SitNews - Stories in the News - Ketchikan, Alaska

A Real Clunker
By TOM PURCELL

 

June 22, 2009
Monday


I'm torn, if you want to know the truth.

Last week, the United States Senate passed the "Cash for Clunkers" bill ­ they tucked it into an emergency war-funding bill ­ and President Obama will soon sign it into law.

Here's how the clunker bill works:

If your current car averages 18 or fewer miles per gallon, you'll qualify for a $3,500 voucher toward the cost of a new car -- so long as the new car averages at least 4 mpg more.

Better: If you buy a new car that averages 10 mpg better than your current car, the government will give you a $4,500 voucher.

jpg Clunkers

Clunkers
By David Fitzsimmons, The Arizona Star
Distributed to subscribers for publication by Cagle Cartoons, Inc.

That is why I'm torn.

I own two vehicles: a 2001 Nissan Maxima SE and a 1992 Chevy S-10 truck, both in excellent condition.

My Maxima gets 19 mpg in the city -- it averages 22 mpg -- so it doesn't qualify for government dough.

But my truck surely does. It only gets about 10 mpg.

Of course, that isn't a problem. The truck sits in my father's garage most of the time. It goes out only when someone in my family needs to pick up a piece of furniture or some mulch.

I love that truck.

Its dated two-tone silver-and-maroon paint job, white-letter tires and red velour interior scream "1992." It's the kind of vehicle somebody like Bill Clinton might have used to pick up someone like Monica Lewinsky.

Despite its coolness -- despite its near-mint condition -- the truck is 17 years old. In the real market -- the free market -- it is worth only $2,500.

Which puts me in a troubling position.

Once President Obama signs the clunker bill into law, my truck will instantly be worth $4,500. All I have to do is find a new vehicle that gets 22 mpg ­ not hard to do.

Of course I don't need or want a new vehicle. I love my Maxima. And my truck is perfect for what it is intended to do.

And I can't bear the thought of what will happen to my beloved truck if I take the deal. All vehicles traded in under the clunker program will be crushed into a block of steel and smelted. Not even the transmission or the motor can be salvaged.

But then again, one must keep emotion out of financial decisions. Only the government is dumb enough to pay me $4,500 for a $2,500 vehicle -- and only a dummy would walk away from a $2,000 gain.

Sure, I know what the critics are saying: The program's $1 billion price tag is a waste of money at a time when we're bleeding red ink. I know we've already squandered some $30 billion meddling in the private auto industry and have likely made things worse, not better.

I know the unintended consequences of the government's clunker program will hit the poor and middle class the hardest. Even with government perks, many people can't afford a new car. Because the program will take thousands of used cars out of service, it will cause the cost of used cars to go up.

I know the political class is trying to impose a desired outcome on us. They're eager for us to drive ever dinkier cars. I know they're bribing us -- with our own dough -- to make us bend to their will.

But then again, this will surely be my last chance to qualify for a government perk of any kind.

I'm generally on the paying end of government programs -- not the receiving end -- and all of us will be paying plenty more if Obama succeeds in signing a torrent of big-spending programs into law.

And so I am torn.

I had been happy with my two perfectly good vehicles, but, suddenly, I'm thrust into the throes of a major automotive decision.

I've been avoiding my truck lately. Wracked with guilt -- I can't believe I may be bought off for a lousy 2,000 bucks -- I can't look my truck in the headlights.

Such are the peculiar thoughts that only the government can produce.

 

©2009 Tom Purcell. Tom is a humor columnist nationally syndicated exclusively by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. For more info contact Cari Dawson Bartley at 800 696 7561 or email cari@cagle.com. Visit Tom on the web at www.TomPurcell.com or e-mail him at Purcell@caglecartoons.com.

Distributed to subscribers for publication by Cagle Cartoon, Inc.



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