Taking in account we pay 1$ per liter, and that the average portuguese receives 3 x less than the average american, that would make the price about right.salm wrote: tax gas anyway. 3$ per liter would be ok.

Moderator: Alyrium Denryle
Spanky The Dolphin wrote:As I said before:
You put cyanide in random cigarettes. And have a label on the pack that says "WARNING: ONE OR MORE OF THE CIGARETTES IN THIS PACK MAY CONTAIN CYANIDE!!"
You make the ratio of cyanide cigs/regular cigs high enough so there's an actual threat.
And you make some laws so it's all legal.
How well would something like that work?
I'll assume both of you are joking. You'd ass rape just about everyone who has to drive to work or school in the state of New Jersey (i.e., everyone) with a $3.00/litre gas tax. And that still wouldn't stop people in places like, say, Buffalo, who can take the bus to the Peace Bridge and buy their smokes duty free, nor would it prevent smuggling (it would probably make it much worse).salm wrote:tax gas anyway. 3$ per liter would be ok.Kelly Antilles wrote:
Well, in that case, rase the tax on gas too. Hit 'em both ways.
bah, i´m not joking! high price of gas = demand for cars which spend less gas.RedImperator wrote:I'll assume both of you are joking. You'd ass rape just about everyone who has to drive to work or school in the state of New Jersey (i.e., everyone) with a $3.00/litre gas tax. And that still wouldn't stop people in places like, say, Buffalo, who can take the bus to the Peace Bridge and buy their smokes duty free, nor would it prevent smuggling (it would probably make it much worse).salm wrote:tax gas anyway. 3$ per liter would be ok.Kelly Antilles wrote:
Well, in that case, rase the tax on gas too. Hit 'em both ways.
Except that there are tens of millions of cars already on the road that are expected to be running at least a decade from now which would become prohibitively expensive to run long before that, even with incremental increases. I'm not just talking about gas guzzling monsters like SUVs. I just bought a Dodge Neon that gets 30 mpg highway. I'm not part of the gas problem, but my fuel costs will triple or quadruple while the asshole with the 8 mpg Suburban can afford to buy a more efficient car. And unlike Europe, in most places in this country, there's no alternative to driving. This tax of yours is a classic regressive tax--it would take the most money, as a percentage of income, from those with the least earnings, while the wealthier drivers who have helped create the problem would be able to afford replacing their vehicle.salm wrote: bah, i´m not joking! high price of gas = demand for cars which spend less gas.
demand for these cars = these cars get invented
i´m not saying that the price should be raised over night but in steps. 50 cents per year or so. it gives the car industry time to build low gas cars and people time to get used to smaller cars.
it´s working here in germany. the gas prices went up rapidly and sudently they were able to build the 3 liter lupo. it´s a decent car if you use it for stuff like shopping, driving to school/work. you dont need a 25 liter wasting pick up monster just to show off in school.
Cyanide is more frightening. That's the whole point. It's not to get laughs from watching smokers die, it's to inspire mortal fear in them.Tsyroc wrote:Good idea. Explosives might work well too. They'd provide a more visual spectacle.
![]()
When I was in the Navy and stuck around a lot of smokers I used to go to a place in Berkley and buy cigarette loads. When people left their cigarette packs lying around the berthing (aka shipboard baracks) I would load up a few. The cigarettes would explode with the sides peeled back just like the exploding cigars in the old Looney Toons cartoons.
The taxes are already enough to pay for the health problems, especially if you consider smokers remove themselves from the public health system 7-10 years earlier than nonsmokers. And banning desireable products does not work. The prices will simply rise to the point that the potential profits of selling outweigh the risks for illegally producing and smuggling. Cuban cigars are a perfect example: they're illegal in this country, yet they're available for something like $200-$300 a box. Marijuana is another good one--you can go to jail for growing, distributing, or using it, yet it's widely available, albiet for more per ounce than gold.Zoink wrote:You can ban tobacco w/o producing criminals. I can park as much as I like w/o paying the meter.... I'll just get a ticket if I do. You could make tobacco possession a fine. The people that end up in jail are the people who produce it.
Ultra-high taxes, enough to pay for *ALL* the health problems is an option. I just think further bans on tobacco is a more important concern. Taxes are of little consolation for the kids being subjected to second-hand smoke. I think its strange that someone could be labelled a bad parent for knowingly subjecting their kids to harmfull products and have their kids taken away... yet second-hand smoke is OK???
Really, you have a link for this? Each smoker that removes himself from the health system will require a sizable chunk of money before they die, with operations, chemo therapy, treatments, etc.RedImperator wrote: The taxes are already enough to pay for the health problems
Getting a fine doesn't make you a criminal. Its not a criminal offense to park in a no-parking zone.why I (childless) should be labeled a criminal for smoking
No. Its much more complex. Its also about the right of a company to market a knowlingly harmfull product. Its about the right of non-smokers to avoid harmfull effects (health / money) from you making a descision that "only affects you".All this doesn't even get into the debate as to whether or not the government has the right to tell someone what they can and cannot put in their own body.
