which will lower the costs of those vehicles in the long term.
Sorry, I'm laughing too hard at this part...
*whew* Ok - yes, the rest of your post I agree with - almost. The main problem with high fuel taxes in the short run is that they are
insanely regressive in the US. We have a very interconnected system where our current infrastructure mans that if you can't afford the price of an electric vehicle (which is high compared to ICE vehicles) you are stuck, and because fuel costs more it will be even more difficult to save for an electric.
Regarding the part about "bringing down the cost of those vehicles" - we are well beyond the point in history where technological advancements are going to result in lower prices for vehicles. Due to the massive barriers to entry to vehicle development, vehicle prices are just going to increase, not decrease. We're also going to likely end up with a new three-letter agency (or new authority for the NTSB or something) to deal with autonomous vehicles; those vehicles are going to start costing the same as light aircraft at best. We're going to be forced to ride-share; the majority of the public is not going to be able to afford private ownership of autonomous vehicles.
So we can't just hike gasoline taxes - we need to start restructuring the entire system. It's this lack of systems thinking that bugs me most about politics... the interactions between various "solutions" often have massive emergent results of questionable merit.
(Sluissa - for some reason I have this image now of you with uncontrollably shaking hands, preventing you from running for office...
)