-efficient car, which derives part of the efficiency by being very light, by mileage, unfairly subsidizes larger vehicles that actually cause damage.

      Face it, it's an idiot band-aid that, like the proposed telecommunications tax to fund more government flab that was just defeated, merely creates another layer of bureaucracy dedicated to sucking dollar bills out of our wallets. If they could just force us to give half our money to the government, and then require us to fill out forms to get it back, they would... wait, they already do that!

    3. Re:Two other problems by simishag · · Score: 1
      A heavier vehicle will no doubt put more wear on the road than a lighter one. Considering the difference in gas mileage in a Prius and a Chevy Avalanche (ok, that's what I drive), the Avalanche driver will be paying quite a bit more in gas taxes (not unfairly).

      But I don't think the big problem is road wear caused by less efficient passenger vehicles, even in the aggregate. The roads are built to last a certain number of years under a HEAVY flow of traffic, and after 5-10 years they get resurfaced regardless of what condition they're in. In any case, my truck still weighs only about 5300 pounds empty, and those dump trucks and 18-wheelers that plow the roads every day almost certainly cause more wear and tear than my little truck.

      The bigger problem, at least in SoCal, is the sheer number of vehicles on the freeways. When you look at it this way, it actually makes more sense for the state to tax by the mile, as that would (in theory) fulfill the public policy goal of reducing the total number of miles driven, and maybe getting people to carpool and use more public transit. Fuel taxes only encourage people to use more efficient vehicles; they don't encourage people to make fewer trips.

      Personally, I think they could do this a lot more easily and with less intrusion on privacy by just making all the freeways toll roads, with different rates based on the time of day. But that's another argument for another day.

    4. Re:Two other problems by gewalker · · Score: 1

      Road damage is roughly proportional to the fourth power of the vehicle weight.

      Having more axles/tires helps spread the load offsetting some of the damage, but just because a Hummer and a Civic both have 32 psi road pressure does not mean equal road wear. The flexing of the road surface is greater in the case of the heavier vehicle because the flexing is spread out over a much larger area than just the contact surface (because a road is much more rigid that the tire) And to support 2000 pounds of load requires roughly twice the flexing that 1000 pounds of load requires.

      Cars cause very little road damage compared to trucks, even Hummers are much less than weight than and drastically less damage than a loaded semi.

      Automobile mileage is a bigger factor in road congestion related costs than it it is in road damage costs.

      Of course in many areas a big road damage cost factor is related to weather damage.

    5. Re:Two other problems by AtomicBomb · · Score: 1

      Exactly... I worked in a asphalt testing lab once upon a time. My role was to quantify the strength of different asphalt against different traffic load...

      My boss was a very experienced road engineer. He told me the road damage by overloaded vehicle could be instantaneous and clearly a function of vehicle weight and tyre type....

      There was an extreme case involving an overloaded logging truck ... In a cold winter dawn, the truck driver decided to drive off at the max speed regardless... The chips broke off from the asphalt and left a couple of tracks along a 10km stretch of just-sealed road. The damage is in the range of millions....

  37. Arnold will tax by grolaw · · Score: 2, Insightful

    how far you drive, how long you f**K and anything else he can. How nice that the democrats aren't to blame for this abomination.

    Time to expose the 13-car owner 'govner for what he is - aggressively hostile to everything the average guy or gal needs.

    1. Re:Arnold will tax by Brandybuck · · Score: 2, Informative

      In California this was recommended by a bipartisan commission. That means Democrats were involved. Next year it's getting implemented in Oregon, an emphatically Democrat state.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    2. Re:Arnold will tax by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

      My solution is even simpeler. Stop investing in the powergrid, healthcare, roads and other things like that.

      --
      Privacy is terrorism.
    3. Re:Arnold will tax by grolaw · · Score: 1

      Yep, you B simpeler. If you think healthcare can be abandoned along with roads, and the power grid, you are an idiot.

      Exactly how will you keep from dying from that nasty scarlet fever epidemic - or from the drug resistant strains of TB?

      Excuse me wizard, but the life you save with public health spending may well be your own.

      Of course, if you want to play "rugged individualist" then I suggest that you take your jeans and a t-shirt and head up to Alaska and rough it outdoors for the winter. You can prove to yourself exactly how tough, smart and dead you can be.

      qqqq moron

    4. Re:Arnold will tax by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

      Dear Moron,

      And is you live in California and you think there is no need to pay taxes you're a moron too :)

      Cheers, Fuzzums.

      --
      Privacy is terrorism.
    5. Re:Arnold will tax by grolaw · · Score: 1

      What the hell are you saying?

      "is you live in California and you think there is no need to pay taxes"

      "Is you" isn't a [roper subject-verb pair.

      "Is you ... and" isn't a proper conjunction.

      I've never said that, "there is no need to pay taxes";, It was you, Fuzzums.

      Frightfully moronnic. Please go back to school now. Your mother is calling.

      Oh, and if you will stop eating those paint chips you will not get much dumber.

      qqqq moron

    6. Re:Arnold will tax by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

      yo, it's a typo and is that's all you undestand from my posting YOU better report at school ASAP.

      unless you've got something intelligent to say in a decent way, this discussion is over.

      --
      Privacy is terrorism.
  38. Tinfoil hat by nerd256 · · Score: 1

    Great... now I have to fit a tinfoil cap for my car

    (yes I know the car is already made of metal)

    1. Re:Tinfoil hat by MemoryAid · · Score: 1

      Put it over the GPS antenna.

      --
      Language students: Don't try to learn English here. This ain't it.
  39. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by .milfox · · Score: 1

    <3 <3 <3

    Someone mod him up! :P

    Seriously, though.. as a californian, I can't disagree. Even though I'm stationed out of state, I still pay my CA taxes because I <3 CA. But the influx of refugees, well.. Don't worry, we'll outsource to your state eventually.

  40. Except that this would target green cars, too by benhocking · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A tax based on how far you drive does make a certain amount of sense (ignoring the method used), in that tax-payer money goes to building and maintaining roads. However, as someone who drives a high MPG car (Honda Civic), I admit that I prefer methods that target gas guzzlers disproportionately. Of course, one could also argue that gas guzzlers tend to do more harm to the environment, etc., and should pay more, but then that kind of sounds like they're buying the right to poison us.

    Of course, what it really boils down to is a new tax that they can add on to existing taxes to pay for even more government programs, preferably to benefit people who made large contributions to the winners' campaigns.

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
    1. Re:Except that this would target green cars, too by brianosaurus · · Score: 4, Funny

      They really need to embed these trackers into shoes, so they can also tax those bastards who walk or ride the bus instead of driving themselves.

      --
      blog
    2. Re:Except that this would target green cars, too by fossa · · Score: 2, Insightful

      buying the right to poison us

      This is how many "everything should be a market" would like pollution to work. It may sound evil when you word it that way, but at least there's a monetary incentive to pollute less. In some schemes, corporations can buy and sell tickets that allow them to pollute a certain amount. A company may gain money by polluting less and selling its tickets (to other companies who will then pollute more). Alternatively, organizations could purchase tickets and then destroy them, or the government could purchase tickets to set an overall limit on the particular polution.

      It's an interesting idea that I don't know too much about, just wanted to share.

    3. Re:Except that this would target green cars, too by ZhuLien · · Score: 1

      it's only work if they make it illegal to wear bare feet and shoot you onsite to discourage breaking this law

    4. Re:Except that this would target green cars, too by Sime208 · · Score: 1

      Didn't the Beatles predict all this anyway?

      If you drive a car, I'll tax the street,
      If you try to sit, I'll tax your seat,
      If you get too cold, I'll tax the heat,
      If you take a walk, I'll tax your feet.
      Taxman.
      'Cos I'm the Taxman,
      Yeah, I'm the Taxman.

  41. ROAD WARRIOR by loid_void · · Score: 1

    I'm going out right now and renting Road Warrior.

    --
    Anyone seen my jagged little pill?
  42. Sort of by Dirtside · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Taxing people based on how much they drive is a good idea (because as it stands, the costs of driving are highly externalized -- e.g. the people getting the benefit from driving more are not necessarily the ones paying for it), but there's no reason the mechanism for tracking needs to store any personal info. It's entirely possible to come up with a system for tracking how much you drive, without tracking where you drive.

    Nonetheless, rather than tracking your mileage, I'd much rather see gas taxes increased so that the more you drive, the more money the state gets for road maintenance, mass transit, etc. Right now, gas taxes are a fixed number, rather than a percentage of the gas price. You could also include the cost of auto insurance in the gas price, so that everyone's automatically insured to some required minimum, and then you could get more insurance on top of that if you wanted it, rather than the situation now, where it's illegal to drive without insurance (in California) but millions of people, mostly immigrants, do it anyway.

    This would also put more of the burden on vehicles that get worse gas mileage, which also tend to be larger, heavier, cause more road wear, are more dangerous to other vehicles, and emit more pollutants.

    And of course, people in the U.S. (and especially Southern California, where I live) are so obsessed with being able to drive wherever you want, whenever you want, and not having to pay for it (even though someone has to pay for it!), that they fight gas taxes tooth and nail even though proper application would reduce traffic (by providing more transit options). Europe has the right idea.

    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    1. Re:Sort of by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      It's entirely possible to come up with a system for tracking how much you drive, without tracking where you drive

      It's called an odometer.

      It doesn't work for what they are trying to do though. They can only tax you for driving in their state, not for driving other places, so the odometer doesn't work.

    2. Re:Sort of by hopemafia · · Score: 1

      "It's entirely possible to come up with a system for tracking how much you drive, without tracking where you drive."

      We already have...it's called an ODOMETER...and they come standard in every car.

      --
      If God had had a computer it would have taken him 7 months to create the earth...if he even bothered to do it at all.
    3. Re:Sort of by Idarubicin · · Score: 1
      You could also include the cost of auto insurance in the gas price, so that everyone's automatically insured to some required minimum...

      Except that there is then no financial incentive to be a good driver, unless traffic fines are made insanely high. Everyone would pay for poor drivers through the higher gas taxes.

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    4. Re:Sort of by mikefe · · Score: 1

      Simple, if you have more than X points on your license, you have to get additional insurance in addition to the insurance in the GF's post.

      --
      There: Something at a specific location.
      Their: Owned by someone.
      Please make sure your english compiles.
    5. Re:Sort of by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 1

      Don't you tax people based on how much they drive allready???

      It's called a gas tax !!
      You drive more ...
      You consume more gas !!!

      This is either big brother rearing it's head.
      Or stupid politicians that do NOT want to be re-elected ;)

      Cheers,
      -- The Dude

    6. Re:Sort of by kaatochacha · · Score: 1

      you should revise that to "Mostly illegal immigrants".
      Every legal immigrant I know pays auto insurance. That's a pet peeve of mine: there's a world of difference between legal and illegal immigration, and the two terms are often used interchangeably.

  43. Time to go ballistic by kuriharu · · Score: 0

    I don't think this will ever pass the state legislature. If it does, I think Gov. Schwarzenegger will veto it. Thank God it's not Grey Davis in there anymore. He'd be sitting in his office with the pen already drawn waiting to sign this. I don't think it's a means of earning revenue. I think it's a veiled attempt to force CA into public transit. Another reason why I hope it will fail. If it does pass, I think I'm gonna have to build a bazooka or something and go nuts. Any / .ters know how to build a bazooka? One that preferrably shoots out glue or something sticky would be nice....

  44. They tried that over here by Killjoy_NL · · Score: 2, Informative

    In the Netherlands they tried something similar a few years back.

    It stranded long before implementation.
    And since the American populace loves to drive and loves their cheap gass price, I don't think that the government will be able to do this successfully.

    (Pardon my typos and possible bad grammar, I'm dutch, so english isn't my first language)

    --
    This is the sig that says NI (again)
    1. Re:They tried that over here by Wizarth · · Score: 1

      Dupe Post!

      It's a joke.

    2. Re:They tried that over here by Killjoy_NL · · Score: 1

      Yeah sorry about that, something went wrong here :)
      and since I didn't see my "first" post, I reposted it

      --
      This is the sig that says NI (again)
  45. wouldn't it be easier... by bradley_earl · · Score: 3, Insightful

    wouldn't it be easier to just tax gas at the pump at a higher rate? while it wouldn't would equate to equal taxes per mile per person (because of mileage variations), it would seem a lot less obtrusive. given the price of gas these days, who'd even notice a few pennies difference anyways? if we absolutely had to spend some money to make money- we could always build toll booths. same function, some of the same privacy issues (a la EZ pass etc.) but would hurt the pizza delivery drivers a lot less hard.

    1. Re:wouldn't it be easier... by El · · Score: 1

      Add a high enough tax on gasoline, and people will just buy thier gas in another state -- or another country.

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    2. Re:wouldn't it be easier... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you think people are you going to do? Drive from San Francisco up to Oregon to stock up on gas, just to avoid paying a couple cents more a gallon?

    3. Re:wouldn't it be easier... by bradley_earl · · Score: 1

      you'd be surprised by how much any one in l.a. will pay to avoid that kind of a hassle. on the other fringes of the state, i'm sure you are correct- but those aren't really the people you need to tax anyways.

    4. Re:wouldn't it be easier... by daveo0331 · · Score: 1

      Not to mention the fact that raising the gas tax would also encourage people to buy more efficient cars. Next time you fly into the Bay Area or LA, look out the window and you'll see why this might be a good idea. If everyone goes out and buys a Prius, no problem for the state -- just double the gas tax, and you collect the same revenue.

      Another idea would be to calculate the sales tax on cars by dividing the purchase price by the miles per gallon. This avoids the "poor people driving old shitty cars that get bad gas mileage" argument against high gas taxes. For example --
      Prius: $20000/55mpg = $363.64 sales tax
      Hummer: $50000/10mpg = $5000 sales tax

      --
      Remember the days when Republicans were the party of fiscal responsibility?
    5. Re:wouldn't it be easier... by El · · Score: 1
      No, but they might drive from San Diego to Tijuana. And I'd invest in some 55-gallon drums and drive to Nevada to save $1/gallon. The operative phrase here is "make the tax high enough" Increase the gas tax to $100/gallon and see what happens...

      And by the way, I live in Oregon and used to routinely buy gas in Washington to save a few cents a gallon...

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

  46. 1984, anyone? by flamechocobo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    HUGE privacy issue. There is no telling what can be done with these devices. Plus, GPS unit's don't JUST measure distance traveled. Most also track where you are at all times.

    1. Re:1984, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HUGE privacy issue
      Get real, you think anybody is remotely interested in how often you fill your fat mouth with a Wendy's triple-stack burger?

      There is no telling what can be done with these devices
      Well, yes there is. These are GPS devices, not triple-core quad processor motherboards with extra secret processor chips. They calculate your longnitude/latitude and record it, nothing more.

      Most also track where you are at all times
      That would be very true, if it wasn't complete rubbish. Most GPS tell you where you are... and that's it.

    2. Re:1984, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could say the same about mobile/cellular phones, but I don't hear yanks complaining about those.

    3. Re:1984, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get real, you think anybody is remotely interested in how often you fill your fat mouth with a Wendy's triple-stack burger?
      How about insurance companies, idiot?

  47. Privacy by spdt · · Score: 1
    Before anyone starts up a big ruckus about privacy, FTA:

    James Whitty, who heads the Oregon pilot project for the state's transportation department, maintains the GPS would detect only whether the car is inside or outside of Oregon and how many miles it has traveled in state - not its every movement.

    "There are people who hear 'GPS,' and they think it's some exotic military device," said Whitty, who said the state will not have the ability, or desire, to monitor drivers' traveling habits. The Oregon device would be a "glorified compass," he said.

    Joan Borucki, chief deputy director at the California Transportation Commission and a member of the California Performance Review team that made the recommendation here, insists the device could not track residents' whereabouts.

    "The bottom line is, they couldn't tell where these people have been. That's just not going to be there," she said.
    1. Re:Privacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But they COULD tell where you've been. It's just a stored procedure away. This is an extremely slippery slope.

    2. Re:Privacy by benna · · Score: 1

      I don't see how you can determine whether somebody is in a state without also having the ability to track hir movements.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  48. Imagine the possibilities! by Kent+Brewster · · Score: 1

    I note with interest the presence of an onboard speedometer in the Oregon graphic. If they're not very careful to protect individual rights, the government of California is going to wind up with an extremely efficient method for collecting revenue in the form of traffic tickets.

    Next logical steps: centrally-controlled speed governors, ignition cutoffs, and Breathalyzers. What fun! ;)

  49. Burgerflickle by evangellydonut · · Score: 2, Funny

    This is a Travesty, a Sham, and a Mockery, a Traveshamockery!

  50. You can already do this by biggerboy · · Score: 1

    It's called, uh, a toll road.

    Just break up the road into multiple sections and have $$ deducted via your Fastrak.

  51. Tolls? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You know, back when I lived in New York state, we had a toll system on our main highway (New York State Thruway). WTF would be wrong with just installing toll booths and (gasp) hiring workers to man them?

    Generates revenue based on miles driven (roughly), preserves privacy, creates jobs. Low- and high-skill, I might add, as modern transportation systems tend to have electronic monitoring systems. I know the LA area has a centralized traffic monitoring and control system; someone had to program and design all that.

  52. Odometer? by bhaskin · · Score: 1

    What's the matter with the already existing measuring device in every vehicle?

    It's already a crime to mess with it anyway. So why can't it just be used for whatever other purpose they want to measure the distance a car is driven?

    Brian

  53. Wait a sec ... by vlad_petric · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Shouldn't efficient cars be encouraged ?

    This proposal will have the opposite effect

    --

    The Raven

    1. Re:Wait a sec ... by Sancho · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Not entirely. You still have to buy gas.

    2. Re:Wait a sec ... by nomadic · · Score: 1

      The people in charge of keeping the roads maintained probably don't care how efficient your car is, they're looking at the wear and tear on the road.

    3. Re:Wait a sec ... by hazem · · Score: 1

      Right, but an H2 is much heavier than a Prius and will do more damage to the road. This is just a big grab for more money and more information on what people are doing.

    4. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go ride a bike!

    5. Re:Wait a sec ... by cephyn · · Score: 1

      well thats an extreme example to make a point, but what about a corrolla vs. prius? a civic vs. a civic hybrid? same wear and tear, one pays more.

      --
      Moo.
    6. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As well it should be. The roads still get paid for through the gas tax, and people are encoraged to drive more efficient cars and pollute the air less.

      Let the people who want to waste extra fuel pay a bigger piece of the road cost as a punishment for polluting. Personally, I'd like to see a $5/gallon gas tax and free mass transit.

    7. Re:Wait a sec ... by mr_zorg · · Score: 1

      I think you missed the bit where the state gas tax will be repealed in favor of this new method.

    8. Re:Wait a sec ... by jaeson · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Yes, but you are forgetting that the Governator "Groper" Schwarzenegger is the one who repealed the increased car registration fees in California which was put in place by Republicrat Gray Davis. The Governator himself is a *big* fan of those Humvees, and isn't about to eat the cost of maintaing the roads just because of a silly thing like fuel efficiency.

      Oh yeah, and California would have a lot more money to spend on roads if Arnie wasn't settling the whole Enron court case that California had filed for cents on the dollar. Link Here

      I can't belive people actually want to change the Constitution to allow this fuck to run for President.

    9. Re:Wait a sec ... by Sancho · · Score: 4, Funny

      Oh I'm sorry, does that mean that you no longer have to fill up the tanks of your gas-guzzling cars? Do they run on sunshine and happiness now?

    10. Re:Wait a sec ... by Smitty825 · · Score: 1

      Ummmm...the Governator didn't propose this idea. A comission (that he appointed) to look into the California Taxes & how they are being spent came up with this suggestion

      --

      Doh!
    11. Re:Wait a sec ... by mr_zorg · · Score: 1

      No, but at least you won't be TAXED on it anymore. Which is the point after all. If you don't like having to put so much gas into your car, buy a more efficient car -- or drive less.

    12. Re:Wait a sec ... by Musrum · · Score: 1

      "same wear and tear" - none at all. Only trucks and other heavy vehicles actually damage the roads.

      --
      In Soviet Amerika the ballot boxes YOU!
    13. Re:Wait a sec ... by Cromac · · Score: 1
      I can't belive people actually want to change the Constitution to allow this fuck to run for President.

      Fortunately I don't think it's very many people who want that, just a few with enough money to buy commercials for it. Even Arnold himself isn't pushing for it, at least publicly.

    14. Re:Wait a sec ... by cephyn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Oh yeah that's a faaaantastic precedent to set. What Mr. Big Company? Want to pollute more? Well, pay more money and you can! (well, that's already possible too, but that doesn't make it right).

      You should not be able to pay more in order to disregard the environment. The health of the environment should not be for sale, it should be a factor on everyone.

      --
      Moo.
    15. Re:Wait a sec ... by IAmMaxHarris · · Score: 3, Insightful
      No.

      The proper role of government is to preserve the constitutionally-limited negative (which do not require the enslavement of others) rights of citizens.

      The government has no business encouraging or discouraging any legal activity. Such "encouragment" necessarily violates the rights of someone.

    16. Re:Wait a sec ... by UniverseIsADoughnut · · Score: 2, Interesting

      it won't have an opposite effect, it would hit people equaly.

      And yes, its nice to encourage people to by efficent cars, but they shouldn't need added encouragement, since the car using less gas is their encouragement.

      Anyways. You forget road wear, no matter what your milage is, your still putting wear and tear on a road, and clogging it up and so forth. If you drive a whole lot, your using that system more then those who don't use it much. Maybe a person has a car that gets 1 mpg, but only drives to church and the grocery store on sundays in a 5 mile loop. But the person in a Prius drives 1000 miles a week, the person in the prius is using the system much much more.

    17. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What you have to understand here is that (for years!) California legislators have been laboring under the delusion that the internal combustion engine will go the way of the dodo real soon now.

      This is the reason for the ZEV mandate, and for the billions of dollars wasted by GM and Ford on unworkable electric cars. As late as 2001, the California government still thought that 10 percent of vehicles sold in 2003 would produce no emissions other than water... because, golly, they'd passed a law saying so!

      Of course, here it is in 2004, and we still have no zero emissions vehicles other than the odd golf cart. Honda and Toyota were smart. They ignored the ZEV mandate and worked on hybrid gas-electric vehicles instead. Thus they reap the rewards while GM is demonized for following orders.

      But the folks in Sacramento still haven't learned anything. They have created a 'ultra low emissions vehicle' category, a 'super low emissions vehicle' category. The idea is that, with the right legislation, they can gradually force car manufacturers to make their hybrid cars more and more efficient. The mechanism is to require a large fraction of new cars in successive years to go from LEV to ULEV to SULEV to PZEV categories, until finally (according to this master plan) there will be millions of cars sold in the ZEV category.

      This is like breeding mice that eat less food in an attempt to create a mouse which doesn't need any food at all. It won't work. You can make more somewhat more efficient hybrid vehicles, but they'll still need fuel.

      If they really want zero emissions vehicles, they should give up on passing all these laws requiring them, and spend money instead on basic research. We need the technology for good enough fuel cells or batteries. Once we have that, cars that don't need gas will appear automatically. But you can't make them just by passing laws that say "make an adequate car that doesn't use gas."

      So, anyway, the CA legislature still fails to understand this, and they still imagine that ZEVs are just around the corner. And this makes them worry: the roads are paid for with the gas tax. But then who will pay for the roads when (in just a few years, remember) no one is buying gas anymore?

      Thus they have cooked up this whole bizarre GPS car tax scheme. There have been mutterings about it for the last few years. I'd hoped that someone would have enough common sense to kill it off, but I guess it just fits in too well in the bizarre worldview which is endemic to Sacramento.

    18. Re:Wait a sec ... by Sancho · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Shouldn't efficient cars be encouraged ?

      This proposal will have the opposite effect


      The opposite effect being, of course, either that efficient cars will be discouraged or that gas-guzzlers will be encouraged.

      Neither is true. There is no government encouragement to drive a gas-guzzler under this taxation plan, there is simply no tax-based encouragement NOT to.

    19. Re:Wait a sec ... by sadler121 · · Score: 0

      actually, someone who is driving a hybrid would still pay less, cause they would pay the per mile tax AND the tax on gas(you really don't think government will give up the tax that they already have on gas do you?). The Hybrid user pays less money on the actually gas, but pays an equal amount for the per mile tax.

      of course this is extremely silly, the over taxation of American society is going to be partially what turns this country into a third world nation in 4 years...

    20. Re:Wait a sec ... by Jason1729 · · Score: 1

      Who said anything about hybrids? Use more fuel per km = polute more = pay more tax....It has nothing to do with "measured" gas mileage; that's exactly the point.

    21. Re:Wait a sec ... by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 2, Insightful
      An SUV with knobby tires puts a lot more wear on a road that a prius. A good rule of thumb: the more gas it uses, the more damage it causes.

      But I agree, it's stupid to tax gas. Poor people buy almost as much gas as the super-rich, so most of the gas tax is paid by them.

      Here's an idea: How about a progressive income tax?

    22. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since these Big Comapnies want to damage the environment for their personal profit, as long as the penalties are high enough to make profit impossible, it will work.

      Anyway, isn't it better than the Governator's alternative of *not* charging more to pollute more with his distance tax. Hey, let's charge a flat $5 tax on a gallon of paint whether the manufacturing involves dumping 50 pounds of lead into a stream or not.

    23. Re:Wait a sec ... by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1
      It is a shame you haven't been modded up.

      It just shows how the government and media have created millions of drones in the USA. I pray for the day when Americans wake up and remember their rights under the constitution and also remember that our government was never setup to be "Big Brother" and tell us how we should live outside of the Constitution.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    24. Re:Wait a sec ... by Luigi30 · · Score: 1

      California will break off from the USA to go hang with Hawaii. Alaska can come too.

      --
      503 Sig Unavailable

      The Signature could not be accessed. Please try again later or contact the administrator
    25. Re:Wait a sec ... by NoMercy · · Score: 1

      If that is true, then poluting to excess should be illegal.

      The US is still so very willing to gamble on it's future against an enemy it can't defeat in the name of short term gain. How do they justify it, 'It'll hurt profits', 'It'll cost money', 'It's not the american way'.

      If this gamble doesn't go the way america wants, we could all be in for a rather uguly future.

    26. Re:Wait a sec ... by fireman+sam · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Well, it appears that this is the attitude that they are trying to please:

      "fuck the environment, I can now drive my SUV for the same yearly cost as those tree-hugging hippies in their solar power buzz boxes that take up room on my highway. Ha Ha Ha Fuck the world, we own Iraq and the oil now!!!! Drop the bomb!!!"

      --
      it is only after a long journey that you know the strength of the horse.
    27. Re:Wait a sec ... by demonbug · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As far as wear and tear on roads, passenger vehicles and light trucks (including SUVs) are generally responsible for a miniscule portion of road wear. The VAST majority of road wear due to vehicle travel (as opposed to weather/expansion/settling/etc.) is from large trucks and buses. A fully loaded semi has up to about 10,000 times the impact of a passenger car (more commonly in the 500-2,000 range) as far as road wear goes.
      The big issue is not paying for road wear (if we based taxes entirely on road wear due to vehicle use every trucking company in the country would be taxed out of business over night) caused by vehicles, but rather the road capacity they necessitate. A semi needs about 2-3 times the capacity (space) of a passenger car; passenger cars, SUVs, light trucks, etc. basically require the same road capacity. The purpose of this GPS system (which seems overly intrusive to me, even if it does make a lot of sense in many respects) is to base taxes on the actual cost incurred by a car - not for repairs due to wear inflicted by the car, but costs incurred by building and sustaining a road system with enough capacity to handle the traffic. The vast majority of maintenance work done on roads is not due to traffic volume, it is due to natural processes like weathering. Larger, higher-capacity roads cost more to build and maintain than smaller roads. From this perspecitve it makes a lot of sense to tax people based on how much they drive (how much capacity they use) rather than how much gas they use (which, as far as road wear and capacity goes, has little do do with the costs incurred).
      In my opinion we shouldn't be looking at reducing gas taxes (they should and do provide an added incentive for people to drive more efficient cars), but it is reasonable to look at other criteria for basing taxes on as well. This GPS is just way to invasive; law enforcement already uses things like FasTrak passes to track people's movements, you know that they aren't going to be able to help themselves from getting hold of the GPS data (and in many ways it would be their responsibility to do so).

    28. Re:Wait a sec ... by lightknight · · Score: 1, Interesting

      How about not? Why are the rich paying more? Because they have more money? That's a fucked up excuse. If you paid according to your income, on everything, people wouldn't work, because 10% of $0 would be the same as 10% of $1,000,000. Hence progressive taxes are for people who have no idea wtf they are talking about (i.e. Basic Economics). Damn, if I made $80,000 a year, and paid $2 for a McDonald's cheeseburger, and a guy making $40,000 pays $1, and a guy making $0 pays $0, what would be the point of working hard?

      And are you going to tell me a Porsche Boxster, 911 or BMW 7 (or hell, an X5) is going to destroy the road faster than a Ford Explorer or Expedition? Whatever you're smoking, spread it around. My dealer is out of town, and I need someone to hook me up.

      Honestly, in the old days of the republic, you paid for what you wanted, and that was that. Anything else was thuggery. Nowadays, they call it welfare or morally right when they assert claims over your money. For reasons like this, the Second Amendment was thus encoded.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    29. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention the heavier it is the more it damages the roads. I would wager that a 2300lb miata driving 20000 miles a year does less damage to the roads than a 6000lb H2 driving 10000 miles.

      I guess I'll be buying registering my next car out of state if this goes through.

    30. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha ha ha ha! What a moron... I truly hope you actually know better than that.

    31. Re:Wait a sec ... by jbarlow · · Score: 1

      Word.

      (waits nine seconds to try posting again)

    32. Re:Wait a sec ... by alexo · · Score: 1


      > Go ride a bike!

      Especially if you live in Yellowknife.

    33. Re:Wait a sec ... by skaffen42 · · Score: 1

      Considering who their governer is, would you really expect any other attitude?

      --
      People couldn't type. We realized: Death would eventually take care of this.
    34. Re:Wait a sec ... by Robber+Baron · · Score: 1

      There is no government encouragement to drive a gas-guzzler under this taxation plan...

      You're wrong. There's a huge bloody tax-incentive to go out and buy a Hummer because you can write it off as "equipment".

      --

      You're using her as bait, Master!

    35. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The rich TAKE the lions share of the money from the system, and therefore should pay more. The impact of a progressive tax is not going to change their status to NOT-rich! The whining bastards will still be filthy-fucking-rich when the day is over, and the poor will still be stressing out and paying the rich for goods and services. I don't see the rich really losing here...

    36. Re:Wait a sec ... by spitefulcrow · · Score: 1

      If I had mod points I'd put you at +5 funny for that.

      --
      Sorry, my karma just ran over your dogma.
    37. Re:Wait a sec ... by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 3, Informative
      This is absolutely true. Road and Track magazine does an April Fools road test each year (the Budwiser beer wagon, the Goodyear blimp, etc.). One year they decided that while they had done road tests, they had never tested road, so that's what they did. They got with their DoT and looked at the equipment that's used to test roads. Stuff I'd never imagined, like a gizmo that looks like a huge steam roller but what it does is measure the deflection of the pavement (why? I don't recall, but it's important to the pavement wonks).

      Anyway, one tidbit of information I took away from that article was the fact that roads last longer if you use them, but not if you abuse them. Remote roads that are seldom used actually break up faster than roads that are moderately used. Cars use them, constantly rolling them flat; trucks abuse them, constantly squeezing them like a toothpaste tube.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    38. Re:Wait a sec ... by Engineer+Andy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The traffic engineering paper I took at university informed me that 90% (or thereabouts) of pavement wear comes from trucks, and that pavement would last a very very long time if heavy trucks did not use it.

      I may well be wrong as I'm not practising as a traffic / pavement engineer, but your regular corolla / family sedan is not the culprit in wearing out roads

      --
      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World" 1 John 4:14
    39. Re:Wait a sec ... by penguinstorm · · Score: 1

      Yes efficient cars should be encouraged, but you need to step back and look at the whole board here.

      A fuel efficient Prius has the same impact as a far less efficient Toyota Echo on the road surface. You still need to appropriate a huge swath of my (the taxpayers) land for it to drive on.

      Admittedly a Hummer will have more impact on road maintenance than either of the above, but from a land use perspective all three are very similar. They all require asphalt, tarmac and a law enforcement infrastructure designed to manage it. (Unless, of course, the Hummer owner decides to drive wherever, whenever he wants....there's an inherent assumption here that drivers are using roads :)

      I've actually long thought that INSURANCE should be based not on some actuarial reading of a table that says my Volvo is safer than your Camaro (although that should remain a factor) but also on how much one drives - a simple odometer reading.

      I have driven marginally in the last year - choosing my bike instead - and yet am paying the same amount of insurance as in previous years (roughly); the fact that I'm driving less obviously reduces the chance that I'll have an accident and this should be reflected in a reduced insurance rate.

      So California: legislate insurance by mileage, let private industry do the data collection (and fraud detection) and then tax the insurance cost to pay for land use.

      Besides - what's to stop you from blocking the GPS unit by using a lead box or something; these things are line of site still, are they not?

      --
      Skot Nelson music is my saviour / i was maimed by rock and roll
    40. Re:Wait a sec ... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hence progressive taxes are for people who have no idea wtf they are talking about (i.e. Basic Economics).

      No, progressive taxes are for people that need to eat. The basic idea is that the first bit of income pays for your food, basic shelter, and clothes. After that, it's just improvements to basics and adding luxuries. By the time your tax burden hits 18%, you're sitting pretty in a big house with a nice Porsche (not that Boxter trash) in the driveway.

      Honestly, in the old days of the republic, you paid for what you wanted, and that was that.

      And government made its money through tariffs. That wouldn't work today, as we're too used to cheap goods from China.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    41. Re:Wait a sec ... by macromegas · · Score: 1

      makes sense if you're talking about urban areas. Don't get me wrong I kinda like the idea, but it needs some thought on how to make it work in the rural parts too. Free mass transit makes little sense where there are no masses.

      --
      Life has become the ideology of its absence - T.W. Adorno
    42. Re:Wait a sec ... by kiscica · · Score: 1

      A fuel efficient Prius has the same impact as a far less efficient Toyota Echo on the road surface.

      It's just a side point, but I'm not sure that I'd describe the Toyota Echo as "far less efficient" than the Prius. My wife has one and regularly gets 45 MPG with it in mostly highway driving. My sister's been getting more like 40 MPG with her Prius (admittedly, a first-generation Prius, but still...)

      Me, I'm happy with the high 40's-low 50's MPG (depending on percentage of highway driving) that my VW Jetta TDI wagon gets. On 100% biodiesel -- minimal pollution, no greenhouse gas emission. Even at $3.00 a gallon I'm paying less in fuel costs per mile than most people....

    43. Re:Wait a sec ... by NetFu · · Score: 3, Informative

      Um, I think everyone is forgetting here that the California government is CONSIDERING this. It's far from even being a bill that we'd vote on -- if this was just passed without our consent, everyone in the state government knows that HEADS WOULD ROLL. I think that was one lesson they learned from Gray Davis' recall and Schwarzenegger's election.

      This is the kind of sensationalist crap you see on Slashdot -- WAY blown out of proportion.

      From working in a gas station before, I can tell you how much of the price of gas is government tax -- about HALF. I've seen the invoices that gas stations pay for gas. So, I would seriously have to look at exactly how this kind of tax would compare to the gas tax we already have.

      Also, correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the "gas tax" both Federal and State? So, this driving distance tax would only eliminate part of the current gas tax.

      Of course, in my position this kind of change may be just fine for me because we tend to stay very close to home (within 50 miles) because we have a young family.

      This kind of change would probably hit commuters the most because of the high cost of housing in the urban areas. Remember, even if this would encourage people to move to the urban areas in California, that doesn't mean they would. They still have to have a job that would support buying a $600k-$900k+ house. A large percentage of people I work with just could not afford it, and companies like ours faced with losing employees or handing out raises would simply leave California.

      This kind of tax change would make the exodus from California go through the roof and in the end probably decrease the total amount of taxes the state collects. The governator isn't going to let that happen.

      So, it probably won't happen, but it's nice to "entertain" it...

    44. Re:Wait a sec ... by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      A large percentage of people I work with just could not afford it, and companies like ours faced with losing employees or handing out raises would simply leave California. This kind of tax change would make the exodus from California go through the roof and in the end probably decrease the total amount of taxes the state collects.

      You see? Isn't it just amazingly easy to understand how humans will react to taxes? Yet for some reason liberals think they can just keep piling on tax after tax. To them it's an endless well of money to be taxed, ehr, tapped.

      Yes, this should never pass. It will cause people and companies to leave California. It will be seen as a restriction of movement in a very large state where people have no choice but to cover large distances. And pity the poor fool that has to drive from Los Angeles to Bishop (or vice versa) each week.

    45. Re:Wait a sec ... by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      Personally, I'd like to see a $5/gallon gas tax and free mass transit.

      Personally I'd like to see $5/ride mass transit and free gas.

    46. Re:Wait a sec ... by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      Who said anything about hybrids? Use more fuel per km = polute more = pay more tax....It has nothing to do with "measured" gas mileage; that's exactly the point.

