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PostPosted: Wed Feb 14, 2007 19:46 
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Cooperman wrote:
It's a fight the gov't will inevitably lose as it will unite many different factions within our society.


Avanti populi !! :)

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 14, 2007 21:07 
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It must be getting close to being difficult to justify expendature on local trials if they have already said they will dump it if public opinion is against it.

The media will have a field day on squandering public funds, and about time too.

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 14, 2007 21:31 
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Gizmo wrote:
It must be getting close to being difficult to justify expendature on local trials if they have already said they will dump it if public opinion is against it.

It's difficult to see how you can have a meaningful local trial anyway. If everybody using a car in the area has to have a black box, outside business will be completely driven away. If outsiders aren't charged, though, you're not coming close to replicating the effect of national road pricing, and the locals would feel extremely aggrieved. Also you'd find the number of registered cars in the area magically declined. Presumably a company car can be registered anywhere in the UK.

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 14, 2007 21:47 
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looking back through the archives here is a little gem.

http://driving.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/driving/article376239.ece

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The £2 billion set aside to help local authorities invest in London-style congestion charging has so far failed to persuade a single council to introduce a scheme.


£2 BILLION :o

How about spending it on the road network instead.

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 14, 2007 22:09 
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Cooperman wrote:
I seem to recall that one reason for the success of the UK employment figures was the fact that we have a flexible workforce willing to move jobs and travel as necessary.
With the increase of house prices in the larger towns/centres of employment, employees have thought nothing about a 30+ mile drive each way to work on a daily basis. The majority of this mileage is on main roads which would be subject to the highest charges, thus, 'at a stroke' destroying this flexibility.
One has to ask whether any estimate of the number of jobs that will be driven-off abroad should this nonsense come to pass, not to mention the destruction of UK touring for Brits (foreigners won't be affected as their vehicles won't be trackable).
B'liar and his lickspittles have already presided over the destruction of a lot of our heritage, a reduction in our traditional values, all the well-publicised other failures and 'soft on crime, soft on the causes of crime'. This road pricing, however, will be the last straw for many of us.
I've been around long enough to have seen a lot of government stupidity and errors (like cancellation of the TSR2, failure to curb union powers in the 60's/70's, failure to support our industries, reliance on foreign coal and gas, the 'Nimrod 2000 project', etc, etc, the list is long and sad), but this has the makings of a huge and un-recoverable disaster for our nation.
It has the potential to cause massive civil insurrection the like of which has not been seen since the General Strike of 1926. It's a fight the gov't will inevitably lose as it will unite many different factions within our society.


Union powers arose as a direct consequence of appalling employment conditions. Thatchers reform of unions was only an attempt to destroy them, which failed anyway. Now they [unions] use the legal system instead....it's more profitable.
Industries change and evolve. British industry started paying its workforce decent wages, and so became uncompetetive...mainly because we are "gifted" by an appallingly uneducated management. You cannot compete with a workforce paid twenty quid a month which is why China gets to make the stuff we use. Look on the bright side, ther Chinese will soon want the stuff they make, so their wages will go up....which is happening now anyway....and then the jobs will come back, to our workforce which we won't have then anyway. Why should I want to work for 8 quid an hour in a crap workshop and have to pay a fortune to get there, when I can work for 50K in an office and get my costs paid for me ? (and get health insurance and pension)....
No, there won't be any revolution. No ability for one...no guns, no bows and arrows and no knives either. Plus, we have a police service that owes its power to government....and you all know how well they responded to protect us from those vicious marauding miners back then ?

1. None of you will do anything.
2. If you did, you'd find your bank accounts etc mysteriously getting lost.
3. This is only them latest chapter in a long list of laws limiting personal freedom to protect us from crime...etc

The road charging will go through, people will not revolt against it, the ability of government and their agents to track and control us will grow.
Facts of life, it has gone too far to stop. You can vote those out if you want, the ones coming in will continue the work. Governernment is too important in the 21st century to leave open to abuse by the people via democracy. Those who rule are not elected, they just do.

