Problem is that driving is something that is a new invention, kind of... Public roads were a response to the private turnpike system of old, where excessive fees could be charged by private companies to get around.
I understand about how we pay taxes, and some goes to the roads... but how much comes from our actual income withholding, and how much comes from the amount collected as road tax on fuel? I dont know, but it would be interesting to see, because the reality is that if not much is coming from my income tax, then it is really an optional thing. I can bicycle on all but the interstates (some other roads have restrictions too, Im sure), and not pay road tax. I can walk along many public roads too. Their right of way is not only for my travel on them, but also as a conduit for everything from basic necessities to data wires. As I stated in the Onstar thread, these things didnt used to exist. You don't have to use them, just like you dont have to use much of anything else. You can walk into town, you can send mail, you can wait until the constable comes to you. There was a reason why people tended to live within a day's ride of town back before cars... But now we merely feel entitled to drive and live where we want, because we feel entitled to cars - something that did not exist 120 years ago. Yet somehow people had (perhaps better) social skills, knowledge in a lot of areas that we have not a clue in anymore, etc. 120 years ago than now. Not saying that 120 years ago was better, but it is only because a product that we feel entitled to have and use arrived and we can't see our way around it.
I challenge anyone that feels entitled to drive and use the roads when free options exist to quit griping about the 'entitlement' attitude of illegals, inner-city welfare folks, etc. While I can't stand any of that, I realize that I have my feelings of entitlement too. I may have earned my driving privledge, the money to buy the car, insurance, fuel, etc., but I still feel entitled to use the roads. In that I am a hypocrite if I gripe about anyone elses' entitlement feelings on unrelated stuff, merely because I don't agree with them. I think we all need to consider what we could do if comfort and laziness wasnt overwhelming. It is all entitlement that we drive, nothing else.
Again, I don't care if they round up and send back illegals, and if people who can't work or save starve. So long as they stay out of my back yard, I really don't care. But so long as a modern entity, set up by the choice and desire of the people whom i am stuck in society with is what is available, and I want to use that entity (the roads) swiftly, then I feel entitled to use the roads - I dont have to use them. People long ago didnt have the luxury of swift travel, so they lived accordingly, and made their choices accordingly. What besides entitlement to drive gives us the ability to live elsewhere now? With fuel prices increasing, there is another reason to drive people back to the 'centers', to avoid the trips. It is all choices, all determinations of what is best for onesself, but many of these decisions that stray from the ages old norm are only possible because of their facilitation by the automobile. remember that... we feel entitled to make these choices because we feel entitled to drive... otherwise we would be making standard survival-based decisions, as people did until about 150 years ago.
JMH