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#31
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![]() "Dave Stadt" wrote in message m... wrote in message news:GpM_d.9280$GI6.1852@trnddc05... "Dude" wrote: Still, what complete idiotic, power hungry, stupid, short sighted etc. etc. etc. thinks user fees are a fix? I wittily replied: The complete idiotic, power hungry, stupid, short sighted etc. etc. etc. administration we elected. "Dude" retorted: Oh, let's not be partisan. Can't we agree both sides have demonstrated enough foolishness? To which I say: Not partisan, just the facts. In our democracy, we get the government we elect. If we elect morons, why are we surprised that they govern (and set FAA policy) moronically? If something other than a moron ran for public office I would gladly vote for them. The ultimate paradox of democracy. Only people unfit to have power put themselves forward to be elected and we give them the power. This debate on user fees is interesting and having gone through the same experience in Europe where the airlines are claiming that they subsidise GA, I know the way it going to turn out. What never gets taken into the math is the money spend by ordinary people through GA training themselves to be pilots which the airlines cherry pick. Imagine what it would be like if the airlines had to pay all the costs of pilot training from ab initio. The airlines get a really good deal from GA and rather than being subsidised by GA, I think GA subsidises the airlines. However the blind cannot see! cb |
#32
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![]() "Dave Stadt" wrote in message m... "Vaughn" wrote in message ... "Colin W Kingsbury" wrote in message link.net... Up here in Taxachusetts there's a long-standing feud over tolls on the Massachusetts Turnpike. The law that authorized the bond issue to build the pike said, tolls will be charged until the bonds are paid off, then the tolls shall end. Well, the bonds were paid off more than 10 years ago, but the tollbooths persist. Same deal here in Florida. Florida's turnpike was paid off about a decade ago, the promise was always that the tolls would go away when the bonds were paid. The reality was that they instead drastically increased the tolls. The basic lesson here is that there is no such thing as a temporary tax. Vaughn Same story in Illinois. Gentlemen, You guys fought the war of independence to get away from unfair taxation. why have you surrendered now? |
#33
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On Sat, 19 Mar 2005 03:34:38 -0000, Marty Shapiro
wrote: Has anyone ever taken the Massachussetts to court about keeping the tolls? Many years ago there was a 10 cent toll on the Southern State Parkway on Long Island, NY just before it reached the Cross County Parkway. One day they raised the toll to 25 cents. One of the commuters was a lawyer who looked up the statute authorizing the toll. The toll was supposed to go away once the parkway had been paid for. It had. He sued. The toll booth was removed. This is Massachusetts... Trust me, you really don't want to go there. |
#34
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![]() "Peter Clark" wrote in message ... On Sat, 19 Mar 2005 03:34:38 -0000, Marty Shapiro wrote: Has anyone ever taken the Massachussetts to court about keeping the tolls? This is Massachusetts... Trust me, you really don't want to go there. ....sorry, I was laughing so hard I couldn't type. Massachusetts courts? I suppose you mean the same one that found out that a 300-year-old state constitution written by THE PILGRIMS actually required the state to permit gay marriage. Whether gay marriage is right or wrong is an entirely different issue, but if they can find it in our constitution (which pre-dates the US one and is rooted in the Massachusetts General Court formed in 1691), then the constitution clearly means whatever they want it to mean, which is to say that it means nothing at all. I in fact narrowly favor gay marriage, but I am also opposed to gun control, and the Massachusetts constitution clearly endorses the right of the people to keep and bear arms (with no reference to the militia, and in fact legal scholars increasingly agree that the Founders intended the 2nd Amendment as an "individual right"). But in order for me to get a pistol permit in this state, I need to prove that I have a uniquely compelling need for it. The fact that I live in a neighborhood that is openly patrolled by a violent street gang with links to Al Qaeda is not by itself sufficient. So like I said, clearly the Constitution means whatever the legislature and courts, who are largely on the same side, want it to mean. -cwk. |
#35
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![]() wrote in message news:GpM_d.9280$GI6.1852@trnddc05... snip Not partisan, just the facts. In our democracy, we get the government we elect. If we elect morons, why are we surprised that they govern (and set FAA policy) moronically? I believe the cynics version of the quote is that "we get the government that we (collectively) deserve" Most people base their votes on prejudice, habit, image, and name recognition or contrived and diversionary issues like fear, abortion, gay marriage, or get tough law and order that have little real impact on voters real lives but make them feel they are deciding important issues. We allow ourselves to be seduced because we want to be seduced, it gives us the moral high ground that allows us to bitch later. Blue skies to all snip |
#36
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![]() Upon which I am happy to point out to "Dude": Actually, if you fill a couple of seats in a single engine piston airplane you are probably below Southwest's average fuel per occupied seat-mile by a good margin. That said, a $.01/gallon extra tax on aviation fuel will not cover the cost of the ATC system, which in any case is far more than an average of $20 per IFR flight. So Dude is saying: Now you have gone off the reservation. I never claimed it would. |
#37
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("Colin W Kingsbury" wrote)
snip . But in order for me to get a pistol permit in this state, I need to prove that I have a uniquely compelling need for it. The fact that I live in a neighborhood that is openly patrolled by a violent street gang with links to Al Qaeda is not by itself sufficient. So like I said, clearly the Constitution means whatever the legislature and courts, who are largely on the same side, want it to mean. Minnesota (The state where NOTHING is allowed) is a close second to Mass. As far as your street gangs go, I wonder if GW's "security" initiatives will ever get down to the local street level. GW has adopted a Wyatt Earp (clean up the West) mentality as far a terrorists go, and poof - no more attacks ....for now. We lived downtown(!!) for 5 years during the "Murder-apolis" years of the mid 90's, shootings and stabbings all around us. (Almost 100 murders per year. We past Miami, Boston and DC, a few more slayings and Detroit was catchable). Saw a banger reloading his gun while strolling through our parking lot one morning ...time to move. Ahhh, sterile suburban townhouse security :-) Loathing street gangs, fearing Gulags. Montblack |
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