That's right. You can kill yourself if you like.If I'm free, then I presumably own my body and can do what I wish to it
If you remove the "at a bar" then:The secondhand smoke issue exists, especially with children of smokers, as you've mentioned, but I fail to see why I (childless) should be labeled a criminal for smoking out on the porch or at a bar because someone somewhere might potentially harm his child with secondhand smoke.
Simple solution: Federal tax on tobacco in all 50 sataes. Will you argue that smokers are so desperate for their noxious fix that they will go to Canada and/or Mexico to get them tax free?RedImperator wrote:Taxing cigarettes out of the price range of regular smokers is an idiotic idea for at least three reasons:
1. Forcing up the price will make smuggling untaxed cigarettes lucrative enough to create a black market. This is already a problem in western New York, where cigarette taxes are high and there are a number of places where smokes can be purchased tax-free nearby (duty-free stores at border crossings and Indian reservations).
2. War on Drugs effect: the majority of robberies and thefts in the United States are for money to purchase drugs. This won't be as severe with high cigarette taxes, but could become a problem, especially in poorer areas.
3. Raising the prices high enough will encourage smokers to either quit (admittedly a good thing) or find another way to acquire cigarettes. In southern New Jersey, where I am, it's a 30 minute drive to Delaware, where cigarettes are about $25 a carton, compared to over $40 here. In many places, people can buy from Indian reservations. Driving smokers to quit or cross state lines to buy cigarettes would represent a major loss of revenue for 49 states (in Hawaii, smokers are kinda fucked). Considerng that pretty much all 50 are operating with huge budget deficits, this is a high price to pay for puritanism.
Canada wouldn't be a tax-free solution. We already have a cigarrette tax. I think the packs are up to $7CDN=$4.50 US (I think, not a smoker myself, just listening to the rantings of my co-workers), how does that compare to the current US price?Darth Servo wrote: Simple solution: Federal tax on tobacco in all 50 sataes. Will you argue that smokers are so desperate for their noxious fix that they will go to Canada and/or Mexico to get them tax free?
Zoink, that's about the average price around here in NJ. Cig low end prices go from like 3.25, med to around 4.50, and top out generally at 5.19.Zoink wrote:Canada wouldn't be a tax-free solution. We already have a cigarrette tax. I think the packs are up to $7CDN=$4.50 US (I think, not a smoker myself, just listening to the rantings of my co-workers), how does that compare to the current US price?Darth Servo wrote: Simple solution: Federal tax on tobacco in all 50 sataes. Will you argue that smokers are so desperate for their noxious fix that they will go to Canada and/or Mexico to get them tax free?
Kelly Antilles wrote: Well, in that case, rase the tax on gas too. Hit 'em both ways.
Will never work, fool....Darth Servo wrote: Simple solution: Federal tax on tobacco in all 50 sataes. Will you argue that smokers are so desperate for their noxious fix that they will go to Canada and/or Mexico to get them tax free?
Well, it's addictive, but it does not give any highs or anything that I've ever heard of, I have read though that it increases the efficency of synapses in the brain, effectively giving someone a little "brain-boost" for a short while after smoking.Darth Wong wrote:Nicotine has a narcotic effect.
This is NOT anecedotal evidence.....The 80 year old woman isDarth Wong wrote:Shep, I can't believe you're using the "anecdotal evidence" method to disprove tobacco hazards. I never thought that you could be that moronic.
Blame your government. Our government realizes that Gasoline PricesHis Divine Shadow wrote:Oh you americans have no right to complain about the gas price until it's about 4 times more expensive, then you're at our level.
Then you know what it's like to shelve ou 60-100$ a week in gas, and I am driving a nice little Mazda, not the 1973 3rd generation Corvette with the 5.7litre V8 I am longing to get.
Jesus ass-fucking Christ, don't you know what anecdotal evidence is? It is irrelevant whether the personal story is true or not; the point is that it is a form of evidence whose application in this instance is based upon a hasty generalization fallacy. Are you getting dumber as you get older or something?MKSheppard wrote:This is NOT anecedotal evidence.....The 80 year old woman isDarth Wong wrote:Shep, I can't believe you're using the "anecdotal evidence" method to disprove tobacco hazards. I never thought that you could be that moronic.
my grandmother, and the 40 year old woman is my mother....
the 50 year old guy is a friend of ours, and it's been bad
with him lately - he's always in the hospital for one reason
or another now.
Then please fucking explain to me how my grandmother, who smokes a fucking PACK of cigarettes a day, doesn't have lung cancer, or any of theDarth Wong wrote: Are you getting dumber as you get older or something?