ChatterBank34 mins ago
How Vital
is your car in your life, could you do without it?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.where I live public transport is dire. I could live without a car....I mean everyone in the world could but life would be very different and much more difficult. I don’t use it for holidays or days out.
Its all very well to say “learn how to live on benefits" but if nobody had cars and everyone was on benefits, who would be earning the money to pay the tax to provide the benefits?
When I worked (retired now) I worked in the NHS in the community visiting people in their own homes to treat them and provide and install equipment to help them to be more independent. That job would have been impossible without a car.
Its all very well to say “learn how to live on benefits" but if nobody had cars and everyone was on benefits, who would be earning the money to pay the tax to provide the benefits?
When I worked (retired now) I worked in the NHS in the community visiting people in their own homes to treat them and provide and install equipment to help them to be more independent. That job would have been impossible without a car.
There's few things in life that are vital to survival. Air, food & drink, shelter, etc.. But some things, like a car, are so important to quality of life and being able to do the things I want that any anti-car brigade achievement makes me think we need to ship these sadists off to an island of their own where the only people they can pick on and make miserable are themselves.
Yes, the councils charge you for it, but take the cost of buying/running your car and remove it completely from your annual budget. People think that going to the tip is £x of fuel and forget the car is depreciating at a phenominal rate for most people as well as servicing/maintenance costs. Once you decide to own a car then lots of trips are cheaper than bus/train fares but it costs a lot of money just to own a car without using it. It's probably cheaper for most people to take a taxi shopping, provided they give up their car altogether.
I guess we could probably manage with one car when OH finally retires later this year, but having three is good gives a choice and we both enjoy driving. and thinking about it we most likely wouldn't want to go to the same place at the same time, she could go shopping while I go down the Country Park with the dog (we're looking atm.) and you never know when a 4x4 might be useful.