      The gas tax makes more sense then a measured gas mileage. Polluters are punished by having to buy more gas so efficient vehicles are encouraged. Those who drive their vehicles a lot will have to pay more taxes than they would if they drove less so less road use is encouraged.

      Eliminating the gas tax and trying to measure miles will cause people to try to drive less but there is no motivation to pollute less when driving the miles you're going to drive. And there is no incentive to drive a small car that pollutes less and does less damage to the road than a heavy mofu car that gets gallons per mile and weighs as much as a truck.

    47. Re:Wait a sec ... by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1
      Wow, a Californian that knows how to make a rational argument! You are a rare find my friend : )

      Seriously, I don't see how this tax would drive out business. Most business don't care about the tax burden of their employees. Most/All Californian companies know that they can easily set up a "surrogate" company in Nevada which doesn't have to pay corporate taxes, just like MS does. It is how MS gets out of paying hundreds of millions in state and local corporate taxes every year. You gotta love MS not supporting the local community. You would be surprised at how many companies are getting out of corporate taxes every year, while citizens are overburdened by taxes, especially the middle class.

      For you Californians, I do hope this doesn't happen, though you never know what wacky laws California will throw at its citizens.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    48. Re:Wait a sec ... by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      Free mass transit makes little sense where there are no masses.

      Which, ironically, is most of California.

    49. Re:Wait a sec ... by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      From what I've read and the sense I get is that people like Arnold and would vote for him for president if he were permitted to run. But the same people would not approve a constitutional amendment making that possible.

      It's not going to happen. Arnold is a likeable guy. But if they change the constitution to permit this it'd be with the specific intent of running Arnold. Who else is on the radar that would benefit from such an amendment? No-one.

      Arnold is likeable. But no-one's really going to change the Constitution for him.

    50. Re:Wait a sec ... by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      Nevada not claim corporate taxes? I must be an idiot || fool || ignoramus, but I cannot imagine a single state, particularly Gambling Capital of the Word, not taxing corporate profits. It's so unAmerican.

      Got references to back that up? (Genuine interest here.)

      -Chris

    51. Re:Wait a sec ... by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      The whining bastards will still be filthy-fucking-rich when the day is over, and the poor will still be stressing out and paying the rich for goods and services. I don't see the rich really losing here..

      I'm not surprised. Take your liberal glassess off. Also don't forget that the "poor" are not just stressing out paying the "rich" for goods and services... the rich are also giving them jobs so that they have money to start with.

      Or how many poor people do you know that are employing others?

      Take your class hatred elsewhere... like the 90's.

    52. Re:Wait a sec ... by aneurysm36 · · Score: 1

      WRONG

      the prius claims about 55mpg
      http://www.toyota.com/vehicles/2005/prius/s pecs.ht ml

      --
      ------ hi mom
    53. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, he didn't miss the point. You still have to buy gas, it just won't be taxed. Fuel efficient cars are still advantageous since you won't have to fill up as much.

    54. Re:Wait a sec ... by op.+59+(2) · · Score: 1

      Damn, if I made $80,000 a year, and paid $2 for a McDonald's cheeseburger, and a guy making $40,000 pays $1, and a guy making $0 pays $0, what would be the point of working hard? I imagine the point would be not having to eat at McDonalds. because 10% of $0 would be the same as 10% of $1,000,000. It's difficult to see how that statement could ever be true.

    55. Re:Wait a sec ... by megaversal · · Score: 1

      The grandparent is referring to the fact that there are no state taxes in Nevada. I don't mean you don't pay tax on say...items you buy in a store, but you don't pay any on wages, etc. So corporations set themselves up in NV to avoid a lot of the taxes they'd normally have to pay in their home state (like MS, which is a NV company). I suppose my reference is living in Nevada for 7 years (before moving back to California, yayyyyy...)

      --
      Sig!
    56. Re:Wait a sec ... by lightknight · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and working even at McDonalds, at minimum wage, gives you enough money to eat. Hell, they give you free food. What was your point again?

      There are more jobs out there than there are people filling them. Maybe not the jobs you and I prefer, but they are there. And if you need to eat, you would take one, just as I would.

      "And government made its money through tariffs. That wouldn't work today, as we're too used to cheap goods from China."

      Then maybe we should cut down on the government. Honestly, do you think the founders were stupid or something? There's a reason the government was given barely any tax control: to stay the fuck out of business. It wasn't supposed to grow this big, nor control what it does today. Everytime the government touches something, it's like the touch of death. Using public money to compete against private companies, that is fucked up.

      If there are more jobs than people to fill them, and those jobs pay enough to buy food, pay rent, afford a few luxuries, why are we taking rich people's money?

      Frankly, there is a reason why the rich are rich: in the capitalistic system we live in, they get there by being the most efficent allocaters of capital. They put money, their money, where they think it will produce the most profit. They spend their time deciding who gets what, and are rewarded for their efforts. In mathematical terms, they are efficent algorithms. You wish to subvert those algorithms by removing some of their capital, which gunks up the whole system. And we all know that politicians aren't efficent: they are hazardous. Hell, most politicians make a living giving people other people's money. And the more they give, the more often they are elected, because those people want to receive more money. It's tyranny by the majority, where the rich are fucked over by the many. They are cattle, prized, but ultimately, food.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    57. Re:Wait a sec ... by dvdeug · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The proper role of government is to preserve the constitutionally-limited negative (which do not require the enslavement of others) rights of citizens.

      That is, if you're a libertarian. Then there would be no roads or schools, of course, and no forms of finacial support. Of course, you'd be free to beat your kid, because child services is just infringing on the rights of rich folks to keep thier money.

      The government has no business encouraging or discouraging any legal activity.

      The government of the people and by the people should have the people's interests at heart. That includes us not all dying due to global warming, or (even if you don't believe in that) the world's economy being crippled by the end of fossil fuels. (Come soon or come late, there's only so much of it out there. Given that demand keeps going up, simple logic tells us that it's going to run out some time in the not-so-distant future.)

    58. Re:Wait a sec ... by lightknight · · Score: 1

      Pick a restaurant, apply the same.

      "It's difficult to see how that statement could ever be true."

      In all likliehood, never. With good reason. But you test arguments by taking them to their logical extreme, because over time, they tend to end up there.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    59. Re:Wait a sec ... by goon+america · · Score: 3, Insightful

      goon america's law: the first person to use the phrase "basic economics", eg, "this is basic economics", is the one who knows the least about economics.

      You're assuming a perfect consumption tax correlated 1:1 with income. No one has ever proposed anything like this. This is what they call attacking a straw man. I take this as a tacit admission that you can't actually think of a good argument against progressive income taxation if you have to resort to that.

      You're also assuming that the value of money is a linear function. Again, this assumption is flawed. In terms of raw dollars, is there any difference between giving someone who makes $10,000/year another $1000 and giving someone who makes $100,000/year another $1000? Even in terms of percent: is there no difference between giving someone who makes $10,000/year another $1000 and someone who makes $100,000/year another $10,000? If the value of money was determined by a linear function you would not be able to see any subjective differences between these two cases, either in total or in terms of percent. The difference is, it ought to seem like the person that makes $10,000 would spend the additional $1000 on more food for their kids, but for the other person it would go to buying more luxury toys. Yes, and that's making a moral judgment on what people should and should not have. If you honestly think it's some perverse moral calculus to see a difference between rich people buying more luxury cars and poor people having more food, than that's an interesting definition of morality you have.

      As for your second ammendment threat, go hog wild: overthrow the government, I encourage you. If lower taxes would put you over the threshold of affording that Porsche Boxster you've always wanted, I'd like to see it happen.

    60. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take this libertarian crap elsewhere because not everything in life can be reduced to an equation otherwise you wouldn't be working to drive the car of your choice.

      Sure, if you could sit on your ass and not do anything and drive a boxter you would, but you can't. Boxters cost money. So to turn your argument on it's head(if taxes were 90%) 10% of 1,000,000 is a hell of a lot more than 10% of 40,000. Even 10% of 80,000 is a hell of a lot more than that. Double, I'd say.

      I worked for a traffic engineer, this idea is about as fair as a flat tax. It increases the load on the entry point user who uses the system the least, benefitting most the person who can afford to rape the system most effectively.

    61. Re:Wait a sec ... by dscotton · · Score: 3, Interesting

      How about not? Why are the rich paying more? Because they have more money? That's a fucked up excuse.

      There are several good reasons for progressive taxation. First, rich people receive a disproportionate amount of the benefits taxes pay for. Large portions of the government, from law enforcement to defense, are devoted to protecting property, both physical and intellectual, which is primarily owned by wealthy people. Second, people have a decreasing marginal utility for money. This means that taxing someone who has a lot of money harms them a less than taxing someone with less money. Third, taxing rich people is better for the economy. Poor people spend a much larger portion of their income than rich people. Rich people save and invest most of their income. Taking away money that would otherwise be spent has a contractionary effect on the economy. Taxing rich people has less of a contractionary effect than taxing poor people.

      If you paid according to your income, on everything, people wouldn't work, because 10% of $0 would be the same as 10% of $1,000,000.

      How in the world did this post get modded up? I never imagined that "$0 == $100,000" could be considered insightful or interesting.

      Hence progressive taxes are for people who have no idea wtf they are talking about (i.e. Basic Economics). Damn, if I made $80,000 a year, and paid $2 for a McDonald's cheeseburger, and a guy making $40,000 pays $1, and a guy making $0 pays $0, what would be the point of working hard?

      I find it pretty ironic that you're criticizing others for not having a grasp of "basic economics", considering that you clearly have no idea how progressive taxation works. Your cheeseburger example attempted to describe a situation where everyone's income is effectively the same. That is not progressive taxation. Under progressive taxation, the first M dollars you earn are taxed at a certain rate, the next N dollars are taxed at a higher rate, and so on. No matter how much you earn, the first M dollars will never be taxed higher than the base rate, which means you're always going to keep more money if you earned more money. There will be slightly less incentive to work hard, since you will keep less of the additional money you earn. But the incentive is still there. Plus, it is misleading to say you will have no incentive to work hard, since the largest amounts of wealth don't come from hard work, they come from investment. When someone's not actually doing anything to create their wealth, it hardly matters how incentivized they feel.

    62. Re:Wait a sec ... by jaydonnell · · Score: 2, Insightful
      There are more jobs out there than there are people filling them. Maybe not the jobs you and I prefer, but they are there. And if you need to eat, you would take one, just as I would.
      First and foremost is the fact that this is simply untrue. There are far more people than jobs. Second, just because a shitty job exists doesn't mean you can get it. I was laid of from my well paid IT job at Worldcom/MCI after they went bankrupt. I searched for a job, in Los Angeles mind you, for 6 months and was told repeatedly that I was over qualified. One particular interview I had was for a job on a loading dock at a Macy's warehouse.
      Frankly, there is a reason why the rich are rich: in the capitalistic system we live in, they get there by being the most efficent allocaters of capital.
      Let's see. Most wealthy people are born wealthy. They don't allocate anything better than anyone else. George Bush would be a redneck living in a trailer just like where I grew up if he wasn't born into the family that he was born into. Your either a troll, a teenager, or delusional. I'm going to guess that it's number 2.
    63. Re:Wait a sec ... by jaydonnell · · Score: 1

      I wish I had mod points for you. Someone mod him up!!!

    64. Re:Wait a sec ... by bnenning · · Score: 1

      (Come soon or come late, there's only so much of it out there. Given that demand keeps going up, simple logic tells us that it's going to run out some time in the not-so-distant future.)

      Logic also tells us that as supplies dwindle, the price will rise (gradually, not abruptly), encouraging both conservation and alternative energy sources. Capitalism handles scarcity just fine. There may be a place for taxes or other government action to combat negative externalities of fossil fuels.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    65. Re:Wait a sec ... by SuSEboy · · Score: 1

      Yes, but in a case like this we have the initiative process. This bill, even if passed by the goverment, would be repealed by the people.

    66. Re:Wait a sec ... by SuSEboy · · Score: 1

      ok, it's not a bill...yet. Just a study.

    67. Re:Wait a sec ... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It's not an excuse, it's a reason. The simple fact is that they have far more than they need and there are people out there who work just as hard or harder and they have much less than they need. Neither group could exist without the system, and the system is obligated to care for both of them, so it is only fair that everyone should chip in and do their part. It's worth noting that even with that kind of assistance the people on the bottom rarely become the people on the top. Therefore it stands to reason that the system maintains that situation as well. In other words, the people getting fucked the hardest are as always the middle class, especially the upper part of them, because they have enough money to have a bunch of it, but they get taxed disproportionately higher in terms of their disposable income than (for example) the top ten percent of taxpayers - who actually only pay taxes on about half of their income. The rest is reported as interest, and even if it's true it underlines a serious problem with money, which is that you don't even have to do anything to make more money with it, and imbalance begets imbalance.

      If you can accept an economic system that creates a permanent financial underclass, you should be able to accept that the rich should pay more taxes than the poor. A sibling comment points out that a progressive tax helps the poor, because they spend the greatest percentage of their income on necessities, so I don't need to rehash that here except to mention it in passing.

      You're right about one thing though, the more a vehicle weighs, the more road damage it does.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    68. Re:Wait a sec ... by ender81b · · Score: 1

      yes. Obviously. Because in countries that implement extreme forms of progressive tax (like sweden) nobody works there anymore. And the country sucks...

      oh wait. You're wrong. Get over it.

    69. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or drive less

      I have been to countries that have bicycles designed to carry stuff better. One of these bikes have a basket attached to the front. Another type is a big tricycle (for adults). The two wheels on the back allow for extra room for putting loads. It's also about time the US got more train lines.

      Both tax per gallon and tax per mile discourage driving. So which tax system are you for and against? the current or the proposed? Gas prices will rise nevertheless because China will be much more thirsty for it soon. ...the land of glorious Socialism where the elite get the best and the rest wait. I'm confused... Are you going to put this into some sort of context, or does this have nothing to do with gases or taxes that we've been discussing about?

      It's rather amusing to think that the downfall of the previous government had much to do with making driving more expensive, and yet the current administration is trying to do the exact same thing, just differntly so that he doesn't get labelled as being as evil as his predecessor. He must have the same advisor who's aware that California has a traffic problem.

    70. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually the job of a government is more complex than just cutting taxes. I'm guessing that people like you despise Ralph Nader from the bottom of their hearts for suggesting that the government has actual things to do besides giving blowjobs to corporations and that companies aren't the perfect angels, and that they don't always have the best intention of consumers at heart.

      Oh no! All taxes are "liberal!" Idiot.

    71. Re:Wait a sec ... by themaidtricks · · Score: 1

      No, but the president is working hard on new gumdrop and sugar plum legislation.

    72. Re:Wait a sec ... by lightknight · · Score: 1

      lightknight's law: the first person to use the phrase "morality" as a factor in economics, is the one who is about to make an irrational argument (effectively dividing by 0), which this person believes has more value than any rational argument.

      Morals are ephemeral things: the values held by an older generation are not the same as a younger generation. They have a tendency to change as often as the wind. Hence, an economic system should not be based on morals, or "need".

      "In terms of raw dollars, is there any difference between giving someone who makes $10,000/year another $1000 and giving someone who makes $100,000/year another $1000?"

      In terms of strictly raw numbers, no. But that's not what we are arguing here. What I'm arguing is taking $1000 from the guy making $100,000/year and giving it to the guy making $10,000/year.

      1.) Having committed no crime (of life, liberty, or property against another), a man is entitled to his wealth.

      2.) Capitalism rewards people who efficiently allocate resources. Sure, giving that man $1000 will help him out in the short run, but it also has the effect of sapping $1000 from the other guy, which means the efficiency of the whole system drops by (a minimum of) $2000. The end effect is that by continuing to divert resources from the most efficient allocaters to less efficient allocaters, the total wealth of the system grows more slowly. In effect, you fuck the rich, you are fucking yourself.

      That's kind of why Europe's growth sucks. And it's also why China is picking up (letting more people keep their money). Little tricks like inflation can appear to change things in the short run (for the better), but in the long run, they do more damage then they are worth.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    73. Re:Wait a sec ... by n0nsensical · · Score: 1

      Dream on...politicians will NEVER completely give up any funding source. If they say otherwise about this one they're lying.

    74. Re:Wait a sec ... by n0nsensical · · Score: 2, Funny

      Well, the governor IS Arnold Schwarzenegger.

    75. Re:Wait a sec ... by joss · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What makes you think the price will rise gradually ? Everybody I've read who has studied this says prices will rise very abruptly, by this I mean as oil starts to run out, the price rises will be many times greater than the current rate of inflation.

      Our attitude to oil consumption is more like the guy falling off a building saying to himself on the way down "so far, so good..." A soft landing is possible, but we better start knitting a parachute sometime soon.

      --
      http://rareformnewmedia.com/
    76. Re:Wait a sec ... by IAmMaxHarris · · Score: 2, Interesting
      First, I'm an Objectivist, not a Libertarian.

      Of course, you'd be free to beat your kid

      Absolutely not. Child abuse is a serious criminal matter that should be handled by the police (which is a proper government function).

      The government of the people and by the people should have the people's interests at heart.

      The problem with this is that your interests are not necessarily mine. The only moral way to deal with this is to speak in terms of negative rights (which tell us exactly how we will not interfere with each other).

      If you haven't already, read John McCarthy's (best known as the creator of Lisp) Sustainability of Human Progress pages. He writes about a large number of environmental topics, and comes to what I consider very solid conclusions.

    77. Re:Wait a sec ... by testadicazzo · · Score: 1
      Some other people have responded to this with statistics, but I want to point out your logical flaws. Quoth you:
      And are you going to tell me a Porsche Boxster, 911 or BMW 7 (or hell, an X5) is going to destroy the road faster than a Ford Explorer or Expedition? Whatever you're smoking, spread it around. My dealer is out of town, and I need someone to hook me up.
      You clearly didn't read a very interesting post above, where we are informed that unused roads degrade faster than used roads. Moderate use (eg, by light vehicles) smooths out the road and acts against natural wear and tear caused by, for example, uneven thermal expansion (this is a big problem in Alaska, esp. in Fairbanks, where they get huge temperature differentials over a year).

      You propose that harm to a road is linearly proportional, or at least monotononely increasing as a function of vehicle weight. Obviously the fact I just stated belies this. In fact there is probably some critical weight at which the vehicle becomes damaging to road rather than beneficial. Or it may be the case that the difference between a porsche and Ford explorer is insignificant, and it isn't until you get to the weight of a loaded semi before changes in weight are significant. Not being an expert on the subject I don't know. My point is simply that your conclusion, while it may be intuitive is not necessarily correct.

      People often think things are obvious simply because they haven't thought them through sufficiently.

      When are these old days of the repuplic you're talking about? At what point in American history was there 0 taxation by the government, or only voluntary taxation? Your economic views are another example of jumping to a quick, emotionally satisfying conclusion, and stating that it's obvious. There are plenty of good reasons for having progressive taxes, but of course there's no way of getting through what I assume are years of dogma and horse-blinders in a slashdot post.

    78. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then the traffic engineers need to design the roads properly. Build them to handle things much heavier than truck and then truck will have the same effect as cars on the road.

    79. Re:Wait a sec ... by lightknight · · Score: 1

      Fair enough. But who determines need?

      From a medical standpoint, you do not "need" two kidneys. Why not donate one, who "needs" one?

      It's a very slippery slope. I mean, originally, the income tax was designed to go after the rich (they have all that money, they don't "need" it). But it was never indexed to inflation. So as the dollar inflated, and middle class income rose, they started getting a taste of the shaft. But then, those upper income brackets ($80,000+) do not "need" that extra money, so they continue to enjoy the shaft.

      I'm all for helping the poor, but of my own volition. I like Bill Gate's charity (boo, hiss cries the slashdot crowd): they keep track of what's going on. I admit that some people are down on their luck, but the number is in disproportion to those gaming the system. It's one thing to reach into your own pocket, and give your money freely. It's another when someone else does it.

      I could state a number of cliches (the road to hell is paved with good intentions, etc.), but I'll refrain.

      Two things though:

      1.) The poor will never go away. As long as someone is rich, someone will be poor.

      2.) Like it or not, their money is their money. Telling yourself that you have better ideas for it is precisely the reason you do not have it. And if they act stupid (ultra-philathropist, spending the family's fortune), they too will soon join the ranks of the poor.

      What most people who claim the moral high ground suffer from is a different evil: jealousy. They want the power that goes with the money, but haven't earned it.

      And most of the people out there (the rich ones), earned their money. Some inherited it, but most earned it (nouveau riche). Bill Gates qualifies for this, Ballmer, Dell, etc. And they respresent the majority of the wealth on those lists. (Funny thing too. Seems most people who inherit wealth squander it.)

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    80. Re:Wait a sec ... by kt0157 · · Score: 1

      It's important to measure the smoothness of roads because smooth roads mean tires don't grip which means cars don't stop in the wet which means dead people.

      They used to measure road quality using a cup of sand which was spread out until the road started to show through. The radius of the circle indicates the smoothness. What a time consuming mess! Now it's done by shining a laser on the road and measuring the back scatter. You can drive the laser at 60mph. A friend of mine worked on building one of the first of these units using a PDP in a rack in the back of a truck and a towed laser unit.

      Ach. I've become a pavement wonk.

    81. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you crayzee? Aaarnold the Governator woud become angry if you tax his beloved Hummer more than the puny cars on the road.

      The Hummer is the Ultimate Power! Bow before Aarnolds Hummer!

      think about it, the rich want to punish the poor. what better way than to tax you on how far you drive cince the poor drive much further to work as they cant afford those $800,000.00 2 bedroom small houses.

      California is looking for a way to remove poor people (Making less than $300,000.00 a year is poor in Californieee)

    82. Re:Wait a sec ... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Actually according to your own position I don't see why you advocate a flat tax percentage, why not a flat tax BILL for every person? Why should someone making $10,000 per year pay any less than someone making $100,000 per year? Isn't THAT taking money from one person and giving it to another? As you said " Why are the rich paying more? " Shouldn't they each be paying (approximately) $8,000 equally?

      I admit that is not your position, but I really can't see why it isn't or shouldn't or couldn't be your position.

      Lets look at efficency of allocation of resources and diverting resources from the most efficient allocaters to less efficient allocaters and total wealth.

      How will someone making $10,000 per year likely use $1,000? They will search out the least expensive and most efficently mass-produced clothing. They will buy the least expensive and most efficently produced food. They will spend it raising and investing in their children They will spend it on health care, including much needed preventitive health care, both of which have a huge return of invenstment in yeilding healthy productive members of society (as does the their investment in their children). They will squeeze ALL of that and more into that $1000.

      And how will someone making $300,000 per year likely use $1,000? (Yes, I bumped it $300,000 to highten the contrast, but by your argument that should be irrelevant.) They might buy a SINGLE hand-tailored outfit made of the rarest, most expensive, and least efficient materials. *OR* they might spend it spend it most expensive least efficent "artisticly arranged" food for a single party. *OR* they my throw it away on a single brief spoiled whim of their child. *OR* they may spend it on vanity cosmetic surgery.

      There *IS* a decreasing value of money. The first $1,000 is VASTY more valuable and vastly more efficently used than the 11th or 31st $1,000.

      The wealthy should always have an incentive and reward for making more money, and under a progressive tax system they DO retain that incentive and reward for making more money.

      But the biggest problem with a regressive tax system as you suggest is that it tends to polarize wealth, erroding the middle class to the extremes. You are increasing teh tax on the middle class pushing them down towards the poverty end and making it more and more difficult for the brilliant and efficent amongst them to obtain and use capital to create new businesses increasing overall wealth. You are lowering the tax on the wealthiest further concentrating more and more capital in the hands of fewer. And with that concentration of wealth and capital they lose both the incentive and need to work to produce wealth at all. You get family dynasties that do nothing, simply leeching off of the self-generating concentration of assets. Even the most inefficently manages concentration of capital tends to feed on itself and expand.

      There SHOULD be a range of wealth, with the smart and efficent being rewarded for their efforts to create wealth. However there also should be pressure for the concentration of capital to continue to be manages efficently and effectively, and it SHOULD decay when it is allocated inefficently. Those who did not inherit vast quantities of capital also should be able to accumulate capital to produce more wealth for us all when they are smarter and more efficent and more driven.

      Increased mobility means that those who are "on top" need to work to stay on top, and those who are "on the bottom" can move up when they *are* better more efficent wealth creators.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    83. Re:Wait a sec ... by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      Probably true, but getting outraged early is what helps stop this idiocy. This is the kind of taxation the Left wants for all of us. Frankly, the person who proposes this should be escorted out of the country.

    84. Re:Wait a sec ... by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      Delaware is also a serious Corporation tax haven for the same reasons


      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    85. Re:Wait a sec ... by Bender0x7D1 · · Score: 1

      Actually, if they bothered to enforce the law it could make a VERY big difference. If the 10% were enforced at the dealer level as:

      "You can only sell 90 "regular" cars/trucks/SUVs until you have sold 10 ZEVs."

      This would mean the dealers would have to drop the prices of the ZEVs (in order to sell them) so they could reap their huge profits by selling more SUVs. This would force the dealers to raise the price of SUVs to offset the loss from dropping the price of the ZEVs.

      It would work great. Those who want the gas-guzzlers pay more, and those who want to protect the environment get a price break buying their ZEV.

      --
      Reading code is like reading the dictionary - you have to read half of it before you can go back and understand it.
    86. Re:Wait a sec ... by mwood · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Using taxes to control behavior almost never works well. Taxation is for raising money for public works, not for punishing people who do what they feel they need to do.

      Ever wondered why newspaper pages are so big? Someone decided to tax newspapers based on page count, so the publishers went to fewer, larger pages. Ever wondered about those long, tall, really skinny houses in some cities on the U.S. east coast? Some idiot decided to tax houses based on fontage. I can't wait to see how Californians try to avoid this tax -- I expect it'll be worse than any problem abated by the tax.

    87. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pardon me folks, but does anyone else think that when a government entity with serious financial problems considers a new form of taxation, they might try to enact it (slowly) WITHOUT removing the present taxes....

    88. Re:Wait a sec ... by mwood · · Score: 1

      What a great idea! Instead of taxing fuel, which must be carefully measured anyway, let's create a pile of new, expensive technology to do approximately the same thing by taxing something nobody previously cared to measure. While we're at it, let's make sure that the new technique no longer measures something important (i.e. fuel turned into air pollutants) but something with no other value.

    89. Re:Wait a sec ... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Like it or not, their money is their money.

      They would not be able to make their money without the existence of a government because they would not be able to operate a business nor would they be able to hold property except by force. In other words, the alternative is feudalism.

      And most of the people out there (the rich ones), earned their money. Some inherited it, but most earned it (nouveau riche).

      Not really. Most of the very wealthy today were already wealthy. They either had money or land that turned out to be valuable. Individuals like Gates are a fluke in terms of the total number of wealthy people. The development of wealth is (for most people) based on being first. If you got into the game late, you are at an extreme disadvantage. Legacies simply perpetuate the advantages (I'm not suggesting we should all have to start over from scratch, simply that we recognize our privileges) and cause the system to be more and more unbalanced.

      Most people who inherit a little money squander it. Most people who inherit wealth have been raised by people who inherited wealth, and they pass their successful behaviors down to their children. By putting their money to work for them - even just putting it somewhere they can earn interest - they simply create a further imbalance, and for what? Once you have a certain amount of money, all the remainder is good for is bullying people and manipulating government, which our system of government almost seems designed to make possible. Thus the people with the money have not only economic power but also get to lead the government in one direction or another and control us all - in some cases, just because they've been in the country for a long time. You can call that fair but it doesn't make it so.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    90. Re:Wait a sec ... by Mr+Pippin · · Score: 1
      1.) The poor will never go away. As long as someone is rich, someone will be poor.

      Sorry, that argument only holds if you assume wealth is static, or you assume whoever holds the least money is by definition "poor".

      By that, if the majority all have 5 bedrooms houses with 6 cars, and you only have a 3 bedroom house and 2 cars, then by comparison, you are poor. That's not a good definition.

      However, it does make it worthwhile to state that todays "poor" have it far better off than the poor of 100 years ago.

      But back to my main point. "wealth" is not a static entity. It varies based on the economic health of a group and the history of that economy. Hence, we have progressed from tents, to wood buildings, to stone buildings, to sky scrapers. The overall wealth has grown. My point is that in a free society (and economy), the classical definition of "poor" does not apply.

    91. Re:Wait a sec ... by lightknight · · Score: 1

      "Actually according to your own position I don't see why you advocate a flat tax percentage, why not a flat tax BILL for every person? Why should someone making $10,000 per year pay any less than someone making $100,000 per year? Isn't THAT taking money from one person and giving it to another? As you said " Why are the rich paying more? " Shouldn't they each be paying (approximately) $8,000 equally?

      I admit that is not your position, but I really can't see why it isn't or shouldn't or couldn't be your position."

      Why not? Let's charge everyone for something reasonable: a citizenship tax, like in the ancient greek (or was it roman) days. Where it was voluntary, but everyone wanted to pay it, because 1.) you actually got something for it (being a citizen) and 2.) it was an honour.

      I'd set it at, say, $200. Yearly. We have, what, 290 million citizens? $58 billion should work out just fine. That's more than a federal government should ever need.

      Of course this means stripping out all the pork i.e. welfare, social security, defense, medicare, medicaid, any faith-based programs I do not know about, etc. I say that we grab people from both sides of the aisle, tell them that they have a chance to clip the other's budget, and see what they cut. Since they will go after each other's pork (because they want to allocate it for more "important" projects), we can easily identify what needs to go.

      "How will someone making $10,000 per year likely use $1,000? They will search out the least expensive and most efficently mass-produced clothing. They will buy the least expensive and most efficently produced food. They will spend it raising and investing in their children They will spend it on health care, including much needed preventitive health care, both of which have a huge return of invenstment in yeilding healthy productive members of society (as does the their investment in their children). They will squeeze ALL of that and more into that $1000."

      That's all great and everything, but it's a drain. Remember my original argument: the wealth of the total system increases the fastest when capital is controlled by the most efficient people.

      The whole thing is recursive. Say Bill can make $40,000 for every $5,000 he invests, and James can make $6,000 for every $5,000 he invests.

      Total Wealth of System (1) = 40,000 + 6,000 = 46,000
      Total Wealth of System (2) = 320,000 + 6,200 = 326,200
      Total Wealth of System (3) = 2,560,000 + 7,440 = 2,567,440

      Now, let's apply a $1,000 wealth redistribution tax (for every $40,000 Bill earns, a 2.5% income tax):

      Total Wealth of System (1) = 40,000 + 6,000 = 46,000
      Total Wealth of System R(1) = 39,000 + 7,000 = 46,000

      Total Wealth of System (2) = 312,000 + 8,400 =
      320,400
      Total Wealth of System R(2) = 304,200 + 16,200 =
      320,400

      Total Wealth of System (3) = 2,433,600 + 19,440 = 2,453,040
      Total Wealth of System R(3) = 2,372,760 + 77,040 = 2,453,040

      At this point, a whole $100,000 has disappeared. And this is with a modest income tax of 2.5%!

      Now, this system does oversimplify a few things. The actual tax rate is a lot higher, but the returns on investing are about half to a quarter (assuming a smart investor). I assumed that both put 100% of their previous income into the next round of investing. And this is putting aside interest and various market fluctuations.

      But the point stands. There is a net bad effect to redistributing people's income (rich or poor). They have that amount for a reason, and interfering, even to "help someone eat" can garuantee that a hundred people do not eat down the line.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    92. Re:Wait a sec ... by lightknight · · Score: 1

      I never said the poor stay poor, and I agree that wealth is not static: it's dynamic, constantly being created or destroyed (don't ask). And yes, the definition does suck, but it's true. People still drone on about the poor today, despite the fact that we have the richest poor in the world.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    93. Re:Wait a sec ... by Mr+Pippin · · Score: 1

      The comment was not intended for you specifically, but for the overall generalization people have for the poor.

      I did not state it earlier, but my fundemental point is that I think the majority have the opinion that "For someone to get rich, someone must become poor" or "For someone to win, someone must lose".

      In the purest definition of capitalism (and Austrian Economics, to be specific), all exchanges of capital occur becuase BOTH parties value more what they are receiving than what they are trading. This is the fundemental nature of the economic growth of wealth. It is not a static quantity.

    94. Re:Wait a sec ... by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Many bus stops in Los Angeles are paved with concrete whereas the rest of the road's pavement is blacktop. Why? Take a look at some of the busy blacktop bus stops. The pavement has been squeezed away from the places that get run over a lot, leaving ruts of perhaps three inches depth.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    95. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you! I was going to comment on this, but figured it would just get another lame, pro-Liberal "Well, move to the city!" response! Any tax plan has to take into account EVERY purpose, including rural use! If a rancher only uses his trucks or jeeps on his property, it PATENTLY UNFAIR to tax him on a mileage basis!

    96. Re:Wait a sec ... by TheWizardOfCheese · · Score: 1

      The VAST majority of road wear due to vehicle travel (as opposed to weather/expansion/settling/etc.) is from large trucks and buses.

      Yes. As I recall, road damage is proportional to the cube of axle weight.

      ... if we based taxes entirely on road wear due to vehicle use every trucking company in the country would be taxed out of business over night ...

      If road wear is a significant cost, then there would be nothing wrong with taxing this way. The true cost of trucking would be passed on to customers and the economy would become more efficient (selecting between trucking and rail based on the true cost and benefit.)

      Of course, you are claiming that road wear is not significant:

      The vast majority of maintenance work done on roads is not due to traffic volume, it is due to natural processes like weathering.

      As far as I know, this is not true. I live in an area where frost heaving causes significant road damage, but even so, heavily used roads must be replaced several times more often than lightly-used roads constructed to the same standard. Rural blacktop decays quickly, but that is because the road bed is not prepared to the same standard.

      Or were you thinking that most of the cost of roads has nothing to do with maintenance? There are certainly many other costs: land, policing, signage, snow removal etc.

      --

      "The good reader is a rarer swan than the good writer."
    97. Re:Wait a sec ... by macdaddy · · Score: 1

      I think there goal here is to leak the story we're reading now that people will be widly against. Then once they've whipped people up to a frenzy and they're willing to do anything to stop this from happening the California Governor's office will propose a solution that's less draconian than the one they leaked. Of course the CA residents would have been against it if they'd come out with it first but they're in favor of it after being whipped into a frenzy over the horrible ideas that were leaked. Make sense? So our real goal here should be to figure out what the actual bill will read like and keep people focused on the ball and not fall for the CA Governor's office pump fake.

    98. Re:Wait a sec ... by macdaddy · · Score: 1
      Many major cities pour concrete intersections and 30-40 yards of the approaching lanes. Why? Because the constant action of the vehicles braking causes asphalt to bunch up and push towards the intersection. Think about it as if you're running through your house on hardwood floors. You run up to a rug on the hardwood floors going full steam and jump on the rug planting your feet and not taking any more steps. Much of the energy from your momentum is transferred into the rug and causes the rug to skate across the floor with your on it, burning up the energy as friction between the rug and floor. Concrete is much more resilient to sudden and forecful braking. The energy from the momentum of the car remains in the car and is burned up in friction caused by the braking system. I watched a fascinating epidodes of Modern Marvels a month or two ago about airport runways. It was fascinating. It never dawned on me what kind of stresses a runway is under but it does make sense. I never have understood why the wheels of a large commericial jet aren't spun up to approximate speed prior to touchdown so as to not wear out the tires. This would I expect be beneficial to the runway as well.

      BTW, few folks have any idea what we've just talked about until they see an old brick street such as the one in my 125-year old hometown (teeny tiny town). The bricks that were originall laid in perfectly straight lines are now in widely curving arches each and every place where people commonly brake on mainstreet such as each intersecution, in front of the post office where people brake before pulling in and parking, etc. It's really fascinating to look at. I'd have to say that in some places the brick rows have been skewed up to 20 feet or more out of whack thanks to the braking. When you see something like that you really start to get a grasp for the forces at work. There's also the highway that runs by town, US 160. 8 miles to our east is a town with a quarry that produces mainly aggregate (gravel). The westbound lane on that road from that town on west past my hometown is horrific. The ruts in the asphalt are deep. Many don't even notice the ruts until it rains. Then you have too extremely deep channels of water in the westbound lanes (tracks) to contend with. You also notice it in the winter during a blowing snow, one of those really dry snows that blow across the road and fill in any low spots or cracks but stick to nothing else. The westbound lane tracks are completely filled with 2-4 inches of snow (flat with the road around it) whereas the eastbound lane is as clean as can be. The steady stream of loaded gravel trucks heading west have seriously warped that road. Seeing that road will convince anyone of how much damage a truck like that can cause.

    99. Re:Wait a sec ... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I'd set it at, say, $200. Yearly.

      I think the federal budget is a far more complex and seperate issue. In my oppinion we were addressing the more narrow question of given a total tax revenue of X, how should that X be distributed. While I see problems with the current federal budget, I also think your $200 suggestion to be... errr... radical in the extreme. Chuckle. But I really don't want to start arguing the ferderal budget itself.

      As for your "economic model" "proving" a net loss of $100,00 in wealth, all I can say is that it is comical. "Basic economics" indeed, LOL!

      Given your model (a trivial and direct exponential growth loop) the ultimate outcome is a single person who owns/controlls everything, a single person who is infinitely more wealthy than everyone else on the planet combined. Whether you introduce the idea of inflation, or the idea of supply and demand, or any other trivial economic principal, the combined wealth of everyone else on the planet rapidly approaches zero.