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 14, 2007 23:39 
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I just noticed the Search box and did a couple of searches on the No. 10 web site. It told me:

"Your search for corruption in All No.10 found 73 hits."

And:

"Your search for "intelligent life" in All No.10 found 0 hits."

Make of that what you will. :lol:

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PostPosted: Thu Feb 15, 2007 00:22 
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I'm revolting!................. :lol:


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PostPosted: Thu Feb 15, 2007 11:21 
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One thing is increasingly clear. This has nothing at all to do with congestion. If congestion were the real reason there would be some sort of suggested alternative for getting to work. There are no plans stated for improving public transport by the degree needed to reduce road congestion nor any suggestion that a proper public transport infra-structure will be in place before road pricing starts.
In a nutshell it's probably about government control over the individual and the obtaining of higher revenues for the Treasury.
The point was mode that 'the people' will do nothing about this. If many can't afford to drive to work, then 'nothing' is what they may well end up doing in the absence of a pay rise to cover the additional costs.
This is where my point about the uniting of various factions comes into play. The unions will have a serious point of view if their members are to be caused financial pain by this. Management will be forced to consider the situation by, maybe, re-locating abroad, non-union workers will see their available post-tax pay reduced by huge travel costs, OAP's will lose their mobility and thus their ability to visit children and grandchildren, tradesmen will have to increase their charges, as will road hauliers with UK registered trucks; the list is almost endless.
Remember the Poll Tax civil disobedience? That was just a small but effective group objecting. Think what will happen with this shambles, and a shambles it will be if it happens, when all the above groups become as one in objecting.
I live in one of the 'trial areas', but my vehicles can easily be registered elsewhere if necessary - Dublin, maybe!
For almost 1.5m to take the time to register their objection on a web-site is almost unheard of and should, to any rational person, indicate that it's totally unacceptable.
Does anyone think this will just be accepted without any struggle?


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PostPosted: Thu Feb 15, 2007 14:33 
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Mr Money - Telegraph

Quote:
Tony Blair seems conveniently blind to the truth of road taxation

After my one face-to-face discussion with Tony Blair, I became immediately worried about the man and his train of thought. Or lack thereof.

On motoring and car-related matters he seemed at best uninterested and at worst out of his depth. The Prime Minister seemed clueless about which companies qualify as true Brits (home-grown MG Rover, surely) as opposed to truly foreign firms such as Nissan, which were tempted here by massive state subsidies from the Thatcher government.
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Such lethargy on Mr Blair's part might have something to do with the fact that Ford has done the unthinkable and stopped building cars in Britain, Vauxhall is no longer making any at Luton, while MG has died, as has Rover and indeed Longbridge. TVR's UK factory, in Blackpool, has recently been murdered too. And within the past few weeks Peugeot's car-building operations here have been cruelly killed off. All this UK car industry carnage has been on Mr Blair's watch.

I also wonder if the Prime Minister understands how our well-oiled, tried and tested system of motoring taxation works. In a nutshell, we pay (at current rates) a total of about £50 billion a year for things like road fund licences, tax on car purchases, more tax on petrol and diesel and yet more tax on vehicle servicing, repairs, parts and oil. In addition to that little lot, we pay a variety of other levies, duties, charges, surcharges and tolls when we purchase everything from our car insurance policies to passes that allow us to drive over major bridges.

Of that £50 billion, we're handed back about £12 billion in the form of better, safer roads. The remaining £38 billion is gross profit for the Treasury to spend on expensive items such as John Prescott and foreign wars.

In other words, thanks to the very high levels of direct road-user taxation, drivers have more than met the cost of building, expanding, maintaining and improving the road network they use. And, of course, as we currently continue to pay up under the same tried and tested system, we continue to pay for those same roads that we have already effectively bought outright - several times over.

The Prime Minister doesn't seem to know this. In a report headlined "Blair: we can't go on without toll tax" published in a leading pro-Labour publication on Wednesday, he reportedly insisted that his Government will press ahead with a pay-per-mile toll system.

