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posted to ott.rec.canoe-kayak,rec.boats.paddle,rec.boats.paddle.touring,nf.paddling,uk.rec.boats.paddle
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I'm recycling here some post, since both bikes and canoes, represent
the same thing: David vs. Goliath... It is a matter of historical record that bicycling groups were the first to push the Good Roads Movement. It's ALSO a matter of historical record that they basically failed. No they didn't. What happened was, since bicycles and automobiles were more-or-less contemporary with each other, drivers usurped the developing Good Roads Movement to their advantage. So the Good Roads Movement was originally initiated and kick-started by bicyclists. But the car drivers later stole it. Of course, a reason bicyclists "failed" is that motorists were able to pay for roads due to the taxation of gas. Thank you motorists, even if you tried to usurp bicyclists' initial efforts as your own. Wayne Thank you, American people, for subsidizing gas so the SUVs can prosper and multiply... "gas has been so crucial to our economy in the governments eyes that they have subsidized a large portion of oil production, through programs, tax-exemptions, and the hiding of pollution costs through pollution permits. They have through intervention put off an inevitable end-we will run out of gas sometime, if we continue forcing prices down on a scarce product. In fact, government has actually contributed to the overconsumption of oil. When government subsidizes something (meaning they pay for a portion of it so that the consumers don't have to) they effectively raise the demand for a product far beyond where it naturally should be. They make it cheaper for the companies to produce it and thus cheaper for consumers. This process distorts market balance, because it hides costs, and creates what is known as a moral hazard. If companies had to pay all the costs out of their own pockets, they would produce less, and with a smaller output, the cost would rise, and consumers would demand less and slowly ween themselves off of this product and substitute another for it. They would find communal travel, or alternate means of energy, things that are both economically efficient and in the long run even better for the environment. But because the government has absorbed the costs of production, they have encouraged overconsumption of this good to the extent that any miscalculation in their plan will result in the prices skyrocketing towards the price equilibrium where oil naturally should be, which is near 5 dollars per gallon or more. It is this type of economic incentive that spurs innovation and gaurds scarce resources from overconsumption. The best solution I can think of now is to let the prices of gas..." http://www.collegeliberty.com/?p=14 |
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