      I could make up my own vastly superior model, But to be honest it would still be comical in comparision to reality no matter how complex I made it. So I won't bother.

      I can think of a large number of arguments to support my position, but they are kind of all over the map and it take forever to go into them and it would turn into a mess arguing them. Economics is complex and messy and virtually no simple statement is universally and clearly true.

      So instead I'll mainly target the foundation of your argument - your claim that more money in the hands of the richest produces that biggest wealth growth.

      Bill Gates is currently worth over $67 billion. Lets hypothetically compare it to Bill Gates "only" being worth $30 Billion and a tax cut worth $100 for every other man woman and child in the country.

      #1: Is Bill Gates actually "weathier" at $67 billion than at $30 billion in any meaningful sense?
      #2: Is Bill Gates seriously focusing his "personal expert skills" on putting that $30 billion to most efficent use for real creation? As far as I am aware Bill Gates has retired and is no longer actively involved in creating any more wealth.
      #3: When Bill Gates spends his money, is he really going to pay any attention on how efficently it gets spent? Inneficiency wastes or destroys total wealth.
      #4: Wouldn't nearly 300 million consumers and small business owners invigorate the entire economy by spending that extra $100 each in a cost-consious manner on consumer goods and on much needed and productive small business expansion? That spending IMMEDIATELY converts into revenues for the businesses efficently supplying those goods.
      #5: Wouldn't that extra $100 be HUGE boon to the wealth of the 15 million children living below the poverty line in the united states? And wouldn't that $100 worth of health care and other basic needs aid them in becoming productive and successfull themselves? Perhaps even giving them that leg up on becoming the next Bill Gates themselves?

      I certainly do not begrudge our most productive and sucessful people becoming insanely wealthy. Under the progressive tax system they can and do become amply insanely wealthy. It's just silly for people to quibble over a few percentage points when they are making a million+ dollars.

      The progressive tax system is not about taking money from one person and giving it to another. It is about how you distribute that tax burden in the first place. Placing a tax burden on the poorest people in the country is counter productive as they *will* be desperate need that of exactly that much more help one way or another. It makes it that much harder for exeptional people who happen start at the bottom to become huge wealth creators for us all.

      Not only are the wealthiest most able to bear that share of the tax burden, but they are also the once who reap the most rewards in society and who have the the most to lose from an underfunded/failed government.

      In general there should be a gentle pressure towards the middle class. A society with polarizing pressure towards concentration of wealth and towords poverty is an unstable and inefficient and wealth destroying society.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    100. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think that liberals would be in favor of this plan simply because it raises taxes. I don't know where you get this whole liberals want to raise taxes thing?

    101. Re:Wait a sec ... by i+wanted+another+nam · · Score: 1

      The cost of road maintenance is insignificant when you know how much money they collect in gas taxes.

      --
      The image is a dream, the beauty is real. Can you see the difference?
    102. Re:Wait a sec ... by lew3004 · · Score: 1

      I always thought that was odd. I don't know about California but here in Wisconsin companies are issued 'points' or 'chits' (something to that effect), which tells them how much of a given pollutant they're allowed to pump into the environment. If you go over that set amount, BAMMM, you get nailed by the EPA. Now here's the funny part...if these points go unused the company is allowed to sell the unused portions to other companies. Nice incentive, heh?

      --
      I still can't get the screen shots of Castle Wolfenstein for the Apple IIe out of my head.
    103. Re:Wait a sec ... by DeputySpade · · Score: 1

      It's embarrasing that you got modded insightful with a statement like "Then there would be no roads or schools, and no forms of finacial support". (note, I assume you meant financial, not finacial)

      There was a time in the not too distant past, relatively speaking, when the United States got along just fine without the government providing the things you mention. Farmers formed Co-Ops to build grain elevators and railway extensions to them. Co-Ops could easily take over road maintenance for most of the country. People supported each other in hard financial times through charitable giving. Charitable giving, by the way, is way up in most red states (read, rural areas) relative to blue states. People educated their children in schools without the government paying for it. The community built a school house and local residents taught the students. This could easily become commonplace again if the governemnt backed out of public education. Your notion that without the government the world would fall apart just isn't supported by history. The world hasn't always turned by the power of government spending and there are plenty of viable alternatives.

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    104. Re:Wait a sec ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      define excess

    105. Re:Wait a sec ... by penguinstorm · · Score: 1

      Fair enough, I debated the inclusion of the word "far" but was simply too lazy to edit it out. I figured it wasn't central to the point, which had more to do with land use.

      I like the Jetta TDI; nice toy. Although I generally am not a fan of Jetta sedans, wagons are nice.

      --
      Skot Nelson music is my saviour / i was maimed by rock and roll
    106. Re:Wait a sec ... by NoMercy · · Score: 1

      The state of exceeding what is normal or sufficient.

    107. Re:Wait a sec ... by lightknight · · Score: 1

      Love Austrian Economics (Mises, Rothbard, etc.).

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    108. Re:Wait a sec ... by lightknight · · Score: 1

      You can read, right?

      "Now, this system does oversimplify a few things." Yes, by about $37 billion. Unless you find $37 billion to be a trifling amount.

      " Is Bill Gates seriously focusing his "personal expert skills" on putting that $30 billion to most efficent use for real creation?" -> Yes. He's proven that (world's wealthiest man). And even on a bad day, I'd rather have BG working on creating jobs, money, etc. than the federal government.

      "As far as I am aware Bill Gates has retired and is no longer actively involved in creating any more wealth." -> I wasn't aware that BG sold all of his MS stock. When did this happen?

      "When Bill Gates spends his money, is he really going to pay any attention on how efficently it gets spent? Inneficiency wastes or destroys total wealth." -> Yes. But he doesn't need to spend his money to raise total wealth. Unless you define spending as investing.

      "Wouldn't nearly 300 million consumers and small business owners invigorate the entire economy by spending that extra $100 each in a cost-consious manner on consumer goods and on much needed and productive small business expansion? That spending IMMEDIATELY converts into revenues for the businesses efficently supplying those goods." -> I'm sure that having an extra $100 would help things out, but not if you have to take $100 from someone else to do it. It's his money (property), like it or not. You can sit here pontificating about how you would spend someone else's money, or how it would do great "public good", but the fact remains: people earning money spurs growth, giving people money does not.

      "I certainly do not begrudge our most productive and sucessful people becoming insanely wealthy. Under the progressive tax system they can and do become amply insanely wealthy. It's just silly for people to quibble over a few percentage points when they are making a million+ dollars." -> Yeah, and I'm sure if you had cancer, it would be silly to quibble over losing a few toes.

      "The progressive tax system is not about taking money from one person and giving it to another." -> Yes, it is, unless you are no longer supporting welfare or any government program. At which point, I drop my argument: your system sounds fairer than the one we currently have!

      "It is about how you distribute that tax burden in the first place. Placing a tax burden on the poorest people in the country is counter productive as they *will* be desperate need that of exactly that much more help one way or another. It makes it that much harder for exeptional people who happen start at the bottom to become huge wealth creators for us all." -> Acutally progressive taxes + government programs makes climbing the ladder harder. Think about it: the further up you climb, the harder it is to get to that next level. You are marginalizing the lower classes by 1.) giving them other people's money and 2.) making it harder for them to grow upwards!

      "Not only are the wealthiest most able to bear that share of the tax burden, but they are also the once who reap the most rewards in society and who have the the most to lose from an underfunded/failed government." -> What rewards? Show me on my tax return where the "rewards section" is. What are they getting by paying $$$ millions? What service costs that much? Security? They would lose money is the government collapses? I think BG has enough money to raise and maintain his own private ARMY, at less of a cost than paying his tax bill.

      "In general there should be a gentle pressure towards the middle class. A society with polarizing pressure towards concentration of wealth and towords poverty is an unstable and inefficient and wealth destroying society." -> And that's why the middle class is growing. Oh wait, it isn't? A society that rewards wealth creation and punishes wealth destruction is not only a stable society, but one where there is constant pressure upwards (not just to middle class).

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    109. Re:Wait a sec ... by lightknight · · Score: 1

      Damn slashcode. Should read:

      "Is Bill Gates actually "weathier" at $67 billion than at $30 billion in any meaningful sense?" -> Yes, by about $37 billion. Unless you find $37 billion to be a trifling amount.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    110. Re:Wait a sec ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Actualy most the enviromentalist tree hugging hippies do own SUV's of some sort. they don't use it as thier primary car but have them to "get close to nature". I don't think this is a fuck the enviroment issue. At least not with enviromentalist compared to anyone else.

      I think the attitude they are trying to get ot is "let find a way to take more tax money from the citizens without them totaly rebelling" switching one tax for another is typicaly were they start. next they will try to only tax a portion of the populous so they don't piss every one off in the proccess.

    111. Re:Wait a sec ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      try looking any of the american elections in hte past 50 years. ohh. wait you were trying ot be funny. i guess i don't joke too well when it is money leaving my pocket because somone else thinks that can spend it better.

    112. Re:Wait a sec ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      your "not paying corperate tax" argument is only partialy true. they will have to pay the taxes of the states they have offices in on the amount of buisiness done in that state. You are corect in that they have ways to minimumize that amount but they will have ot pay some.

  54. Defrauding the System by delta_avi_delta · · Score: 3, Funny

    This would be seriously easy to crack: GPS receivers must have a clear view of the sky. This gives you a limited amount of obvious places to mount the device. Now cover with a tasteful home-made faraday cage (made from recycled cans or some-such, this being California) and voila, no tax.

    So in effect this is a tax on people who flunked physics 101. Just like lottery is a tax on people who failed Math.

    1. Re:Defrauding the System by Professeur+Shadoko · · Score: 1

      Hmmmm.
      Lottery is not a tax.
      It's a game.
      People enjoy the game, even though they know that in the long term they lose money. They pay for the excitement of the game.

      And lottery also lets some people dream of a better life. They pay for the nice dream.

  55. Call it the "Hummer Tax Cut" by Animats · · Score: 1

    Is Arnold still getting payments from AM General for promoting the Hummer?

  56. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    we know you're driving an hour each way to and from work because of the sky-high housing prices around the Bay Area (again: your fault),

    Boy, are they wrong about that one! It's actually San Andrea's fault.

  57. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by ttyp0 · · Score: 1

    Nice. I grew up in Walnut Creek. We since moved to Arizona that is less than half the cost of living and still have nice weather. In fact, Arizona has seen a large influx of new residents (mostly from CA)

  58. So many problems with this by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 1

    1. You're removing the right to privacy, and who says they won't track you for other purposes?

    2. What happens if someone removes it?

    3. See number 1.

    4. See number 3.

    Solution: Simply increase the gas tax, or raise the price of tabs.

  59. Going back to Cali (NOT) by CountrySon · · Score: 1

    As at least one poster has already noted, this would be particularly brutal for the low- and medium-wage folks living in the Central Valley that're driving their poor selves miles 'n miles to the Bay Area every day 'cause... they're already close to the edge financially. It would be more just (relatively, anyway) to tax water consumption in Atherton and Hillsborough. (Not that I'd go there, at least not as a matter of principle...)

  60. Death to California dealerships... by evangellydonut · · Score: 1

    So, all I have to do is go to Arizona or Nevada to buy a car, and I'll still benefit from the $0.18 of tax break per gallon of gas? ALRITE!

  61. Governmental mixed messages by RealProgrammer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They build the roads, but get mad when we drive on them.

    They subsidize the roads with tax dollars, then wonder why we don't take the bus.

    They tax gas to keep us from buying it, then complain they have budget problems.

    The State taxes me so I don't drive, but the Feds let me take it off my (business) taxes.

    They want jobs, but they can't stand it when we make money.

    What's a self-employed nerd to do?

    --
    sigs, as if you care.
    1. Re:Governmental mixed messages by farble1670 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They build the roads, but get mad when we drive on them.
      no one is mad. it's quite simple: roads cost money. someone needs to pay for it.
      They subsidize the roads with tax dollars, then wonder why we don't take the bus.
      uhhh. buses drive on the roads don't they? would you take the bus more often if the highway system was in decay? seems like that would affect all motor vehicles equally (including buses).
      They tax gas to keep us from buying it, then complain they have budget problems.
      gas tax raises revenue. there are many, many sources of income for the a state government, and gas tax is a small part of it. so what's your point? they should cut the gas tax so they have greater budget problems?!?
      They want jobs, but they can't stand it when we make money.
      don't take it so personal. running a state / nation is expensive. someone has to pay for it. if you don't like it move to some other western nation with lower taxes (hint: you'll be looking a long time).

  62. I work in Cali and "live" in Nevada by gsfprez · · Score: 1

    That's my story, and i'm fscking sticking to it.

    i'll rent an apartment with 10 other friends, and we'll all just register our cars at that location.... and get our Driver's licenses out there too.

    everything you try to do to fsck us over, we WILL work around it, assholes.

    --
    guns kill people like spoons make Rosie O'Donnell fat.
    1. Re:I work in Cali and "live" in Nevada by Nept · · Score: 1

      it won't work. CA taxes all income from CA sources, regardless of where you live (I think virtually all states are like this).
      I work for a large company and have to work around the US, and at the end of the year I'm taxes in several different states, although I have residency in CA.
      I take a deduction on CA (Schedule CA) taxes for all income not earned in CA, as I'm being taxed on that income from another state.
      The only thing registering your cars and getting Driver's license's in Nevada will do is help determine your residency test. Although car registration and license are not the only factors in determining residency, they are key. By becoming a CA non-resident you will not qualify for any CA tax credits or deductions. As Nevada does not have a state tax, taking a residency there will not qualify you for any Nevada state tax credits. The result is, what you are proposing to do will only (fiscally) hurt you or at will not improve your situation.

      --
      "Teachers leave us kids alone ..." - Roger Waters, Pink Floyd
    2. Re:I work in Cali and "live" in Nevada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      You missed his point. He was saying by making his residence out of state. He won't have to install this GPS crap in his car. There fore not having to pay this crappy tax at the pump when he fuels up in CA. It had nothing todo with income taxes..

  63. Then I don't have to pay for your stuff... by gizmonic · · Score: 1

    See, we all pay taxes, and some use the road more, some use it less, but it all comes out in the wash. If I get taxed more for driving more, then I want people with kids to pay more property tax than me. Since I don't have kids, why should I pay for your kid's education, if you don't give me the reach around and pay for my roads?

    If we all pay we all benefit. If we want to start paying based on use, then suddenly I can make a strong case against a lot of taxes that I pay for services that I NEVER use. Why go through that hassel? I'll pay the same property tax, you pay the same gas tax, and everyone's happy.

    --
    WWJD?
    JWRTFM!
  64. Please don't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please don't.
    We already have too many left wing, nimby, do-gooder morons from CA moving here messing the place up.
    Nevada is great because it is Nevada, don't try to turn it into Kalifornia.

    1. Re:Please don't by Herschel+Cohen · · Score: 1

      I agree that you certainly do not need any do gooders of any liberal strip ruining your great state from whatever location. Now how about taking a smaller bit of the Federal taxes that support your independent, freedom loving life styles?

  65. Gee - Time to build that GPS Jammer..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My father was one of the original designers of the system. I remember once that he said you could jam it with a very simple low power transmitter. I'll ahve to ask.

    1. Re:Gee - Time to build that GPS Jammer..... by chaffed · · Score: 1

      Phrack had a nice article detailing how to jam the consumer frequency. I assume cost is an issue so the recievers requiered will use this band.

      So without further ado:

      http://www.phrack.org/show.php?p=60&a=13

      BTW: insert lame space balls quote here.

      --
      What could possibly go wrong?
  66. For the non Americans out there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Mad Max 2" \equiv "The Road Warrior"

    1. Re:For the non Americans out there by loid_void · · Score: 1

      This is true, but some DVD covers look like this one

      --
      Anyone seen my jagged little pill?
  67. Proposition 71 has no current impact by MagicMike · · Score: 1, Informative

    Did you read proposition 71? I did.

    First, its set up in such a way that it has no fiscal impact for the next few (2? 3?) years. The finance charges are rolled into the bond issuance so it requires no cash.

    Second, the money it kicks out will largely go to California business activity, which gets taxed, sending some of the money right back where it came from.

    Third, it proposes that through interests in any discoveries it is self-funding.

    Whether you believe the second and third points or not (and the jury is definitely out here...), the first point is not up for debate - 71 has no impact right now, and will not for some time.

    I don't drive hardly at all either, so I don't really care, but we're nerds, and nerds like facts, right?

    1. Re:Proposition 71 has no current impact by Brandybuck · · Score: 2, Insightful

      71 has no impact right now, and will not for some time.

      Of course it doesn't have any immediate impact. It's a bond, which is a debt, and which must be repaid. In other words it is a fancy name for a tax on your children.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    2. Re:Proposition 71 has no current impact by whorfin · · Score: 1

      It's a Perpetual Money Machine!

      --
      Laugh while you can, monkey-boy!
  68. Factor in vehicle size to encourage small cars by Howl · · Score: 1

    If we step back and look at the impact of the gas tax it's two fold: First to pay for roads and second it has the happy side effect of encouraging socially responsible behavior by favoring smaller more efficient cars.

    The same effect could be achieved with a mileage based tax by including a weight factor in the tax calculation. Heavy vehicles (which do more damage to the road) pay more. This improves the fairness of the system (which is the stated reason for move to a mileage based system) and preserves the incentive to drive smaller cars.

    [As an aside some California cities impose a road tax on construction projects based on the amount of concrete pored and dirt hauled away to cover the wear and tear caused by heavy trucks]

    That said it's not going to fly because the state is simply not capable of maintaining the technology infrastructure needed to make it work.

    --
    Never underestimate the bandwidth of a truck load of tapes
  69. It's Kalifornia....it's not supposed to make sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's supposed to make the fatcat suppliers of the new tracking system rich. Track their campaign contributions to determine who you should throw rotten vegetables at....

  70. The better way by Herschel+Cohen · · Score: 1

    is to make all major highways toll roads including those within a city limits. Day pass, tokens, cash and radio receiver/transmitters (e.g. EZ Pass, etc.).

  71. Arnold. Hear this now. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I and many many people like me will leave the state if you enact this. Fewer voters equals less money and votes for you.

  72. Canadian perspective by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (You know you want to hear it, don't you? Christ, we Canadians are pricks)

    America just SUCKS so hard. What an ungodly police state you idiots have chosen to give yourselves.

    1. Re:Canadian perspective by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It was our parents, they couldn't see the forest from the trees. They wanted things now now now and pay later later later. Well, its later, and look what we got?


      I love it when my Republican aunt and uncle complain about their lost retirement money. They honestly believed that they were going to be on the 'other' side of hte Rep. party, and be filthy rich while not having to worrry at all.


      That million dollar house sold for 400k and they live in a condo now. But they STILL voted for bush and cronyism.


      It's blantantly obvious by reading these boards how the youger generations feel about this situation, but there isn't much that can be done at this point, at least, not quickly.


      If you have too much to lose by fighting, you will not fight. Not because you dont care but because by doing so you could inherently make things worse for yourself, and that is something most people cannot deal with.

    2. Re:Canadian perspective by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. That was such a reasonable response to that really nasty post I posted. Must apologize - just having a hard time understanding the whole Schwarzenegger and Bush thing. Americans fine people but.. huh????

  73. don't visit red light districts... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...additional charges may apply.

  74. Governator by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    I thought Schwarzenegger was going to wave his magic Hollywood wand and edit California's debt right out of the picture. Oh, yeah, he promised Enron (in that meeting he can't somehow remember) that he'd run for governor, and drop that $8B lawsuit to recover all the pricegouging Enron pulled on "Grandma Millie". So now he's going to get the money, and privacy invasion, all on the same ticket. That's what Republicans, do, right? Smaller, less invasive, cheaper government. And their superior morals make them keep their promises. Action!

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  75. People will just avoid buying new cars in the stat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You'll see a barage of sales of new cars from across the state lines where such devices aren't required.

    I also personally think that they should wait until more hybrids/eco-friendly cars are in service until changing the tax system as an incentive for people to buy more efficient and clean cars.

  76. And why not just raise the gas tax instead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Taxing expensive low mileage vehicles is a great progressive tax, and doesn't lessen the importance of doing everything we can to reduce our country's expensive and security-exposing dependence on OIL. This is one of the most humongously dumb ideas I've ever read.

    And who says that just because someone doesn't drive much, they shouldn't share in the tax burden to maintain the roads? Just because you don't have kids doesn't mean you shouldn't contribute to the tax to support public education. This pay-as-you-use stuff is for the birds and this is a clear case of overextending it.

  77. Uh huh by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

    "What's that? My car's GPS tracker isn't working? Gee, officer, I have no idea where that fuse got to."

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  78. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by MindStalker · · Score: 1

    Sorry for being ignorant, but which one is prop 13? I havn't been keeping up with califorinia latly.

  79. So this has nothing to do with budget shortfalls by IdahoEv · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The article claims this is because of the danger that hybrid cars will eat into the tax income, since they consume less gas and therefore don't pay as much tax.

    But the fact is that very few people drive such hybrids, even in California. Far more Californians drive gas-guzzling SUVs; a drive through LA used to surround you with Ford Explorers, but now those seem to be outnumbered by the much larger vehicles like Expeditions and such. A gas tax is a better way to collect income and provide a market incentive to reduce air pollution (as opposed to a regulation, like smog checks, which are expensive to enforce and provide an incentive to cheat rather than to conserve).

    So really, this is just a proposal to make sure that people who actually switch to efficient technologies keep subsidizing those who don't. It's completely retarded. It is not only counterproductive to the desire to reduce fuel consumption and air pollution, but requires that the state spend an additional $100 per car just to implement.

    Expensive + counterproductive to societal goals = bad government. Bad government! No cookie!

    Dumb dumb dumb dumb....

    --
    I stole this sig from someone cleverer than me.
  80. Gotta love the gov't by ThePyro · · Score: 1

    So let me get this straight... One half of the government is trying to encourage hybrids by giving tax breaks... ...while the other half is going out of their way to make sure that owners of hybrids have to pay the same amount?

  81. The sex tax. by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I have an ingenious plan on how every government in the world can solve all its budget problems:

    THE SEX TAX

    Every male will have a chip installed in his sex organ. This chip would provide the following functions:

    • It would provide extra stimulation during the sex act.
    • Via a Bluetooth interface, the male would be able to specify sexual parameters, such as extra lasting time, longer orgasms, etc.
    • The chip would record all sexual activity and categorize it as follows:
      • Masturbation
      • Vaginal intercourse
      • Oral intercourse
      • Anal intercourse
      • Other intercourse
    • The male would have to report all sexual activity on a government document. Government computers would then match these documents against records received wirelessly from sex organ implants. (This step is performed to make the process error-prone on the male's part.)
    The male would then be taxed accordingly. Mistakes made in filing the appropriate paperwork would result in interest, fines, interest on the fines, penalties, interest on the penalties, and interest on the interest.

    This new technology would create a new revenue stream for the government. Additional benefits for the male include:

    • A spousal sex monitoring system, accessible via the web. Using this service, for which women could pay a monthly fee, wives will be able to monitor their husband's sexual activity, uncovering extramerital affairs, dirty masturbational habits, etc.
    • Proof of rape allegations. This service would provide women with a method of proving that a male had engaged in sexual intercourse with them. Of course, since there would be no female implant, a woman who is completely unrelated to the male, but who knows that the male had a sexual rendezvous at a certain time, could allege that the male had raped her. Proof would exist that the male had sex, but the male could not present any evidence that the sex had occurred with a different woman. According to the law, the male would be assumed guilty until proven innocent, and the law will provide for only one way for the male to prove his innocence: Sign all assets, property, and money over to the government.
    The new law will be called: The Millenium Sexual Freedom Act of 2005.

    Yes, this will obviously benefit both the male population, by providing innovative services that all males want, and the government, by providing a much needed revenue stream.

    Of course, in the typical government style, the money would be used for anti-sex education.

    1. Re:The sex tax. by JeanBaptiste · · Score: 1

      dude, you have thought about this waaaaaaay too much. no offense, just sayin'

  82. No troll there. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Speaking in negative tones about a Republican is automatic troll insurance on this board.

  83. Odometer by zors · · Score: 1

    Couldn't they just check your odometer when you get your car inspected, then tax you accordingly? The intent of the law seems good enough, but the method is a pretty horrible invasion of privacy.

  84. Doesn't take into account... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    all of the folks that don't live in state, but drive in your state. So if I live in another state and come to california and drive, then I pay no tax at the pump for the miles I have driven. Since I don't have this GPS system in my car when I fuel up at the pump.

    Were as right now everyone pays at the pump when the fuel up. No matter what state they are from.

    Yet another failed plan to make some more money for the state. Why don't we focus more on the issues that matter, such as unemployment, the state budget, NOT passing propositions that cost more money for the state (stem cell research), etc..

  85. SUVs do more damage... by dahorowitz · · Score: 1
    As Slate pointed out, many SUVs driving on California's roads (not necessarily highways, though) shouldn't even be there.

    Although it is not a perfect proxy, gas taxes are a relatively good measure of the amount of wear a specific vehicle causes on the roads--heavier vehicles tend to use more fuel per mile, resulting in a higher tax per mile. Although the connection is less strong to congestion, there is still some correlation between acceleration and vehicle weight (and a lot of congestion is caused because trucks and other slower-accelerating vehicles take more time getting back up to speed, slowing down all the more-capable lighter cars behind them--this is actually the main premise behind the Bay Bridge metering lights).

  86. dfgdfgfsdg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://img40.exs.cx/img40/28/feuerfreimovie.swf

  87. EVEN BETTER IDEA!! by Timmy+D+Programmer · · Score: 1

    Let's just put a tax collector in each car! And just have him reach into your pocket every few miles.

    --


    (If at first you don't succeed, do it different next time!)
  88. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by MindStalker · · Score: 1

    Sorry, I went back and did the right thing and googled it. Prop 13 reduced property taxes (apparently they were very high). I can see how this reduced the budget for public education, but I don't see how its such a crazy insane idea like you make it sound.

  89. ok.... by TedTschopp · · Score: 1

    But only if they use the money on building and expanding our transportation system here in California. And if you have said device you no longer pay taxes on Gas.

    This will push people to carpool and to use public transportation.

    Not a too horrible thing at all.

    --
    Fantasy remains a human right; we make in our measure and in our derivative mode... -- JRR Tolkien
    1. Re:ok.... by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 1

      But only if they use the money on building and expanding our transportation system here in California

      Yes, so as long as the transportation systems your building and expanding are public, mass transit systems.

      As it appears now, this sort of policy would be great for gas guzzling SUV owners who only use their vehicles for short commutes to work. If you took away the gas tax on top of that, the cost penalities for buying a giant commuter vehicle as opposed to an efficent, envrionmentally friendly vehicle are dimished, and the benifits of utilizing mass transit over commuting alone in vehicles are gone.

      Sadly, California seems perfectly happy to use funds collected from vehicles to maintain and expand road systems instead of investing in transit, so it would be likely that major road arterys into citys would garner the majority of the funds, while long distance freeway travlers would be bearing the brunt of the cost.

      --
      The Internet is generally stupid
    2. Re:ok.... by Fareq · · Score: 1

      'cept... nobody would agree to drive the carpool, as they'd be the one getting all the tax money and speeding tickets

  90. Who are you kidding? by Engineer-Poet · · Score: 1
    Hummers are legally trucks, and don't pay guzzler taxes.

    The "think of the poor!" plea has been around since the 1970's. It has been an excuse for failing to give people any incentive to cut their fuel use, and it's gotten us exactly where we are today. Isn't it time to go back to what works? If your withholding taxes go down won't you be able to afford another quarter for that delivered pizza?

    1. Re:Who are you kidding? by Mal-2 · · Score: 1

      > If your withholding taxes go down won't you be able to afford another quarter for that delivered pizza?

      No, because the driver won't find the money (after expenses) to be worth the effort. So your pizza won't GET delivered, unless you like cold food delivered as part of a very large batch. The driver is probably already cheating on insurance (not reporting as a commercial vehicle), if he actually had to play by the rules as they are NOW he'd quit. This isn't going to help.

      Mal-2

      --
      How is the Riemann zeta function like Trump rallies? Both have an endless number of trivial zeros.
    2. Re:Who are you kidding? by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 1

      Sir, you are a moron.

    3. Re:Who are you kidding? by MemoryAid · · Score: 1
      The only alternative is setting fire to dealers' lots of SUVs. That has the added benefit of reducing the pollution* these (evil) gas-guzzlers will eventually produce, while simultaneously reminding people** that they don't need such large vehicles.

      * Discounting the up-front pollution caused by burning the thing in the first place
      ** This does not work, either.

      Note: The author of this statement does not endorse this course of action.

      --
      Language students: Don't try to learn English here. This ain't it.
    4. Re:Who are you kidding? by John+Jorsett · · Score: 1
      If your withholding taxes go down won't you be able to afford another quarter for that delivered pizza?

      Anybody who thinks CA will raise one tax and reduce another correspondingly either doesn't live here or is seriously out of touch with how Sacramento works. Taxes only go one way in this state: up. The exception to that rule being when people finally get fed up and pass something like Proposition 13 by initiative, bypassing the legislature.

      By the way, hummers DO pay a guzzler tax. It's 18 cents (state tax) at the pump for every gallon. Plus sales tax. If you get crap mileage, you pay thru the taxes on the extra gallons you burn.

    5. Re:Who are you kidding? by Bastian · · Score: 1

      Ya know, with fuel cost and emissions being what they are, the "think of the poor" argument doesn't hold water for gas taxes and the like, anyway. Not with the greenest cars being the cheapest and all. Hell, if you're willing to buy a Geo Metro you can get a car whose fuel economy rivals some hybrids.

    6. Re:Who are you kidding? by daft_one · · Score: 0

      True enough... But you'd be about as safe on a jet-propelled skateboard.

    7. Re:Who are you kidding? by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I don't know about Hummers specifically (tho IIRC, they do have passenger-class plates here) but SUVs in general are passenger vehicles in Calif., and pay the lower license fee.

      Conversely, any pickup, *including mini-trucks*, is legally a "commercial vehicle" (ie. "truck") and pays the same weight fees as an 18-wheeler.

      This is due to idiots passing a proposition that raised the vehicle tax on "trucks" without bothering to notice that includes pickups.

      And that's why my 26 year old pickup gets dinged $146 in tax and lic. fees (which continues to rise every year, it's gone up $22 in the past 5 years), vs. $38 for a "passenger vehicle" of comparable age and weight.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  91. There are other ways... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I live in California, and have to take my car to get smogged each year. As part of the process, they read my odometer. Why not just look at last year's smog test records and compare them to this year's to figure out how much I drove? That avoids all the expense of GPS's, figuring out how far the GPS has gone, and fighting the privacy people (like myself) who will go crazy over this idea.

    All that said, I'm not sure how I feel about the idea of taxing me on how far I drive; "Real estate is loads cheaper in Texas, and it's closer to the family..." is about the only thing that comes to mind.

  92. It'll Never Happen by smclean · · Score: 1
    I know this has been said, but this will never happen. Firstly, we just got through recalling a governer, and one of the major factors which led to this was a car tax (in that case it was an increase in registration fees). People were pissed; California is a car state, the average commute is something like 45 minutes a day. If Arnold wants a one-way ticket out of politics, this is his move.

    Not to mention trucking companies and their importance to the California economy. They do all this work to improve out trucking infrastructure, then think they can bust something like this out?

    As for the privacy issues, they make me want to puke. Seeing such short sightedness makes me lose my faith in mankind.

    --

    "'Yrch!' said Legolas, falling into his own tongue."

  93. Tax by CAR WEIGHT, dumbasses!!! by wernst · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I'm sure readers outside California know this, but in case you didn't know...

    Some other states apply their car tax by the vehicle's weight, due to the very sensible reason that a heaver car wears down the roads more than a lighter car, and therefore more repairs (and hence, more cost) are required with heavy cars.

    Obviously, SUVs and luxury cars pay more, while lighter and frugal cars pay less, PLUS it just makes sense: if you chew up the pavement and make more potholes because of your heavier car, then you SHOULD pay more.

    Of course, this makes too much sense for my state's DMV to figure out...

    1. Re:Tax by CAR WEIGHT, dumbasses!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A sensible idea. In fact, in most European countries road tax indeed depends on both vehicle mass and fuel type.

      This is not so strange when you consider that damage to the roads varies with the *sixth* power of axle pressure.

    2. Re:Tax by CAR WEIGHT, dumbasses!!! by Degrees · · Score: 1
      Absolutely right.

      What is happening, is that someone wants to make a huge buck off the government, and some other set of bureaucrats are bored stiff, and want to play with something sexy.

      "Oooh! Wouldn't it be cool if we implemented something like GPS Enabled Transponders, Reporting Every Vehicle Entry Now Using Expressway (G.E.T.R.E.V.E.N.U.E)??? Oooh! This'll be so cool."

      Just making the vehicles pay by weight is boring. It also doesn't create a huge system for some outsourcer (or state bureaucrat empire-builder) to build, maintain, and abuse.

      My tax dollars at work.

      And people wonder why I'm a Libertarian.

      --
      "The most sensible request of government we make is not, "Do something!" But "Quit it!"
    3. Re:Tax by CAR WEIGHT, dumbasses!!! by kgp · · Score: 1

      Actually road damage goes by the cube of the axle weight so you really should charge based on the cube of the axle weight and directly proportional to the milage.

      i.e. charge is proportional to milage * (total_weight/count_of_axles)**3

      This would hit transportation (cargo and people) most but they're the ones mostly messing up the roads. So it's not done.

    4. Re:Tax by CAR WEIGHT, dumbasses!!! by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Uh here in California we apply a car tax by vehicle weight as well. Most light vehicles are under the weight limit (not sure what it is, I think it's only like 5,000 pounds) and as such are taxed (in the form of vehicle registration fees) yearly based on their weight. Also, every toll bridge I've seen yet charges trucks based on the number of axles. Of course some people manage to get out of it...

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    5. Re:Tax by CAR WEIGHT, dumbasses!!! by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 1

      Take this a step further, how much damage is done by those
      OUT OF STATE semi-tractor trailers that are overloaded
      beyond their maximum legal weight limit .

      I cannot even imagine how many semi's go in and out of California via I-40 alone , prolly a metric $hitload .

      I think hybrids and diesel's that get over 40 mpg should be immune to
      the idea altogether .

      Just a thought,
      Ex-MislTech

      --
      google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
    6. Re:Tax by CAR WEIGHT, dumbasses!!! by Linknoid · · Score: 1

      This article has some interesting information about California's actual laws (which are not enforced). Basically all those big SUVs out there get a tax break by being over a weight limit which defines them as trucks. But those same trucks aren't supposed to be allowed in residential areas and such, so they're getting the benefit of building heavier vehicles (tax breaks) without the limitations that go with it.

    7. Re:Tax by CAR WEIGHT, dumbasses!!! by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Pickups are classed as commercial vehicles in CA, therefore are are taxed by weight, same as 18-wheelers. This applies even to mini-trucks that weigh less than a standard passenger car. SUVs are legally passenger vehicles, therefore pay passenger rates (much lower despite being heavier than the average pickup).

      I have a car and a pickup that are the same age and similar weight, but the truck gets taxed $110 more (and rising) as a "commercial" vehicle. The extra $110 started when these idiot voters passed a proposition (ca. 1985) to soak commercial vehicles, without realising the extent of its effects.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  94. Re:adrger by TRIEventHorizon · · Score: 0

    (using parent to show up on top)

    This kind of nonsense is so typical for the People's Republic of California!

    Why doesn't California leave the nation, the nation would be better off without California!

    --
    "And so the Trekkies were executed in the mannor most befitting virgins - thrown into volcanoes" - Futurama
  95. No Different than a Toll by Brigadier · · Score: 1



    You know this isnt' a bad idea, I've lived in NYC, and La, Southern california has an extrodinary amount of traffic. Now most of the time you look in traffic 80% of it is single passnger. Now back east they generate a ton of revinue based on Tolls. The way I see it this is a better way to tax the traffic. If anyone has ever sat in the valley say around sunset and seen the smog trust me it's worth it.

  96. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wouldn't wanna live in California anyway.

  97. I'm sorry, my gps broke by madshot · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, I don't know where that tin foil came from.. damn neighborhood pranksters.. I was wondering why I wasn't getting my quarterly bill on driving.

    Oh, and I would like to thank you for charging me last summer for driving to New York. I enjoyed paying for the 3000 miles drivin outside of the state of CA. I like being taxed, thank you!

    --
    Obama = Socialism.
  98. Forget your tin foil hat...... by i_want_you_to_throw_ · · Score: 1

    It's ALUMINUM foil. Tin and aluminum are distinctly different. I can't believe so many geeks never get this right.

