Huh!
Yet the 3x'r can state he wishes that the Tuc's house had burned down w/ him in it for stating the dude wasn't being smart renting his basement w/ a known fire hazard and not addressing the issue.
Not that I wanted the dude banned, but maybe some words(or short timeout) on what's not appropriate to post
listen. I 100000% agree with your last statement. There are tons of proposed solutions and little way to get there. I am for EVs for a lot of people, it’s perfect. They won’t work for me doing construction yet or living where I travel a couple hundred miles in a day doing something for work.
Old Goat brings up the most valid points of all though. California and western states where the cities have been developed in the last 50 years are very different then east coast cities that were developed 250 years ago. Boston is a very standout place. Between the road system or lack there of, lack of parking, super tight streets, and tons of other utilities that are buried and antiquated already, bringing so much more electricity to charge vehicles will be very very expensive.
Is there technology for solar car chargers? Like essentially portable charging stations that have a battery in them to hold a certain amount of charge and a solar panel to charge the batteries back up after said EV is plugged in? It would seem to cut cost in infrastructure, staying above ground would be the cheapest way. So maybe some time of portable charging station needs to come to the table.
I'm over it, don't you worry toughguy
Me either
Yep.
Got 0 lingering issues w/ the guy! I'd rather ski w/ guy than fight 'em.
And yeah, I agree, we both acted like 6 yr old assholes in that thread
Sorry for thread drift, carry on.....
A 22 year megadrought fueled by climate change sure sounds like a good reason for a water shortage.
https://blog.ucsusa.org/pablo-ortiz/...rn-us-drought/
Go that way really REALLY fast. If something gets in your way, TURN!
So now the climate thread is the place for biased jong trolls...
Umm... no. Boiling occurs when the liquid vapor pressure reaches the ambient barometric pressure, but water evaporates at all temperatures above freezing. Otherwise, it would never dry after it rains.
But the chart of water evaporation vs temperature isn't a straight line, it's an upward curve.
I think the proper response to this moranity is:![]()
It can be true that both climate change and too much human consumption are contributing to the problem.
Re:consumption-
“In 1960, U.S. Supreme Court Special Master Simon Rifkind made a fundamental mistake in calculating how much water was then available in the Colorado River Basin, and how much might be available in the future. The court, in its ruling in the case of Arizona v. California, accepted Rifkind’s math. The consequence is a shortage on the Colorado River relative to the expectations of the nine states (seven in the U.S., two in Mexico) that share it.But it also was a fundamental mistake for the water users in the Lower Colorado River Basin to not recognize the flaw in Rifkind’s math and act accordingly. That second mistake, more than Rifkind’s, is the cause of our current troubles.”
https://www.inkstain.net/2013/11/sim...olorado-river/
And yeah, evaporation isn’t the same as boiling. Maybe read about sublimation - you’re mind will be blown!
A common sense solution 🤪
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=P0q4o58pKwA
Although I guess you skipped earth science in school.
"It's only steep if you're backseat"
If you read this sentence as "anyone who blames the river/lake drying up ONLY on carbon emissions or global warming and not on too many humans using the water as well is a moron" then it makes sense. Don't think that's what they meant though. And around here it's "moran", JONG.
The first Colorado River basin users that should be allocated less are the users that draw water from outside the Colorado river basin.
I don't give a shit that they had a say back in 1922. Look at the map, its not their water.
These powerful groups should be the first to tighten their belts considering they aren't taking their native water, but rather stealing it from a basin over.
-Denver
-California Agriculture in the Imperial valley
-LA (desalination plants anyone???)
Why nobody singles out these users is odd to me.
![]()
$200K? How much were the first Teslas? If this can be scaled up to demand and price cut in half, we've got something right??
Hydrogen-powered Ford Ranger hits the road
Go that way really REALLY fast. If something gets in your way, TURN!
Don’t forget MX
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