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![]() "Jose" wrote in message t... I am of course being contrarian (though the questions have merit). The libertarian view would also eliminate libraries and the space program. It is fatally flawed when applied as a panacea. The libertarian view would eliminate libraries and the space program? I don't think so. It would certainly eliminate taxpayer support of libraries, but I don't think libertarians are opposed to the funding of libraries by the Andrew Carnegies of the world or by user fees. I also do not believe libertarians are opposed to the portion of the space program that serves a valid defense need, but they would certainly eliminate that portion that serves pure science. |
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It would certainly eliminate taxpayer support of libraries,
but I don't think libertarians are opposed to the funding of libraries by the Andrew Carnegies of the world or by user fees... You are correct, I was imprecise. However the result would be quite similar. It would eliminate the public libraries we all (or most of us) know and love. It would eliminate support for pure science (and the part of the space program that generates results accessible to the public) Jose -- The price of freedom is... well... freedom. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
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by "Steven P. McNicoll" Apr 11, 2006 at 06:31
PM The libertarian view would eliminate libraries and the space program? I don't think so. It would certainly eliminate taxpayer support of libraries, but I don't think libertarians are opposed to the funding of libraries by the Andrew Carnegies of the world or by user fees. I also do not believe libertarians are opposed to the portion of the space program that serves a valid defense need, but they would certainly eliminate that portion that serves pure science. Yes. In general, user fees that do not distort economic behaviour are favored over general tax support. If I provide a subsidy for something, more of it will be created than the economics justify. For that reason, taxes should only be levied for things that are purely in the interest of the public at large. Recreational flying does not serve the public at large, and should therefore be 100% funded by the participants. At a local airport, they charge no landing fees, charge only about $600 per year for a tie down, and thats it. Overnight tie-down is $5. Yet, they receive millions of dollars in AIP grants (derived from general taxpayer dollars and commercial airline ticket taxes), $150K annual operating subsidy, state subsidies, etc. They even wanted the city to kick in some $$ so as not to "burden" airport users. Hey, who subsidizes my boating: It costs $3500 per year for the slip; transient slips will cost upwards of $75 per night, etc. Yet, a marina has minimal infrastructure compared to an active GA airport. Tax subsidies make GA flying artificially cheap. |
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"Skylune" wrote in
lkaboutaviation.com: by "Steven P. McNicoll" Apr 11, 2006 at 06:31 PM The libertarian view would eliminate libraries and the space program? I don't think so. It would certainly eliminate taxpayer support of libraries, but I don't think libertarians are opposed to the funding of libraries by the Andrew Carnegies of the world or by user fees. I also do not believe libertarians are opposed to the portion of the space program that serves a valid defense need, but they would certainly eliminate that portion that serves pure science. Yes. In general, user fees that do not distort economic behaviour are favored over general tax support. If I provide a subsidy for something, more of it will be created than the economics justify. For that reason, taxes should only be levied for things that are purely in the interest of the public at large. Recreational flying does not serve the public at large, and should therefore be 100% funded by the participants. At a local airport, they charge no landing fees, charge only about $600 per year for a tie down, and thats it. Overnight tie-down is $5. Yet, they receive millions of dollars in AIP grants (derived from general taxpayer dollars and commercial airline ticket taxes), $150K annual operating subsidy, state subsidies, etc. They even wanted the city to kick in some $$ so as not to "burden" airport users. Hey, who subsidizes my boating: It costs $3500 per year for the slip; transient slips will cost upwards of $75 per night, etc. Yet, a marina has minimal infrastructure compared to an active GA airport. Tax subsidies make GA flying artificially cheap. So you pay for the dredging, the shorline maintainence, and in many cases the gazillion dollars for the dam and land costs that created that lake?? Public funding of small city/county airport by local govt especially makes sense because of the economic activity it generates. its a simple $- in $$$- out equation. -- -- ET :-) "A common mistake people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools."---- Douglas Adams |