  99. And by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

    They can "consider" tracking my car, and I will consider never, ever living there. How is it that a state that is supposedly the world's third largest economy (or some such) is so completely and thoroughly screwed up? It's California that is heavily pushing OBDIII (On-Board Diagnostics III) for use in all automobiles. That thing makes this GPS tracker look comparatively tame. My apologies to any Californians in the audience, but ... geez. You guys have your work cut out for you. I wish you luck.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    1. Re:And by yorkpaddy · · Score: 1
      How is it that a state that is supposedly the world's third largest economy (or some such) is so completely and thoroughly screwed up?
      Probably has something to do with their socialist state government.
      --
      "brxref .k.p ,.by xprt. gbe.p.oycmaycbi yd. cby.nci.bj. ru yd. am.pcjab lgxlcj" don'
    2. Re:And by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      No doubt you're right. And that ought to be a lesson to the rest of us.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  100. Wait a minute, disengage tinfoil hats please. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shouldn't the people who drive the most pay the most? Honestly, you think that Joe Blo driving 5 miles to work everyday should pay the same as a fscking TRUCKING company that tears up and down California's highway system a hundred thousand+ times a year? People. There /is/ a privacy concern and that's quite obviously going to be a huge block in getting this through, but the people who get the most monetary benefit from the free road system (ie truckers) are the same exact people who destroy it every year. Throw a damn GPS in those trucks and let them foot the bill. I'll happily pay less than the nearly $3.00/gallon gas is here in Cali.

    Jebus.

  101. Phucking Hippies! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    YEAH! Stick it to them!

    Right along with their new-age spectacle frames and their Volkswagon Bugs and their Honda lawnmowers.

    Yuppi scum!

  102. Re:Funny prank idea by rainman_bc · · Score: 1

    Or use the mail system.... Mail it to a penpal in China back and forth until it hit's 1,000,000 miles... Who'd believe that?

    --
    09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
  103. Smokey's Gonna Like This by techsoldaten · · Score: 1

    Looks like he's finally gonna catch up to the Bandit, just maybe not the way we wanted.

    Yee-haw!

    M

  104. Oregon Already Proposed This (and /. Covered it.) by mlmitton · · Score: 2, Informative
    Here's the link to a slashdot story on Oregon's proposal, which includes a link to an earlier slashdot story on Oregon's proposal.

    Oregon Slashdot Article

    --
    "My girlfriend's got sodium laureth sulfate hair."
  105. gas saving technology unwelcome by gfody · · Score: 2, Interesting

    this seems somewhat on topic. I found this article from 1995 (!) about a new electronically controlled valvetrain system that would increase fuel efficiency by at least 10%
    http://www.cnn.com/TECH/9510/cleaner_engine/

    here we are 10 years later and no production cars come equipped with such a system, nor is there anything like it in the after market. The details of it seem simple enough, prototypes have been demonstrated to work well and manufacturing costs as well as tcoo are lower than the current line of mechanical valvetrains.

    does this not exist because america can't afford to take the tax hit?

    --

    bite my glorious golden ass.
    1. Re:gas saving technology unwelcome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      correction: 30% increase in fuel efficiency

    2. Re:gas saving technology unwelcome by Kurin · · Score: 1

      Actually this does exist on production cars. The technology is known as variable valve timing, and Toyota's family of engines is actually named VVT-I (Variable Valve Timing with Intelligence). Even without the name, many automobiles come with this technology.

    3. Re:gas saving technology unwelcome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Yes, its called variable valve timing. Most modern cars have it. Honda calls it VTEC and Toyota calls it VVT-i (there is a VVTL-i which controls valve lift too). Granted its not 100% electronic. The reason a lot of cars still have somewhat mechanical valve systems is RELIABILITY. Just replace your belt every so often, and its good to go. They work, they work well, they work well for a really long time. Replacing it with something more complicated will almost always decrease reliability. Junking your car more often because a valve didn't open or close and shredded your engine isn't worth the small difference in efficiency.

    4. Re:gas saving technology unwelcome by Aeiri · · Score: 1

      No, it's because Halliburton can't afford to take the profit hit.

      ...I kid Mr. Cheney! I kid!...
      ..Please don't kill my family!...

    5. Re:gas saving technology unwelcome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not the same thing. They all use camshafts and just alter the lift profile. The system he was talking about replaces the cams completely with a set of electric actuators.

      VTEC for example is not that great because it's only activated beyond a certain high rpm (5000 or 6000 I forget), which makes the cars have no torque for most of the usable rpm range. I believe VVTL-I is similar. The first one though, was Mitsubishi's MIVEC in the 80's I recall.

    6. Re:gas saving technology unwelcome by QuasiEvil · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's not all about efficiency - mechanical valves, cams, and timing belts are extremely reliable mechanisms in ICEs that have been refined over decades. Electric valves and all the high power, complex electronics behind them just aren't proven. Even if they came out in production cars tomorrow, I wouldn't buy one for at least 5-10 years. Why? They're not proven reliable in the long run.

      While I'd like fuel efficiency (hence the reason I have and usually drive a 95 del Sol - nearly 40 mpg with no exotic technologies at all, perfectly reliable for its first 180k miles), reliability is absolutely paramount. I travel into some of the more remote parts of the US and Canada that are still accessible by road, and a breakdown hundreds of miles from the nearest service facility or cell tower is not acceptable. I carry a rather extensive set of tools for dealing with most minor issues and some not so minor (anybody ever spent most of the night changing a halfshaft in a parking lot of your hotel?), but a major drivetrain failure in one of these places would be more than annoying. A dead valve would be just that, especially if it was the only one the exhaust side of a cylinder - a major failure. There just aren't that many ways that a mechanical valve can fail.

      Not saying it can't be done, but if I was a car company engineer, I'd make sure those things had been in a fleet prototype test vehicles for 5 years and 250k miles before ever turning them loose on the mechnically-inept public.

      As others have posted, though, a significant portion of the benefits can be gained by adjusting the timing on a mechanical cam - Honda's VTEC, a well proven technology, powering my del Sol since, well, 1995. ;)

    7. Re:gas saving technology unwelcome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pneumatic valvetrains also existed. I believe Renault had one in a car that won the Constructors trophy in F1. Problem was, if it failed, which it did occasionally, valves would meet piston crowns at about 1200 mph. Bad news. Reliability is not just probability but consequences. An F1 team with a $100 million budget can afford the occasional engine rebuild. Tell an owner or the warranter of a new $20,000 car that his engine has to be completely replaced at a cost of $7,000 and he's going to be questioning the worth of that new whizbang tech.

    8. Re:gas saving technology unwelcome by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      If you have coil on plug ignition, if you lose an exhaust valve you could just shut off the cylinder. Actually this could be done on any vehicle with sequential fuel injection and electronic spark control. All you have to do is make the exhaust valves fail open and the intake valves fail closed on the dead cylinder for a worst-case failsafe limp-home. The biggest problem with electronic valve actuation is supplying the system with enough power. My solution to that is to eliminate the starter and alternator and replace them with a pancake motor attached to the place where the crank pulley normally goes. A high-power alternator can draw as much as 15hp from the engine under full load. Assuming you would need to approximately triple your output to run the electronic valve system and all of your other equipment that's not mechanically driven, potentially including a water pump, air conditioning, and so on, that means about 45hp. A pancake motor that can reliably deliver that much power should not be hard to come by. You could use it as a generator to power the car's electrical systems, and as a starter motor. It would probably not weigh appreciably more than your average starter and alternator, though it would cost quite a bit more, I must admit.

      I agree it would be a good idea to test a valvetrain like that and I'd sure want to see it operating at high RPMs on a regular basis before I got too excited about it, but we are going to need rapidly and continuously valve timing, lift, and duration if we're going to get much more efficiency out of these internal combustion engines.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    9. Re:gas saving technology unwelcome by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      You're forgetting that many engines (especially the more efficient ones) have interference designs. If a valve fails in the open position, the piston crown will hit it, causing a LOT of damage. If you could engineer it to fail in partially-open mode (open, but not enough to hit the piston), then it'd be ok.

      Your "pancake" motors are already here, on the hybrid vehicles. They'll probably come to everything else shortly.

  106. Sue... by oliverthered · · Score: 1

    I suggest you file a counter compalint about the damage hard pavement has done to you knees. If the pavement was of original quality (dirt, grass and pebbles) then you wouldn't have had the problems.

    Same goes for if you fall over and land on the concerete that someone put in the way of the nice soft dirt underneath.

    --
    thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    1. Re:Sue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fess up. you live here, don't you?!

  107. sounds fair to me by farble1670 · · Score: 1

    this is perfectly fair. why should people that go out of their way and sacrafice their quality of living to avoid driving pay equally for the roads they rarely use? why should i, who drive the 5 miles to work about once a month, pay the same road taxes as someone who drives 60 miles to work every day? duh!

    when i went looking to purchase a condo in the SF bay area, i heavily weighted: how close it was to my my current job, how close it was to public transportation hubs, and how centrally located it was in the greater metro area. what did i lose by heavily weighting these items? well, i had to pay A LOT more. i purchased a condo for the price my colleague paid for a house (he lives 50 miles from work). my property taxes are higher. i don't have a yard. i live in the city, so it is noisy, and dirty. i have to risk life and limb to ride a bike in darkness (in the fall and winter). it takes me 2x as long to travel the same distance as someone in a car. the school system is worse.

    any way you slice it, it's cheaper for society to manage a population when they live close to urban centers, yet for the most part there's only negative incentives to do so. this is a step in the right direction.

    1. Re:sounds fair to me by subri · · Score: 1

      the problem is... not everyone can afford a house close to work... some people just have to drive .. to get a cheaper place to live... plus, not everywhere do you have good public transportation facilities... take l.a. for instance!....

    2. Re:sounds fair to me by Fareq · · Score: 1

      I highly doubt that you use as much gas as I do -- I live about 30 miles from work. Even though I get good gas mileage, I still pay more tax.

    3. Re:sounds fair to me by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      this may come as a surprise, but the gas tax does not pay for 100% of the roads. in fact it pays for a small percentage. also as surprise, as an american, you have very cheap gas compared to the rest of the world. the % of tax on your gas is very small comparitively speaking.

      so you commute 30 miles in a car, i commute 5 miles by bike. so you put 30 times more wear on the road per day than i do. i am making an assumption that a 15 pound bike puts insignificant wear on the road compared to a 3000 lb car. do you think that you pay 30 times more road-targeted taxes than i do? probably not.

      not to mention the greenhouse gases and toxins you are dumping in to the atmosphere. seems like i probably end up breathing your toxic poopoo gas. how do i get compensated for that? oh right, the gas tax. maybe when i am older and i have lung cancer, your gas taxes will pay for my lung cancer treatment. oh wait, we don't have public healthcare i guess that won't happen.

    4. Re:sounds fair to me by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      another thing to consider: public transportation is not free. when i take the train and bus to work, about 5 miles, it costs abut $4 ... probably the same that it costs you for gas to commute the 30 miles. now, unlike the gas tax, where only a small percentage of the $ goes back into improving the transportation system, all of the $4 i pay goes back into the transportation system.

      it's not like people who take the bus and train and whatever other means of commuting just get free rides, and it's a common misconception that it is cheaper to take public transportation.

  108. Constitutional by BigGar' · · Score: 1

    Would this be constitutional? Something about freedom to move about within the country/states.

    --


    Shop smart, Shop S-Mart.
  109. Track and Track is the goal by Muttonhead · · Score: 1

    The goal is to create a track and trace society where the government has "godlike" powers over you. BTW, OnStar *is* a GPS device. You speed can be determined. You are this close to being fined for driving too fast based on their ability to track you this way. It is tyranny.

  110. what about a factor for the car's weight by yorkpaddy · · Score: 1

    I don't like the idea because its an invasion of privacy. But, if you are going to have said law to help more fairly tax those who use roads, why not make the law actually do that. Add in a factor for vehicle weight, a prius is going to cause less road damage than an accord (I think it weighs less, might not with those godawful heavy batteries), and it definetly weighs less then an excursion. The excursion is going to cause more road wear than a prius, so it should be taxed more per road mile its driven. Also, motorcycles should be taxed almost nothing, since they weigh so little. While your at it, why not tax based on the way the vehicles are used. A prius hauling one person getting 50 mpg, is getting 50pmpg pmpg=people miles per gallon). An excursion hauling 7 people getting 10mpg is getting 70pmpg.

    --
    "brxref .k.p ,.by xprt. gbe.p.oycmaycbi yd. cby.nci.bj. ru yd. am.pcjab lgxlcj" don'
  111. Arnold = RINO by Trespass · · Score: 1

    Republican In Name Only. He's just another goofball demagogue who got elected on a flood of voter rage. He seems to be in a race with Feinstein to see who can pass the most unwarranted gun control legislation, as well.

  112. Motorcycles save the day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good thing I ride 24/7. As it is right now with bikes.

    Less reg fees
    Lane spliting
    No smog check (read altered exhaust system)
    and my guess is that this won't affect me.....

    More you should join us!

  113. Round up the usual suspects... by ElectricRook · · Score: 4, Insightful

    At smog-check time, the GPS memory gets down-loaded into a database... Remember Gray bought $82M worth of Oracle licenses.


    Then when a crime goes unsolved, the local police only need to search the monster database of who was where and when. Round up the guilty, and sentence the convicts.


    Remember Big Brother is Watching

    I'm beginning to think Americans are suffering from a lack of studying Orwell.

    --
    - High Tech workers, please say NO to Union Carpenters, their Union sees fit to control our compensation.
    1. Re:Round up the usual suspects... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The first thing they do is cut the education budget. This is no accident. They don't need more smart working people, they need more consumers.

  114. Blue . . . by Dausha · · Score: 1

    So, is this what the blue states want for the rest of us? I'm glad I ended up in a red state then.

    --
    What those who want activist courts fear is rule by the people.
  115. people want to save money by supernova87a · · Score: 1

    the only way I could ever see this succeeding is if by allowing the GPS, you (individual) would stand to get a tax break because you don't drive as much as the average. Like Ezpass -- there must be a benefit so that people would *want* to adopt the technology.

  116. Hell of time to.. by Loco3KGT · · Score: 1

    start making your own bio-diesel!

    --
    Blessed be he who reads this post, Cursed be he who tells my boss.
  117. Re:adrger by over_exposed · · Score: 1

    douche bag...

    Assuming they are going to tax by the mile, wouldn't it be easier to have the car's circutry (sp) report to the pump how far it's driven since it's last fill-up? This could be done via a very simple interface near the gas cap. Maybe even integrated into the gas nozzle. Granted, there are "Security" issues to work out (like making sure someone doesn't reset that counter right before they fill up) but it has potential. What do you guys/gals think?

    --
    "The object of war is not to die for your country, but to make the other bastard die for his." - Patton
  118. Desperate for new revenue by Shivetya · · Score: 0

    Californians screwed themselves by not allowing property taxes to rise with true value of property.

    It basically is an example of a democracy run amok. The people vote for every benefit and against every attempt to make them pay for it.

    Hence their government is reduced to what some see as hair brained methods of raising taxes, or worse punishing corporations with such high taxes that many just get up an move futher exaggerating the problem.

    What California needs to do is revoke the ability of the public to pass initiatives that make it impossible for the government to function while at the same time reigning in all the frivolous governement spending. My favorite, non-essential employees. If they are NE why do we have them anyway?

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
  119. TFA doesn't include weight by zakezuke · · Score: 1

    MPG 51 - $52.94/yr 2004 Toyota Prius 2,890 lbs
    MPG 24 - $112.50/yr 2004 Honda Accord 3,265 lbs
    MPG 11 - $245.45/yr 2004 Hummer H1 6,814 lbs

    Prius = 1.83 cents/lb yearly
    Accord = 3.44 cents/lb yearly
    Hummer = 3.60 cents/lb yearly

    Clearly the hummer is charged a higher rate per mile and per pound than both the Accord and Prius. My question is what the hell is wrong with that? California traditionally has been very aggressive with pollution legislation, so much so that some import automakers used the -C designation for cars sent to the Americas. A rate based on miles traveled makes no since if you are considering smog control.

    --
    There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
  120. Raves are so 1999... by f8free · · Score: 1

    What we should really be taxing is THE BLING!

  121. Now that is just going too far... by borgheron · · Score: 1

    in a manner of speaking. ;)

    GJC

    --
    Gregory Casamento
    ## Chief Maintainer for GNUstep
  122. Next thing - air tax by tyrr · · Score: 1

    All people living in California are required to get a breath measurement implant.

  123. GET TO THE CHOPPA!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While they're at it, they should add the perimeter system from the Running Man, and if someone doesn't pay their taxes on time, the collar around their neck blows up.

  124. We are all just dumb ass zombies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    lol

    Its a good thing too.. I mean the GPS unita are not cheep. putting one in every car sounds like the answer to drive out the econimy . Kinda wounders how some of these people got elected. Oh

    wait thats right you never did elect them they got thous neato nifty voting boxs controled buy some company linked to the secret soieties..

    Bush is not even a legal persedent..

    frig in order to beat bush alone not the majority of the peole have to vote.. you would need like 150% just to beat out all the chunks of fake votes they cram into the machines before voting even started.. funny how more people voted for bush then there are registered to vote.. so many unaswered questions.. but you know thats a bunch of bull.. I am going back to my sugar stuper.. cause we are all just a bunch of zombies..

    la la la la everything is fine.. .. new terriest threat coming better hide... la la la I will be fine.. the police will protect me as they stun gun my children.. l al la lal la

    everything is fine..

    just wanna makes you knock some sence into people..

    1. Re:We are all just dumb ass zombies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "funny how more people voted for bush then there are registered to vote.. "

      Your entire post is a classic example of the failure of the No Child Left Behind act, but let me address this one point. If more than 100% of registered voters voted for Bush as you contend, then who the hell voted for Kerry? In your fantasy scenario, all registered voters and then some voted for Bush, leaving 0 votes for Kerry. But obviously Kerry had more than 0 votes. Stay in school and stay off the crack, boy.

  125. Not really by wantedman · · Score: 0

    Will a primus will do less damage to the road than a light truck or a small car? The answer is: it depends on the vehicle we're comparing it to. Those batteries are heavy. :D

    Let's be honest here, Not everyone can drive a primus around. Trucks and other gas powered will always be needed, expecially for rural and long distance driving.

    If we continue down taxing gas usage only, we'll get to a point where rural areas are paying a significant part of the taxes for upkeep of the road, while the city population, which would be near 100% electric in 10 ~ 30 years, gets off tax free.

    Taxing gas is the incorrect tool for the job.

    1. Re:Not really by nmx · · Score: 5, Funny

      Let's be honest here, Not everyone can drive a primus around.

      In fact, no one can, because it doesn't exist. Maybe you were thinking of the Prius?

      --
      "Well kids, you tried your best, and you failed. The lesson is, never try."
    2. Re:Not really by rsborg · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If we continue down taxing gas usage only, we'll get to a point where rural areas are paying a significant part of the taxes for upkeep of the road, while the city population, which would be near 100% electric in 10 ~ 30 years, gets off tax free.

      You know what... It's about frickin time

      Rural parts of states live off of our dime in the cities. Urban centers generate the lions share of tax revenue. At least for gas taxes, if they want to pollute, then they should pay their fair share. Hell, if it incoveniences them so much maybe they should lobby for mass transit to be improved? Urban votes are the reason things like the LA/SF fast rail project are ignored in favor of some random state pork project in the boondocks.

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    3. Re:Not really by RandomCoil · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Will a primus will do less damage to the road than a light truck or a small car? The answer is: it depends on the vehicle we're comparing it to. Those batteries are heavy. :D
      Surely you saw this coming. A Prius weighs 2890lb, a Civic EX (AT) weighs 2668lb. Pretty negligible.
      Let's be honest here, Not everyone can drive a primus around. Trucks and other gas powered will always be needed, expecially for rural and long distance driving.
      A Prius with a low-ball mpg rating of 44 (a real-world number I've heard) and its 11.9 gallon tank can go over 500 miles. How far apart are gas stations where you're talking about? I think the basic problem here is you're assuming the Prius is electric. It's not; it's a hybrid. So why can't the truck be a hybrid?
      If we continue down taxing gas usage only, we'll get to a point where rural areas are paying a significant part of the taxes for upkeep of the road, while the city population, which would be near 100% electric in 10 ~ 30 years, gets off tax free.
      No, people in rural areas will use more efficient vehicles. Last I checked, electric power also made it out there -- why do you think an all-electric vehicle wouldn't be practical in 10-30 years?
      Taxing gas is the incorrect tool for the job.
      No, it's the perfect tool. It pays for the impact of vehicles in the same way as gambling, smoking, and alcohol pay for their impact: through a sin tax. A gas tax encourages more efficient vehicles, shorter commutes, and public transportation. Taxing mileage only encourages the latter two.
    4. Re:Not really by Buelldozer · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Two words:

      Bite

      Me

    5. Re:Not really by breagerey · · Score: 1

      Trucks and other gas powered will always be needed, expecially for rural and long distance driving.

      A Prius will do 600+ miles on a tank.
      How far will your car go?

    6. Re:Not really by nick_davison · · Score: 1

      If we continue down taxing gas usage only, we'll get to a point where rural areas are paying a significant part of the taxes for upkeep of the road.

      What, make people who use rural roads that are far less efficient, getting two or three cars per day, pay more than city drivers who densely share the same roads far more efficiently?

      Why, that's scandalous!

      Besides, have you been to California? I live here. I'm not so sure there actually is anywhere rural. We have cities, mountains, desert, freeways and some weird green stuff up North of which Regan said, "If you've seen one, you've seen them all".

    7. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      A Prius will do 600+ miles on a tank.
      How far will your car go?</BLOCKQUOTE>

      VW are currently advertising their Passat diesel model with a 850+ range over here in old Europe.

    8. Re:Not really by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      Tell me what good mass transit will do in an area where you have 10 miles between bus stops at the least. Better yet, 10 miles between houses. I'm in an area where Urban transit won't work except for certain routes cause there aren't enough people to support it.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    9. Re:Not really by Kolgoth · · Score: 1

      What about those of us who live in areas where public transportation is not an option, and the nearest set of places to work a --real-- job are roughly 15-25 miles away at least? I drive a much longer stretch of road, that on average, has fairly light traffic.

      Why should I be forced to pay more for something I have little control over? My car gets 30+ mpg, isn't a hybrid, and I have to drive quite a ways to get anywhere (Gotta love GA Suburbia) - so again I ask - why should I - when faced with little other choice - be forced to pay more?

      --
      "The Samurai who does not fear death becomes invincible."
    10. Re:Not really by rileysowner · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So I take it you don't eat!? Don't forget that every piece of food you eat starts with some farmer in the boondocks, and for them to produce that food they need affordable fuel.

    11. Re:Not really by alexo · · Score: 1


      >> Let's be honest here, Not everyone can drive a primus around.
      >
      > In fact, no one can, because it doesn't exist. Maybe you were thinking of the Prius?


      The Primus does exist, although they are quite difficult to "drive around".

    12. Re:Not really by John+Courtland · · Score: 0

      Trucks can't be electric because the sheer amount of torque needed to simply budge that 80,000 lbs of cargo. That's why they're diesel, deisel engines, liter for liter, produce more torque output than gasoline engines. They're also more efficient and cleaner (assuming this sulphur act passes(ed)).

      --
      Slashdot is proof that Sturgeon's Law applies to mankind.
    13. Re:Not really by elhedran · · Score: 1

      * Jaw drops *

      Rural parts of states live off of our dime in the cities

      Um, you do realize that without the rural parts of the state you wouldn't eat, you wouldn't have any materials to manufacture with, you wouldn't even have a friggen job since nearly everything we do to make money starts in a rural part of a state.

      Further more every dime going from city to rural comes back in the form of cheaper everything. Look at the big picture before you sign a death warrent on farming. Unless you want to pay triple prices for a steak since they now has to come from another country.

    14. Re:Not really by Euler · · Score: 1

      The biggest of trucks are electric. What you say?? here: AC solutions for haul trucks

    15. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Erm, have you ever seen a torque curve for a large electric motor?

    16. Re:Not really by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Actually most cities live off the the suburban tax base. Oh yea the cities are such a bastion of money for the rural areas. Not really. If you look at places like New Mexico and Texas a large amount of the tax base comes from west texas and and east New Mexico from the oil. Plus you will just pay more for the food you eat and the cloths you wear if you tax the rural areas more.
      Besides if you can afford 600k for a loft or 3k a month for rent you can afford more taxes. Soak the rich right :)

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    17. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not really.
      The biggest trucks for mines (3-4 meter tires) are hibrids - a diesel engine makes electrisity and electric engine makes the torgue, because the transmition needed otherwise would be too big...

    18. Re:Not really by AndyChrist · · Score: 1

      It's not no one's fault, you know. You chose to live in a place built around cars, probably with little accomodation made for anything else. So did a lot of other people. The more people who do that the less options there are. Public transportation won't be improved because everyone has to have a car, so even when they don't need to use the car, they're more likely to do so anyway...the public transit won't be used enough to be good (a bus every hour and a half doesn't even count as having a system IMO...I lived somewhere like that). Not that there would be money to pay for it, with it all going to pay for the upkeep of roads.

      Why should you, and all the other people who helped make the bed you all now have to sleep in have to pay for it? Because someone has to, or your whole system, which you are dependent upon, will collapse, or at least degrade.

      On the plus side, the more of you who get frustrated with having to pay for your unhealthy, inefficient lifestyle, the more people will be clamoring for alternatives, and maybe suburbia will get some of it's problems fixed.

      Me, if I can't find a job in one of the handful of US cities which ISN'T a fucking wreck when it comes to it's infrastructure choices, I'm staying overseas.

    19. Re:Not really by RandomCoil · · Score: 1
      What about those of us who live in areas where public transportation is not an option, and the nearest set of places to work a --real-- job are roughly 15-25 miles away at least?
      Sufficiently high gas prices will generate an interest in public transportation. Car pooling already exists. Telecommuting is occasionally possible. Working under the assumption (which can be argued) that burning gas "is bad", there must be an economic pressure against it.
      Why should I be forced to pay more for something I have little control over? My car gets 30+ mpg, isn't a hybrid, and I have to drive quite a ways to get anywhere (Gotta love GA Suburbia) - so again I ask - why should I - when faced with little other choice - be forced to pay more?
      Why not you? You're using a lightly-used road that is probably incurring more per-car costs than a heavily-used road. You're not car pooling. You have ~40 mile daily commute. Who, would you argue, should pay? I'm sure you have a very good reason for not moving closer to your work. That's fine! But there's no reason the economics of transportation should be excluded from such decisions. You already drive a reasonably fuel efficient car -- great! You will bear less of a burden than the H2 drivers making the same commute. And when you buy your next car, there will be even more efficient cars than you current one on the market due to demand.
    20. Re:Not really by RandomCoil · · Score: 3, Informative
      Trucks can't be electric because the sheer amount of torque needed to simply budge that 80,000 lbs of cargo.
      Freight trains run on electric motor powered either by overhead electric lines or diesel turbines. Torque is not an issue for electric motors. Power storage would be the primary concern.
    21. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The idiots that live in Kerry "blue counties" think that food just magically appears in their grocery store. They don't understand that it's the red Bush counties that feed them.

    22. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ... for them to produce that food they need affordable fuel.

      Which is why most states do not tax the gas that is used for off-road agricultural use. Thus, it's not that big of a factor in this argument.

    23. Re:Not really by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      Um, those are NOT electric trucks. Those are diesel turbine based electric trucks. Diesel turbines generate electrical power that drives motors on each wheel. Direct drive in a vehicle that big is prone to all sorts of problems with weight loading (picture putting your car in park while pointed downhill, now try and put it into gear).

      The motors are high-torgue, but they cannot generate speeds necessary to move cargo economically.

    24. Re:Not really by TheMeuge · · Score: 1

      Hmmm. How about no! If you actually looked up at how much the red states contribute to the GDP, then maybe you'd realize that perhaps we should have let the south secede after all.

    25. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Judging by most people in the red Bush counties, I'd say that they are doing more than their fair share of the eating too...

    26. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. That's why anyone who argues that the red states don't contribute anything to the GDP are plainly wrong. But the previous poster was arguing that most states do not tax the gas that is used for off-road agricultural use. Thus, it's not that big of a factor in this argument. Do you see the difference? One is saying that the whole debate is null because they're debating about the harms of a tax that does not exist. On the other hand you think you are debating someone who is arguing that red states don't contribute anything to the national GDP. I have no idea who made that statement, though.

    27. Re:Not really by hazem · · Score: 1

      Don't most modern train engines work on the same idea? The drive train is electric, powered by a diesel powered turbine that spins a generator?

      The trains seem to have quite a range of speeds available to them. Gearing may be difficult, but it does not seem impossible.

    28. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Will a primus will do less damage to the road than a light truck or a small car? The answer is: it depends on the vehicle we're comparing it to. Those batteries are heavy. :D
      No, I think they just use a lot of AA's ... :)
    29. Re:Not really by NegativeOneUserID · · Score: 1

      It could be he is a roadie for primus and drives the tour bus.

    30. Re:Not really by haraldm · · Score: 1
      A gas tax encourages more efficient vehicles, shorter commutes, and public transportation. Taxing mileage only encourages the latter two.

      That's okay as long as there are some oil producing countries left for invasion. C'mon folks, let's burn the remaining oil as quickly as possible so that nobody else can do it. Just for the heck of it (like, why does a dog lick its balls? Because it can). In 30-50 years it's all over anyway. So hummers are the way to go, not this steenkin' hybrid crap. Let's have fun!

      --
      open (SIG, "</dev/zero"); $sig = <SIG>; close SIG;
    31. Re:Not really by n0nsensical · · Score: 1

      Sure, keep deluding yourself that China can't do all that and better in a truly open market.

    32. Re:Not really by joss · · Score: 1

      http://www.homle.com/aer/2004election_by_iq.png

      You know, it is actually possible to pinpoint where the idiots live.

      --
      http://rareformnewmedia.com/
    33. Re:Not really by Draveed · · Score: 1
      I say let the farms sink or swim. Cut all farming subsidies. Which ever farms can continue to profit, good for them. Let the rest go out of business. We don't need them. We can import plenty of food from third world countries and no that's not going to triple the cost. The price of food is higher now than it would be exactly because of the expensive American farmer. The US should just drop trade restrictions on farm products. If you still wanna farm cuz your family did that for umpteen generations, sell your land, move to Ghana and live like a king on your US dollars. Otherwise, go back to school and retrain for a new line of work. Hey, by saving money on farm subsidies, the gov't could afford to run more job training programs.

      Rural areas consume more in taxes than they put in. It's just indirect. Instead of getting a check from the "Dept. of Welfare", they get subsidies, pork barrel projects and ungodly sums spent on a bloated military.

      --
      Oh, Edmund, can it be true? that I hold here, in my mortal hand, a nugget of purest green?
    34. Re:Not really by kuiken · · Score: 1

      actualy I'dd advise not to drive with primus

      --

      42
    35. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "What about those of us who live in areas where public transportation is not an option, and the nearest set of places to work a --real-- job are roughly 15-25 miles away at least?"

      You aren't owed the right to be able to live a long way from work and be able to travel there in private transport cheaply. While that might have been possible in the past economic circumstances change. They have changed in the past, they will now, and in the future. The options in the medium term may well be to use public transport, move closer to work, or to work closer to home. As time progresses efficient cars may lead to a reduction in fuel costs at least. At the moment hybrid cars are still relatively expensive but they are becoming more common and the cost is falling.

      Also as time goes on I would expect city and work planning to change to be dependent less on cars. E.g. less zoning so that there is more chance of your home, business, recreation and shopping being more closely located in tighter communities, meaning shorter commutes and more opportunity for efficient public transport, and also more telecommuting.

    36. Re:Not really by John+Courtland · · Score: 0

      Exactly, I knew I'd get pedantic-ed out, time to start being mre precise on this site... It's the power reqs of the electric motor. There are no doubt electric motors capable of moving 80,000lbs, but not ones as small as an ICE.

      --
      Slashdot is proof that Sturgeon's Law applies to mankind.
    37. Re:Not really by Euler · · Score: 2, Informative

      exactly. And my orignal point was to dispute the poster who said that only diesel engines have the torque available to move a truck. Electric motors have the best torque curves across all speeds compared to combustion engines. Electric trains and trucks are usually direct drive, or fixed gearing to avoid complexity and failure points.

      Obviously, the electricity has to come from somewhere. But an electric drive-train opens up many other options: regenerative braking with a battery, dynamic braking which is more reliable and conisitant than mechanical brakes, and constant RPMs on the diesel for efficiency and reduced wear.

    38. Re:Not really by nospmiS+remoH · · Score: 1

      Da comrade!

      --
      !hoD
    39. Re:Not really by npsimons · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, it's the perfect tool. It pays for the impact of vehicles in the same way as gambling, smoking, and alcohol pay for their impact: through a sin tax.

      While I agree it's the perfect tool, I wish that we would stop calling them "sin" taxes. For one, not all of us believe in "sin". For another, wouldn't it be more appropriate to call it (ab)use taxes? Think about it: you (ab)use your lungs (through smoking), you pay to fix them; you (ab)use your liver (through drinking), you pay to fix it; you (ab)use the roads, you pay to fix them. That way, you're not forcing morals on anyone and just being more honest. I know it's mostly semantics, but the idea of a "sin" tax just bothers me.
    40. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Will your Prius handle loads of vegetables from one coast to the other? Will your Prius carry upwards of 50 head of cattle 2000 miles?

      You "Prius lovers" out there need to pull your heads out and realize that the Prius ONLY works for inner-city driving. In the real world it will never work....

    41. Re:Not really by CompleteMoron · · Score: 2, Informative

      Oshkosh is working on a hybrid truck which means a diesel engine with A/C electric torque motors. There are several benefits to this as well as some potential downsides such as decreased overall efficiency when using a pure D/E drivetrain on a highway truck. Obviously some large off-highway trucks used in the mining industry as well as loaders, etc. are D/E now because of the flat torque curves of electric motors and the elimination of mechanical complexity of routing power through the vehicle using transmissions. BTW *any* engine can be used to move a truck with torque amplified by the correct gearing. The total power will determine speed and load ability. It just so happens that diesel is more efficient as displacement increases, a fact supported by the use of diesel engines on large ships.

    42. Re:Not really by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Just in case you did not get it the soak the rich was meant to be a joke.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    43. Re:Not really by DeputySpade · · Score: 1

      We can _import_ more food from _third_world_countries_??? Where, by God, do you think much of the food we produce goes? And do you honestly think that the American agricultural system makes food _more_ expensive? American farms are not simply a man and his family out cultivating the earth with hand tools. American farms are massive highly efficient crop growing mechanisms. American farms grow so much food so cheaply that we practically give it away to many third-world countries that can't grow sufficient food for themselves. While there are a few specialized subsidies that I don't fully grok, like tobacco farm subsidies, many of the subsidies paid to farmers (in the midwest, at least) are in the form of "We'll pay you _not_ to grow crops on this plot of ground". These are in place usually for things like erosion management, not welfare or crop price management.

      The other part of your post, that rural areas consume more in tax dollars than they contribute, seems rather suspect. Could you please post a source for that information? I live in the sticks and I work in Chicago. I see both sides every day. Taxpayers payed for millenium park. Tax payers paid for the skyway. Tax payers paid for soldier field, the destruction of meigs field and its subsequent conversion into a park. Tax payers paid for the renovation of lake shore drive, expansion of McCormick place, hired trucks that sit idle, and the destruction and rebuilding of every major route into and out of this city for the last couple of years. Taxpayers carry the burden for Cows on Parade, Bobblehead baseball player statues, wrought iron railings on just about every damned thing, new planters around every city administration building, and a towing program that steals people's cars and sells them to the towing company at scrap prices. Tax payers pony up to dye the river green, host the Taste of Chicago, and put on the air and water show. When massive amounts of rain or snow fall, the farmers smile and welcome it. A city sends out hundreds of taxpayer-sponsored workers to clear the snow or put up signs and block traffic on flooded streets that the taxpayer-sponsored storm sewers aren't maintained properly to drain. That's only a small percentage of the money-sink that each major modern city has become and doesn't even include the welfare state (government assisted or provided housing), the salaries of the thousands employed in the bloated beurocracies, or the added law enforcement/fire protection required in a major city. If you have information indicating that rural areas are consuming more than their fair share of tax dollars, I'd like very much to see it, because I just don't know where the equivalent amount of money could possibly go.

      --


      This space intentionally left blank
    44. Re:Not really by DeputySpade · · Score: 1
      What, make people who use rural roads that are far less efficient, getting two or three cars per day, pay more than city drivers who densely share the same roads far more efficiently?

      I'm not sure about wherever you might live, but where I'm from, even the most desolate rural road gets more traffic than that. Roads that are as infrequently used as you describe are typically covered with a thin layer of gravel and are not really maintained at all, so there is not all that much money being spent to keep them up. Most roads in rural areas see way more traffic than you describe and are maintained in the following manner:

      • Once every five years or so send one guy and one truck out to drop cold patch in the worst of the potholes
      • Once every twenty years or so, resurface with a thin layer of asphalt if the road goes by something important like a school. Otherwise, substitute gravel glued down with a layer of tar for real asphalt
      • When it snows more than a foot at a time, maybe eventually send a plow down them a day or two later

      That's it. That's the entire maintenance schedule. Now, compare that with, say, Lake Shore Drive in Chicago.
      • Resurface every two years or so with thin layer of asphalt
      • Rebuild the entire road every 20 years or so with all new substrate, concrete, new bridges, etc...
      • Fix problems caused by substandard rebuilding job when the guy who is buddies with the mayor's brother pocketed half the money instead of doing it right.
      • Install massive concrete planters
      • send platoon of landscapers out 4 times a year to put new seasonal plants in planters and along median and shoulders
      • send mowing crews out every weekend 30 weeks a year to mow median and shoulders
      • send lightbulb replacement crews out to install fancy decorative lighting fixtures along the entire length of the road
      • send crews of light bulb changers out every couple weeks to maintain lights
      • every time a sixteenth of an inch of snow falls send an entire division of plows and salt trucks to scour the road two or three times an hour
      • send crews out every weekend to pick up the trash that enlightened, sophisticated, high-tax-paying city dwellers throw out their windows as they drive down the road at 3x the posted speed limit doing more damage to the road than it was designed to take

      I'm sure I'm forgetting some of the more subtle points of maintaining an urban road like stripes (rural roads typically aren't afforded the luxury of actual stripes...) and traffic controls (...or traffic controls), but the point is, take any one component of the budget used to maintain a single Chicago street like LSD, Michigan, Clark, State, Wacker, Roosevelt, etc... and spend that money where I live. You could repave, light, and paint stripes on every road in my town for what Chicago spends on landscaping alone for one of their roads in a single year.

