According to the energy economist Phil Verleger, a $1 tax on gasoline and diesel fuel would raise about $140 billion a year. If I had that money, I’d devote 45 cents of each dollar to pay down the deficit and satisfy the debt hawks, 45 cents to pay for new health care and 10 cents to cushion the burden of such a tax on the poor and on those who need to drive long distances.Yep... taxes are the great stumbling block of the American body politic. No taxes for health care. No taxes for energy security. No taxes even if it would reduce the Middle East terrorist threat. But no problem sending the kid from down the street to die in an endless "mission" in Iraq/Afghanistan. Crazy.
Such a tax would make our economy healthier by reducing the deficit, by stimulating the renewable energy industry, by strengthening the dollar through shrinking oil imports and by helping to shift the burden of health care away from business to government so our companies can compete better globally. Such a tax would make our population healthier by expanding health care and reducing emissions. Such a tax would make our national-security healthier by shrinking our dependence on oil from countries that have drawn a bull’s-eye on our backs and by increasing our leverage over petro-dictators, like those in Iran, Russia and Venezuela, through shrinking their oil incomes.
In sum, we would be physically healthier, economically healthier and strategically healthier. And yet, amazingly, even talking about such a tax is “off the table” in Washington. You can’t mention it. But sending your neighbor’s son or daughter to risk their lives in Afghanistan? No problem. Talk away. Pound your chest.
I am not sure what the right troop number is for Afghanistan; I need to hear more. But I sure know this: There is something wrong when our country is willing to consider spending more lives and treasure in Afghanistan, where winning is highly uncertain, but can’t even talk about a gasoline tax, which is win, win, win, win, win — with no uncertainty at all.
So, I ask yet again: Who are the real cheese-eating surrender monkeys in this picture?
Monday, September 28, 2009
Self Criticism
Here is a bit from a NY Times op-ed piece by Thomas Friedman that points out that most Americans are willing to sacrifice a fellow citizen in Iraq/Afghanistan but isn't willing to sacrifice even the tiniest amount of tax to make the US safe from petro-based terrorism. This is the great enigma of the US:
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment