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Originally Posted by vid
Gas? Insurance? License renewal? Car washes? All the silly trinkets people buy for their cars? Car payments if you don't own it yet?
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All totaled $4375.61 last year, which is still considerably less than your $6000 figure. Not bad considering that includes the fuel gulped up by an aging, troublesome V6.
Quote:
Originally Posted by vid
Other costs, in addition to what car owners pay up-front, include Road paving, plowing, sweeping, line painting, traffic policing, accident response, investigation and clean-up, health care costs related to pollution and obesity, the toll on cities like mine that developed for cars instead of people and must now maintain much more infrastructure than a city with this many people ought to, the cost of federal government bailouts to car manufacturers to allow those companies to circumvent the principle of supply and demand, etc.
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While I agree with most of your ideas on road maintenance (personally I think your condo road ownership idea is brilliant), I do take issue with other points. First of all, roads are over-policed to begin with, and most of the time police only exist to hand out tickets to generate a revenue stream for the government. Cut policing, cut costs, make everyone happy. Secondly, the health care costs are endemic to a malfunctioning system that misallocates
all costs to begin with. If there was more private health insurance, then people would be made to pay the price for their bad driving and their lack of exercise.
Thirdly, I take issue with the idea that the bailouts were fundamentally bad. GM and Chrysler were forced into a corner by bad management and big unions which were strengthened by government union shop laws. Fine, a few missteps were made. But the collapse of those two companies would have been catastrophic for the Great Lakes manufacturing economy (not just direct job losses, but also indirect losses through bankruptcy of suppliers), and losing them would have meant a drastic reduction in competition, which would be bad for consumers further down the line. Toyota and Honda dealers already exploit the shit outta people, can you imagine what it would be like if they only had Ford to worry about? Furthermore, both companies have paid back most of their loans and are beginning to make some genuinely good products, which again benefits consumers. I'm normally more laissez-faire, but I think the economic benefits that resulted from the loans far outweighed any trivial costs.
I love how leftists are all in favour of subsidizing solar panel and wind turbine manufacturers, but throw their arms up when an auto manufacturer gets the same treatment.