      This entire thread is a fabulous illustration of just how little grasp city dwellers have of what goes on in the land of well water. Lots of "brilliant insight" based on "facts" I can only describe as "delusional"
      --


      This space intentionally left blank
    45. Re:Not really by Kolgoth · · Score: 1
      You aren't owed the right to be able to live a long way from work and be able to travel there in private transport cheaply.
      What about when the cost of rent on an apartment anywhere near where I work, is more than my mortgage on the house that I currently own? And what about the situation that where I work, there really aren't a lot of houses to live in, it's all townhomes and apartments. Are you saying that I should pay more in rent, have to deal with stupid neighbors complianing about my music (parties, etc etc) and give up the land I own, to live closer to work? I think not... Especially when living further away is cheaper. Now legislation like this is trying to remove even that benefit of not living in the inner-city...
      --
      "The Samurai who does not fear death becomes invincible."
  126. Obvious privacy concerns? by mr_zorg · · Score: 1

    The plan seems logical enough, but what about the obvious privacy concerns? Will this device have "phone-home" capabilities to report the mileage? Even if not, I sure don't want them downloading data detailing every trip I took (think of the datamining you could do with THAT information). If the box were programmed with the California borders built in and logged the in-state mileage only (not actual GPS coordinates), AND could only be read at an inspection station -- cool.

    1. Re:Obvious privacy concerns? by bnenning · · Score: 1

      The plan seems logical enough

      No it doesn't. It's completely illogical, because it has no advantages over just raising the existing gas tax. (Assuming for the moment that they actually do need more money).

      but what about the obvious privacy concerns?

      To the government that's a feature, not a bug.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
  127. Silly Raven... by ackthpt · · Score: 1
    Shouldn't efficient cars be encouraged ? This proposal will have the opposite effect

    It's about devising the method that will generate maximum revenue, who in government is really concerned with fair? Besides, if you can afford a new car you got lotsa money.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  128. Purpose is transparent. by Dr_Marvin_Monroe · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm sort of a "tinfoil hat wearing" type of guy, but this seems really transparent to me. With everything that's been happening lately, perhaps tinfoil will become the latest fashion trend, but... Remember that the state of Oregon proposed this same thing perhaps a year ago, Slashdot did an article on it then...

    Think of this logically, as some of the others here already have. If the state were interested in taxing you based upon milage, they would simply record your odometer readings at each emmissions inspection and bill you accordingly for your tabs. Yeah, I know about the in-state/out-state argument, why not just ignore that and set the median tax at something reasonable.

    If the state were interested in reducing polution and oil consumption, they'd simply increase the already in place tax on gas and let the people in their Prius' slip through with their good milage. There are not really that many of them, and you could always give truckers a rebate at the end of the year if you feel sorry for them. Yeah, you COULD buy gas in Nevada or Oregon or Mexico, but you'd use up that gas getting back across the border, making any savings moot. Besides, the number of people living on the border is pretty fractional.

    Seems clear to me, the intention is NOT about simply taxing vehicle use based upon how far you drive, but something more nefarious. Something like the car rental places have been implementing. Looks like California wants to incorporate GPS into the new "black boxes" discussed on cnet a few days ago, those boxes that the government & insurance industry wants to put into your cars in order to give you better rates and let you prove that you're law abiding. They'd have the ability to track all vehicles.

    Each of the other taxation methods (checking odometer / gas tax) are simpler and already have the infrastructure necessary to implement in place. Both would accomplish the desired goal (more money for state based upon usage). Because something like this would be all new and would involve MUCH new infrastructure, it seems clear that simple revenue is NOT the intent of this proposal.

    California is a big enough market, that they cause defacto standards for cars. The lawmakers know this, and I'm guessing that they are acting as the "stalking horse" in order to get all cars in America fitted with such devices. I don't think the insurance industry alone has the clout to pull this off over the objections of the car driving public, but if each of the players asks for some little addition, they might all be able to get their way. Think of it like this, insurance wants feature A, Feds wants feature B, and state wants feature C. Expect all three features in one DMCA protected box that you must not tamper with, under penalty of law. Expect lawyers to get access to ALL recorded information.

    I would expect this proposal to move just about as quickly and silently as the copyright modifications moving through the Senate currently... Think fast and quiet.

    1. Re:Purpose is transparent. by Stauf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, I know about the in-state/out-state argument, why not just ignore that and set the median tax at something reasonable.

      Why not set up small booths at the major exits to the state - then motorists can drive up, get their odometer read and get a receipt. On the way back, they get another receipt, based on the initial one, allowing them, at tax time, to claim something of a refund?

      And make it optional, so anyone who doesn't want the hassle can just drive straight on past - but no receipts = no refund.

      Of course, that is not to say that I'm supporting the tax, just that there are fairly simple ways to implement it without the expense and invasiveness of GPS.

    2. Re:Purpose is transparent. by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      Never attribute to malice that which can adequately be ascribed to stupidity...or in this case, rabid excitement about newfangled technology, which amounts to the same thing.

      Sure, they can use odometers, or at worst GPS markers at the state lines. But why do that when you can set up a really cool uplink on the GPS?

    3. Re:Purpose is transparent. by khallow · · Score: 1
      Never attribute to malice that which can adequately be ascribed to stupidity...

      I have embarked recently on a mission to eradicate that expression. Replace "stupidity" with "self-interest", then you'd be more correct.

    4. Re:Purpose is transparent. by ndixon · · Score: 1

      Yeah, even to reduce traffic volume, implementing a GPS tracking system wouldn't really be best value-for-money, so why do it?

      Looking further ahead, once the infrastructure is in place (to track vehicle positions), any other (perhaps more policitally sensitive) uses for the technology would only need a legislative step, not a physical roll-out of hardware, so they could be implemented quickly and quietly, with most of the population not even being aware of it.

      --
      Oh, how convenient: a theory about God that doesn't involve looking through a telescope.
    5. Re:Purpose is transparent. by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      I have embarked recently on a mission to eradicate that expression. Replace "stupidity" with "self-interest", then you'd be more correct.

      Self-interest is itself in most cases malice, through greed and egotism*. In other words, you disagree with that statement; why?

      (*Egotism/egoism as Ayn Rand uses it - something like self-assuredness - is probably acceptable. Egotism as fits in this context and as California lawyers are allegedly displaying - almost a disparaging misanthropy - is quite unacceptable.)

    6. Re:Purpose is transparent. by khallow · · Score: 1
      Self-interest is itself in most cases malice, through greed and egotism*. In other words, you disagree with that statement; why?

      First, your definition of self-interest is not common use. Malice generally implies some sort of inclination or intent to harm another. Hence, being greedy or egotistical isn't in itself malicious. There are a number of altruistic acts that forward self-interest (perhaps in a loose sense). For example, by jumping on the hand grenade I can save the lives of my buddies who I like and who are like me. I give money to a bum on the street so I won't feel guilty about our relative circumstances as I walk by him. I obey the rules of the road so that I can travel from point A to point B without accident.

      Second, I'm looking for a more accurate phrase. What causes a person to act stupidly? There's no stupid force pulling on the person to perform the reckless behavior. If, let's say, someone dies by rocking a huge vending machine onto themselves, we don't say that they rocked the vending machine because stupidity made them do it, but rather because they were trying to get a free can of Pepsi. The act can be very stupid in that there are large, easy to foresee unintended consequences, but stupidity isn't a cause.

      So in practice, if you are harmed by someone, the tendency is to assume that the person wanted to harm you. That's generally incorrect. But so's the assumption that it's just stupidity. Generally, if someone does something that hurts you, then they probably expected to gain from their action. By understanding what's going on and what the offender expected to gain, you can prevent further occurances of this harmful action.

    7. Re:Purpose is transparent. by khallow · · Score: 1
      Let's go back to the GPS tracked vehicle problem.

      Assuming malice would mean that the respective government agencies want to cause us harm. Ie, this is another step in the march to a police state.

      Assuming stupidity, we might assert that the government agency flailed around and just happened upon this particular solution by chance.

      Assuming self-interest, some possible scenarios are that the bureaucracy instinctively sees this as a way of widening the niche. Maybe there are some industry players behind the scenes promoting the technology that would be required for tens of millions of California vehicles. Most likely, there are many players each with a different interest in seeing this come to pass. Not a malicious conspiracy, but a hugh government project with plenty of space for leeches and public funds to leech from.

  129. Asininity to the max by meheler · · Score: 1

    That's rediculously asinine. Some people, making very little, depend on their vehicles to, you know, live. Besides, there's already taxes upon taxes on the distance you drive, they're embedded in every litre/gallon of gasoline you buy.

    1. Re:Asininity to the max by wheelbarrow · · Score: 1

      I agree. This would represent extremely regressive taxation. I would expect that the liberals would be up in arms about it if it did meet their more precious goal of controlling personal freedom by getting people out of their cars. This taxation is force. Liberals want to use force to get people out of their cars. But, as meheler points out, it will only get poor people out of their cars.

  130. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    400$ for a HOUSE with a YARD?! If you think you got it tough, check out real estate around NYC!

  131. Re:Funny prank idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Better yet, give it to an astronaut before they go and spend 6 months on ISS. I wonder how many orbits until their GPS-odometer rolls over. :)

  132. Most vehicles are trucks/SUVs by IT+Steve · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The majority of vehicles in my area are trucks and SUVs anyway, so if they dropped the gas tax and went with mileage tax, the people with low gas mileage would pay effectively less tax, therefore possibly defeating the purpose. Besides, we need more insentive for people to buy CARS instead of huge trucks and SUVs that they're not using for any reason other than trying to be cool and wasting gas. I'm tired of having some jackass in an SUV driving 2 inches from my back bumper just because he can see over the top of my car.

  133. H2 purchasers can get big tax writeoff by jayveekay · · Score: 2, Informative
    the H2 pays significantly more in taxes

    If you are self-employed (e.g. doctor, lawyer) and buy a vehicle that weighs 6000 lbs or more (e.g H2), then you can write off the cost of the vehicle against your income as a business expense. Ok, I'm not a tax lawyer so I may have the precise wording or details wrong, but the end result is that you purchase the H2 for $50k and save $20k on income tax. You have to buy a lot of fuel for the government to get that $20k back.

    Thirty feet long, 2 lanes wide, it's sixty-five tons of American Pride --- Canyonero!

  134. Um...Out of State Cars? by Jameth · · Score: 1

    Won't this just do wonders for the economy of some neighboring state that lets people easily buy cars and get them registered and everything, what with the full faith and credit clause?

    1. Re:Um...Out of State Cars? by cubicleman · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't work, I would think..if you reside in Ca you would need to register your cars in Ca. I've been looking at moving to So Cal from Colorado, and I would need to register my 3 cars there (Jeep, Mustang, BMW), unless I keep my condo in Denver as a vacation residence maybe..

  135. If you're not guilty why do you care? by g0hare · · Score: 1

    You shouldn't because as long as you live a perfect life it's OK that the state knows what you do every second of the day. God, I'm glad Republicans are in power because they don't believe in bigger government or intrusion into the personal lives of Americans.

    --
    Vote Quimby!
  136. Thank you GOD by AstroDrabb · · Score: 0
    That I have never lived in California nor will I ever have the ambition to : )

    Seriously, California is really getting "too far out there" for most HUMANS to understand their motivations. Taxing someone on how far they drive? Holy crap batman. So I guess everyone should be forced to live close to where they work even if the neighborhood is not favorable to them?

    I work for a big fortune 500 in Orlando, FL and I drive 26 miles each way to/from work. I would never live close to work because outside of all the commercial properties, the homes are crap and the neighborhood is bad. I guess that no matter how much I make, I should subject my wife and two children to a crappy community with drugs and violence?

    --
    If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
    it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    1. Re:Thank you GOD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Er, either that, or just pay the tax dumbass.
      Surley the tax is worth not having to live closer to work.

    2. Re:Thank you GOD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      There is no such thing as god.

      I work for a big fortune 500 in Orlando, FL

      You must be very proud of yourself. Couldn't make it on your own, huh? Had to suck on the teat of a FORTUNE 500 company? I understand.

      I guess that no matter how much I make, I should subject my wife and two children to a crappy community with drugs and violence?

      You're already subjecting them to living with you, so I'd assume that a life of drugs and violence would be an upgrade for them.

  137. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Revenue is generated for schools by property tax. Atleast in California.

  138. Go full electric by HPNpilot · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That will slow them down a bit, as there are no visits to the gasoline pump.

    But seriously, if they are talking about wear and tear on the roads, why wouldn't they make the tax a function of vehicle weight AND mileage driven? A heavier vehicle causes MUCH more road damage than a light one.

    But what do you expect, the Gov drives Hummers...

    1. Re:Go full electric by builderbob_nz · · Score: 1

      why wouldn't they make the tax a function of vehicle weight AND mileage driven?

      I'm not sure about the states, but here in New Zealand most heavy vehicles run on desiel rather than standard petrol. Why is this significant? Well if you buy petrol you are also buying road tax, when you are buying desiel, you are not buying road tax. Instead owners of desiel vehicles must buy "mileage" (which is odd in that we haven't used miles measurement for decades) which is the road tax they didn't get chared at the petrol pump.

      Boring lesson aside, why not adopt a similar system where you pay for you gas at the pump (along with whatever your equivilent of GST is) and buy "milage" seperatly, with each type of vehicle having to pay a different rate.

      --

      Karma? Hey I just call it as I see it.
  139. I'd heard the Beatles were making a come-back... by genjo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Let me tell you how it will be,
    There's one for you, nineteen for me,
    'Cos I'm the Taxman,
    Yeah, I'm the Taxman.
    Should five per cent appear too small,
    Be thankful I don't take it all,
    'Cos I'm the Taxman,
    Yeah, I'm the Taxman.
    If you drive a car, I'll tax the street,
    If you try to sit, I'll tax your seat,
    If you get too cold, I'll tax the heat,
    If you take a walk, I'll tax your feet.
    Taxman.
    'Cos I'm the Taxman,
    Yeah, I'm the Taxman.
    Don't ask me what I want it for
    (Taxman Mister Wilson)
    If you don't want to pay some more
    (Taxman Mister Heath),
    'Cos I'm the Taxman,
    Yeah, I'm the Taxman.
    Now my advice for those who die,
    Declare the pennies on your eyes,
    'Cos I'm the Taxman,
    Yeah, I'm the Taxman.
    And you're working for no-one but me,
    Taxman.

    'Fool on the Hill' was taken already, I guess.

  140. not the state by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    requires that the state spend an additional $100 per car just to implement.

    Not the state... Guess again ?

  141. Well this is reeeeallly cute.... by Kartik3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This just does not seem like a good idea. So they're telling me that a Prius takes up as much space on the road as a freaking Hummer?! The Hummer is gargantuan compared to the Toyota (?) hybrid. If their argument is that the Hummer and the Prius both cause the same amount of wear on a road, I find that to be very thin. Are they considering vehicle weight a factor in regards to how much wear a vehicle induces on the roads? If weight is indeed important here (which I think it is) then I think they had the right idea by taxing the semi-trucking companies and other companies that use the roads. However I feel they should tax the companies using the roads first before the individual drivers.

    By the way isn't there a way they could just work this into a toll or something. If you've been driving for X miles on the road you pay a couple of dollars or something at the toll. Because the way it sounds, every time I fill up I'll get taxed a certain percentage based on how much I've been driving. If my gas mileage isn't all that great I have to pay more than if my gas mileage was that of a hybrid.

    I just feel too little thought went into this before it's proposed.

  142. but cars last 20 years in CA by museumpeace · · Score: 4, Interesting

    if they don't start salting the roads, and the gps units are only going on NEW cars, The biggest effect they will have is to further depress new car sales [ie get LESS tax to the state]
    dumb!

    --
    SLASHDOT: news for people who can't concentrate on work or have no life at all and got tired of yelling back at the TV.
    1. Re:but cars last 20 years in CA by Hobadee · · Score: 1

      Are you kidding? People here in Cali have too much money, even AFTER the .com bust! People don't care - they will continue to buy cars like they always have. That, and the industry will find some way to market it. Hell, GM could just call it an upgrade to its OnStar service, and people wouldn't think twice.

      --
      ...Had this been an actual emergency, we would have fled in terror, and you would not have been informed.
  143. Or in Slashdot terms ... by e1en0r · · Score: 1

    ... and with the necessary infinite emphasis on privacy ...

    10 PRINT "What happens if someone removes it?"

    20 PRINT "You're removing the right to privacy, and who says they won't track you for other purposes?"

    30 GOTO 20

    (I'm sorry. I'm very, very bored. And apparently in retro mode.)

  144. heh by comet69 · · Score: 1

    i don't think GPS would be as good as an idea on Gas usage monitoring.. they should tax according to that if you ask me..

    --
    - Hi I'm Linus Torvalds and I pronounce Linux, Lih-nix..
  145. A new way to save money in TWO steps... by djblair · · Score: 1

    Step 1: Remove the GPS device from your car
    Step 2: Drive around!

    1. Re:A new way to save money in TWO steps... by rewt66 · · Score: 1

      How about:

      Step 1: Move out of California.
      Step 2: Profit!

  146. What a PITA by StikyPad · · Score: 1

    Why go through all of the trouble of mandating GPS when they could just check the EDRs, the equivelant of an airplane's black box.

  147. Morons by MicroBerto · · Score: 1
    This is funny. Do these people realize that when I choose to start my business, California has basically ZERO chance of me an my employees working and living there?

    All taxes do is tell smart, hard-working Americans to screw off and go somewhere else. Fine by me, there's plenty of other states that aren't going to try to restrict how much my salespeople can do their jobs and make money.

    --
    Berto
  148. The H2 should pay more by tipsymonkey · · Score: 1

    The person driving the H2 should pay more in taxes. Their huge/heavy cars cause more damage to roadways so they should pay more..

    maybe its just the fact that I hate those cars with a passion

  149. US should DOUBLE the price of gasoline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That way, the price we pay at the pump will reflect the REAL cost of our gasoline dependence. We need to maximize our desire to get off the gas and that must be done economically.

  150. Less intrusive ways to accomplish the same thing by djblair · · Score: 1

    They could accomplish their goal in a much more appropriate way by simply tracking how much gas you buy and what type of vehicle you drive. This would be a lot cheaper and simpler than building an infrastructure to collect and parse the data from all these GPS things (remember, GPS is RECEIVE ONLY!).

  151. Wrong idea. by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

    Public highways like schools are a socialist institute for a reason. They're too expensive for any one person to pay for.

    I'm all for taxing gas [which they already do]. That's a good way to get people to use more efficient cars, carpool, etc.

    However, if you are taxed base on how far you drive you just punish people who can't afford to live near their work [for instance]. Which is specially important in California where housing is expensive.

    This is just another example of double-dipping. Either make gas tax higher or don't implement this new mileage tax.

    Tom

    --
    Someday, I'll have a real sig.
  152. one word... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    PROPRIETARY.

  153. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by thomasa · · Score: 1

    "Move back to Wisconsin. We're not kidding."

    Hum, I thought Wisconsin was one of the Blue states?
    That makes it NOT part of Jesusland.

  154. Automotive Sales Tax? by Jaywalk · · Score: 1

    Rather than trying to tax mileage directly, why not make a separate sales tax rate for automotive parts and supplies? Even hybrids need lubricants, tires and spare parts. And cars which are used more will require more of these things. Since there would still be taxes on gasoline, it would still be cheaper to drive a more efficient car.

    --
    ===== Murphy's Law is recursive. =====
  155. ...is there a refund given if your car was towed? by gmezero · · Score: 1

    That's the real question. What if you're car
    breaks down three times, say, 20 miles from your house and AAA comes and tows it to the shop for you. Are you going to be taxed for that 60 miles? If you use a flat-bed tow truck and the tow driver has already payed tax on that travel, is this a double tax? Oh I see a huge lawsuit brewing on this one.

  156. Mandatory GPS? Must be a joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As if we didn't loose enogh privacy already. All I can say: just say no!

  157. Re:Less intrusive ways to accomplish the same thin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No.

    This already exists, and does *not* allow charges to vary by road used and by time of day. Following elementary economics, charges for congested roads in the peak hour should be higher than for empty roads at night.

  158. I wouldn't mind.... if... by chipset · · Score: 1

    they drop the taxes already paid in each gallon of fuel... until then, it's double taxation...

    1. Re:I wouldn't mind.... if... by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

      There are a lot of double taxes. Liek say State Income and Federal Income tax.

  159. California seems to be doing OK... by Goonie · · Score: 1
    We have some of the highest sales tax, the highest standards of living...

    ...and as other posters have pointed out, people are still moving there at a sufficient rate to inflate the property market to pretty outrageous levels. That suggests to me that maybe a race to the bottom in tax scales isn't the be-all and end-all of making a state a good place to do business.

    --

    Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
    --Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
  160. Money Maker by Quintalis · · Score: 1

    From the Article: The California Performance Review Commission recommends developing a pilot project to test whether the state could levy a user fee based on how uch each driver uses roads. The report suggests a fee of .1 cents per mile traveled. In case you missed it, that's a whopping $100.00 for every 100,000 miles you drive -in California-. Seems to me the real money makers here are the GPS manufacturers. Infrastructure costs alone would make this a money losing venture.

  161. And you are likely unlicensed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    ...uninsured, and not even in the country legally.

    Hummer drivers ought to have carte blanc to run '70s chevrolet products off the road.

  162. That's my cue to flee to a red state... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, I know things will never get any better if people leave when things start going sour, but I'll be damned if I'm going to pay huge taxes to be able to own a car, to fuel a car, to insure a car and to maintain the roads and then let them tack on another "driving" tax. Fucking hell man, that's insane! I will leave before I pay another tax.

    I voted against the LA "cop" tax (the .5% additional sales tax which would go to the corrupt and bloated LAPD) and I'll vote against this tax, too.

    What we need is a state amendment to require that any taxes levied on the citizens of California be approved by the citizens, by at least a 66% majority or even better, a 75% majority.

    California: land of sunshine and outrageous new taxes.

  163. Cars Obviously don't run on Brain Power by Mulletproof · · Score: 1

    It's tough to find a state so wallowing in it's own ineptness as California. This is among the same policy that bankrupted the damn place to begin with, and you'd have hoped Arny would have sacked whoever proposed this busted-ass initiative. I mean, overengineering the solution isn't even the half of it. Frankly, I don't think california has the rescources to impliment this without driving them further into that bleed gushing pit of red they call a budget. We're talking about the percision tracking and billing of over a million drivers. What is going to be cheaper? A few toll booths, or building a new infrastructure designed to handle this crap from the ground up??? And that's not even the privacy issues involved. Even then, it's only a matter of time before mass circumvention of the system takes place.

    How the fuck is it that every other state in the damn union can maintain their roads without seriously ass-fucking their population in the process? I have hope for Arny, but if he lets something like this through, he can go screw himself if he tries for another public office.

    --
    You need a FREE iPod Nano
  164. the answer by lophophore · · Score: 1
    The answer to this is simple, people...

    A tinfoil hat for your car...

    GPS signals are piss-weak, and can be easily blocked with a bit of metal. Wrap your GPS antenna in tinfoil every other week, and you will only log 1/2 the miles...

    Of course, your reported gas mileage will be pretty crummy, but you do drive with a lead foot, right?

    Or, to quote Mr. Scott, "the more they overthink the plumbing, the easier it is to stop up the drain."

    --
    there are 3 kinds of people:
    * those who can count
    * those who can't
  165. Hmmm... more laws.. by chipset · · Score: 1

    It might be fairly easy to defeat... however, it also presents additional problems. Would you be taxed for out of state driving? How about disabling the GPS receiver so the signal isn't recieved? Seems like a huge hassle in the name of "revenue capturing"? Why not increase the gas tax? Seems easier and less of a new beauracracy... Then, they will have to increase the taxes to support the new GPS Monitors administration... Silly, silly taxmen

  166. ObSimpsons by generationxyu · · Score: 1

    Homer: Let the bears pay the bear tax! I pay the Homer tax!
    Lisa: Dad, that's homeowner's tax.
    Homer: Well, anyway, I'm still outraged.

    --
    I mod down pyramid schemes in sigs.
  167. What's so wrong? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Road transport is an economic good like any other. Road tax that is time and place-specific (as GPS-based road tax will be) merely allows for more flexibility in adjusting the market price for effects that the market doesn't incorporate. Such as congestion, air pollution, and damage to roads.

    If individuals find that a certain consumption bundle (location of home, workplace, transport mode) is no longer economic, they will adjust their consumption bundle by moving house, work, or changing transport mode.

    Can you explain what is so wrong about that?

    1. Re:What's so wrong? by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      Not everyone lives in your fantasy world where they can just quit, move, learn to cycle 40 miles because some random change.

      You want to save the environment? Prop up public transportation. Random taxation only punishes those who can't afford it the most.

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
  168. Hmm, voting is legal... by jayveekay · · Score: 1
    The government has no business encouraging or discouraging any legal activity.

    So the government shouldn't encourage citizens to vote?

    Getting an education is legal. Working is legal. The government shouldn't encourage citizens to get an education or a job?

    I must be misreading your point somehow, or am I a commie nutcase?

    1. Re:Hmm, voting is legal... by lightknight · · Score: 1

      Smoking cigarettes is legal (for anyone over 18). Drinking is legal (for anyone over 21). The government shouldn't encourage citizens to drink or smoke?

      The government is here not to encourage or discourage anything. It is here to lay down a few absolutes (Life, Liberty, Property), and to make you aware of the consequences of infringing on those absolutes. Everything else is of your own free will.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    2. Re:Hmm, voting is legal... by SlimFastForYou · · Score: 1

      Why should the government _encourage_ voting?

      Why should the government _encourage_ getting a post-high school education?

      Why should the government _encourage_ getting a job?

      The government does not need to encourage people to do these things. It is nice that the government facilitates the above activities, but it does not need to do much beyond that as far as these three are concerned. The government was not intended to be your mother.

      If someone doesn't really care about voting, they probably wouldn't have made a thoughtful vote.

      If someone doesn't get a post-high school education, then either that individual is content without it, or realizes he/she could really use one. In that case, the government may help with financial aid and such.

      Getting a job - basically the same as the post-high school education.

      I am glad the government makes an effort to facilitate voting, access to higher education, and job services. However, making those activites the hip thing to do is not their business.

    3. Re:Hmm, voting is legal... by jayveekay · · Score: 1
      The government is here not to encourage or discourage anything. It is here to lay down a few absolutes (Life, Liberty, Property), and to make you aware of the consequences of infringing on those absolutes.

      I would argue that informing the citenzry of the consequences (and perhaps enforcing the consequences) would constitute a form of encouragement (to stay with the rules) or discouragement (for breaking them).

    4. Re:Hmm, voting is legal... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The government was not intended to be your mother

      Amen! At least somebody here realizes this...

    5. Re:Hmm, voting is legal... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      If someone doesn't get a post-high school education, then either that individual is content without it, or realizes he/she could really use one. In that case, the government may help with financial aid and such.

      All of those things are social goods - it's in all our interest to have an educated, employed, and involved populace. We live in a society, and sometimes we do things like this because it helps us in the long run.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    6. Re:Hmm, voting is legal... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes if voting would change anything it would be illegal.

      Education? to make sure you will grow up to be a following citizen to ensure that whenever the government needs you, you will be there to obey, to conform (and die!).

      Working? To keep the economy working and the few people in the top rich. The government doesn't encourage citizens to get a job, it states a fact: Work or Die. Capitalism.

      All the things you mentioned, are tools, to make sure the governments have power and to prevent any sort of resistance.

      You are deprived of original thought, creativity and criticizing on your very early youth.

    7. Re:Hmm, voting is legal... by DeputySpade · · Score: 1

      Please, tell me where your sig is from! Every time I see it I hear the disembodied voice of some comedian or actor shouting it, but I just can't figure out where I heard it.

      --


      This space intentionally left blank
  169. Colossally stupid, overly complex idea by fname · · Score: 1

    This is nothing more than a colossally stupid, complex idea which will only serve to benefit drivers of environmentally unfriendly (due to high gas consumption), needlessly dangerous (to drivers of other vehicles) expensive cars. Oh, and the trucking companies who do most of the damage to our roads, it will benefit them too. It will certainly benefit those who are paid hundreds of millions of dollars a year to run the complex systems, not to mention those who will charge about $5 Billion just to install the tracking devices. And the guys who install other supporting hardware. It may also benefit the politician who angles to name it after himself. And SUV dealers

    Who won't it benefit? Drivers of fuel efficient cars. The state, which could spend $5 billion on much more effective things-- like fixing the roads, or installing real-time electricity meters on every home, or paying off our debt, or funding the UC system. It won't benefit motorcycle drivers. It won't benefit our state's clean air as more hydrocarbons are burned.

    Put it into perspecrtive. The chart shows that a typical car owner pays $100/ year in gas taxes. And the article states the technology costs $100/car (I bet it won't be that cheap installed, but I'll let that one go). My guess is that the average car is in California for about 5 years, so that means 20% of the revenue goes to tracking the revenue! And that doesn't take into account the software, administrative or infrastructure part of the equation.

    We have a great system now for taxing road usage; vehicles pay by the mile and heavier vehicles, which cause more road damage, pay more per vehicle mile. I don't know this, but I would bet that SUVs tend to be involved in more accidents than cars due to their decreased manueverability.

    I'll say it again: it's a colossally stupid idea which will waste billions in unneeded administrative, infrastructure & software costs that will lead to more pollution, less healthy air and decreased state revenue. I'll lay down on the tracks to stop this one.

  170. tried it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's called income tax. Problem is those who bling most just write it off as a business expense, or setup bling charities to shelter their bling habit...

  171. Karl doesn't think Arnold = RINO by grolaw · · Score: 1

    All of the girlie R's don't like Arnold. The big bidness boys LOVE Arnold and they are behind the Mormon R's amending the Constitution to permit Arnold becoming the second coming of Ronald.

    RINO - I think NOT!

    1. Re:Karl doesn't think Arnold = RINO by Trespass · · Score: 1

      Congratulations. That post succeeding in obliterating the line between the merely inarticulate and completely incoherent.

  172. Why is taxing fuel a problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't the best way to do this using the god given free market, to gently increase the cost of fuel so relatively increasing the benefit of producing efficient cars - it works in europe!!

    The resulting increase in efficiency will transfer money that you would have sent to the Middle East to prop up varius unsavory regimes to your local government to pay for your schools....

    In the long run you will thank them as when crude hits $200 a barrel you will be able to afford to drive further than to the gas station and back.

  173. Yeah.. uh.. NO! Hello!? Mr citizen over here... by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

    I do belive the government TRACKING every automobile in our civilization is a violoation of our privacy.

    I'm really growing to dislike our country (America that is). It stands for so little that is relevant to an individuals rights these days... not even the ideals it set forth. So much for inalienable rights

    We're a profit society and you are only worth the cost of your exploitation.

    Frankly i'm starting to feel all fuzzy knowing that the michigan militia exists ;)

    It seems that when politicians, aka fat cats... who simply sit on their high chair with no real qualifications to run our gorvernment in a financially stable way, love to make new ridiculous laws that at all costs are defined to make up for their own lame inabilities.

    Basically.. you're electing idiots (like Arnie) and now hes fucking you. GOOD JOB! Lets make it legal for such a fine man to run for president.

    1. Re:Yeah.. uh.. NO! Hello!? Mr citizen over here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually I plan on finding out where they store these things (if they ever implement) and burning the warehouse down. This one is worth fighting. I don't want the nanny government following my every move. Next they'll be putting the damn things in us!

    2. Re:Yeah.. uh.. NO! Hello!? Mr citizen over here... by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      hell, they could ALREADY be in us :)

  174. Gas, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can someone explain to me why they just don't add more tax onto the price of fuel, rather then screwing around with all this tracking stuff?

  175. Do it! by PHAEDRU5 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Let the brain drain begin!

    We here in GA welcome our new CA overlords!

    Y'all want grits, right?

    --
    668: Neighbour of the Beast
    1. Re:Do it! by RandomCoil · · Score: 1

      Is the brain drain expected because those with brains drive gas guzzlers or because they don't like being tracked?

      I'll hope for the latter... If it's the former, GA can keep them.

    2. Re:Do it! by PHAEDRU5 · · Score: 1

      We have plenty of room, we're close to both Atlantic and Gulf ports, hell yeah!!!!!! bring on those SUVs.

      And bring brains. Brains....

      --
      668: Neighbour of the Beast
    3. Re:Do it! by RandomCoil · · Score: 1
      And bring brains. Brains....

      LOL! I knew Georgians were weird but I didn't know y'all were zombies. Anyway, surely the CDC is pulling a few brains already. Come to think of it, shouldn't they be dealing with the zombies?

      Cheers from WA, on the other side of the country!
    4. Re:Do it! by CaptKilljoy · · Score: 1

      >Y'all want grits, right?

      Can I get a side order of of Natalie Portman to go with that?

  176. Gas Tax and General Fund by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How much of the California's gas tax go into Calif General Tax fund?

    I am sure that currently most of the gas taxes in california are not paying for road improvements and maintenance.

  177. Privacy Concerns 101 by MysticalMatt517 · · Score: 1

    This just screams "major privacy intrustion"! You're gonna slap a GPS device on my car to um... "track how much I drive"? Geeze, then how long before homeland security gets access to this system to "track terrorist"? Then how long is it until you become a "terrorist" because you drive to "suspicious places".

    The world has enough to worry about with RFID. Do we really need this too?

  178. From the fine article by agrippa_cash · · Score: 1

    There is a pilot program for this scheduled in Oregon. California has no elected officials who endorse this plan. It is merely a possible income source pointed out by a comission designed to point out possible income sources. While I do not at all like the idea of being tracked everywhere I drive, the fact remains that this not even in the pipes pipe-dream stage.

    1. Re:From the fine article by loubear · · Score: 1

      Sounds like a possible income source for some suppliers of GPS devices...

  179. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by MindStalker · · Score: 1

    Yes, but property taxes shouldn't be so high as to cripple the housing industry.

  180. Joyriders by datafr0g · · Score: 1

    What happens if someone takes your car for a joyride cross country? Can you claim that back?

    --
    "Who says nothing is impossible? Some people do it every day!" - Alfred E. Neuman
  181. One of the only advantages... by Zenmonkeycat · · Score: 1
    "So you claim you were sitting at home watching football when your wife was strangled at the docks?"

    "Yes, Mr. Prosecutor."

    "Then why were you driving to the docks that night?"

    "Uh..."

    "And why, when you know there are better alternatives, did you fuel up using REGULAR?!"

    [Gasps from the jury]

    "I rest my case!"

    --

    *****
    Dear Mary,
    I yearn for you tragically,
    A.T. Tappman, Chaplain, U.S. Army.

  182. It's about CONTROL not taxes. by Banner · · Score: 1

    This isn't about taxes. It's about tracking you everyplace you go so they know WHERE you are at any given moment. Also this will allow them to give out speeding tickets, failure to full stop, etc. from the comfort of a computer room. And don't bother with court, the evidence is such you'll be guilty no matter what.

    Remember, this IS NOT about taxes. It's about CONTROL.

    1. Re:It's about CONTROL not taxes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should get a nice shiny gold star next to your name.

    2. Re:It's about CONTROL not taxes. by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      This isn't about taxes. It's about tracking you everyplace you go so they know WHERE you are at any given moment. Also this will allow them to give out speeding tickets, failure to full stop, etc. from the comfort of a computer room. And don't bother with court, the evidence is such you'll be guilty no matter what.

      Looks like they've finally found an effective way to keep people away from California.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    3. Re:It's about CONTROL not taxes. by Banner · · Score: 1

      Why? For pointing out what everyone else is missing? All these idiots here keep going on about the tax angle. If it was about taxes, they'd check odometers, DUH!

  183. Some Consultant Is Making a Bundle.... by John+Murdoch · · Score: 1

    This just reeks of a consultant who is being way too clever....
    There have been a number of proposals like this ever since GPS technology became widely available. And a lot of seemingly knowledgeable people have bought the concept, and thrown a lot of good money at consultants to study how to implement these sorts of schemes.

    I should know. I was one of those consultants.

    Executive summary: It won't work
    Key point: GPS technology broadcasts from satellites in space to receivers on Earth. Given how far out in space the satellites are (and the problems of generating electricity in space) you won't be surprised to learn that the signal strength from the various satellites is extremely low. Lower, in fact, that ambient background radiation. GPS receivers have to use digital signal processing (DSP) chips to dig the GPS signals out of the ether.

