It seems everyone is consuming more and more oil, me included.
At what point should the govt step in?
During the last oil crisis speed limits were introduced, CAFE (corporate average fuel economy) standards for cars were mandated, petrol was rationed.
Oil must be a big factor in most nations trade deficits.
Should the govt do anything to cut consumption by law - which would be painful and unpopular but beneficial for most consuming nations.
Or just sit back and let the market decide the price as the oil goes up in smoke? The rich don't notice, the poor can't travel)
A middle path might be to increase tax and use the money for public mass transit.
And is it right for people to be tooling around in 8MPG Hummers while troops are dying in Iraq?
At what point should the govt say 'sorry mate, maybe you can afford it but the nation can't'
(Dilbert_X's car does ~22MPG according to US figures, 27MPG in Europe - I do ~5,000 miles/yr -> small city surrounded by empty desert )
At what point should the govt step in?
During the last oil crisis speed limits were introduced, CAFE (corporate average fuel economy) standards for cars were mandated, petrol was rationed.
Oil must be a big factor in most nations trade deficits.
Should the govt do anything to cut consumption by law - which would be painful and unpopular but beneficial for most consuming nations.
Or just sit back and let the market decide the price as the oil goes up in smoke? The rich don't notice, the poor can't travel)
A middle path might be to increase tax and use the money for public mass transit.
And is it right for people to be tooling around in 8MPG Hummers while troops are dying in Iraq?
At what point should the govt say 'sorry mate, maybe you can afford it but the nation can't'
(Dilbert_X's car does ~22MPG according to US figures, 27MPG in Europe - I do ~5,000 miles/yr -> small city surrounded by empty desert )
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2008-07-02 05:14:08)
Fuck Israel