With tolls, tea party got the government they demanded
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When I was a cub
reporter I subsidized my habit of writing for the Jamestown Press by
working as an arborist on Aquidneck Island. To do so, I had to pay a lot of
tolls going over the Newport Bridge. And not the ten cent kind like those
crossing over the brand new Sakonnet River Bridge this morning. To get to
Newport back then it was shell out 10 bucks for 11 tokens or pay 2 bucks each
way.
So I can certainly
sympathize with the folks who live in Tiverton and Little Compton – as well as
Fall River and Westport – and need to get to Aquidneck Island, or vice versa.
It adds up, I know. (On some days I would toss as many as six tokens in that
blight at the bottom of the bridge!)
In political theory,
too, I support this cause. Bridges, like buses, have a value to users and
non-users alike and – in a perfect progressive world – both should be paid for
communally through taxes not user fees.
Justin Katz, one of
the most outspoken Tivertonians on tolling, says the expense
should be borne by taxpayers. Meanwhile, his day job is to advocate
against taxes. WPRO made the Providence Journal last week when fictional small government hero John Galt call into the Matt Allen
Show to advocate against tolls. The yellow “don’t tread on me”
snake shirt that graced yesterday’s protest is an iconic
emblem of the tea party movement.
WPRO, Allen, Katz and
the tea party are among the most vocal critics of government spending in Rhode
Island politics. It stinks that people have to pay a user fee to cross the
Sakonnet River Bridge but it stinks because of what small government and
austerity actually look like when not fictionalized in novel or talk radio or
blog post.
This isn’t big
government sticking it to John Galt, Matt Allen and Justin Katz. This is what
small government looks like.
The whole thing
reminds me of the HL Mencken quote: “Democracy is the theory that
the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard.”
Bob Plain is the
editor/publisher of Rhode Island's Future. Previously, he's worked as a
reporter for several different news organizations both in Rhode Island and
across the country.