    As a consequence, it is extremely easy to lose "lock" on a particular satellite--or on any satellite. Drive under a gas station canopy--lose lock. Drive into a tunnel--lose lock. Drive into your garage--lose lock. Because you lose lock all the time, GPS chipsets all store your last known good position, and will continue to report that until lock is regained.

    So....
    Let's pretend that this silly scheme is enacted. Drive your vehicle to your local gas station where you always buy gas. Buy gas. Wrap a piece of aluminum foil around your GPS receiver. Drive all you want to. Your GPS unit will never detect that you have moved.

    The really, really sad story behind this....
    I had a client, back in the late 1990s, who had a brilliant idea: use GPS technology and the cellular telephone system to develop and sell a low-cost vehicle tracking system. I was at a luncheon in a neighboring county, and talked about the project to some people at my table who seemed interested. One older man, in particular, got more and more enthusiastic as the conversation went on. After lunch he spelled out the reason for his enthusiasm: he didn't want to track trucks, he wanted to track people. In particular, he wanted to track people who had Protection From Abuse (PFA) orders preventing them from having any contact with an ex-wife, ex-girlfriend, etc. He was one of the county commissioners (which in Pennsylvania means, among other things, that he was involved in supervising the county prison system). They had an in-home monitoring system, which monitors convicts who are not permitted to leave their homes. What he wanted was a system that let the subject go anywhere--except within N feet of some specific points (her home, her workplace, etc).

    How big a deal would this be? He said, and I've subsequently heard other people confirm the number, that 40% of homicide victims have an outstanding PFA order against their attacker. The vision my acquaintance had--right before his eyes--was being able to almost instantly cut the murder rate by forty percent. He could barely contain his excitement. I was getting pretty excited, too.

    The client gave us the bad news--the GPS signal strength (as I mentioned above) was far, far too low. All the guy would have to do is wrap a piece of aluminum foil around the attacker, and his monitor would never know the difference. And worse--his monitor would continue to report that he was at home, while he was across town beating his ex-wife to death. Our oh-so-cool system would not only not prevent the killing--we'd also be providing the killer with a terrific alibi ("...how can the district attorney accuse my client, when the county's own computer system shows that my client was safely within his home at the time, the very time your honor, that the crime was committed?").

    It was an exhilarating few days--and I can still remember the crashing disappointment when we learned it wouldn't work.

    Sigh.....

  184. Yep. Like raising tolls... by Chordonblue · · Score: 1

    It's like when they raise tolls in Virginia. They say that part of the reason why their doing it is to scale back traffic - great idea but it doesn't work.

    Bob: "Hey boss, they raised the tolls on Rt. 7 another $1 yesterday!"

    Boss: "No problems Bob, here's a small $350 raise to cover it..."

    --
    "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
    1. Re:Yep. Like raising tolls... by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      Seeing as how I live in VA, where the hell are they having toll roads like that? About the only idiots I know doing something like that are the private corporation that own tne Dulless toll road that keep uping the price on people who pay cash to encourage them to switch to EasyPass.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
  185. A progressive income tax IS what we need by Cryofan · · Score: 1, Insightful

    All taxes should be income-based. No usage or consumption taxes of any kind. And no low income person should pay ANY type of tax.

    In a capitalist system like ours, the top 50% should be able to pay all taxes for everything. After all, they have like 85% of the wealth.

    If you believe as I do, let's organize and focus our power to change the system. See my sig for more.

    Or simply make me one of your Slashdot "friends" via the "Relation" operator on my slashdot page. As more Americans get connected, we progressives can organize together to change America.

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by acvh · · Score: 1

      I'll agree if you define income as profit derived from investment, and NOT the exchange of time for wages.

    2. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

      Or simply make me one of your Slashdot "friends" via the "Relation" operator on my slashdot page.

      No, crazy socialists go into my foe list.

      Yet what you are proposing is far worse than socialism, and has far less vision. Socialists want everyone to pay a lot to a system that will (in theory) help everyone.

      You want to increase taxes on the richer half to punish them and take away some perceived power that you apparantly feel they stole from you by being successful.

      Setting aside for the moment that I feel what you propose is fundamentally wrong, it is also incredibly stupid -- you are advocating taking money away from the rich to "make them less powerful." Who is going to get this money? The government. In other words, you are just going to shift the power, from the rich, further into the government's hands. Now you don't have to worry about the rich being powerful. But, uh oh, now the government has all the guns AND all the money.

      Scary.

      And even more short-sightedness... where do you think all of the money and jobs are going to come from once all the people you are punishing leave the country and setup shop elsewhere? Why would a business invest in a country like the dystopia you are presenting? They wouldn't. They'd leave, they'd take their money and their company with them, and then you'd be left wondering where all of America's prosperity went.

      Fucking stupid.

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
    3. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 3, Interesting

      LOL, Cryofan up to his old socialist tricks...

      I just calculated what the effect on me would be if we replaced the Federal income tax (FICA) with a national sales tax, as some GOP'ers have been considering. And you know what?

      At a $15/hour wage, a national sales tax (a national consumption tax) would put *more* disposable income in my pocket than the current income tax. The income tax does not start looking better for me until the national sales tax reaches about 50% -- and the current claims by the left is that we would have to set it at about 30% in order to reap the tax revenues as the govn't currently takes in via the income tax.

      A sales tax is far-more fair, for the simple reason that if you so choose, you don't *have* to buy anything, and thus, you pay nothing in taxes. It'd be a miserable, agrarian lifestyle (much like that of the Amish I suspect), but it could be done.

      Likewise, the people who buy the most expensive, most luxurious items -- the Beemer and Rolls-Royce crowd we both envy but only one of us is jealous enough of to support theft to get those riches -- would pay the most taxes on those items, b/c they tend to buy those items in the greatest quantities.

      Now, to reduce the regressive nature of the sales tax, were it me, I would eliminate *all* sales taxes on life-necessities: food, any health/medical supplies (including prescriptions), and possibly housing (but not land; the property tax should definitely stay, so as to prevent people from hoarding land).

      And I would further raise the sales tax on items which have socially-negative effects: alcohol, tobacco, marijuana (if it's ever legalized), possibly firearms (I'm a gun nut, of course, but I also recognize the socially-negative aspects of them), and so on. I'd probably place a luxury tax on grossly-expensive items (items that only the top 5% of income earners typically purchase -- again, the Rolls, the Bentley, the 50' yachts, etc.).

      That way, the tax is made at least somewhat progressive, but still is optional -- people are left free to decide whether or not to pay the tax (by consuming).

      You know, a national sales tax ought to appeal to the leftie anti-consumerist, anti-materialist mentality which says that "Americans consume too much! Ach, it makes me sick that all people do is buy stuff! Waaahh!" Funny that they've been silent on the issue.

      Anyway, whether the GOP will be so smart as to implement my version of the sales tax is another question...

      I'm curious why you think low-income people shouldn't pay taxes. Don't they owe a responsibility to the state? By what right do they *deserve* a free ride? The right of being poor? Under your system, if everyone could get a free ride off the rich by being poor, I think I would remain poor too, just so I could loaf around and do nothing on the rich man's dollar.

      Gosh, how nice it would be to sit around and let the rich man work for me. Boy, the world owes me a living!! LOL.

    4. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      In a capitalist system like ours, the top 50% should be able to pay all taxes for everything. After all, they have like 85% of the wealth.

      They already do, pretty much. The amazing thing is that you apparently believe otherwise.

    5. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by bnenning · · Score: 1

      Now, to reduce the regressive nature of the sales tax, were it me, I would eliminate *all* sales taxes on life-necessities: food, any health/medical supplies (including prescriptions), and possibly housing (but not land; the property tax should definitely stay, so as to prevent people from hoarding land).

      The FairTax has no exemptions, but provides a universal rebate to cover the costs of all purchases up to roughly the poverty level, so poor people pay zero or negative taxes. I like this better than exempting "necessities", because it avoids rent-seeking lobbyists trying to get their products on the list.

      You know, a national sales tax ought to appeal to the leftie anti-consumerist, anti-materialist mentality which says that "Americans consume too much! Ach, it makes me sick that all people do is buy stuff! Waaahh!" Funny that they've been silent on the issue.

      Indeed. They're also oddly silent on the regressive payroll tax, because they have to maintain the fiction that Social Security is a retirement program and not a Ponzi scheme.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    6. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by MmmDee · · Score: 1
      This is from an October 2004 newsletter by Bruce Bartlet Who Pays The Taxes reflecting US taxes paid in 2002.

      "The IRS data divide taxpayers into percentiles according to their adjusted gross incomes. Following is the share of aggregate income taxes paid by each group:

      Income Group ---- Tax Share
      Top 1 percent ---- 33.7 percent
      Top 5 percent ---- 53.8 percent
      Top 10 percent ---- 65.7 percent
      Top 25 percent ---- 83.9 percent
      Top 50 percent ---- 96.5 percent"
      Presumably you could argue with the IRS data but it appears that the upper 25% already pay nearly the 85% you mention, and the upper 50% pay nearly all of it.
      --
      No man's an island, unless he's had too much to drink and wets the bed.
    7. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Well, you are living in a system far worse than socialism then. You don't pay federal income tax if you make less than $7,400 or something in a year. I'm one of those people, so I don't pay taxes, yet I still receive their benefits. I'm going [back] to school however, so I intend to be a good little taxpayer again before too long. I also receive financial aid, and I receive federal grant money but it's a paltry amount per hour and I have to do real work to get it, and sometimes even work hard, as in harder than most of my real salary-paying jobs required.

      Taxing everyone into oblivion is not the answer but it's pretty clear that making California expensive has not driven people away. Instead it has created a self-perpetuating system of high costs driving a mystique driving high costs. While most of the US seems to be full of people who will tell you they hate California, Californians, and Californian law, people are moving here in droves and the prices of everything just keep going up, especially land and housing. Soon you simply won't be able to afford your own dwelling in most Californian cities, unless you have a professional job - and I'm talking about rentals here, too.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    8. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      You can choose not to buy anything? What are you planning to do, live on BLM land and poach your dinner in the off season? You're not allowed to homestead out there so you can't really expect to grow any crops... at some point, you're going to have to own something. The fact is that to participate in american society you have to have a telephone, some sort of media device (radio, television, computer, whatever) and a certain amount of clothing. Besides, we want to encourage people to buy more shit, because it keeps money moving which is good for everyone.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    9. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by kbmccarty · · Score: 1

      I'm curious why you think low-income people shouldn't pay taxes. Don't they owe a responsibility to the state? By what right do they *deserve* a free ride? The right of being poor? Under your system, if everyone could get a free ride off the rich by being poor, I think I would remain poor too, just so I could loaf around and do nothing on the rich man's dollar.

      I don't have too many objections to your proposed sales tax scheme, since you exempt basic necessities from it, but I do want to comment on this attitude. I'm not sure why you think low-income people "owe a responsibility to the state," when it sure isn't doing much for them. Public schools? Yes, shitty inner city ones. Highway maintenance? Uh, they don't have a car. Military defense? Well, they are the group most targeted by recruiters. In any case, there is certainly a lower limit on income below which someone needs all of it just to survive, and can't afford to pay any taxes, "responsibility to the state" or not; hence the standard exemptions in the current tax code.

      Gosh, how nice it would be to sit around and let the rich man work for me. Boy, the world owes me a living!! LOL.

      Yeah, those damn lazy poor people all have it as good as Lucky Ducky.

      --
      - Kevin B. McCarty
    10. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by dave420 · · Score: 1
      Sorry - just read some more of your post. It's pretty funny.

      You ask why poor people shouldn't pay taxes? Because, to them, paying taxes means not having enough money to eat. As food isn't sold at relative prices (ie poor people pay $0.10 for a loaf of bread, and rich people pay $10.00 for the same loaf), it's very possible for one person to spend all their money on just getting enough food to eat. As we all live in a society where we look after each other, expecting someone to spend money they need for food on taxes is silly. The amount of money you'd get from them is pennies, yet those pennies would be more useful to that person than to the state.

      I guess you or anyone you love has never needed anything from anyone. I hope you never will. From what you say, it seems you think that poor people somehow choose to be poor. That they enjoy it. Well, you're flat-out wrong on that one. No-one loves being hungry all day, not being able to get enough work to survive. The image of the out-of-work person loving every second is of a very tiny minority, and to refuse to help the vast majority because of those people is not only selfish, but stupid. If we were to apply that logic to everything, there would be no police (as some cops are corrupt), no government (same thing), no teachers, no doctors, no office workers, heck - no anything.

      Rich people are lucky. You can say "but it's all hard work" and you'd be half right. Sure, hard work plays a big part of it, but your upbringing plays an even bigger role. People who are born into poor families have less resources available. They can't choose which school to send their kids to, as they don't have the money for transport. So, the kids go to the nearest school. That school is near the poorer districts, and gets less funding owing because of it. Those kids *should* have the same education as kids in a richer school, but they don't. Lack of budget means too many kids are in each class, and the learning aids are inadequate. That difference in education means those kids leave school far behind their rich counterparts. That means from then on, they'll be at a disadvantage. The poorer you are, the harder it is to increase your wealth. That's fact. Poor families stay poor, rich families grow wealthier. Poor kids don't choose to be born to poor parents, just like rich kids don't choose to be born to rich parents. If you think that's somehow fair, then fine.

      Basically, it's rich people paying for a service THEY received. Society was good to them, so society asks for a little more back. It's not so much more back that rich people become poor, but it's enough so poor people don't starve.

    11. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by zev1983 · · Score: 0

      Maybe you can explain to me how a national sales tax is in any way consistant with a free market. The GOP keeps going on about the virtues and importance of the free market, but then come up with something that seems to contradict the entire idea of a free market by proposing direct government intervention on the price of EVERYTHING. The federal income tax was actually implemented to PUNISH the rich for EXPLOITING the poor and middle class, that's the only reason the public supported it in 1894 and 1895. It came first during the civil war for obvious reasons, then in 1894 and 1895 during the Gilded Age. That was the age of unrestricted capitalism and Robber Barrons and corruption. (It was struck down by the Supreme Court as being unconstitional because it did not apportion amung the states according to the constitution. This was changed in 1913 with the passing of the 16th amendment.) Unrestricted capitalism doesn't work, neither will a national sales tax and the elimination of the income tax because it will make possible the hoarding of money on a scale unseen in this country in our lifetimes. Not to mention the establishment of an untouchable upper class with the elimination of the Estate Tax. Also the rich man wouldn't be 'working' for you, the truly wealthy make enough income off their passive assets to exceed their expenses. In other words they sit around letting you work for them while they sit in a lounge chair on their yacht getting thier income. That's why there is a capital gains tax....

    12. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      The GOP does this since it's the right arm of the American Corporate War Party. The Democrats are merely the left arm. And both arms wield clubs with which they beat the hell out of the working man. ... who, in finest dumbass tradition, continues to vote 99% for the ACWP.

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    13. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      Likewise, the people who buy the most expensive, most luxurious items -- the Beemer and Rolls-Royce crowd we both envy but only one of us is jealous enough of to support theft to get those riches -- would pay the most taxes on those items, b/c they tend to buy those items in the greatest quantities.

      If you somehow think that the wealthy won't capitalize on many loopholes that will essentially annul their NST contribution, you're living in a fantasy world.

      Which car gets you the largest tax deduction?: [_] Toyota Corolla, [_] Ford Explorer. Yes, you should have placed a checkmark next to the Explorer. This is happening now. Just imagine the loopholes that Congress would put into the NST law that would allow the wealthy to escape most of the NST for the things they buy.

      If all it took was spending thousands to fix the paperwork to make their purchases look like "business production" expenses, then the wealthy will do it. Corporations do that now.

      The NST will only make sense if applied uniformly. But the same could be said for an income tax ... applied as a flat tax, with no exceptions. And we can see how THAT fared.

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    14. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by nojomofo · · Score: 1

      A sales tax is far-more fair, for the simple reason that if you so choose, you don't *have* to buy anything

      Well, hell, then if you so choose, you don't *have* to earn anything because you don't *have* to buy anything and the income tax passes your very odd sense of fairness.

      I'm also very skeptical of your math. Care to elaborate?

    15. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A few East-Coast states (NJ for one?) I know already have the case of not sales taxing luxuries like clothing, with the weird cases that expensive fur coats are tax-free, etc.

    16. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They already do, pretty much. The amazing thing is that you apparently believe otherwise.

      Well then the obvious thing is to not tax the rest at all, as it would make minimal difference to state income, but a huge difference to the low income people. Most likely the rich would not abandon their work or whatever to become low-income so they can then pay no tax

    17. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

      Instead it has created a self-perpetuating system of high costs driving a mystique driving high costs.

      People don't live in California because of some mystique. Nor is it a mystery why costs are high.

      People live in California because the weather is great year-round, you have access to a bevy of natural resources (beaches, deserts, mountains), the beaches have better weather than east coast beaches, and it is a high-tech state with a massive highway system.

      It is expensive because (a) they tax the hell out of everyone to pay to maintain that freeway system, maintain the natural resources, and support the huge number of illegals living in California, and (b) there are a lot of people jockeying for housing, esp. in the nicer areas.

      No mystique, just plain old economics.

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
    18. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      People don't live in California because of some mystique. Nor is it a mystery why costs are high.

      Most people come to California because they think it's some kind of magical, mystical place. It isn't. It does not have (as you assert) universally excellent weather, it is and has long been horrendously expensive to live here, we have the worst traffic problems in the nation, and you may have noticed that lately high-tech isn't really hiring out here. Oh sure the weather's better anywhere in California than it is in, say, Idaho, but it's not all sunshine and rainbows.

      It's not just the taxes that make living in California expensive, or even the housing, although that's a serious problem. Just about everything is more expensive here, because there's more people to buy whatever it is. I'm not saying I'd particularly like to move to another state but it's not everything it's believed to be and plenty of people turn around and go back where they came from.

      In other words, the mystique is part of the economic situation.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    19. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

      Well, hell, then if you so choose, you don't *have* to earn anything because you don't *have* to buy anything and the income tax passes your very odd sense of fairness.

      Ahh, but that's the fatal flaw made by Austrian economists. That is not true.

      I can choose whether to drive a Honda or take a train to work. I can choose whether to spend big on pizza made by the delicious local pizzaria, or I can choose to make my own pizza (or take the middle route and bake a frozen pizza). I can choose whether to buy expensive clothes or cheap clothes.

      In so doing, I am also choosing (based on the price of each product) how much in sales tax I want to pay. I am free to choose how much tax I pay, based on the price of the product.

      But let's say I don't want to pay the income tax. How do I avoid it? By going on welfare? Who pays for welfare then? Somebody else -- and that somebody else then, is not free to choose how to spend the money they earned which has been redistributed to me to fund my welfare living (which I might choose just to avoid paying taxes -- is *that* fair? And if not, what do you do about somebody like me? Force me to work? Is that not, then, slavery? Therein lies the problem with welfare vs. work, and the consequences were disturbingly-visible in former Soviet-bloc nations).

      Moreover, I cannot avoid earning an income if I want to own property, because property taxes are in effect everywhere (as they should be, more or less). In order to continue renting land from the government (or rather, the public, of which other members might instead rent the land) on which I live, I must earn an income. But the income tax taxes me. Thus, I would be stuck between a rock and a hard place -- not having land to live on, or not being able to choose how much I want to give up to taxes.

      In economic jargon, it's a problem of elasticity. Every one of us is far-more elastic on our choices of goods/services than we are on whether we will work. Essentially, more elasticity = more freedom to vary from the norm, i.e. more freedom to choose. (an example, if you're unfamiliar w/ the concept of elasticity, is the difference between, say, gasoline and tickets to a football game. Almost everybody needs gasoline for their cars, and we need it almost all the time -- this is a classic example of an inelastic good. But tickets to a football game are purely entertainment; a luxury. People can and do go without football tickets on a regular basis. Football tickets, then, are an elastic good.)

      The sales tax avoids this problem. It's far from a perfect solution by any means, I agree, but I think it's a better one than the income tax.

      I'm also very skeptical of your math. Care to elaborate?

      I really would like to, believe me.

      But given that I would greatly-prefer not to reveal too much about my personal income and spending habits, I prefer even-more not to elaborate too much... It's a choice I'm making based on privacy (you're free to believe what you like about my math. I'm humble enough to admit it may well not be correct, but I've gone over it so many times in light of this discovery that I'm hard-pressed to find fault w/ it).

      All I can say is that, at least on the surface of things, and at least for me, it seems like it would work. That said, I am alraedy a relatively-frugal person, generally (and moreover, there is a good probability that as a soon-to-graduate student, my rate of consumption will rise in the next few years, in which case, the sales tax obviously becomes a worse deal, though from my current rough estimates, perhaps not *too* much worse. Still, as the value of our dollar on foreign-exchange markets worsens, import prices rise, which, when combined w/ the NST, drives prices up even further. In light of these considerations, even just in the last few days, I've actually been re-thinking whether a NST would be such a good idea. I'm still of the opinion that it probably would be for fairness' sake, but IMO, it's

    20. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

      The FairTax has no exemptions, but provides a universal rebate to cover the costs of all purchases up to roughly the poverty level, so poor people pay zero or negative taxes. I like this better than exempting "necessities", because it avoids rent-seeking lobbyists trying to get their products on the list.

      That is an excellent point, and it's one I've considered from time to time as well. Rent-seeking lobbyists would clearly be a problem w/ my sales-tax solution (whether to get their products on the list or their competitors' products *off* the list). I notice the FairTax FAQ points this out as well...

      My suggestion was intended to stay within the framework of a national sales tax to eliminate the federal income tax (as the FairTax also does). Seeing as consumption taxes are inherently-regressive, and seeing as I can think of considerable economic reasons why we ought not leave the poor in the dust, I think it would still be a better situation (to have an NST w/ exemptions) than a purely-flat sales tax w/o exemptions... But throw things like rebate checks for the poverty-stricken into the mix, and then it becomes more sensible.

      My main problem w/ rebate checks, however, is their immediacy. People living at the bottom of the wage scale live paycheck-to-paycheck. They have neither the personal financial discipline nor the practical ability to wait for a check to come back in 6 months to a year, giving them back the money they shouldn't have paid in the first place. The problem lessens as the checks become more frequent (monthly, weekly, etc.), but then, the costs of administration and distribution rise as the frequency rises too.

      Simply-put, the solution of rebate checks fails to deal with the opportunity cost of leaving one's money tied-up with the government for any amount of time.

      Rather, and still within the FairTax's system (which I think overall is quite solid), I (theoretically, since I've never seen this idea posed before; it's just a seemingly-better solution I cooked up) would favor something like a "tax-reduction card", whereby whenever a purchase is made by somebody who qualifies (i.e. is in poverty), they display the card, which has a lower-than-normal (or even zero) tax rate printed on it (the figure and on magstripe). That rate would be the national sales tax they are charged. The card would be replaced once a year and the next year's tax based on the previous year (or 2 or 3 or 5...) qualification for poverty relief. The cards would be plastic, so they would get recycled back into new cards every year, hence, little environmental waste.

      That way, poor people get immediate discounts on the things they purchase. Moreover, this saves the government and Postal Service the costs of writing these checks (true, the administration is fairly-cheap, given it can be automated in the same way corporations automate their payrolls. But the cost of mailing that many checks is still significant; if 10% of the nation qualifies, that's 28m people, which, at $0.37/letter, comes out to about $10.3m/year if mailed annually, or, about $124m/year if mailed monthly. Either way, it's an extremely-trivial sum by federal standards, but still more than I'm guessing is necessary, compared to a once-a-year plastic card (that is, can 28m cards be created within the difference of $114m/year that remains after postage, compared to a rebate check?)), while providing immediate relief to those who need it.

      The biggest problem I see with a tax-reduction card is that the government can track the purchases of the poor. The potential for totalitarian abuse there is considerable (for example, it makes it easy for the government to know which poor people own guns, unless they don't use their tax-reduction card at the time of purchase).

      What do you think - a tax-exempt card vs. rebate checks? :) (serious question)

    21. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

      You ask why poor people shouldn't pay taxes?

      It was a rhetorical question, meant to make jabs at Cryofan's normal line of taxation thought.

      Personally, I don't think the poor should have to pay much in taxes either, for the very reason you describe -- taxes make it harder for them to afford the things they need, as if it weren't hard enough.

      Hence, my original point about removing some of the regressivity of the national sales tax by exempting "essential" goods/services, such as food and medicine (as noted elsewhere, this introduces the problem of rent-seeking though, which allows for lobbyists to create special-interest loopholes and/or knock legitimate tax-exemptions off the exempt list. I'm coming to warm up to the idea of a flat consumption tax, with rebates for those in poverty instead of exempting specific goods/services).

      From what you say, it seems you think that poor people somehow choose to be poor. That they enjoy it.

      I'm genuinely curious how you divined this leap of logic. I never said poor people choose to be poor (though you get the occasional weirdo who is actually rich and pretends to be poor, or is so frugal that they *look* poor).

      But it'd be silly to say that people enjoy being poor. I can't imagine most people would enjoy that (some may on the philosophy that with wealth comes too much responsibility and/or fame, and they prefer not to have such things. I would guess they are a minority though)...

      They can't choose which school to send their kids to, as they don't have the money for transport.

      Which is all the more reason to implement a school-voucher system, whereby the tax-funded voucher allows parents to choose which schools - public or private -their children go to, rather than having their tax money automatically driven to the nearest public schools...

      As for transportation costs, whether this is a significant issue in light of a voucher system is questionable, seeing as it's likely that schools would be created within local areas to serve the students (much like McDonalds' have sprouted up on every corner), rather than hiding out in the suburbs, etc.

      BTW, Sweden is trying a voucher-based educational system. And they show that it works. So it can't be the all-bad, evil ultra-conservative solution to education that I'm sure some people make it out to be...

      (I also went to the nearest public school, because my parents didn't want to pay for private school. I don't blame them, I wouldn't want to either. But I do wish we had better choice in our schools, rather than my being forced to go to the high school I did).

      Poor kids don't choose to be born to poor parents, just like rich kids don't choose to be born to rich parents. If you think that's somehow fair, then fine.

      You are again making a wild-ass assumption and putting words in my mouth. I never said "people choose to be poor" (they certainly may do so indirectly -- by not trying hard enough in school, by getting into trouble with the police, by eating too much and getting overweight, thus causing nasty health problems, etc. - and on those grounds, they *do* choose to be poor. But I really don't think anybody makes a conscious decision to be poor out of some kind of enjoyment of poverty...).

      I favor a voucher-based education system, by which means all children are still are guaranteed an education (as Thomas Jefferson would've had it), but at the same time, offering more competition between schools, in order to invoke the discipline of market competition on them and force them to improve performance (or else, go out of business).

      Such a system, more than any other, would help the poor rise out of their crappy inner-city schools onto a more-level educational playing field.

    22. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by bnenning · · Score: 1

      What do you think - a tax-exempt card vs. rebate checks?

      Very interesting idea (and I am surprised I haven't seen it elsewhere), but I think there are a couple of serious flaws. First, you have nontrivial administration costs of deciding and keeping track of who gets what rate, and businesses would have to break down their sales by rate as well. (True, you do save on mailing out rebate checks, but my sense is that this would be even more expensive). Second, it seems to make fraud much more profitable. Even if the discount cards are 100% unforgeable, a gray market would immediately spring up where cardholders buy expensive products on behalf of the real customers. Third, as you point out the potential for tracking is worrisome, and you'd essentially *have* to track purchases to try to minimize type of fraud I just described.

      They have neither the personal financial discipline nor the practical ability to wait for a check to come back in 6 months to a year, giving them back the money they shouldn't have paid in the first place. The problem lessens as the checks become more frequent (monthly, weekly, etc.)

      IIRC the FairTax calls for monthly rebates, which I think is about right.

      Simply-put, the solution of rebate checks fails to deal with the opportunity cost of leaving one's money tied-up with the government for any amount of time.

      True, of course very few people even understand the concept of opportunity costs. And really, we have the same situation today. Several times I've listened to people expounding on their brilliant financial maneuver of increasing their income tax withholding so they'd get a bigger refund on April 15. My attempts to explain the time value of money were futile. (Them: "But if they didn't take it out of my paycheck I'd just spend it!" Me: Kif-style sigh).

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    23. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

      Good points about the card vs. rebate check question. I'm inclined to agree w/ you overall; it probably would cost more than mailing out checks. *Especially* in terms of fraud-detection and prevention; I think that would more-than likely create the need for an agency like the Secret Service (or else, use the existing SS to enforce anti-fraud methods)... After all, who wouldn't want to have a tax-cut card?? :P (there's also the "free-rider" problem here of non-cardholders using cardholders' cards to gain tax cuts they weren't supposed to receive. Imagine Larry Ellison in the grocery line, asking the wife of the unemployed bum if he can use her card to save himself money!)

      I think the determination of "who gets what rate" could be pretty easily automated. We set a base minimum (as with a negative income tax, as proposed by Milton Friedman. In a way, the FairTax seems like an adaptation of the NIT to a consumption tax -- a problem I've been wrestling with in my mind for a while, actually) for qualification for a rebate - probably around the poverty level. From that, we still need a way to determine one's yearly income -- this would need to be reported by employers to some agency (basically, what remains of the IRS). Most employers could do this online, although, there would still be a need (whether w/ a rebate card or check) to have people to process those forms from employers who don't file online...

      Anyway, those values are sent to some beastly mainframe in Washington, processed, and those people who qualify have their rebate card rates calculated and the cards processed, manufactured, and mailed back to them automatically -- just like credit card companies do. It'd all be automated batch-processing w/ mainframes and such, so there's little need for human intervention, and therefore, little in the way of administrative costs besides system updates, rate-calculation changes, and such.

      Still, in my mind, the fraud potential (and the privacy implications resulting as you note) are too-great to ignore, thus effectively sinking the rebate card idea. :-/

      IIRC the FairTax calls for monthly rebates, which I think is about right.

      The FairTax does call for monthly rebates, which seems reasonable. Provided annual inflation is kept low (i.e. < 5%, and preferably < 3% like it has been for several years, though with the current admin's unbelievable deficit spending, well - there's only so many Treasury bonds that investors will soak up (even foreign investors, though I suspect they'll tire out long after domestic investors do) before the Fed has to start buying them, by pushing their printed money out into the economy, raising the money supply and increasing inflation as a result), the loss on the value of those checks due to rebate-transmission lag would be close to nil.

      And regardless, monthly rebate checks would be far-superior to yearly rebate checks, as is currently the case.

      True, of course very few people even understand the concept of opportunity costs. And really, we have the same situation today. Several times I've listened to people expounding on their brilliant financial maneuver of increasing their income tax withholding so they'd get a bigger refund on April 15. My attempts to explain the time value of money were futile. (Them: "But if they didn't take it out of my paycheck I'd just spend it!" Me: Kif-style sigh).

      It's amazing, isn't it? Seems to be a common problem and misconception... It's really almost like a tax on the people who don't know any better. :-)

    24. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by skyemoor · · Score: 1

      You've stated a conclusion without showing us the data points, assumptions, or calculations. Are we simply to take your word on it? What about people that make $30/hr? $100,000/yr? What increase to the deficit would their be? Or do we just ignore that?

    25. Re:A progressive income tax IS what we need by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

      You've stated a conclusion without showing us the data points, assumptions, or calculations. Are we simply to take your word on it? What about people that make $30/hr? $100,000/yr? What increase to the deficit would their be? Or do we just ignore that?

      As I noted here, I would like to do just that. I haven't gotten around to it, however (I have other homework which eats my time -- this sales tax calculation is something I made in my free time. My original calculation was merely for my own personal justification, and to that end - in looking forward 5 or 10 years - the question of whether a NST would continue to work for me is still up in the air.

      But you are quite right that if we are to accept such a tax, that other levels of income need to be accounted-for as well, from the poorest people on minimum-wage to Bill Gates and everybody in-between. Your skepticism is perfectly-valid: I never claimed that there wasn't more work to be done on this. My remarks were off-the-cuff, not intended as a thorough policy analysis...

  186. Car-related restrictions indeed! by aquarian · · Score: 1

    The car-related restriction that bothers me the most is being restricted to one's car to go anywhere or do anything. This is life California.

    The scary thing is, new development in the rest of the country is following the same template, only worse. If you think LA is a horror of sprawl, try Atlanta or Greensboro.

    The best thing that could happen to California, and the US, is $5/gal gasoline. There would be a lot of short term pain for sure, but in the end we'd make better choices about where to live, work, shop, and send our kids to school. The idea that "...it's only a 25 minute commute..." is simply absurd.

    1. Re:Car-related restrictions indeed! by teh_greatest · · Score: 1

      good idea. then the property value around schools and areas where jobs are plentiful skyrocket so high that the only people who can live there are the people currently in the $500k homes in the burbs.

      now the guy with the $10/hour job has to live a 20 minute drive from his his employer, and he can't afford to drive there. i'm sure he'll thank you for the 2 hour bike ride (each way) every day.

      there are more people who can't afford to make your "better choices" than there are than can.

    2. Re:Car-related restrictions indeed! by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      The idea that "...it's only a 25 minute commute..." is simply absurd.

      Yeah, great idea there, Chief. We just gotta remember to relocate all the businesses in each region into 30-mile diameter industrial megaparks, so when you lose you fucking job in one, you can just find another one in that big circle.

      Or, we can do away with property taxes, to allow you to keep your home during times of unemployment, instead of being under constant pressure to earn money to avoid becoming homeless.

      I'd also suggest that we force businesses to stay put for decades, allowing people to move near them and continue to be employed. But that's just getting silly, right?

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    3. Re:Car-related restrictions indeed! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Isn't that alway the result of arm chair quarterbacker that think because it sounds nice up front it is the best thing since sliced bread?

      serriously. i have seen alot of good ideas but they all fall short of other effects when you look into them. The only way to atificualy create something like this would be to let the free market do it. Then the guy making 10 dollars an hour might be making the $50,000/year and it wouldn't be too problemmatic. unfortunatly, as it goes the person making the least is the person going to feel it the most when it is crunch time. It is sad when someone will have to work a second job just to affor to work at the first.

  187. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by evilmousse · · Score: 1


    d'oh -_-

    wisconsin's a nice place, undeserving of the boring midwest reputation. i'm an east-coaster, moved to milwaukee, and there's a good balance of blue-collar'd square-headedness and bohemian artistry. plus a sky-high bars/miles^2 ratio. madison's a great college town too. green bay sports the only publicly-owned football team, and even little old ladies state-wide are fans.

    i don't want to troll, so i won't comment on much of the rest of the midwest ^^

  188. Poison/pollution credits by benhocking · · Score: 1

    I agree that it sounds evil worded this way (or thought about this way), and yet, the pragmatist in me agrees (I assume) that there is some validity in the approach.

    I've always thought that a fundamental flaw in Communist theory (as espoused by Marx as opposed to as practiced by any real regime) is that it ignores the fundamental flaws of human nature. As a species, "doing the right thing" tends not to be a driving force for us. As my old world history teacher used to say, "Communism would only work in two places - heaven, where they don't need it, and hell, where they already have it."

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
  189. Why is it dumping on California? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oregon actually plans to do it. California is just considering it.

  190. At least.. by spacecadetglow · · Score: 1

    At least the californians aren't being taxed for wearing fluffy directors pants. Or was that for not wearing fluffy directors pants..?

  191. Much less efficient than a gas tax by egarland · · Score: 1

    With the gas tax, people who drive gas guzzling SUV's pay more than people who drive efficient vehicles. It's a very efficient tax to collect and is generally quite fair. Heavy SUV's and trucks do more damage than their light efficient counterparts and they pay more. That just makes sense.

    If the revenue isn't high enough to cover expenses, make the gas tax higher. People get all nutzoid about raising gas taxes but it makes much more sense than this crazy plan. Gas tax ends up being somewhere around $100 per year for the average car (10,000 miles/year, 20 MPG, $0.20/gallon gas tax.) That's nothing compared to the rest of the taxes we get slammed with. Raising the gas tax will cover the gap without the $100 per car wasted expenditure and it gives people incentive to drive more efficient cars.

    --
    set softtabstop=4 shiftwidth=4 expandtab nocp worlddomination
    1. Re:Much less efficient than a gas tax by anubi · · Score: 1
      I wonder if they are proposing this bullshit just to butter us up for a gas tax hike.

      Its as if they were "marketing" a gas tax hike.

      Incidentally, you know what marketing skills are all about - its how to make the customer think he's getting laid, when he's really getting screwed.

      --
      "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]

  192. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by NardofDoom · · Score: 1
    You know what's funny... there was a propaganda campaign a while back in PA (which isn't that much different than Wisconsin) trying to convince people to *stay* in PA.

    "You hear that... NO EARTHQUAKES!!!"

    Good enough reason for me. California is too crowded, too dependent on cars, and while the weather is nice, I'd rather have land that didn't move underneath me and no riots or police beatings or car chases or wildfires or recall elections or...

    Well, you get my drift.

    --
    You have two hands and one brain, so always code twice as much as you think!
  193. Tightening the noose... by i41Overlord · · Score: 1

    I notice that every step of the way, the government finds an incremental way to gain legal power over the people that are supposed to be running the show. And each time they do it, they make sure not to cause too much of an uproar. After people get used to it, they take a little bit more.

    Of course you'll get the people who always support the government no matter what they do, so they'll concoct a reason to believe that they're helping us.

