Chat & Social > The Bar - General Chat
Petrol to RISE !!!!
Moose:
I heard they tied his kn***ers to big ben bell, I wish we could do the same to the present gov
baldrick:
Thanks for the show of support Daz.
I nearly spat out my meths when the first newsreader said 5p a litre...after that shock 5p a gallon doesn't seem so bad......well 'ish.
Ed
muddyweb:
OK.. far be it from me to defend the fuel price increases (I drive a 4 Litre V8 !), but compared to many countries in Europe, we are not as hard-up as we might believe.
The road tax for a Discovery in Denmark or Holland (for example) would make your fillings fall out in fright... the cost of TUV testing in Germany is scary too.
I'm all for cheaper fuel, but they *will* find somewhere else to get the money if they drop it.
If they did, then those of us who own more than one vehicle would be complaining at the £1000 road tax we have to pay a year.... You can't win. By applying tax to fuel, the people who use the roads most, pay more..... There is an element of fairness there.
The thing that *really* upsets me, is that a large proportion of the revenues from fuel and VED don't actually go into transport.... if they did, I wouldn't mind paying the tax quite so much
:?
datalas:
My point exactly tim.. or at least, my feelings... (I don't recall saying expressing them)
I'm fed up with being fed gobshite that the current policy to tax the bejesus out of car use, put speed cameras everywhere, congestion charges, toll roads and so on are either ""environmental" or "neccesary to pay for transport".
We have a laughable public transport system in this country, and since most of it is private and rather underfunded by public resources I don't think that much of the "road tax" (in whatever form it is collected) goes that way.. And since the last kyoto (sp?) accord was both [bollards] and not going to be achieved anyway, it's not an environmental act.
It's simply to get money into the coffers, fair enough. Only a) this is not what they say it's for and b) I'd like there to be an alternative. Currently I have *no* way to get to whereever I need to go than by car. I could walk the 30 or so miles into Manchester, but that's not too convienient. As for public transport, it is actually cheaper to buy, tax, test, insure, and drive a car into Manchester than it is to take the bus. The fact that driving would also save me 3 hours a day is purely co-incidental.
This government, just like the last one has everyone over a barrel, and all we can do to stop them is.. well vote for them and complain to ourselves over a lack of choice I suppose....
matthew:
It won't actually affect me that much now as my mileage has dropped right down, a tank of fuel lasts me 2-3 weeks normally. Until Feb this year though I was spending £150 - 200 a week on diesel :( Very soon all but one of our cars will be tax exempt :)
As for public transport, if I want to get to college 17 miles away by 9am by car I leave at 08:20, by train (station is 5mins walk) I would have to get a train at 07:05 and change trains in Blackburn. Guess I'll be sticking with the extra hour in bed :)
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