首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Americans and Their Cars A)It has been one of the world’s most enduring and passionate love affairs: Americans and their cars. I
Americans and Their Cars A)It has been one of the world’s most enduring and passionate love affairs: Americans and their cars. I
admin
2015-01-31
38
问题
Americans and Their Cars
A)It has been one of the world’s most enduring and passionate love affairs: Americans and their cars. It’s no secret that America is a nation of cars. A recent survey of the number of cars on America’s roads counted some 204 million vehicles in the U. S. There is an average of 1.9 motor vehicles for every household in America, and just to illustrate how many cars this is, consider that the average American household has only 1.8 drivers; America has more vehicles than it has drivers to drive them. By the time a middle-class American reaches 35 years of age, he or she has likely owned 3 cars in his or her life.
B)The United States’ lawmakers have done little to undermine the romance between their citizens and their automobiles. Taxes on gasoline have been kept low, while massive highway building projects allow more and more cars to take to the road. Public transportation, on the other hand, has traditionally suffered from neglect. From the 1970s, since Americans have more than doubled their reliance on cars for long-distance rides, train and bus usage has largely stopped developing. Inner city transit systems in most cities were either deteriorating or crime-ridden, as in New York, or dysfunctional(机能不良的),as in Los Angeles.
C)There are, however, signs that U.S. drivers are quietly looking for alternatives to car usage—with growing backing from legislators. Throughout the country a record number of commuters are taking buses and transit to work. In Washington DC, city officials say this summer has been the busiest in the history of the Metro rail system, with trains often carrying more than 600,000 passengers a day. In Cincinnati, transit authorities say there have been up to 50 percent more users this summer on some commuter routes. The Atlanta and Portland transit systems are also recording heavy usage. Nationwide, public transportation systems have recorded a 4.8 percent increase for the first quarter of 2003 over the same period in 2002, according to the American Public Transportation Association(APTA).
D)Transit officials say the main reason is the recent rise in gasoline prices. Feeling the impact of cuts in production by oil-exporting countries, gasoline prices in US shot up from a national average of $1.30 a gallon(nearly 3.8 litres)late last year to high of $1.68 a gallon in June this year. In parts of the country, prices even reached $2 a gallon for the first time.
E)While the price rise angered car drivers, many transportation experts feel it has turned attention to America’s meager(不景气的)public transport. "The public transport system has been better now than in the past decades," says Delon Lowas, an urban planning analyst at the Sierra Club, the environmental group. According to APTA, a person commuting 10 miles to work every day by train instead of by car could save as much as 314 gallons(1,193 liters)of gasoline annually—thus reducing emissions of hydrocarbon gases and other pollutants.
F)The oil price rise might just have been the induction to result in a new revolution in the travel habits of US commuters, say environmentalists. As evidence, they point to the popularity of new light-rail systems in cities such as Portland. Even Los Angeles, whose residents are famous for their infatuation(迷恋)with cars, recently installed 17 miles of subway tracks. Now, US politicians are also warming to public transport. Federal and state governments are toying(玩弄)with some initiatives, such as tax breaks for people who use trains or buses.
G)But public transportation continues to have its ideological critics. "It shouldn ’t be encouraged at the expense of private ownership of vehicles," says Ben Lieberman of the Competitive Enterprise Institute(GEI). He asserts that the government’s priority should be to make owning and driving a car more affordable by reducing environmental restrictions that push up the price of gasoline.
H)The expansion of public transportation systems also draws opposition from those who are worried about the immense costs involved. They cite Los Angeles’ subway expansion, which cost a record $4.7 billion, as an instance of how expensive public transport can be.
I)Citing costs of construction, Tome DeLay, the powerful Republican Whip of the House of Representatives, have moved to block funds for a proposed light-rail system in Houston. Mr. DeLay argues that die city should conduct a referendum(公民投票)before investing taxpayer’s money. The result: the Houston authorities might well have to manage without federal funds—or scrap the light-rail project entirely. Given the strong political pressure against it, some observers think the flirtation(对......的一时兴趣) with public transport will pass, not least because there are signs already that gas prices have started to fall. Mr. Lovaas, however, thinks that there has been "genuine grass-roots change" as people understand the environmental and social need for cutting down on automobile use. But he admitted that political opposition could take a long time to overcome. "The people at the top will be the last to get it."
Tax breaks are one of the initiatives federal governments takes into consideration for people using buses.
选项
答案
F
解析
题干:减免税收是联邦政府考虑让人们使用汽车的一个举措。题干关键词Tax breaks,federal and state governments和people using buses。文中F段最后一句提到,联邦政府在政策上耍弄一些小把戏,如为使用火车或者公交车的人减免税收。与题干意思吻合,故选F。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/xz4FFFFM
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
A、Towarntravelerstotakecareoftheirbelongings.B、Totelltravelershowtofindtheirlostluggage.C、Toprovideinformati
AaronSwartz.thebrilliantyoungsoftwareprogrammerandInternetactivistwhoinspiredaweandreverence(尊敬)fromleadingfigur
Infuturetradethekeydevelopmenttowatchistherelationshipbetweentheindustrializedandthedevelopingnations.TheThir
Byimposingstrictrulesaboutalcohol,parentscanreducetheirkids’impulsestodrink,accordingtoanewstudy.【C1】_____
ThePeakTimeforEverythingCouldyoupackmoreintoeachdayifyoudideverythingattheoptimaltime?Agrowingbodyof
HavingKidsMakesYouHappy?A)WhenIwasgrowingup,ourformerneighbors,whomwe’llcalltheSloans,weretheonlycoupleon
A、BecausetheyhadovercometroublestoachievesomefruitsinAfrica.B、Becausetheyhadinventednewequipmenttocompletethe
Politicsisanemotionalbusiness.Still,manypeoplefoundthemselvesunusuallymovedbythehistoricpresidentialinauguration
EmilyDickinsonisoneofthegreatestAmericanpoets.Shewasbornina【B1】______NewEnglandvillageinMassachusettsonDecemb
CaringforelderlyparentscatchesmanyunpreparedA)LastJuly,JulieBaldocchi’smotherhadamassivestrokeandwasparalyzed.
随机试题
A.D860B.氯磺丙脲C.胰岛素D.格列本脲E.苯乙双胍一位糖尿病合并糖尿病肾病的患者,经饮食控制后,空腹血糖在10mmol/L,可首先采用上述哪种药物治疗
下列关于疾病与疼痛类型关系的叙述,哪项是错误的
临床诊断考虑为主要治疗措施是
受理复验的检验检疫机构或者国家质检总局应当自收到复验申请之日起( )日内作出复验结论。
应付可转换公司债券转为资本属于债务转资本方式的债务重组。()
1936年12月12日,()在西安扣留蒋介石,迫使他停止内战、联共抗日,史称“西安事变”。
对甲市乙县公安局派出所以乙县公安局的名义作出的具体行政行为不服申请的复议,应由()管辖。
在一项实验中,第一组实验者摄取了大量的人造糖,第二组则没有吃糖。结果发现,吃糖的人比没有吃糖的人认知能力低。这一实验表明,人造糖中所含的某种成分会影响人的认知能力。以下哪项如果为真,最能支持上述结论?
落花是一种自然现象,但在我国诗词中却赋予它们以情感与生命。“流水落花春去也,天上人间”表达了国破家亡之恨,无可奈何之情,“花自飘零水自流,一种相思,两处闲愁”抒发了浓浓的郁闷之情,幽幽的相思之苦。落花的意象反映的是()。
Hewas______onthetelephonesoIaskedhimtospeakmoreclearly.
最新回复
(
0
)