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So you pay for the dredging, the shorline maintainence, and in many
cases the gazillion dollars for the dam and land costs that created that lake?? Public funding of small city/county airport by local govt especially makes sense because of the economic activity it generates. its a simple $- in $$$- out equation. The economic benefit studies are bogus. They simply tally the payrolls, then add a multiplier. If the airport ceased to exist entirely, the discretionary entertainment $$ would be spent elsewhere and have some economic value as well. I don't know of any govt. dredging for private marinas (none that I have ever visited), only for public ports that import/export cargo ships use. I never really looked into it, but if public $$ go to a private marina, I would definitely be opposed on principal: Why should you pay for what I use if it provides no benefit to society?? Dams: built to generate power, primarily. Low cost hydro power. Not for boaters. Shoreline maintenance: I agree with that. But it is mostly done to protect housing built (stupidly, I think) along the coastline. Homeowners should bear that risk (or pay an insurer to bear the risk), not taxpayers. (Unless it supports a military base or Cape Canaveral, or something like that.) |
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I don't know of any govt. dredging for private marinas (none that I have
ever visited), only for public ports that import/export cargo ships use. Dams: built to generate power, primarily. Low cost hydro power. Not for boaters. You benefit from the dredging, you benefit from the dams. Are you claiming that you shouldn't have to pay just because "they would be there anyway"? That's a mighty familiar argument. Jose -- The price of freedom is... well... freedom. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
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by Jose teacherjh@[EMAIL PROTECTED] Apr 12, 2006 at 04:13 AM
You benefit from the dredging, you benefit from the dams. Are you claiming that you shouldn't have to pay just because "they would be there anyway"? That's a mighty familiar argument Wait: Dams directly benefit consumers of electricity, farmers and other water users, lakefront property owners, and boaters. None would be built if they had to be financed by private boat owners alone. On the other hand, GA airports benefit only pilots. (No, I don't believe the economic benefit studies. There are also studies that say taxpayer subsidized sports stadiums are economic drivers: more nonsense.) |
#8
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![]() "ET" wrote in message ... "Skylune" wrote in lkaboutaviation.com: Recreational flying does not serve the public at large, and should therefore be 100% funded by the participants. At a local airport, they charge no landing fees, charge only about $600 per year for a tie down, and thats it. Overnight tie-down is $5. Yet, they receive millions of dollars in AIP grants (derived from general taxpayer dollars and commercial airline ticket taxes), $150K annual operating subsidy, state subsidies, etc. They even wanted the city to kick in some $$ so as not to "burden" airport users. Hey, who subsidizes my boating: It costs $3500 per year for the slip; transient slips will cost upwards of $75 per night, etc. Yet, a marina has minimal infrastructure compared to an active GA airport. Tax subsidies make GA flying artificially cheap. So you pay for the dredging, the shorline maintainence, and in many cases the gazillion dollars for the dam and land costs that created that lake?? Public funding of small city/county airport by local govt especially makes sense because of the economic activity it generates. its a simple $- in $$$- out equation. We have to stop repeating this AOPA talking point, and stick with the facts. Whenever we say this we just look like deer in the headlights; i.e. clueless and dumbfounded. Yes, GA airports generate revenue, but measured as dollar/acre GA revenue is abysmal. Virtually any other economic use of airport land will produce a tremendous amount more of $$$ than GA. |
#9
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In article et,
"Tom Conner" wrote: Virtually any other economic use of airport land will produce a tremendous amount more of $$$ than GA. based on ....? -- Bob Noel Looking for a sig the lawyers will hate |
#10
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In article ,
Bob Noel wrote: In article et, "Tom Conner" wrote: Virtually any other economic use of airport land will produce a tremendous amount more of $$$ than GA. based on ....? still waiting for the source of your claim... -- Bob Noel Looking for a sig the lawyers will hate |
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