The price of gas

Gas prices are hitting record dollar amounts (if you ignore inflation). But, while you know that the government makes up a large portion of the pump cost, you may not realize how much (I didn’t).

Here is the average cost of gas from May 2004 – April 2005 in Canada and in the United States. The chart also compares the prices with the taxes stripped. As one can discern from the graph, the Canadian cost (minus taxes) is actually somewhat lower than the US. I’d guess that this is because we’re a larger oil producer than the U.S. However, we pay higher at the pumps because of taxes.

canada-us-gas-prices.jpg
Source: Canadian Taxpayers Federation

How does our tax situation compare? Well, if you’re a Canadian, you already know your taxes are higher than what an American pays. But, by how much?

This graph represents the price breakdown of the price of gasoline at the pump for the Canadian consumer in between the same time period:

canadian-gas-prices.jpg

Here’s the comparative American graph:

american-gas-prices.jpg

A full 38% of the price that we pay at the pump goes to the taxman while American only suffer 23%.

And now for a correlative comparison (and while not the absolute and certain truth of cause and effect, it may provide some insight).

disposable-income-canada-usa.jpg

The price of gas is tied into the cost of living. Virtually every physical product we buy (whether food, furniture, home electronics etc.) is delivered by truck and figures into the price we pay. Air Canada raised its ticket prices as a reaction to the soaring cost of fuel. The daily commute to the office is becoming a significant expense.

Would it be in the government’s best interest to reduce taxes on the price of fuel to stop knee-capping the economy?

What it’s all about

I have to admit, I’ve been feeling a little blog fatigue lately. It happens every once and a while and especially of late as the theme of this blog (politics) is currently in the off-season. I’ll poke around from place to place from Blogging Tories to Nealenews and I’ll glance at topics which currently fail to motivate me to contribute. Topics such as Liberal corruption, the Governor General and the sponsorship scandal just don’t strike me at the moment and they certainly lack motivational power to get me to write in these dog days of summer.

There is a truth to be learned here. If I’m turned off by blogging now, this likely represents the yearly low point in public political interest.

Consider this piece written by Monte Solberg today,

“Sure politics will always be somewhat about strategy, tactics and spinning your message. The public even expects that. But when spin is at the center of everything you do citizens head for the exits, find the nearest Tim’s, and go nose to nose over hockey, and did you hear what Cherry said.”

Monte notes the nation’s general disaffection with politics. The unfortunate mood is a result of the Liberals over-spinning for the sake of power over issues. The Canadian electorate is spun-out.

However, Monte continues,

Look I love hockey and Don Cherry, but being a hockey fan has to come second to being a citizen. Actually being a citizen is what we are paid to do. Citizens get their pay in the form of freedom and democracy, and our obligation is to keep caring about those things even when the government makes us want to quit caring.

You can of course burn off some of that disaffection by saying sarcastic things on a blog. I hear that helps. An even better thing to do though is to catch a vision.

One of the arches on the Peace Tower quotes a great truism from Proverbs, (quote) Where there is no vision, the people will perish (unquote).

The quote sounded familiar.

I blog about politics because I certainly care about the state of this country. I started Blogging Tories because there are others who certainly do as well. But, I blog, first and foremost, because I want to add to the debate that is so thoroughly discouraged, the discussion that is so often met with disdain, and the dialogue that often is met with attempts to discredit. I blog because those that wish to stifle these elements of our democracy are those that rule for themselves, do so at great expense to the people, and do so without vision.

This year, in June, I traveled to Ottawa to interview Monte to kickoff podcasting on Blogging Tories. After the interview was over, as I wandered around Parliament as any other tourist, I noticed an interesting quote etched into stone above a beautiful window of the peace tower at the centre of this nation’s two houses of Parliament. So, I took a picture.

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“Where there is no vision, the people will perish” – Click to enlarge

There is a debate brewing in this country and it is not whether or not Stephen Harper can pass as a cowboy in a small leather vest. This debate occurs between people who recognize a neglected healthcare system and wish to improve it, people that see gun violence in Toronto and are asking for a real solution to address it, and people that wish that politicians would make decisions to benefit Canadians instead of their polling numbers.

We debate because we need change. We debate because those that would discourage it have lost their vision. We debate because we’re Conservatives.

Thank you Monte, I think that you’ve cured my blog fatigue. Now, it’s time to cure Canadians from their Liberal-induced political coma.

Put the Tory Transit Calculator on your site!

Attention Blogging Tories! The Conservative Party of Canada has released their transit plan which includes tax relief for users of public transit. The party has created a transit calculator, which I’ve modified below for integration into Blogging Tories member blogs (or for anyone else that’s interested). If you’d like to put the transit calculator in the sidebar (or anywhere else) on your website, please copy and paste the full code below. Please leave the entire code intact as we’d like to encourage others to put this calculator on their sites.