
Originally Posted by
AdironRider
I'm not the one demanding they do things that fit my political or cultural worldview.
Just give them the option to do it and if it works for them, that is a net benefit towards your goal is it not? If the option doesn't work.
Frankly, the amount of pushback you are all doing on this topic shows your insecurity about the real problems that exist concerning EV's and their practicality and cost. There are many reasons why EV's are only a 10% market share, and it is a technology that is no longer in its infancy. Batteries have existed for a long fucking time and the same problems still exist.
The push back is because you make the same simple, hackneyed arguments that angry libertarians always make. Just about everyone of us has a libertarian friend with an MBA and an 85th percentile IQ who hasn't taken math beyond multi-variable calculus, worships Milton Friedman, and fancies themself an expert on economics. The are free-market types who don't remotely understand market economics. To be honest, I actually really like some of them, but the arguments are simple-minded and poorly thought out.
There is a reason it is mandatory to pay taxes. It is actually in the best interests of people to do so, how much is obviously debatable and a whole different question, but it is certainly in their best interests for people to actually pay. But you can't make that sort of thing optional.
There is a reason there are regulatory boards for surgeons. You can't just throw up a shingle saying you are a brain surgeon (or an orthopedist) and figure the market will simply take care of who is or is not good. The idea that surgeons don't need to be licensed is interesting theoretically in the way the it helps facilitate discussion and might help develop practical policy, but it is not reasonable in practice. Much like the saturated model in statistics, it helps one consider the issue of overfitting and the underlying decision mechanisms regarding modelling, but in practice no one would actually use a saturated model anyway. It is a helpful construct theoretically, but not something for pracitical use.
The idea of ending licensing for MDs was one of Miltie's real gems. I get that this does cause an increase in medical costs, but simply pulling the band aid off and deregulating is not the way to do things. It is helpful for a think tank considering how to solve the issue of medical costs, but it has little practical use.
It actually is in the long term best interests of people to go electrify. Most people really don't know what is good for them in the long run, that is where regulations which accurately reflect cost come in. There is a reason children are not allowed to drop out of school until they are 16. Most people simply don't understand what is in their best interests in the long run.
Environmental issues take a very long time to be visible. The idea that most consumers are smart enough to understand the damage they are doing and make purchasing decisions accordingly is absurd.
If you are going to give people the option then you need to have the cost of what they do commensurate with the damage. You cannot wait for people to understand what is in their best interests. In a country where everyone seems to have a smart phone that costs 1k and smart TVs it is in many cases a choice.
2035 is a long way away. Batteries have already improved, and there is tremendous work being done. The charging infrastructure in California is excellent, and getting much better. People are actually much more capable of traveling using EVs than they think. There is work to be done, but it is much easier than expected. In the last couple of years it has improved by leaps and bounds, and that is only going to increase exponentially. Electric cars
I'm actually not entirely onboard with banning ICE vehicles in CA. I go back and forth on it. But what I would do is have a cap and trade system for carbon. I'm not in favor of taxing gas (or anything else that has to do with carbon) because of the emissions, I would prefer to limit how much we are going to put out and then buy/sell shares. That way if a company can't limit themselves it is going to cost them. If every single other company (obvious some strange hypotheticals here) which needed carbon was able to move off that, then maybe the shares cost less. But in the end there is a limit to how much we are going to pollute.
This approach would actually allow people the freedom to drive what they want, but they would have to pay according to the actual costs of their actions. The market would then be more sentient and intelligent, the costs of goods and services would reflect what it costs to manufacturing costs (in this case we are talking about the damage the carbon is doing) in much the same way that buying a smoothy is reflective of both it's demand and what it costs to make.
Companies don't have the right to just dump chemicals into a river. The idea that relaxing these regulations and would lead to a better solution is ridiculous. It is also ridiculous to assume that making paying taxes optional would lead to a better solution.
Make gas prices reflect the environmental cost of driving an ICE and then maybe it is reasonable not to ban them. If that were the case, i.e. if the market accurately reflected the cost, things would probably take care of themselves. Honestly, electric cars are simply better in my experience. I don't have any interest in ever driving an ICE again. Whenever I'm at hot and I drive my dad's Volt I can tell when it is driving on electricity and when it is ICE, and it drives much better on electricity. I think if most people actually had the experience of driving a good EV they would convert easily. For the money they are usually much better cars.
EVs are getting cheaper. That is only going to continue to happen. More and more energy in California is coming from clean sources. New homes, unless they don't have solar exposure, are going to need solar panels. These are all good developments, but there is more work to be done.
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