JumboBeef
Suspended / Banned
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- Yes
so if your going to buy a thirsty car
The problem with that statement is it is just too black and white.
What is a "thirsty car"? A 4x4? Many in The UK automatically think of 4x4s when they think of thirsty cars. If you look at just mpg then, yes, large engined cars don't look too good but surely you need to look at the whole life of the car, from when it was first manufactured to the day it dies and is scrapped. Some of the 'greenest' cars around if you look at them in this way are the same large engined 4x4's 'everyone' hates and small fuel efficient cars are much worse............
The other thing is this: who is to say who can drive what? OK, the cliche 4x4 driver is mummy driving two miles in rush hour traffic with a child in the back. Should she drive a much smaller car? Yes. Should she walk instead, Yes. Is taxing her going to stop her from driving that big 4x4? No.
Here is a big suprise: most 4x4 drivers drive a 4x4 because they need them, not because they are a fashion statement. Taxing a shiny Range Rover off the road sounds good, until you consider exactly the same amount of tax is going to be payable on post 2001 versions of this:
I just bet farmers are going to love to pay £440 per year for their workhorses.
Farmers, landowners, village dwellers, rural people all over the UK (and I bet there are a damn sight more of them than posh mummy in central suburbia) are now going to have to pay huge amounts of tax on motors which are not a whim but a real daily necessity.
Who is worse? Posh mummy doing that school run, or a person living in the sticks driving a small car to get to work where there is no public transport? I'm sure you'll say the former. OK, how about a family of seven living rurally without public transport and where the roads are not gritted in winter in their seven seater Disco, or someone living and working in a city with good public transport on their doorstep who instead chooses to drive instead of walking/getting the bus? Now would you say the latter? All of a sudden the 4x4 is the good guy
I have three 4x4's, and I need at least two of them where I live/work I do (and when the third gets used, I'm not using either of the other two!)
The point is, it is not the car, big or small, which is the issue here, it is the situation it is used in. Is there an answer? Dunno, not my job to work that one out

