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Monday, March 9, 2009

NY Times: Mileage Tax Would ‘Track Where Motorists Have Been’

Authorities want to “get at” beleaguered American taxpayers with fresh assault on their wallet & privacy

NY Times: Mileage Tax Would Track Where Motorists Have Been 090309top

Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet.com
Monday, March 9, 2009

A New York Times article about the different test studies being conducted as a precursor to the introduction of a CO2 or mileage tax admits that cars will contain tracking devices that will record where motorists have been.

Obama’s transportation secretary Ray LaHood recently caused controversy when he let slip that the administration was considering a “vehicles miles traveled” tax to replace the federal fuel tax. Press secretary Robert Gibbs hastily moved to offset concerns by claiming that such a tax “is not and will not be the policy of the Obama administration.”

However, as the New York Times reported in its Sunday edition, a number of different large scale beta-testing programs are currently underway to trial that exact scheme.

The largest is the $16.5 million federal Road User Study, under which thousands of volunteers in Austin, Tex.; Baltimore; Boise, Idaho; Raleigh and Durham, N.C.; San Diego; and the Quad Cities region of Iowa are driving cars equipped with tracking devices that catalogue their every movement.

For such a program to achieve its objective of taxing people by the mile, one would think that the only information the tracking device would need to measure is how many miles the vehicle has traveled. However, the true purpose of the technology is revealed when we learn that the system will also “record where motorists have been”.

Jon Kuhl, principal investigator for the Road User Study, concedes that “invasion of privacy” will be an issue, but the article does not mention how this will be overcome.

“You’d have to have a record where the car is at all times, and that certainly would frighten America,” said Mike Moffatt, an economist at the Ivy School of Business at the University of Western Ontario.

Efforts to sell the mileage tax proposal as a replacement for gas tax are likely to increase as the proposal nears introduction, but as is the case in North Carolina, where legislators are considering introducing a fee of one-quarter of a cent per mile, the charge will be in addition to tax per gallon of gas, not as a replacement for it.

The Times article notes that Massachusetts, Nevada, Oregon are also piloting similar schemes.

An increase on the roads of fuel-efficient vehicles and cars run on electricity is causing panic amongst tax-hungry authorities, who are seeking new ways to snag people who are managing to pay far less gas tax.

Indeed, the Times article quotes Susan Martinovich, director of the Nevada Department of Transportation, who expressed her desire to pursue such individuals.

“Those people are not paying as much, and yet they’re still on the road and still causing congestion and impacting pavement. How do I get at those people?” she stated.

“How do I get at those people?” That phrase perfectly underscores the nature of this entire program - a fresh government assault on the personal privacy and the wallet of the beleaguered American taxpayer that will achieve nothing aside driving more people into near-poverty while ensuring their every move is tracked and catalogued by big brother.

The Times article concludes as all the best PR pieces for an expansion of government taxation and surveillance would be expected to, by proclaiming that the mileage tax is “inevitable” and that it will begin by all automakers installing the tracking devices in new cars as standard.

http://www.prisonplanet.com/ny-times-mileage-tax-would-track-where-motorists-have-been.html

Research related articles:

  1. Kulongoski to pursue mileage tax
  2. Transportation secretary says taxing how much we drive may replace gasoline tax
  3. Nine million car owners will be hit by tax rises - four times higher than previously estimated
  4. Some Web Firms Say They Track Behavior Without Explicit Consent
  5. Big Brother spy planes that track the Taliban may soon hover over your home
  6. Government commission urges taxing drivers by-the-mile
  7. Pak on track to being named terrorist state
  8. Documents say feds can track cell phones’ locations without telecoms help
  9. Internet firms set to track and cash in on surfing habits of 11million customers
  10. Google offers free software to track people
  11. Senator Leahy and New York Times Criticize Paulson’s Shock Doctrine
  12. Financial Times Editorial Admits Agenda For Dictatorial World Government

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