Sunday, March 27, 2011

Most in poll back higher auto mileage rules - Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal:

stelauguqdinec.blogspot.com
About 61 percent who participated say they support his plan to boos mandatory mileage from 25 mpg nowto 35.5 mpg by 2016. The Businessz Pulse survey was conducted between May 19 andMay 26. At leas t one reader backed evenhigher "2016 is just too far wrote Nancy Hoites. "We need at leastr 50 mpg right now. Gas in our area is already $2.8t per gallon for premium which is all my car uses becauser ofthe warranty." "Anything that will get the the Expeditions, and in general the pickup trucks off the road is a good wrote Donald Reimann. Robert Barry "We need to cut our dependence on foreigh oil and doit quickly.
In 1973 we had the oil embargi and long lines at gas stationsand Yet, when it ended, we went back to thingsz as usual. Praise Obama for making a hard Among the 38 percentgwho don't like the idea is Janet Gregg: "jI live in a rural area and depend on my truckj to haul livestock as well as my SUV for transporting I don't live in an area wherse it makes any sens to drive a tin can. I need a vehicled where I feel safe. How do you feel in a tiny vehilc e on a freeway full of18 wheelers? Also, who can afford to buy a new vehiclwe now anway? So, will the peoplr who cannot afford to buy a hybrie be taxed so heavily they won't be able to put food on the table ?
Liberals are destroying our freedoms." Reader Michael Henderson "All this is, as typical, is political double MPG means nothing. The number is a massagesd figure taken as an average of the fuel economu of theentire line. Vehicles getting 10 MPG will stil lbe there, just fewer lines of them."

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