"In the future, I don't believe you will get consent for general taxpayer-funded massive investment in transport," he said.

His meaning is clear: if big money is to be spent in transport-related areas (as it has to be) then the general taxpayer will be unhappy picking up the tab. But the point he conveniently misses is that the general taxpayer never has had to pay for roads and public transport out of income tax or VAT on household goods. Road-related charges cover the lot.

Despite this, it now seems certain that a road-pricing scheme will be introduced, relying on charges of up to £1.30 a mile.

In other words, we'll have to pay once via the traditional road user taxes we've been paying for decades, then we'll have to pay again when cameras and/or other electronic devices permanently track us and charge us for every mile we drive.

A government source insists, pathetically: "We're not in the business of asking people [ie drivers] to pay twice." But that's a blatant lie. When you are charged up to £1.30 a mile to drive, you will, at the very least, still be subjected to heavy taxation on your vehicle purchases, servicing and repairs and you will still have to pay high fuel taxes. The inevitable result will be that, all things considered, the Government will get richer while private motorists will get poorer. Guaranteed.

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PostPosted: Thu Feb 15, 2007 15:20 
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Thank goodness my son is going to live permanently in France and can 'lend' me a car to use in the UK on French plates and insurance. Then, every 6 months, we can swop cars and 'my' French registered car will be quite legal. At least the EU regulations are good for something.


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PostPosted: Thu Feb 15, 2007 20:22 
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Cooperman wrote:
Thank goodness my son is going to live permanently in France and can 'lend' me a car to use in the UK on French plates and insurance. Then, every 6 months, we can swop cars and 'my' French registered car will be quite legal. At least the EU regulations are good for something.


Quote:
Interoperability for Road Charging
GALILEO will offer the possibility to implement new and more advanced methods of user-friendly road charging: charge for the use of particular roads at particular times with particular vehicles, or charge users travelling in a certain urban zone, according to the distance driven. Although there are other techniques for road tolling, only satellite navigation leads to a reliable seamless service thus avoiding isolated system implementation which puts a burden on user equipment.
The vehicle will use GALILEO to determine its location and to store the distance driven on every type of road (charged or free). Then it reports the results to a monitoring centre for a central charging entity to invoice the user. This would work on both inter-urban and urban roads.
A GALILEO-based solution avoids expensive investments in roadside equipment and avoids traffic jams at traditional toll plazas. New charging policies will allow better demand management. For this type of application, GALILEO will offer reliability and the possibility of tracing its performance in disputed cases. It will also provide a common standard for road charging.


Sorry....road pricing is a european project...why do you think that the EU is spending billions launching a new gps system ?
And why do you think it is that Mr Blair is unable to see the wood for the trees ?




http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/energy_transport/galileo/index_en.htm


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PostPosted: Fri Feb 16, 2007 01:37 
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1,499,687 and rising........and the site is so slow that it must be popular!


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PostPosted: Fri Feb 16, 2007 01:56 
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jomukuk wrote:
Interoperability for Road Charging
GALILEO will offer the possibility to implement new and more advanced methods of user-friendly road charging:.. ...

but this is one of a range of 'possible applications' quoted - with no obligation on or directive (as yet!) to member states for implementation. Thus, on the issue of road pricing, it remains with the UK government to decide - and, with the numbers signing, they will ignore this petition at their peril.

Perhaps Mr Cameron will take similar action as with ID cards - pledge to reverse any decisions made by this administration for implementation.

As an aside, the EU document also includes this gem:
Quote:
It is worth emphasising that the services offered by GALILEO will cover the whole planet, particularly areas at a geographical disadvantage and the outermost regions of the European Union.

so, if you're planning a drive to outer mongolia you won't get lost - but you may have to pay more than you were expecting!


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PostPosted: Fri Feb 16, 2007 02:44 
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Now passed the 1.5 million mark - 1500034 as I look.
Will the government listen? :speakno:

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 16, 2007 10:49 
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PeterE wrote:
Now passed the 1.5 million mark - 1500034 as I look.
Will the government listen? :speakno:


Hell, yes, they are lsitening intently. They are just pretending not to listen.

