Govt has too much of our money to start with!
What did they do with the money that was supposed to have been spent on fixing our roads?
Pay our debts? How about responsible spending so we don't have so much debt?
We have got to stop electing the spend, spend, spend, Tax, tax, tax, democrats!
It’s Time To Raise The Gas Tax By $1 A Gallon
By Scott Burgess
Record low gas prices around the country create a unique opportunity to rebuild America’s infrastructure, help the auto industry and pay our debts.

As gas prices continue to drop to a nine-year low, according to the Automobile Association of America, and barrels of oil hover around $35, the time has come for the federal government to raise its gasoline tax. And not by a few pennies, or even a doubling of the 18.4 cents per gallon last raised in 1994.
It needs to go up a lot. Last week,
Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-OR) tried to pass an amendment to raise the gas tax by 15 cents. That amendment died on the House floor for lots of reasons, some sound and some silly. But Blumenauer’s biggest mistake was thinking too small—a common problem in Washington D.C.
The federal government needs to put a $1 tax on every gallon of gasoline sold, which would raise about $140 billion dollars a year, according the estimated 136.78 billion gallons of gasoline used by Americans, according to the U.S. Energy Information Agency.
The transportation funding bill signed by President Obama last Friday calls for roughly $60 billion a year for the next five years. The new proposal is less than half what the Heritage Foundation estimates the
Highway Trust Fund needs. A $1 a gallon tax provides serious money for a serious problem. So let’s tax gas by a buck and start fixing our roads.
This idea certainly goes against my libertarian leanings, but since no viable plan has been offered, and we still need roads, let’s do it. Gas prices are low. The people who use them should pay for them. Let’s artificially raise them and get people paving, fixing, and making better roads. There would be still money left for bike lanes and public transportation along highways.
That would certainly be enough money to calm the infrastructure doomsayers, at least through Christmas. No doubt, billions will be wasted on political boondoggles and
pet projects like
budget-breaking bullet trains.

But at some point don’t we have to take responsibility for our infrastructure? Since Washington has never shown itself to be fiscally responsible, we have to accept they are going to waste billions, building bridges to nowhere and otherwise disappearing our hard-earned dollars.