Gas taxes, sales taxes, property taxes, tolls, B&O taxes and vehicle taxes from the vehicle owner. Add in also, income and payroll taxes paid by the companies and workers providing the technolog(ies)
Personally, whenever I need a ride, I'd rather just hit a button on my smart phone and have a vehicle show up that will take me anywhere I want to go, at any time of day, for an unsubsidized, modest fee.
21st century solutions for a 21st century world are working in over 75 countries/500 cities around the world, right now, today. Rapid expansion would be instantaneous if government would get the fuck out of the way.
who paid for the road that your Uber drove on?
TAXPAYERS DID!
Yep the same ones that are paying you to make an ass out of your self all day on HH
Personally, whenever I need a ride, I'd rather just hit a button on my smart phone and have a vehicle show up that will take me anywhere I want to go, at any time of day, for an unsubsidized, modest fee.
21st century solutions for a 21st century world are working in over 75 countries/500 cities around the world, right now, today. Rapid expansion would be instantaneous if government would get the fuck out of the way.
who paid for the road that your Uber drove on?
TAXPAYERS DID!
Yep the same ones that are paying you to make an ass out of your self all day on HH
Switzerland's light rail system is great ... I've ridden it on a few occasions.
But people have to ask themselves why it works in a place like Switzerland and then figure out if the reasons for it working are the same in the United States.
Life is slower in Switzerland ... nobody is in a constant rush like we typically are in the US.
When I would fly into Zurich and then need to get to my company's office after about an hour train ride, I still had about a 15 minute walk from where I got off the train to get to my office. That's ok if nobody is in an urgent hurry ... but when everybody's in an urgent hurry, those minutes ... for example, if the train for me to get to/from my office right now was to take 45 minutes with a 15 minute walk each way from the train stop to the office ... what's different between that and spending an hour in my car but parking at my office and then having the flexibility to leave when/how I needed to during the day?
There's an entire infrastructure situation that is tied around mass transportation that has to be flushed out. It's a great system for those that it works for ... but for others, it's square peg round hole.
Autonomous on demand passenger drones don't use roads. Airspace over current state and federal highways is already owned by the public. Technology is available today and immediately scalable.
Technology will continue to evolve extending efficiencies. If government would simply stop impeding progress, this could start today.
Look here bitchfork, just because you don't understand it doesn't mean the rest of us should have to stand in line for choo choo trains to nowhere that aren't even built
Autonomous on demand passenger drones don't use roads. Airspace over current state and federal highways is already owned by the public. Technology is available today and immediately scalable.
Technology will continue to evolve extending efficiencies. If government would simply stop impeding progress, this could start today.
Look here bitchfork, just because you don't understand it doesn't mean the rest of us should have to stand in line for choo choo trains to nowhere that aren't even built
You don't think trains between 100 and 300 miles are a good idea?
I thought everyone did. There just aren't many options citywise for that.
And newsflash. You don't wait in line.
Btw we've been waiting on flying cars and other bullshit for like 50 years.
Comments
You didn't know this?
But people have to ask themselves why it works in a place like Switzerland and then figure out if the reasons for it working are the same in the United States.
Life is slower in Switzerland ... nobody is in a constant rush like we typically are in the US.
When I would fly into Zurich and then need to get to my company's office after about an hour train ride, I still had about a 15 minute walk from where I got off the train to get to my office. That's ok if nobody is in an urgent hurry ... but when everybody's in an urgent hurry, those minutes ... for example, if the train for me to get to/from my office right now was to take 45 minutes with a 15 minute walk each way from the train stop to the office ... what's different between that and spending an hour in my car but parking at my office and then having the flexibility to leave when/how I needed to during the day?
There's an entire infrastructure situation that is tied around mass transportation that has to be flushed out. It's a great system for those that it works for ... but for others, it's square peg round hole.
Intercity rail is a whole different ballgame.
The US just barely has any major cities that are 100-300 miles away.
And the ones that are are generally part of a nonstop metro area where the costs of actually getting the land to build it is outrageous.
Say Phoenix and LA were 250 miles apart. That would be a no brainer.
Some of the cities in Texas would probably be most feasible right now.
Flat open land is obviously the easiest.
Everyone uses it on the east coast but it's not really high speed. I think it averages like 80 mph.
Still pretty convenient.
Technology will continue to evolve extending efficiencies. If government would simply stop impeding progress, this could start today.
Your problem is, you spew shit but never read let alone understand it.
It's all out there. Go find it.
There are currently 7 companies I'm aware of with built, flying drones. Combined, there is unprecedented money and technology developing this future.
I thought everyone did. There just aren't many options citywise for that.
And newsflash. You don't wait in line.
Btw we've been waiting on flying cars and other bullshit for like 50 years.
I'll believe it when I see it
It's not ready for primetime yet.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=TlKbi8YslrA
It's hard.
Cool. So they created flying cars in the 40s!
And you can now buy a 68 year old one for a cool 1 million!
Not gonna hold my fucking breath.