    "Let us install a surveillance camera in your bedroom. It's for your protection"

    "Just because you're in the privacy of your bedroom doesn't mean that you're not breaking the law. If you aren't doing anything wrong you have nothing to fear"

    As for this law, I think installing GPS in the cars would be a trojan horse of sorts. At first they'll market it like the reason it's there is to help you or to help with emissions monitoring, but long range goals are predictable and it's only a matter of time before they start monitoring your speed with it and sending you tickets in the mail for speeding in the Nevada desert.

  194. Gas taxes?? (Re:Odometer) by Agent+Green · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Isn't this the kind of stuff that gasoline taxes are supposed to take care of?? Since most of populous CA is nowhere near a state border, just raise that. The best part of this, is that if you don't drive, you don't get taxed directly. Who needs more technology for this?

    And this will sorely punish the SUV owners that the tree huggers keep bitching about simply by virtue of fuel usage. So, in a way, you are getting taxed by the mile and for having an eco-unfriendly car.

    Granted, the whole idea is utter bullshit to begin with...

    --
    // Agent Green (Ian / IU7 / KB1JQO)
    // IEEE 802.3: All 10base Are Belong To Us
  195. What's so wrong? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Moving house isn't something you do for fun, it's something you do when it makes (economic) sense.
    And, yes, taxes are a factor in economic decisions. And far from being random, taxes reflect pressures.

    That's why people talk about a job market, a housing market, education market ...

    Readjusting market equilibrium isn't fun, but it's not 'wrong' either.

  196. Wonderful rebuttal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, that really proved him wrong, and showed how suave and mature you are. I wanna be like you when I grow up.

  197. Dutch? Kill a film maker in the name of tolerance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dutch, huh?

    Shouldn't you be out gunning down some film maker, or right-wing politico? And, then bitching that you did it because THEY were intolerant?

    Hypocrites!

  198. That would be a bad idea. by i41Overlord · · Score: 1

    And no low income person should pay ANY type of tax... In a capitalist system like ours, the top 50% should be able to pay all taxes for everything. After all, they have like 85% of the wealth.

    The problem with that is that the idea, by design, would encourage a further separation of the classes, or even a secession. It would help destroy the balance of power in the country (and it's bad enough already).

    Think about it, the rich feel elite enough as it is, if they're the ones that paid all the taxes, what would they need the lower classes for? They'd look at everyone else as dead weight, a burden on their backs. They'd be able to abuse their power even more than they do now and point to the fact that they bankroll *everything* in the country, and that they should have more voting power than the poor majority who don't pay for anything.

  199. wow by GotSanity · · Score: 1

    This reminds me of shadowrun's version of the grid. Next thing we know we are going to have car geeks worldwide having to remove the gps just to avoid speeding tickets.

  200. possible solution by thomasa · · Score: 1

    My GPS can display my speed. If a GPS was built that ONLY displayed or output speed, then it would be a simple matter of integrating over time to get distance with the information about precisely where the car had been being left out. Of course internally, the GPS would have to know location, it just would not have to report it. Would they do that? I doubt it.

  201. what are the odds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...that one of the folks on the governator's panel of experts is a heavy investor in this GPS mileage tax technology boondoggle?

    HELLO! If the existing gas tax is not bringing in enough revenue how about raising the gas tax? That will cost much less then your crappy new system. Of course simply raising the gas tax will not have the added benefit of charging Hummer drivers (whose vehicles do more damage to the roads than Prius drivers) less than the current scheme charges them.

  202. Three words by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

    Kiss My Ass.

  203. Not exactly... by Cryptnotic · · Score: 1

    It didn't just lower the taxes. More importantly, it made it so that the tax rate could not be more than 1% of the value of the house and that the tax rate could not increase by more than 2% each year unless the property was sold. The idea here was that grandma who bought her house in 1930 for $15,000 wouldn't get kicked out of her home that is now worth $1,000,000 because she can't pay the $10,000 per year property tax.

    It was definately not a crazy idea. Taxes again are getting worse and worse in California. We already have an around 8% sales tax (actually varies by county and city). Our state taxes are very high as well. Property taxes, while restricted by Prop 13, are still high because of the high price of homes in California. Add to that the fact that you basically need to have a car in California to get anywhere (i.e., car payments, maintainence, tires, brakes, gasoline, insurance) and the cost of living in California is as high or higher than anywhere.

    I'm personally hoping to inherit my parent's home. But even if that happens, I'm not sure how I'd be able to afford the increased property taxes. I think I'd manage, but it would be a heavy burden.

    --
    My other first post is car post.
    1. Re:Not exactly... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On the other hand it left control of the schools in the hands of Sacramento, which has been a disaster. There's basically no local control of schools anymore, due to the fact that they are funded by the state since Prop. 13.

      And the grandma story doesn't really wash since the house won't be appraised while she's living in it.

    2. Re:Not exactly... by khallow · · Score: 1

      Another correction here is that the accessed value of most homes (for taxation purposes) is less than the real value. Prop 13 put a ceiling on how fast the accessed value could rise.

  204. Fire Caltrans and save a ton of money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Get rid of the lazy, leaning-on-the-shovel, ten-guys-to-dig-a-hole Caltrans "workers" and there will be plenty of money to build better roads!

  205. oooh! ooh! by Cryptnotic · · Score: 1

    It should also be based on the weight of the passengers in the car (i.e., a fat tax). It's only fair, since heavier people put more wear on the roads.

    --
    My other first post is car post.
    1. Re:oooh! ooh! by notbob · · Score: 0

      Tax credit should be given to females of the appropriate weights, ie 115lbs and under for anything taller then 5'4.

      Keep American beautiful... out source fat & ugly to india ;)

  206. Tracking by jeffkjo1 · · Score: 1

    James Whitty, who heads the Oregon pilot project for the state's transportation department, maintains the GPS would detect only whether the car is inside or outside of Oregon and how many miles it has traveled in state - not its every movement.

    "There are people who hear 'GPS,' and they think it's some exotic military device," said Whitty, who said the state will not have the ability, or desire, to monitor drivers' traveling habits. The Oregon device would be a "glorified compass," he said.

    Joan Borucki, chief deputy director at the California Transportation Commission and a member of the California Performance Review team that made the recommendation here, insists the device could not track residents' whereabouts.


    If this is true, why not just create a device that is no more than a 'glorified' trip odometer that resets itself everytime the motorist fills up for gas? There are far fewer concerns about vehicle tracking in that instance.

  207. Oregon proposed this and it went nowhere by PotatoHead · · Score: 2, Interesting

    All it's going to take to bury this one is a quick call to your representative, or a letter.

    Ask a bunch of questions:

    who will pay for the devices?

    What about shared cars?

    Does travel outside the state count?

    How about the tourists?

    Rental cars?

    and on and on and on.

    It will die the same death Oregons proposal did.

    1. Re:Oregon proposed this and it went nowhere by Sime208 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      who will pay for the devices?
      Who do you think? Governments don't have money, they only have yours or will borrow on your behalf. If they see a way of skimming that little extra from your pay cheque, they'll do it. And they'll ask you to pay for it too.
      What about shared cars?
      What about them? The registered keeper will get the bill and it'll be up to them to go through the hassle of working out who owes them what.
      Does travel outside the state count?
      Eventually.
      How about the tourists?
      What about them? If their cars don't have the units now, they'll get away with it. Eventually they will have though, and then they'll pay.

      In the mean time, that extra money they're bringing your local economy will have to cover it.
      Rental cars?
      When you drop the car off you'll pay based on how many miles you did.

      Hope this has answered your questions :-)
  208. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by SpaceCadetTrav · · Score: 1

    Why does everything think that people are migrating here from other states? If you stopped counting the immigrants coming from across the border, you would see a massive exodus from the state over the last several years. Try to rent a Uhaul out of the state and see what I mean. They'll practically pay you to drive one into California.

  209. Big Brother is watching and charging you for it by ToasterTester · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So they want to charge you not only for the miles you will drive, but some roads and highways they will charge more for than others. They claim all this is because of people buy more fuel efficient cars. Huh since when is reducing gas consumption and reducing emissions a bad thing??? But I guess I could take the GPS off and put in on my grandmother cars. That will keep my mileage low.

    How stupid are these people??? If you leave the current gas tax it has it only way of adjusting it self. People who drive more, buy more gas. People with SUV's and other gas guzzlers by more gas. Even illegal aliens with no license and unregistered cars, still pay gas tax.

    Then we shall we get into the invasion of privacy with the GPS tracking everywhere we drive.

  210. No. by Cryptnotic · · Score: 1

    Aparrantly children in California are all under the impression that the water from a faucet is completely unsafe to drink.

    Personally, I drink bottled water often, but I buy it by the case for about $5 (for maybe 24 half-liter bottles). It's convenient to keep bottles in my car for when I'm thirsty and stuck in traffic.

    --
    My other first post is car post.
    1. Re:No. by plasm4 · · Score: 1
      water from a faucet is completely unsafe to drink.
      Judging by the taste I'd assume that this statement is fairly accurate.
  211. Other ways of tracking use by ESarge · · Score: 2, Informative

    You may not believe but there are other ways of taxing based on road mileage. Every vehicle has an odometer which tracks the distance travelled - use that.

    In New Zealand, we have a tax on petrol to fund roads and other useful things. Because diesel vehicles can get vastly different fuel efficiency they use a Road User Charges (RUC) system.
    You can buy RUCs from many places like post offices or AA stores. You must keep your RUCs up to date or you face a fairly steep fine (I think it's 3 times what the RUCs would have cost you). The police check the RUCs every time they do a routine stop. Normally the distance travelled is measured from the odometer however large truck and trailer units will often have a hub mounted distance meter (I don't know why).

    Fairly simple and doesn't involve expensive privacy-invading tracking units.

    And while we're about things - don't bother whinging about increased taxes. The price of petrol in the US is about a third what much of the rest of the world pays.

  212. As a former governer of California once said, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it moves, tax it.

  213. I know you're trying to be funny... by Cryptnotic · · Score: 1

    ...but the dealer wouldn't care either way. They'd give you the trade-in value based on 100k miles (i.e., next to nothing).

    --
    My other first post is car post.
    1. Re:I know you're trying to be funny... by matlhDam · · Score: 1

      ...but the dealer wouldn't care either way. They'd give you the trade-in value based on 100k miles (i.e., next to nothing).

      And then they'd sell it based on 20k (ie, quite a bit more) and PROFIT!

  214. Stop beating around the bush... by bigox · · Score: 1

    And just tax breathing since you are exhaling a greenhouse gas. Hell, why not tax living since you are consuming valuable resources and taking up space. This is getting nuts.

  215. $100 devices eat a year of revenue by trulymadlydeeply · · Score: 1

    At 18.4c per gallon, the average gas tax for a prius driving 10,000 miles a year at $2 a gallon is about $70. The proposed GPS devices cost around $100 -- over a year of gas tax per vehicle. Consider that there are 40M people in California, and each will probably have 5 cars in a lifetime, factor in installation and maintenance of roadside stations and this becomes some real money. A simple 'no parking' sign costs hundreds of dollars to install, these babies will cost 10s of thousands each.

    In any case, the argument that high mileage vehicles have lowered gas taxes is outrageous. I don't know hybrid sales numbers, but gas prices have increased substantially since the Prius was released, and every report I've read says gas mileage is way down from its high, thanks to SUVs, trucks, and beefed up engines. A little math should bear out that gas tax has increased, not to mention CA state sales tax, which is applied on top of gas tax.

    It doesn't really add up, the gas tax is doing fine and this would cost so much to implement. Other than plots to spy on the populus, I'd say this is this could be back alley to toll-roads and more complex pricing schemes. Once the GPS infrastructure is in place, it doesn't require a whole lot of code to change the tax rate for people driving through 880 during rush hour all by their lonesomes. It could also lead to commuters becoming political footballs -- the SoCal contingent arguing the NoCal lemmings aren't paying their share and vice versa.

  216. Dutch? Kill a film maker in the name of tolerance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dutch, huh?

    Shouldn't you be out gunning down some film maker, or right-wing politico? And, then bitching that you did it because THEY were intolerant?

    Hypocrites!!!

  217. No 25 year old cars in CA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever hear the term "California car?" This is a monicker that gives collectors the giggles. It means that the car has never seen a speck of rust, no matter how old it is. SoCal's climate is also very hospitable for the engine. I've never been to CA, but I would expect that there are districts where it's like Cuba, with all the cars being from some bygone era.

    Also, while I'm posting - to hell with all-electric vehicles. Give us the ceramic engine! No lube system, no coolant system, burn just about anything, make insane hp.

  218. ok.... by cypherwise · · Score: 1

    so what is to stop me from just disabling the gps device?

  219. taxing the rich MORE reduces their power by Cryofan · · Score: 1

    I wrote:

    And no low income person should pay ANY type of tax... In a capitalist system like ours, the top 50% should be able to pay all taxes for everything. After all, they have like 85% of the wealth.


    And you wrote:

    The problem with that is that the idea, by design, would encourage a further separation of the classes, or even a secession. It would help destroy the balance of power in the country (and it's bad enough already).

    Think about it, the rich feel elite enough as it is, if they're the ones that paid all the taxes,


    Who care what they feel? When you take 60-70% of their incomes it REDUCES THEIR POWER. They still have enough money to buy mansions and fancy cars, but they do not then after taxes have enough to manipulate the voters and the govt through media propaganda. There has been a reduction in income tax in the last 25 years (from 70% to about 5-10% for most of the truly wealthy, mainly due to an outright drop in top tax rates and an increase in loopholes. This has given the rich (and the corporations, their surrogates) much more money, obviously, and they have used it to wreak havoc in America, busting unions, outsourcing jobs, increasing immigration, buying the American govt almost outright.

    I say disempower them. Cut their nuts off--neuter 'em!

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:taxing the rich MORE reduces their power by mdfst13 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "(from 70% to about 5-10% for most of the truly wealthy"

      It's closer to 13%. Both Cheney and Heinz Kerry published their tax returns. It's also worth pointing out that even though the rate was 90% (prior to the Kennedy years), few people paid it. You are also mixing book rates (90%, then 70%, then 28%, and now 15-35% depending on type of income) with effective rates. The effective rate when tax rates were 70% was much lower than that. Tax loopholes aren't new. In fact, Ross Perot got his own personal loophole in 1978 (which is what made his 1992 claim to be an outsider so ridiculous).

      Dropping the top rate from 90% to 28% (1986) encouraged people to get their income in reportable ways. The rich paid *more* in taxes (as a percentage of total taxes paid) in 1988 than they did in 1980. I haven't seen numbers since Bush cut the rate on dividends. It is reasonable to expect that the result has been a drop, but it is hard to say how much was the tax changes and how much was the recession.

      "They still have enough money to buy mansions and fancy cars, but they do not then after taxes have enough to manipulate the voters and the govt through media propaganda."

      You are confusing income and wealth. You aren't going to take away the rich's "media propaganda" abilities with an income tax. It's not their income that establishes their control of the media. It's the ownership of the media. Even a 100% income tax won't change that. It would only make it more difficult to buy mansions and fancy cars (things that are bought with income).

      If you want to reduce the "power" of the rich, tax *wealth*, not income. Income is what pays for the toys. Wealth is what gives the power.

    2. Re:taxing the rich MORE reduces their power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I say disempower them. Cut their nuts off--neuter 'em!

      This is why you lost the election, friend. As much as Democrats accuse Bush of dividing the country, it's wack jobs like you that are instigating class warfare. And one doesn't have to be rich to realize that. I have yet to reach the 25% tax bracket and even I can see that your hatred for the rich and wanting to "cut their nuts off" is not a positive, useful proposal for this country.

      Again, that is why you lost the election.

    3. Re:taxing the rich MORE reduces their power by DeputySpade · · Score: 1

      Who care what they feel? When you take 60-70% of their incomes it REDUCES THEIR POWER. They still have enough money to buy mansions and fancy cars, but they do not then after taxes have enough to manipulate the voters and the govt through media propaganda.

      Then why, sir, would they work so hard to become rich? Why would you bust your nuts to make a bunch of coin if somebody was always going to adjust your tax rate such that you never had any left over? Why not make "just enough" so that you can be comfortable? In addition to the other horrible side effects pointed out by other posters, your lopsided "vision" also encourages marginal performance. Whee! What a gem of a country we would live in then, eh?

      --


      This space intentionally left blank
  220. Had to be said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In Soviet California, GPS tracks YOU!

  221. Overkill by ReeprFlame · · Score: 1

    I think that's a wee bit overkill. There's already tax for gas and your car and everything else. The products you buy are more due to transport, this would most likely increase it [think about the trucking industry going millions of miles everyday]. Furthermore, who needs the taxes? It may be a good idea but its also a privacy intrusion. Ok it may be useful for jacked cars or other crimes, but so what. There are already somewhat [not very] efficient ways to do that as it is. Also, there wont be taxes on motorcycles, mopeds, and other kinds of vehicles. Quick, everyone buy a harley!

  222. they should improve public trnsport instead by dwipal · · Score: 1

    I used to live in LA, and the public transport SUCKS. If i have to go to irvine to see my aunt, it either takes 4 hours and 30$ to reach there (a 40 mile trip), or i can drive down. So to discourage people from driving, they should have more efficient (and cheap) public transportation. Doing something on the government scale can definitely earn some $$s for the state.

    1. Re:they should improve public trnsport instead by JDLazarus · · Score: 1

      Bike. 40mi/20mph = 2h + exercise.

  223. Problems by Mmm_Coco · · Score: 1

    So what's to stop people from just filling up gas canisters, instead of directly into their cars? I'd do it, if it saves me a few hundred a year.

    And also, the article didn't say if this GPS system only charges for miles traveled on public roads. My Grandfather's pickup never leaves his property, except to go to the gas station. Should he be charged for the "wear and tear" he puts on his own gravel?

  224. car pool? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what happens to the driver of the carpool? won't they end up paying while their passengers do not? and technically they are doing a service to the state by carpooling? really, how do they intend to accomplish this, not to mention enforce it?

  225. Sorry charlie by Safety+Cap · · Score: 1

    There is no place on earth that doesn't experience earthquakes.

    --
    Yeah, right.
    1. Re:Sorry charlie by NardofDoom · · Score: 1
      Yes, but there are places where it doesn't make sense to have earthquake insurance or earthquake proof your house. And that's where I want to live.

      Besides, you should be happy. I'm *never* moving to California!

      --
      You have two hands and one brain, so always code twice as much as you think!
  226. tax me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lets face it, you already pay for stuff you may or may not use with city/state taxes... mass transit, stadiums, parks, schools, ... some illegal aliens posing as 50 people collecting 50 different welfare checks.....

    Can we start placing RF tags on people and charge taxes based on usage of these other services?

    Oh wait, the plan is to screw over the middle class. Why don't you just go over to their houses, beat them up and steal their money... be a lot faster, easier and cheaper for everyone!

  227. True by wantedman · · Score: 1

    But IIRC, they also only go up to about 35 miles per hour. Not truely effective for road travel.

    1. Re:True by SenseiLeNoir · · Score: 1

      Electric trains and deisel electric trains here in the UK have tremendous torque, and pretty good speed, from a relativly small motor......

      --
      Have a nice day!
  228. GPS = automated speeding tickets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey Californias - with this handy dandy GPS gizmo installed, just wait until you start receiving automated speeding tickets in the mail.

  229. Actually.... by Degrees · · Score: 2, Informative
    It is a false claim that urban centers generate any larger or smaller share of tax revenue.

    The agriculture industry in the central San Joaquin Valley produces about 1/10 of the California "GDP". (That doesn't include the Imperial valley down around San Diego.)

    10% of GDP is 10% of GDP, whether it comes from an urban area or a rural area.

    The only place where lower taxes come into effect is the endpoint sales tax on groceries. Sales tax revenues are consumed locally - so you don't really lose.

    FWIW, since Ag takes about 3% of the population to produce that 10% of GDP, we are actually more efficient than you: it's you who are the moocher.

    If you really want to shift roads expenses to us rural people - go for it. But don't be surprised when the delivery cost on food becomes astronomical to you people who are so foolish to live so far away from it.

    Maybe you want to let that sleeping dog lie, eh? Or, you can continue to stab at it with a sharp stick. What do your brains tell you?

    --
    "The most sensible request of government we make is not, "Do something!" But "Quit it!"
    1. Re:Actually.... by NereusRen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      People in rural areas get subsidized almost everything: electricity, mail, roads... any infrastructure that the government has deemed "public" enough to regulate, they probably force equal prices (if they even allow private competition), even though it is actually much more expensive to provide such things to rural areas, per-person. You say that it would drive up the cost of food if farmers paid the cost of their own roads... yes, it would, and that's a good thing! It would bring food's grocery store cost up to the *actual* cost of providing the food, thus more accurately reflecting the priorities of the populace. The roads would still get paid for by both farmers and cityfolk, since we urbandwellers would consume your food, which would be priced according to the true cost of getting it to us. Don't get scared off by the prospect of more expensive food, though... because it's money that would have come out of your taxes, before. Except it allows you to actually choose whether that is worth spending your money on or not. This would be a much fairer way of charging everyone who benefits from such roads, without taking too much money from peole who don't. (such as people who aren't so "foolish to live so far away from it.") At any rate, it's pretty clear the current tax support for such things is unfair to *someone*, but that's just how central planning is.

    2. Re:Actually.... by Degrees · · Score: 1
      You have a good point, and I thank you for that. We *do* get farm subsidies, and although many industries get some subsidies, we probably get a greater 'share' than others. I had forgotten about that and I stand corrected.

      And you are correct about electricity and mail, too. Flip side is, as the cost of living goes up in urban areas, (as you all become more affluent) you drive poor people into the rural areas. Its not a great change - I just compared Tulare County's expense for Public Assistance (38% of the budget) to Los Angeles County's, and L.A. still pays out 30%. Still, if the country must have a centralized welfare system, we get stuck with that burden. I did not compare additional costs, like health care, job training, etc. And you are correct - the rural counties will cost more to provide such services, because we will need six small campuses to provide service, instead of being able to get away with one large campus.

      Truth to be told, I very much would like subsidies to be eliminated over time. There is a quote (that may be ficticious) that suggests the danger of subsidy driven government.

      Anyway, you reminded me of something I had forgotten, and for that I thank you.

      --
      "The most sensible request of government we make is not, "Do something!" But "Quit it!"
    3. Re:Actually.... by Jason+Ford · · Score: 1
      If you really want to shift roads expenses to us rural people - go for it. But don't be surprised when the delivery cost on food becomes astronomical to you people who are so foolish to live so far away from it.

      That, or the cost is absorbed by subsidies. You seemed to have neglected them in your post.

      Things are rarely as simple or black-and-white as they appear.

      --
      I did not become a vegetarian for my health, I did it for the health of the chickens. --Isaac Bashevis Singer
    4. Re:Actually.... by Degrees · · Score: 1
      You are correct. NereusRen pointed that out as well.

      --
      "The most sensible request of government we make is not, "Do something!" But "Quit it!"
  230. just tax gasoline by Jookey · · Score: 1

    this is the most retarted idea ive ever hered. Why don't they just tax gasoline. The amout of gas you use is proportional to how much you drive. If you own a big gas guzzler than you can afford to pay more at the pump. Im supprised they could find a tax as regressive as a gas tax and make it even MORE regressive. sheesh

  231. Wow, taxing how much you drive! by Feztaa · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't it be easier to just tax gasoline sales? If you wanted, you could put in some multiplier based on the fuel efficiency of your vehicle to determine how far was actually driven with the amount of gas purchased.

    Just seems like it'd be a hell of a lot easier measuring gas flowing through a nozzle than tracking where cars go after they've filled up.

  232. water quality by plasm4 · · Score: 1

    It isn't strange at all. The water here tastes like shit, even if you put it through a brita. The water that comes out of the tap at my apartment alternates between coming out chalky white or chalky brown. It dries the my skin out after I shower. Thats why we only drink bottled water. Fortunately it is cheap if you buy cases of it. I live in downtown los angeles now, but the water tasted just the same when I lived in pasadena. I've been drinking bottled water my whole life. Maybe the water in San Francisco is better, but I doubt it. The tap water is great in Lake Tahoe though!

    Los Angeles, nice place to live, terrible place to visit.

  233. Gas Tax Bad - Sin Tax Better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bu$h wants to kill income tax and replace it with sales tax - why don't we just kill income tax and replace it with energy taxes?

    Oh, right, that would divert money away from his "interests" - the way this administration thinks we might actually be seeing food taxes subsidize energy by 2008.

    By the way, doesn't this miss the point that Big Brother wants to put a speed monitor in your car - how long before your speeding tickets are charged to your credit card before you're allowed to buy more gas?

  234. My solution by chriso11 · · Score: 1

    If you have two cars, you could fill up with the car that has the lower mileage, and siphon the gas over to your high milage car.

    --
    No, I don't trust in god. He'll have to pay up front, like everybody else.
  235. Road Impact and Road Damage by BiggRanger · · Score: 0

    A Hummer H1 is going to have more impact on the road surface than an Prius, or Mini. It is road impact that damages the roads and costs money to repair. Heavy vehicle = poor gas mileage = more gas = more taxes, this system already works. It is unfare to tax the light fuel efficent vehicle for the damage heavy trucks and SUV's cause. What next, force everybody to put a GPS on their bike and shoes so they can be taxed for the sidewalks! Not only is this unfare, it reaks of big brother.

  236. Gas guzzlers & work vehicles & Movie Stars by LemonFire · · Score: 1

    My thinking though is that it unfairly hurts people who use a light to medium weight truck for work purposes, who are using the road in a consitant amount.

    Many countries in the worlds already make concessions for work vehicles. I just think that we don't need technical equipment in cars to charge for usage of roads. We already have the means to handle this through gas taxes. However, I think any California guvernor trying to increase the cost for California drivers will find himself voted out just as fast as Gray Davis, even if you're a famous movie star.

  237. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    According to this and this, NYC housing prices, on average, are not much different from LA. I know NYC has some very expensive areas (like Manhattan) but so do LA, OC, SF, and SD... You have to make sure you're comparing apples to apples here...

  238. Glad I left California when I did by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You: "What's this ticket for?"

    CalDMV clerk: "You ran a yellow light, and you were speeding... And following that Buick too closely.... Oh, and it looks like you violated your insurance contract by leaving LA county on a weekday... That means no proof insurance... And we seem to have no data for the hours of 3:34pm to 3:40pm - Oh my, that is a very serious offence"

    You:"I pay my GPS-Travel Tax! How many Amendments can you suspend?"

    CalDMV clerk: "Pre-trial questions are not permitted."

    You:"What? You have no data for a window of 6 minutes and you're blaming me??" Can you at least tell me what laws I'm supposed to have broken?"

    CalDMV clerk: "I'm sorry Sir, that is Sensitive Security Information. Please step back behind the yellow line, and place your hands inside the red circles on the wall. Prepare to be Tased, Sir."

  239. Slightly Orwellian by meatflower · · Score: 1

    In communist California, Car drives you!

  240. Not with new smong laws, they don't by DemonCat · · Score: 2, Insightful

    CA recently passed laws increasing the smog testing for older vehicles. Cars companies were very pleased with the legistlation, since it will entice people to buy new cars to replace their othewise perfectly good old ones.

  241. http://www.odot.state.or.us/ruftf/ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Social Security Numbers were DESIGNED to be Identification Numbers from the very beginning even tho the law said otherwise.

    So too, the forces that be have decided that 10 or so years from now all cars in America will have a GPS and a radio transmitter. EVERYTHING ELSE ABOUT THIS IS A LIE.

    http://www.odot.state.or.us/ruftf/ is a web site filled with lies to begin the decade long process to brainwash us all into believing this is about taxes. It is NOT about taxes.

    Road User Fee Task Force Agenda
    November 19, 2004
    9:30 a.m. -- Noon
    Transportation Building, Room 122
    Salem
    9:30 a.m. Introductions
    9:35 a.m. Approval of Minutes

    * Feb. 14, 2003
    * Nov. 21, 2003
    * May 14, 2004

    9:40 a.m. Media Reports/National Presentations
    9:50 a.m. FHWA Grant Update - James Whitty, Manager of the Office of Innovative Partnerships and Alternative Funding
    10:00 a.m.

    Task Force Discussion and Work Session

    Staff Report
    1. Presentation: Pilot Status Update - Joe Brookhouse, Mileage Fee Pilot Project Coordinator, and Betsy Imholt, Alternative Funding Administrator
    2. Discussion: Development of Model Legislation - James Whitty, Manager of the Office of Innovative Partnerships and Alternative Funding

    Report to 2005 Legislature
    1.Presentation: Outline for Legislative Report for Mileage Fee Pilot Program - James Whitty, Manager of the Office of Innovative Partnerships and Alternative Funding
    2.Decision: Approve new description of mileage fee concept to allow for adjustments since Report to 2003 Legislature

    The Hydrogen Economy
    1. Presentation: "The Hydrogen Economy" - Justin Klure, Oregon Department of Energy
    2. Discussion: How will the hydrogen economy affect Oregon's transportation system?

    Future Topic Areas to Explore and Discuss
    Noon Adjourn

  242. what's good is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what's good about the idea is it discourages unnecessary driving.

    Also, they could hook it into insurance. Premiers get rebated based on mileage. I'm sure insurance industry will fit that idea tooth and nail. There was a proposition to do just that, by putting insurance as a tax on gas. That way everyone was always insured, and only in proportion to the amount of driving they did. The insurance covered everybody, out of one pool. (modulo some extra fees for bad drivers.) Naturally, it was defeated.

  243. http://www.odot.state.or.us/ruftf/newspage.html by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    News Releases

    2004

    * November 15 -- RUFTF meeting Nov. 19
    * May 12 -- OSU, ODOT give gas tax alternative first test
    * May 11 -- Road User Fee Task Force to meet May 14

    2003

    * November 7 -- Road User Fee Task Force to meet Nov. 21
    * October 8 -- Oct. 10 RUFTF meeting cancelled
    * January 10 -- Task Force weeks new revenue system for roads (opinion piece)

    2002

    * November 13 -- RUFTF to meet Nov. 15
    * September 4 -- RUFTF meeting in Salem Sept. 6
    * July 2 -- RUFTF public hearing and formal meeting in North Bend
    * May 31 -- RUFTF June 4 meeting announced
    * April 30 -- RUFTF to hold public meeting in Pendleton
    * April 26 -- Road User Fee Task Force to meet May 3 in Pendleton
    * April 4 -- April RUFTF meeting
    * March 1 -- RUFTF to meet March 8
    * January 22 -- RUFTF meeting Feb. 1

    2001
    * November 21 -- Governor, Legislature announce Road User Fee Task Force members

  244. More idiotic misdirection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    None of this is about road maintenance or efficiency. Its about finding new ways to add on taxes, and at the same time increase the government's ability to track people.

    The bottom line is they already take in enough taxes to run the state properly, the problem is they don't.

    If anyone could come up with a way to make the government accountable for all the tax money they waste, and make sure it went where it was supposed to go, the problem would be over.

    Instead, they create new taxes, and new ways to implement them, so that some contractors with friends in high places can drain it all right back out through multi-million dollar contracts to supply all those black boxes.

    Then, a few years later, when people start to clue in, and the lawsuits start coming, they'll claim its all because those boxes were defective and get a new contract to supply new ones.

    1. Re:More idiotic misdirection by KD5YPT · · Score: 1

      Actually, California is heavily in debt because of their shoddy accounting practice and spending WAY more then they could get through tax.

      --
      In US, you can easily buy enough major firearms to wipe out your neighbourhood but a few little fireworks are banned.
  245. What's wrong with using the odometer? by sbaker · · Score: 1

    Modern cars have pretty much 100% tamper-proof odometers - why not just read off the number of miles you drove between smog checks or whatever?

    Is it some complication like they can only charge for miles driven with California?

    --
    www.sjbaker.org
    1. Re:What's wrong with using the odometer? by JDLazarus · · Score: 1

      This is one of the most inaccurate statements I think I've heard.

      The digital odometer (the mileage info in the Powertrain Control Module, or whatever the mfg calls it) can be editted. The physical odometer (for cars that have them), I'm told, is still fairly easy to crack open and roll back.

    2. Re:What's wrong with using the odometer? by sbaker · · Score: 1

      Versus removing the GPS module and leaving it in your garage!

      --
      www.sjbaker.org
  246. Re:Gas taxes?? (Re:Odometer) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Isn't this the kind of stuff that gasoline taxes are supposed to take care of??"

    A gas tax is not fair, because it taxes Arnold's SUV driving more than it taxes those liberal wusses who drive a Prius.

  247. Re:adrger by javamann · · Score: 0

    We would love to leave the right wing idiots. It sure would save us a lot of money. California pays more in Federal Tax than we get back in benifits.

  248. taxes, regulation, and expensive programs by torrents · · Score: 1

    got them into the fiscal mess and now they think the same thing will get them out...

    --
    Get your torrents...
  249. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    2 2 2?

  250. Taxing the working poor yet again by theonetruekeebler · · Score: 1
    Let me get this straight---so people who can't afford to live in the damned good, expensive houses close to where they work, and have to live in the suburbs and commute a longassed ways to work, they're the ones we should be taxing? Right.

    I have a cousin who commutes 90 miles each way, for a number of reasons, the most important being that he had a choice of living closer to work or having enough money left over to feed his family. Given the half-million dollar houses in town or quarter-milllion dollar houses in the suburbs, and the high gasoline taxes and even worse gasoline prices (thanks for the war, Mr. President!) he's stuck with for living out in the sticks, why the hell does he need to be fucked out of what little he has left? The drive alone costs him four or more hours a day, on top of the ten he works, the hour getting out of the house, he has maybe two or three hours a day to spend getting to know his sons.

    Why the hell does the state need more of his money? Maybe he deserves it on account of not being a rich corporation.

    Ah, fuck it. This is what I get for posting under the influence.

    --
    This is not my sandwich.
  251. Out of Staters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like people form out of state get a free ride. Although unfair, it might not impede tourism. Increasing the gas tax would be fairer. Also, the trucking industry would relocate their head office and purchase their vehicles out of state. What happens if a new car is imported from out of state?

  252. Right. by raehl · · Score: 1

    We'll raise fuel taxes, and everyone will starve to death because farmers won't be able to grow food anymore.

    1. Re:Right. by nospmiS+remoH · · Score: 1

      I grew up in a rural area, now I live in an urban area. I drove WAY more miles in a rural area. 20 miles to get gas, 60 to a mall of any sort. I don't see how, on average*, milage tax would be better for rural areas.

      * I know, Iknow, someone will say, "I live in LA and I drive 75 miles each way to work every day!" Well, I drive 10, some people walk, thus a v e r a g e

      --
      !hoD
  253. Re:Dutch? Kill a film maker in the name of toleran by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shouldn't you be out gunning down some film maker, or right-wing politico? And, then bitching that you did it because THEY were intolerant?

    Well then, shouldn't you be off shooting wounded and dying Iraqis in the head because you think they're faking being dead?

  254. No. You wait a sec..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The damage to a road is geometrically proportional to vehicle weight per axle. An 80,000 tractor-trailer doesn't cause 40 times the damage that a 2000 pound car does to the pavement it causes 400 times the damage (20,000/axle vs 1000/axle)squared. The reasons that 7000 pound Hummers are technically illegal on most residential streets are not incidental or caused by pansy wannabees, it's by this simple fact of roadway engineering.
    Of course Hummer got its first, most effective, endorsement by the Governator, so we can see where he's coming from. He's got an overdeveloped sense of entitlement.

  255. Youf forgot sales tax on toilet paper by syousef · · Score: 1

    Youf forgot sales tax on toilet paper

    --
    These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  256. So, do you support such a tax? by PotatoHead · · Score: 1

    The tourist question is not so easy to answer. Getting other states to adopt this is going to be very tough. That means lots of drivers not paying the taxes. However, I really don't want to debate these questions, because they are not the real point.

    The point is to ask the reps lots of questions. Demand responses, then ask more questions about those, all the while making it known that you are a voter and a voter that knows lots of other voters.

    Elected officials rarely hear from more than a very small set of those they serve. When an issue gets loud and it consumes their time and staff resources, that issue gets far more consideration.

    It's really the only check we have against industry lobby influences and budget constraints. If they think they can just get more money, they will.

    Now, I am not always for the lowest tax, but the tax needs to have a clear need and be well invested for a return I can see. This also means existing taxes need to show this being true before new ones are acceptable.

    There are a lot more questions that can be asked too. How about commercial vehicles? They do the most damage, how do they fit into this new tax? What to the companies think about this? Perhaps the lobby might be on the peoples side on this one, particularly if a stupid staffer goes on record saying the tax will have to apply to them too!

    It's about noise. Make it and that goes a long way toward nipping stupid things like this in the bud, early before they get traction.

    That's all.

    1. Re:So, do you support such a tax? by anubi · · Score: 1
      We wonder why we have a budget deficit???

      Right here, look at the effort being squandered on what will be a very unpopular tax if implemented. What are the chances of this thing actually going into effect?

      I would save money, right here, right now, by promptly terminating this group. Private business does this all the time. Let these people who have come up with this work go find someone else to work for... as a taxpayer, I DO NOT WANT THESE GUYS ON THE PUBLIC PAYROLL!

      If we could find some way of terminating public jobs as easy as private jobs are terminated, public officials would be much more careful of how they do their jobs, just as the rest of us have to be.

      We all have to "design to cost", and if they can't do this, we need to open these positions up to those who can.