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 16, 2007 16:46 
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SafeSpeed wrote:
PeterE wrote:
Now passed the 1.5 million mark - 1500034 as I look.
Will the government listen? :speakno:


Hell, yes, they are lsitening intently. They are just pretending not to listen.

They are only trying to find ways to 're-educate' us into accepting the stupid bloody idea though.


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PostPosted: Fri Feb 16, 2007 16:47 
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The fact that it is, in theory, possible to make this 'Europe-wide', and putting in a pan-European system are, in reality, two very different things.
Whether drivers across Europe will allow it is yet another matter.
Then there are the local political isues. If the Conservatives realise that this issue alone could win them the next election by simply ruling out any form of tracked road pricing they may take the side of the objectors (the majority it seems). If one nation in Europe rejects this, and the French are most likely to, it would all fall down anyway.
Gallileo must be seen to be of some use and that's why it's being suggested that road pricing is the way ahead. The fact that Gallileo is completely unnecessary is another matter.
It would not take much in the way of active resistance to collapse the entire idea.
Then there is the issue of older or classic vehicles, which no-one seems to have given much thought to. How could a tracking deviced be fitted to, say, a 1960 Mini with positive earth electrics or a 1955 VW with 6 volt electrics? Don't suggest banning them all from the roads as that will simply enrage yet another sector of opinion and cause the loss of thousands more jobs in the restoration business.
How long will it take to implement this one might wonder. I'm 66 now and probably it won't be working within my driving lifetime, assuming it ever works. But that's just a selfish attitude and I will still be very pro-active in resisting this. Time to send another letter to my (Conservative) MP.


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PostPosted: Fri Feb 16, 2007 18:21 
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Einion Yrth wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
PeterE wrote:
Now passed the 1.5 million mark - 1500034 as I look.
Will the government listen? :speakno:


Hell, yes, they are lsitening intently. They are just pretending not to listen.

They are only trying to find ways to 're-educate' us into accepting the stupid bloody idea though.


Quite possibly, but why, exactly?

I well remember the WMD BS in the run up to the Iraq war. It was only later we learned that the real reason was Blair's agreement to support Bush.

So where's the 'agreement' behind the BS surrounding road pricing?

EU/galileo?
Technology suppliers?
Something else?

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 16, 2007 18:31 
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SafeSpeed wrote:
Einion Yrth wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
PeterE wrote:
Now passed the 1.5 million mark - 1500034 as I look.
Will the government listen? :speakno:


Hell, yes, they are lsitening intently. They are just pretending not to listen.

They are only trying to find ways to 're-educate' us into accepting the stupid bloody idea though.


Quite possibly, but why, exactly?

I well remember the WMD BS in the run up to the Iraq war. It was only later we learned that the real reason was Blair's agreement to support Bush.

So where's t, and lack of he 'agreement' behind the BS surrounding road pricing?

EU/galileo?
Technology suppliers?
Something else?




Try the arguements/comparisons re the nuclear generators .
Then ask RP about the comparison between letterbombs and WMD war is not valid??(Not agreeing with the sending, just bringing the prat into the arguenment and asking why no censure for the remark.)


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PostPosted: Fri Feb 16, 2007 19:32 
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SafeSpeed wrote:
Einion Yrth wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
PeterE wrote:
Now passed the 1.5 million mark - 1500034 as I look.
Will the government listen? :speakno:


Hell, yes, they are lsitening intently. They are just pretending not to listen.

They are only trying to find ways to 're-educate' us into accepting the stupid bloody idea though.


Quite possibly, but why, exactly?

I well remember the WMD BS in the run up to the Iraq war. It was only later we learned that the real reason was Blair's agreement to support Bush.

So where's the 'agreement' behind the BS surrounding road pricing?

EU/galileo?
Technology suppliers?
Something else?


A long conversation with the political editor of a newspaper just now suggested a much simpler explanation...

It's a political 'grand design' and as such so much 'sexier' than grafting away to improve the transport network, yard by yard, mile by mile.

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