The money saved by not being at all involved in the midEast, reduced
military expenses, oil, wind, solar subsidies, nuclear regulatiory agency,
and  anti pollution efforts will more than make up for the loss of fuel
taxes, but the gov't will find a way anyway -- hence the home made E-Cat
business will thrive.
  -----Original Message-----
  From: noone noone [mailto:[email protected]]
  Sent: Tuesday, May 10, 2011 7:44 AM

  My concern is that energy is taxed heavily right now, and the powers that
be will try to find some way to make up for the lost revenue. I think there
are many ways they could go about this. Here are a few possibilities.

  1) They could try to put a tax on every E-Cat unit sold. For example, they
could claim the energy savings are so great having an E-Cat to provide
electricity, heat in winter, and hot water that a 90% sales tax on units
would be acceptable. Their argument would be, "The average family of four
will save ten thousand dollars in the first five years of owning an E-Cat
unit. After that, their energy costs will be near zero. Due to this, a
$4,500 dollar tax on a $5,000 dollar unit is acceptable."


  2) They could try to tax every vehicle that uses the E-Cat. They could
state, "Since we are losing revenue from taxes on gasoline, we will need to
add an upfront tax on every E-Cat powered vehicle. Otherwise, we will not be
able to pay to maintain the roads." What is even more scary than an upfront
tax, would be if they demanded some sort of GPS tracking device on every
vehicle monitoring the miles driven, and hence the energy consumed!
Consumers could then get a bill in the mail for lets say $1.00 for every
mile driven.

  3) They could add an extra tax on every electric bill. Although I think
home based E-Cats will be sold, the power grid will probably be augmented
with E-Cat units. Although the price of the electricity could go down, the
government might step in and use that as an excuse to raise taxes. You could
end up paying a special E-Cat tax per kilowatt hour of power consumed.

  I really do hope you are right, and the government will not try to tax the
energy produced by E-Cats. However, with an increasingly out of control
government I think they will at least try.








----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
  From: Jed Rothwell <[email protected]>
  To: [email protected]
  Sent: Tue, May 10, 2011 6:51:50 AM
  Subject: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Steam hotter than 110 °C /
Internal heater

  noone noone wrote:


    I think the NRC can try, but it will not last long.

    I am a bit more concerned about the powers that be trying to tax the
energy produced to high heaven.


  It would be difficult to do this, because the energy will eventually be
generated on site by small machines. To tax it you would have to meter it,
and meters can always be disabled. People occasionally reset odometers in
automobiles to enhance the resale value of a used car. This is against the
law. They do not do this often because there's not much point to it; it does
not increase resale value much. On the other hand, when the odometer breaks
people seldom bother to fix it. I'm sure that if the government started
taxing heat and electricity from home generators, millions of consumers
would cut a few wires or download a patch for the control electronics
computer to report false readings. The government would soon find this
untenable.

  (I have thought about stuff like this!)

  - Jed

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