      --
      "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]

  257. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please, I hope more people move OUT of my state.

  258. Double Plus Good ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Ministry of Privacy approves this device in its protection of citizens private affairs.

  259. Yet another reason by JohnnyGTO · · Score: 0, Troll

    to say FUCK YOU CALIFORNIA and don't move over here you LOSERS!

    --
    Si vis pacem, para bellum! For evil to succeed good men need only do nothing!
    1. Re:Yet another reason by JohnnyGTO · · Score: 1

      Yay my first trollllll!! Well I was a bit hot about this but having lived in Canada half my young life (born there) and the US the latter I will ask that the Canada MIND ITS OWN FLIPPIN BUSINESS.

      --
      Si vis pacem, para bellum! For evil to succeed good men need only do nothing!
  260. People's Republic of California by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
    Horse Hockey

    Ever the ones that are full of it Hockey (shit). California already collects 16 billion a year off of motorists, 18 cents a gallon, but the funny thing is they only spend about 4.4 billion of it on roads and transportation. So exactly what is the problem here?

    Boo hoo we don't have enough money we need more for the roads.

    It's like a kid coming home from school complaining he didn't have enough money for lunch to his parents, but they come to find out instead of buying lunch, he is spending his lunch money on comic books instead.

    1. Re:People's Republic of California by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Even worse: knowing how California does things, this will be an ADDITIONAL tax, not an "instead of" tax.

      And most of the new tax income will disappear down whatever toilet the old tax vanishes down already, and somehow the budget will be even more cramped next year, and gov't admins everywhere will become more top-heavy.

      The problem with taxes of any sort is that they can always find ways to increase taxes when they run out of money, regardless of whether they used it properly or blew it on the gov't equivalent of comic books. Unlike the rest of us, who when we run out of money, have to [*gasp*] STOP SPENDING.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  261. Re:Tax by gas consumption, not mass, dumbass. by stmfreak · · Score: 1, Interesting
    Let's try increasing the basic taxes instead of layering additional confusing taxes on everything:
    1. they already tax by weight in the sales tax since raw material has a direct cost.

    2. taxing by mass of the vehicle would inappropriately hit those who don't drive much or have managed to buy a conservative car for commuting and a gas guzzler for when they really need to haul ten sheets of plywood home from home despot.

    3. the annual licensing fee is a joke. It's completely unrelated to usage, wear, etc. so it's the wrong place for this. Plus a high licensing fee results in... you guessed it, unlicensed vehicles.

    4. Gas taxes are the best place for usage taxes. Guzzlers would get hit extra hard, as you'd hope based on their mass. Not only that, but the feedback is regular and persistent... and enforcement is unavoidable, pay or don't drive.

      Of course, it's also going to be the most opposed because it hits everyone and no one can get out of it.

      Or maybe it's because the citizenry knows the government is horribly inefficient and a gas tax would soon be followed by a hike to the sales tax, the annual license tax, road usage taxes, rinse, repeat.

      We need to repeal the government and privatize the roads.
    --
    These opinions guaranteed or your money back.
  262. It can be done WITHOUT new tech measures by ElForesto · · Score: 1

    When you go to register the car, they can read the odometer and assess mileage based on the difference in reading between registrations. Doesn't sound very difficult at all to do it that way.

    Then again, I suppose you don't get to prop up Silicon Valley with something that simplistic.

    --
    There is a difference between "insightful" and "inciteful" other than spelling.
  263. I am an asshole by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    I didn't read your comment. I tried to cancel about half a second after I hit submit, while the page still hadn't loaded, but apparently slashdot managed to store the comment to the database. Suffice to say I am a dipshit.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  264. Unreasonable search? by RoboProg · · Score: 1

    Sounds like an unreasonable search to me. Not that Big Brother, Inc. gives a rat's rear end about the constitution anymore, except perhaps when caught with both hands a little too deeply in the cookie jar.

    America: it was nice while it lasted.

    --
    Yow! I'm supposed to have a plan?
  265. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Our neighborhood library went from being open 30 hours per week to being open for 4 hours on Wednesday. Overnight. I got out of an overdue fine by crying.

    Well, what do you do in 3rd grade?

  266. Re:Gas taxes?? (Re:Odometer) by okigan · · Score: 1

    Now I am glad to see this posted.
    The only thing I dont understand is
    this is not stated louder by everybody.

    I mean on average the distance traveled
    is VERY much proportional to the gasoline
    consumed. So if one [CA] wants to tax
    according to mileage, add tax to gas.

    The only reason i see for the "GSP tax"
    is that they need another place to milk
    the same cow (umm, no pun intended), since
    gas taxes are already to high. Paying
    30-50$ per gas stop is a bit of a sticker
    shock (for me at least).

  267. Re:Gas guzzlers & work vehicles & Movie St by ke6 · · Score: 1

    I'm thinking of people who are independent contractors of such. People with their own tree trimming business, roofers, pizza delivery boys(admittedly, they should not be driving a 1 ton crew cab for that!)

    And probably my own mentality, of not wanting the state to know how much gas I use for work, and then for my own pleasure.

  268. Re:Gas guzzlers & work vehicles & Movie St by LemonFire · · Score: 1

    Well living in California I'd think that any guvernor trying to add additional taxes on cars will have a short lived career.

    We Californians love our cars a little bit too much than is good for us.

    -- Vote for Cowboy Neal, say NO to taxes on SIGs...

  269. This makes no sense by quintessent · · Score: 1

    Heavy cars use more gas and damage the road more.

    Cars that use less gas are better for the environment. Remember that tax break many states give hybrid cars to encourage people to buy them?

    The state realizes hybrid owners are saving too much in gas taxes, so they propose to put a GPS in every car.

    This makes no sense.

    If you really think hybrid drivers are getting too good of a deal, then reduce the hybrid tax break.

    Remember, California, we want more efficient cars on the road, not less.

  270. If only.. by DrNibbler · · Score: 1

    Looking at the comments between the privacy concerns and the technical issues with GPS people on /. have valid concerns about this. If only someone would invent a device that could be intregrated into a car that would track the amount of miles it has traveled.....

    --
    Sean.OutaHere()
  271. but that's how it already works by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    Taxing people based on how much they drive is a good idea (because as it stands, the costs of driving are highly externalized -- e.g. the people getting the benefit from driving more are not necessarily the ones paying for it)

    The people who drive more pay more. Gas taxes are a fixed price per gallon, so if you buy more gallons, you pay more tax. This is essentially a "mileage tax", modified with a discount for people who have efficient cars and an extra surcharge for people with inefficient SUVs.

    I don't see why tracking actual mileage would be better. Gas usage is both a good and anonymous stand-in for mileage, as it is directly related, and has the additional benefit of encouraging resource conservation.

  272. Re:adrger by nbowman · · Score: 1

    Sounds like another pain in the ass to avoid when filling up my motorcycle. On Topic though, Fuck paying by the mile. A 400 lb motorcycle doesnt wear away the road as quickly as a 2500 lb car doesnt wear the road as quickly as a 7500 lb Humvee etc. Making Pay by mile reasonably fair would be more complicated than its worth, just up the gas tax if they need (ha!) more revenue.

  273. No... by hummassa · · Score: 1

    You'll rev the odometer just before going to the dealer, so you'll sell a "gold condition" 10k mi car to him.

    --
    It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048
  274. I have said this before by hummassa · · Score: 1

    it's a computer, live in my car, was paid with my money? I can hack it. Indetectably.

    --
    It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048
  275. Bwahwahwah... uninformed. by hummassa · · Score: 1

    So that you'll know: down here in Brasil we have a place called Planalto Central that has roughly the area of three to five Texas (it's basically one-third of our country, that in turn is bigger than continental US). It's one big arenite-basalt rock. No seismic earthquakes, the only (less than 3 richter) localized tremors are terrain accomodation, not seismic activity. No volcanos, no quakes. AT ALL.

    --
    It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048
  276. What to do when the signal is blocked by gilesjuk · · Score: 1

    It's GPS, it requires line of sight. It could be very simple to block the signal out and drive around for free.

    They will also need to monitor you entering various parts of the cities and then do a cross-reference to your travel data. So they might as well just have a congestion charge system as used in London and save everyone the cost of messing up their cars by fitting overpriced GPS hardware (can you say monopoly).

  277. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

    Yes, because Christians only vote for Republicans...

  278. If they did this... by jonwil · · Score: 1

    They should also make the GPS feed available (in some way that doesnt allow someone to mess with it and defeat the system) so that people can plug in things like in-car navigation or whatever.
    After all, what is the point of having a car with one government mandated GPS for this and a second GPS reciever for in-car navigation.

  279. propaganda award for you by gomel · · Score: 1

    I'm tired of hearing that rich people are necessary so that poor people can have jobs. You bought into the neo-liberal propaganda, big time.

    What is needed for job creation is capital and capital mostly is borrowed. You can have a well functioning economy where the whole capital comes from savings of what you would call "poor" or middle income people and is allocated through the banking system.

    No ultra-rich investors are necessary.

    --
    Fight Frist Psoting!
    Browse Slashdot with 'Newest First'!
    1. Re:propaganda award for you by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      So, leaving your socialist dreamworld out of it for a moment... How many poor people do you know that are generating jobs?

    2. Re:propaganda award for you by gomel · · Score: 1

      "socialist dreamworld"

      Do you want to insult me? Do you feel superior when you insult people?

      Answering your question: MANY.

      1) option one: it's called self-employment. Using your own money in your own small-business. They create their own jobs.

      2) option two: everybody who is saving money in the bank is generating jobs per definition of investment. savings => credit => investment

      The key fallacy in your world view (by this I mean the way you believe that the world works) is that the economy can not exist and work without rich people, because only they can generate jobs. This leads to the immediate conclusion, that bigger wealth disparities are benefitial because they create more jobs.

      That exclusive claim is false. All that is really needed are people willing to save their money and entrepreneurs with ideas for investment. None of the person playing these two roles needs to be really, badly rich. The investors can be poor people saving their money in current accounts. The banking sector does a good job of converting these short-term savings into long-term credits for entrepreneurs.

      I can not provide you with a direct connection between a chosen poor person and their financing of a huge company that employs thousands of people, precisly because the connection is obstructed by the way the capitalist system works. But that does not mean that such a connection does not exist.

      OTOH, I am sure that you can list a few big owners of big companies. It's easy to memorise these connections, precisly because they are straight forward and less numerous. Yet any of them is a smaller investor that Calpers, an investment fund which cumulates the savings of millions of people. Calpers is THE job creator.

      Let me restate my point: Rich people are not the sole creators of jobs in the economy. There is no need worship them for it. Please stop propagating such a personality cult. You and I do not own them nothing and they do not need our protection.

      --
      Fight Frist Psoting!
      Browse Slashdot with 'Newest First'!
    3. Re:propaganda award for you by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      1) option one: it's called self-employment. Using your own money in your own small-business. They create their own jobs.

      Yes, and some of us start poor. But most either become richer and start employing others or eventually give up and get employed by someone that is richer than us that had better luck. My statement stands. Poor people don't employ people. They may be self-employed but that's not the same as giving jobs to others. Rich people do that.

      2) option two: everybody who is saving money in the bank is generating jobs per definition of investment. savings => credit => investment

      And relatively rich people usually end up borrowing money to make more money. It's not impossible, but few poor people get business loans because they are a credit risk. So even though the money saved by a bunch of poor people makes credit available, it's usually the relatively rich that actually put that money to use, invest it in their idea, and employ others.

      The key fallacy in your world view (by this I mean the way you believe that the world works) is that the economy can not exist and work without rich people, because only they can generate jobs. This leads to the immediate conclusion, that bigger wealth disparities are benefitial because they create more jobs.

      No, of course not. It's not that bigger wealth disparities are beneficial. But it's a recognition that wealth disparities will always exist.

      That exclusive claim is false. All that is really needed are people willing to save their money and entrepreneurs with ideas for investment.

      And that depends on people having enough money to save in the first place (most poor people don't) and also depends on banks making high-risk loans to low-income entrepreneurs--something that is also unlikely.

      None of the person playing these two roles needs to be really, badly rich. The investors can be poor people saving their money in current accounts. The banking sector does a good job of converting these short-term savings into long-term credits for entrepreneurs.

      But only people with some amount of collateral are going to get loans from a bank. The poor sure aren't. I'm not saying that anyone has to be filthy rich like Bill Gates, but the rich are not the enemy.

      Let me restate my point: Rich people are not the sole creators of jobs in the economy. There is no need worship them for it. Please stop propagating such a personality cult

      I do not worship them and I do not claim they are the sole creators of jobs in the economy. But you are denying reality if you don't accept that they are the major creators of jobs in the economy.

  280. California tax based on how much you drive by chawly · · Score: 1

    GPS in new cars to calulate the tax you owe ? Second-hand car prices are going to go up - sell your used car in California !

    --
    How many beans make five, anyhow ? ... Charles Walmsley
  281. Meanwhile, in Britain... by payndz · · Score: 1
    A very similar scheme was proposed recently here in the UK, using GPS to charge drivers what would essentially be a toll per mile.

    This being Britain, of course, it would doubtless be levied in addition to the existing car tax and fuel tax (and congestion charges if you drive into London) instead of replacing them. And they'd probably make you pay to have the damn transponder fitted to your car in the first place - and then charge VAT on top of it!

    --
    You must think in Russian.
  282. Why is this a bad idea? by EkkiEkkiShiwaddle · · Score: 1
    Could anybody please explain to me why this is a bad idea?

    I'd even pay MORE for such a system, where I would only pay for my car, my insurance, the gas I use and the miles I drive. No more taxes, road taxes, car taxes and whatever other taxes they impose on me/us right now!

  283. Connecticut does. by Gadgetfreak · · Score: 1

    Don't confuse the will of California with the will of the USA.

    Several years ago, Connecticut abandoned all toll booths in favor of a gas tax. Gas isn't as cheap as surrounding states, but there's no money wasted on the tollbooth infrastructure. Or GPS units.

    --
    "No fair, you changed the outcome by measuring it!" - Professor Hubert J. Farnsworth
  284. Re:Gas taxes?? (Re:Odometer) by Zugot · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You forget that when you raise gasoline prices, you are raising prices for everyone. Think about the companies with the huge fleets of cars and trucks. This will get very expensive.

    --
    -- Bryan
  285. Gasoline Taxes by prescot6 · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't taxing gasoline accomplish the same thing? If you tax gas, then you're effectively taxing people based on the amount that they drive.

  286. Why spend money when a tax system already exists! by sxmjmae · · Score: 1

    Why spend all this money when you could effect all drivers at once - raise the gas tax!

    That way if you drive a big H2 or SUV then you pay more tax per mile you drive.

    If the truck drivers and movers of industry bitch then offer to send a 'rebate' check for all the receipts they summit on a yearly basic (that way the government gets the money and collects the interest while they hold it). This did not really work in Canada as it cost the highly efficient government bureaucrats more to process the receipts then they could collect in interest - so they kept the price the same and stopped offering rebates.

    --
    My Sig indicates the end of the comment I posted.
  287. What's next to tax? Sex??? by still-a-geek · · Score: 1

    Next up for taxation is sex. Soon the state of California will put a "special" chip in or around our groin area to determine how much sex we have and tax us accordingly. For a lot of us geeks, we'll come out shining as we are like Vulcans - sex once every seven years. Unless you're a chronic masturbater, then you're in trouble. Ha!

    But seriously, what a ridiculous proposal! Why doesn't the state of California propose more public transportation? My sister lives in San Diego, and the public transportation is aweful compared to other big metropolitan areas like Chicago or New York.

    I go out to San Diego about 3 times a year. Each time, I see a new road extension being built or the highways widened. They should be be expanding their Coaster rail system (or similar). This also makes sense since California is worried about keeping pollution down.

    --

    "Happily lived Mankind in the peaceful Valley of Ignorance." -- Hendrik Willem Van Loon
  288. This is in place for semi's already by tazanator · · Score: 1

    For years the trucking industery has had this in operation ... all the domed cans on the roof's of semi's track the semi to within 3 feet. The data is feed back to the company that tabs up how many miles the truck moved in each state that figure is than multiplied by the road use tax (from .31 to .55 (ohio i belive) per mile, depending on state) this is why truck stops don't charge semi's fuel tax. Instead the charge for how many miles, it was forced when trucks started fueling in a cheaper state and driving thru another without buying fuel. Often trucks fuel in indiana or pennsyvania in order to avoid giving Ohio any money. States started to see that fuel taxes were going down and discovered that peopel would by the cheapest gas (DUH!!) even if it ment from out of state.

    --
    I'm told you are what you eat, does that mean I can be you by tomorrow with some A1?
  289. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really? wonderful! heck i'll go out and bring a couple more u-hauls from out of state here to help the exodus. If we can get enough of them to leave I might actually be able to afford a nice sized home here in my lifetime.

  290. Re:Sensationalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    While it may be true that this has a very low chance of becoming law, the story and discussion still has value, and holds interest because it is a window into the evolution of the laws that govern our automobiles. However California goes, so goes the country.

    This stuff COULD be passed without the people's consent unless the people are informed BEFORE it gathers enough steam to roll over any last minute dissent.

    There are already powerful arguments against this ill concieved measure:

    • Gas guzzlers should perhaps be encouraged to buy more fuel efficient vehicles. Gas guzzling vehicles are generally heavier and may cause more road wear an tear than lighter, more fuel efficient vehicles
    • Probable technical difficulties in implementation.
    • Cost of implementation and enforcement
    • Last but not least: People don't want the government to know their whereabouts at all times. Although some ( idiots ) may say that those with nothing to hide have nothing to fear, they have no idea what they are talking about. The more government knows about you, the more able they are to find patterns and use the data they have to make generalisations. They will be able to form profiles of 'criminals' that will let them focus their harassment more efficiently on a few 'likely offenders'. There will be many innocents who fit the 'profile', and they will resent the high level of scrutiny they recieve, but there will be less people resentful than there would be if the high level of police scrutiny were applied in a less targeted manner.

      By targeting surveilance and harassment at the 'suspicious community', the numbers of the 'suspicious and henceforth surveiled and harassed' will never be great enough to defend themselves at the polls. Ever higher levels of rights trampling will be tolerated by society as the police armed with better and better data become better and better at directing their harassment at those who fit their profile of 'likely criminal'.

      It will eventually become popularly known which people are harassed, and what data gets one put on the list. When the police intrusion and rights curtailment imposed on the 'suspicious' becomes unbearable, people will avoid participating in any 'suspicious activity' for fear of thereby becoming a second class citizen. We would be technically free to be suspicious, but only a fool would risk becoming considered 'suspicious' by excersizing them. Sure one COULD critisize the government, but then you might be put on an FBI list of possible terrorists. Better to keep mum. Wouldn't want the police showing up at work every other day to 'question me' - that could get someone fired! And of course any criminal worth their salt would be able to use surveilance to perform misdirection - for instance, they could loan their car to a friend to generate an alibi for a murder.
  291. It's a good thing by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

    that they don't institute this in texas, everyone in the state would be broke within a month.

    --
    ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
  292. Mod parent up! by shatteredsilicon · · Score: 1

    The man has a point. Putting all additional tax on fuel would have multiple benefits: 1) No additional hardware to put into cars, no doubt at the vehicle owner's expense. 2) Fuel-efficient cars are encouraged while gas guzzling SUVs are discouraged. 3) Avoiding tax on fuel is much more difficult than hacking a GPS tracking device. Bottom line - it would keep things simple. Alternatives would totally needlessly complicate things.

  293. Easier ways? by blanks · · Score: 0, Redundant

    With any problem I always try to find the most resonable and the simplest way to handle it. Realiticlly wouldnt it be easier to just add this tax onto the sale of gas? I mean christ your not going to be driving anywhere unless you buy gas, and Im willing to bet most people will not be jumping accross the cali border just to get gas. The only reason I can think of why they wouldnt want to do this is the fact people would realize how much extra they are paying to drive, and start driving less and less as this tax goes up, so they only way to milk consumers money is through an illusion of a tax they pay each year. Or theirs other reasons as to why they would want to track cars, and im willing to bet the "driving tax" is the only way they can get a revenue stream for these other reasons.

  294. Re:Little Control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    You do, in fact, have complete control. You have the choice to live somewhere else and take whatever consequences such a move would imply.

    Perhaps if there were higher gas taxes, the bite out of your wallet would be enough to outweigh your attachment to the area where you live now. Maybe then you would choose to move to an area where you contribute less to Suburban Sprawl.

  295. Skynet by arakis · · Score: 1

    It must be called Skynet in honor of the "Governor." I'm sure CA can get a liscense if there is a copyright issue on the term.

  296. They can tax my tanker truck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Okay - ditch the GPS, and get a gasoline tanker truck and sell gas to all your friends.. They don't give you a special sticker if you don't buy gas so the police can stop you for not paying tax right? Problem solved - lower taxes too...

  297. CA GAS TAXES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FUEL TAXES, CALIFORNIA 2004

    Fed /CA /TotalTax
    Gasoline (1) 18.4/18/36.4
    Diesel Fuel (2) 24.4/18/42.4
    Ethanol (3) 13.15/9/22.15
    Methanol (3) 12.35/9/21.35
    Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) (4) 13.6/6/19.6
    Compressed Natural Gas (CNG)(4)
    (per hundred cubic feet) 4.854/7/11.854
    Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) (4) 11.9/6/17.9
    Aviation Gasoline 19.4/18/37.4
    Aviation Jet Fuel 21.9/2/23.9
    Ethanol-Blended Gasoline (1)
    10%=13.2
    7.7%=14.396
    5.7%=15.436
    18
    10%=3 1.2
    7.7%=32.396
    5.7%=33.436

    Updated July 2004

  298. NOTES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Notes:

    1. The following gasoline applications are exempt from excise taxes: From federal excise tax: commercial fishing boats; state government; non-profit educational organizations; United Nations; exported or used in foreign trade. From state excise tax: non-highway use (farming, construction, etc.); military aviation or marine; foreign governments; exported out of state; public transit is exempt from 6 cents per gallon of the tax.

    1. The following diesel fuel applications are exempt from excise taxes: From federal excise tax: farming; state government; non-profit educational organizations; school buses; intracity buses; intercity buses are exempt from 17 cents per gallon and railroads are exempt from 20 cents per gallon of the tax. From state excise tax: non-highway use; farming; foreign governments; exported out of state; public transit; school buses; railroads.

    1. Rates for ethanol and methanol apply to fuel formulations containing not more than 15% gasoline. Federal and state excise tax exemptions applicable to gasoline generally apply to these fuels.

    1. Federal and state excise tax exemptions applicable to gasoline generally apply to these fuels. In lieu of paying California excise taxes on these fuels at the above rates, operators of vehicles using these fuels can purchase annual flat-rate stickers at $36 to $168/vehicle (depending on vehicle weight).

  299. It's not so new... by macromegas · · Score: 1

    Germany is about to start a similar system for trucks soon, called toll collect that already got the local big brother award back in 2002. Once such a system is in action for trucks, no doubt it'll be only a matter of time untill police will push to have it implemented in cars too. Pretty orwellian.

    --
    Life has become the ideology of its absence - T.W. Adorno
  300. Hello - Raise the Friggin Gas Tax by clickster · · Score: 1

    Yes, the problem is real and they need to find a solution, but this isn't it. What about bi-annual inspections that look at your odometer readings or something non-invasive like that. If that's unacceptable to them or to the people, then they need to find something else. Or simply raise the gas tax accordingly. That's the best way to do it. Let's do some math. We'll keep simple, rounded numbers.

    Gas Price (Tax Incl.)- $1.00 / gallon
    Gas Tax - $.40
    Car A - Guzzler - 20 mi/gal - 10 gallon tank
    Car B - Hybrid - 40 mi / gal - 10 gallon tank

    After 400 miles of driving, the guzzler has paid $20 in gas, while the hybrid has only paid $10.
    Now, as more hybrids hit the road, up the gas tax to $.60 and gas is no $1.20. After another 400 miles, the guzzler has paid $24.00 while the hybrid has paid $12.00.

    So the guzzler is paying twice as much of the tax increase as the hybrid. It increases the revenue for the state while continuing to encourage people to drive hybrids. There are already hybrid SUVs on the roads and, whithin the next few years, you'll probably see hybrid versions of most vehicle-types. Hybrid owners will complain that they're now paying more taxes, but the truth is, they're still paying significantly less in taxes than they would be if there had been no tax increase and they didn't own a hybrid. The people who own gas guzzlers are still disproportionately taxed - as they should be since most gas guzzlers weigh more and put more wear and tear on the roads (at least until we get more hybrid SUVs) and they create far more pollution.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become less powerful than you could possibly imagine.
  301. I for one.... by isotope23 · · Score: 1

    do not welcome the Calizonia overlords!

    Please leave my state. All of the CA. asshats moving here to AZ. are going to fuck up the gun ownership laws, smoking laws etc.

    I do not want to be a mini california, and frankly you guys are nuts.

    --
    Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
  302. Adapt the I-PASS by jzarling · · Score: 1

    Why not adapt the I-Pass system from Illinois Tollway, its an existing system and the cost of development would be alot less than a new one.

    Even though I agree that we as a nation drive to much. We dont have the public transportation systems in place to really get over our car addiction. The American dream of a house in the burbs, and the idea that we are entitled to this, has essentially doomed us to this fate.
    This proposition will probably be defeated by public opinion. Its a tax that will adversly effect the drivng poor who must commute long distances for jobs that have moved out of the urban centers.

    --
    It is better to be the hammer than the anvil.
  303. what does it go to pay for? by ProfBooty · · Score: 1

    Is all that tax money used to pay for road maintenance or does it go into the general treasury?

    Some states here have sales taxes dedicated for transportation, but more often than not the legislature co-opts it for the general treasury.

    --
    Bring back the old version of slashdot.
    1. Re:what does it go to pay for? by EnglishDude · · Score: 1

      Not sure. Considering fuel tax makes up 6% of the govt's budget, I'd suspect some goes back to roads but most don't. I don't know I'm afraid - did a bit of googling, but there's a massive response of websites against fuel tax, so hard to find :) Here's a vaugely interesting PDF document about the effects of fuel tax on the general populace, you might want to read it or not. Not really revelant to this subject tho.

      Oh yeah we do have vehicle excise duty (more generally called "road tax") in which we have to pay a lump sum per year (depending on engine size) and get a "tax disc" and display it on the car. I currently pay £110 per year (the minimum possible for old cars) but it goes up to £160 IIRC. The money raised from that goes back to the roads. Lorries et al pay much more but I don't know the figures for them. Anyway my point is that I think VED pays for the roads while fuel tax doesn't.

  304. OFFTOPIC: Sig Comment by gearry · · Score: 1

    " Every year during my review, I just pray the words 'slashdot.org' aren't mentioned."

    I just had to say that your sig both made me smile, and a little nervous. I think I know how you feel.

    I am at work now.

    --
    like g-a-r-y, only different
  305. Plus side ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... maybe now they'll stop sending me notices to register my car in California, even though I moved out of state over two YEARS ago!!

  306. Good one by Safety+Cap · · Score: 1
    You know, the Instituto de Pesquisas Tecnológicas do Estado de São Paulo Identified 23 seismicgenic zones in Brazil:
    1. - Boa Vista SZ, related to the Guiana-Central Belt, between the Caroni and Maecuru blocks;
    2. - Cruzeiro do Sul SZ, along the Serra do Divisor and Acre suture zones, between the Juruá Block and the Peruvian subandine domain;
    3. - Manaus SZ, at the Rio Negro, Madeira and Médio Tapajós suture zones, and the Japurá, Maecuru and Juruena blocks;
    4. - Belém SZ, in the Belém Block, with some influence of the Amapá and Gurupi suture zones;
    5. - Aripuanã SZ, on the Rondônia Belt, between the Juruena and Parecis blocks;
    6. - Itacaiúnas SZ, near the Central Pará suture zone, between the Belém and Araguacema blocks;
    7. - São Luís SZ, near the Gurupi suture zone;
    8. - Sobral SZ, along the Granja suture zone, between the São Luís and Ceará blocks;
    9. - Pacajus SZ, adjacent to the Jaguaribe suture zone in Southeastern Ceará;
    10. - Açu SZ, practically restricted to the Rio Grande Block, between its junction with the Pernambuco Block and the Patos suture zone;
    11. - Caruaru SZ, restricted to the Pernambuco Block, which southern and southeastern boundaries seem to be extension of the Salvador suture belt;
    12. - Cuiabá SZ, restricted to the Pantanal Block, between the Guaporé and Coxim suture zones;
    13. - Porangatu SZ, in the Porangatu Block, between the Porto Nacional and Ceres suture zones;
    14. - Passos SZ, on and adjacent to the Itumbiara and Alterosa suture zones;
    15. - Paraguaçu SZ, in the Serrinha Block;
    16. - Jequitinhonha SZ, along the Abre-Campo suture zone and the Governador Valadares Lineament; at the junction of the Brasília and Vitória blocks;
    17. - Paraopebas SZ, near the southern border of the Brasília Block;
    18. - Ribeirão Preto SZ, in the Paraná Block, between the Ribeirão Preto and Presidente Prudente suture zones;
    19. - Presidente Prudente SZ, also in the Paraná Block, between the Ribeirão Preto, Presidente Prudente and Três Lagoas suture zones;
    20. - Pinhal SZ, in the São Paulo Block, near the junction of the Ribeirão Preto and Alterosa suture zones, and coincident to the Moji-Guaçu Uplift;
    21. - Cananéia SZ, along the Ubatuba suture zone and the coastal flexure related to the Santos Basin;
    22. - Cunha SZ, at the Ubatuba and Abre-Campo suture zones, between the Brasília, Vitória and São Paulo blocks, as well as at the domain of the Mantiqueira Uplift, and the flexure zone related to the Santos Basin;
    23. - Santos SZ, near the Ubatuba suture zone, at the western border of Santos and Campos offshore basins and the São Paulo Plateau.

    So P, S, Rayleigh, and Love waves (i.e., seismic waves) aren't transmitted from those seismic zones through your central plateau (basalt)? Maybe the magic Smurfs keep the waves out, much like the smoke from the smoking sections stays out of the non-smoking sections of the open-room restaurants.

    Oh, wait, you said that seismic waves are due to "terrain accomodation" instead of "earthquakes." Maybe that has something to do with the earthquake weather y'all get down there?

    Damn, I wish I'd known that before I got my Geophysics degree. Oh well, I guess I can just go ahead and go into the glamorous world of fast food.

    --
    Yeah, right.
  307. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by Thagg · · Score: 2, Informative
    What most people outside of California (and most inside California too, as people here have the average attention span of a three-day-old kitten) fail to realize is that Prop 13 was really the result of a series of California Supreme Court decisions in Serrano v. Priest a couple of years prior to it. That Supreme Court decision said that education was a state mandate, and that all schools must be funded equally. This was a dramatic departure from the status quo ante, which let the property taxes of relatively wealthy areas fund very good public schools in those areas, and left the poorer areas with significantly inadequate funding.

    These court decisions, and the various legislative responses to them, led people in the relatively wealthy areas (read "people who care enough to vote") to limit their property taxes dramatically. In the end, school funding is equal -- yes -- but equal at a very low level. People remember the tax cut and the 2/3 vote necessary to raise taxes, but they don't remember or even know the political environment that caused it to happen.

    Thad Beier

    --
    I love Mondays. On a Monday, anything is possible.
  308. Odometer? by Bob9113 · · Score: 1

    Sorry if I'm repeating something already said by someone else, but, umm, don't cars already have a "distance travelled" device that must, by law, not be tampered with? I think it's called the odometer. WTF do they need a GPS for? That just reports location - calculating distance is a side effect. Were they just trying to come up with a more expensive way to track something that is already being tracked by every car in the state, or are they, idunno, trying to slip a tracking device through on the back of seemingly innocuous legislation?

    Tin foil hat? No. Either they're stupid and wasting money (for not using the odometer), or they're lying.

  309. What does senator Hatch mean by grolaw · · Score: 1

    When he says he is in favor of amending the Constitution to permit the foreign born to run for president so long as they have been citizens for 20 years and been residents for 20 years?

    The ONLY person that applies to is Arnold. There is just no way that Henry Kissinger could run

    Tru Googleing Hatch and Amendment and see how many times the good Mormon from Utah proposes this amendmen.

    The public record prohibits dispute where: (1) Hatch proposes the amendment; and, (2) Hatch supports Arnold's candidacy; and, (3) Hatch is openly biased towards his Church.

    Incoherent? Inarticulate? Not where Mormons operate with the authority of God in their public policy pronouncements.

    Dispute the facts.

    1. Re:What does senator Hatch mean by Trespass · · Score: 1

      Okay, when you said Karl I thought you meant Malden and was upset that 'The Streets of San Francisco' still hadn't been released on DVD. I know I am.

  310. Insightful not troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Moderators on crack

    1. Re:Insightful not troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A troll is when someone intentially posts something to get people to flame him. I think this is just a political rant. (I guess it would be in the form of satire?)

  311. Nonsense Quote: by Domo-Sun · · Score: 1
    • the state will not have the ability, or desire, to monitor drivers' traveling habits...
      --[James Whitty]
      they couldn't tell where these people have been. That's just not going to be there," [Joan Borucki] said.

      --http://www.ocregister.com/ocr/2004/08/19/secti on s/news/news/article_208035
    Obviously they can track driving habits, and admittedly that's why they want to use it. Now you can call it a "glorified compass", and you can even have the easter bunny install it, but that doesn't change the fact that it tracks your global position. That's what a global positioning system does.
  312. Re:Yeah, I already got the letter about this one.. by MonkeyCookie · · Score: 1

    Interestingly enough, I've lived in California for most of my life and I've never experienced a single earthquake. So it's not like everywhere in California is having earthquakes all the time.

    I wouldn't mind experiencing a mild one just to see what it feels like.

  313. Intelligent? by grolaw · · Score: 1

    It's OVER, man. Game Over. It's OVER, man. Game Over. It's OVER, man. Game Over.

  314. What? by grolaw · · Score: 1

    The Streets of San Francisco are out on DVD?

    No way!

  315. Re:Gas taxes?? (Re:Odometer) by adamfranco · · Score: 1

    Think about the companies with the huge fleets of cars and trucks.

    Oh, the poor companies with huge fleets of cars and trucks! Their thousands of miles of driving and beating down the roads with their heavy loads should really get a break. We should take up a collection for them. A bake sale, maybe.

    --
    "When ideology and theology couple, their offspring are not always bad but they are always blind." -- Bill Moyers
  316. Seriously ironic by one-egg · · Score: 1
    Let me get this straight...

    Schwarzenegger was elected largely because the people were angry about the vehicle tax. His first act in office was to roll the tax back to pre-Davis levels (despite the fact that the state was in the red).

    Now, a year later, he's busily raising...VEHICLE TAXES!

    You gotta admire his panache.

  317. Hackers of the world unite! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    GPS jammers, anyone?

  318. Corporate 'taxes' by Kelsen · · Score: 1

    For what it's worth, there's effectively no such thing as corporate taxes; corporations charge as much money as they wish to make the profit they desire. If you increase the tax they have to pay, they increase the price of the goods or services they produce commensurately. Reducing the taxes they pay will have a reducing effect on prices as well, albeit somewhat slower - the 'float', so to speak. This holds true for monopolistic industries as well as those which have decent competition, because generally each competing company is paying the same level of taxes.

  319. the wealthy don't spend on material things by Khashishi · · Score: 1

    They buy services. They buy people. They trade intangible things. They buy companies. I don't think they spend that much on material things. A flat sales tax would necessarily tax these immaterial things or it would be horribly regressive.

  320. Look up again by hummassa · · Score: 1

    Look up again the size, frequencyt and intensity of the seismic activity IN THE MENTIONED 23 areas. Ohh. BTW, I lived 4 years inside the Paraguaçu zone hehehe... in the city of Paraguaçu (the center of it) itself. And, guess what? No quakes whatsoever in four long years.

    Just FYI, only 13, 14, and 17 (it's Paraopeba, not Paraopebas, and it's not close to Brasilia, it's even closer (200+km) to Belo Horizonte ... where I do live now) are in the Basaltic plate.

    Now, what earthquake weather? This is interesting, because I have never seen any reference to it.

    --
    It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048
    1. Re:Look up again by Safety+Cap · · Score: 1
      And, guess what? No quakes whatsoever in four long years.
      What types of geophones were you using, and what was the sample resolution on your recording device?
      --
      Yeah, right.
  321. I was hoping by hummassa · · Score: 1

    You would answer my question, but... hehehe... I will admit my error:

    "no quakes that could be felt without using instruments whatsoever in four years"

    as in... I could not feel any quakes in four years, but I guess people living in LA could. And I was in the center of one of the 23 seismic zones in my country. Ah, but if you'd like: 6 months after I moved back to Belo Horizonte, they registered an 2.9 richter quake in my old town. Yes, they do register one -- each 20 years.

    --
    It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048
  322. Wrong government entity by Engineer-Poet · · Score: 1

    The Feds determine what is a car, a light truck or heavier vehicle for emissions and CAFE purposes. Yes, this means something can be classed as a truck by the Feds when determining its pollution limits and possible guzzler penalty, and as a car by your state government. Crazy, isn't it?

    1. Re:Wrong government entity by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Yeah, ridiculous. Never let it be said that one government agency is capable of doing a job by itself at any level, if two or more agencies could get their paws on its budget!!

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?