- First Name
- Chris
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2024
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- 1,175
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- 635
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- Bucks county PA
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- Infiniti g35 coupe, VW Golf
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- Undecided
- Banned
- #241
Timelines change if they're not ready for prime time in the infrastructure isn't there. The government isn't going to have us walking down the interstate. The way you get products ready for prime time is to get them out to market and get investment dollars and then the way you do that is to get people to buy them. Incentives are one of those ways. They should not be forced on people as you say prematurely but incentives are not being forced. If they're not ready but a time any kind of ice ban comes in that ban will be postponed. As for the government forcing things, that's what governments do. They are called laws. Like I might want to drive 100 miles an hour to my street but the speed limit is 25. I don't want to drive that fast down there but you get my driftI suspect a lot of the negative reactions are coming from the fact that BEVs are effectively being forced on people. With some states claiming they will ban the sale of ICE vehicles in some years. Any kind of forced cooperation is going to get backlash, its human nature.
One negative of this enforced EV conversion is that the technology is not being given the time it needs to mature before widespread adoption. The effect is that we are getting vehicles on the road with sometimes questionable safety, and fairly unpractical for most needs. This gives the BEVs a bad name. Early adopters are effectively beta testers for EVs right now. On that note, CR has consistently found BEVs to be less reliable on average then their ICE or hybrid counterparts.
People not wanting to be beta testers, does not make them haters.
Knowing that new products will tend to have more failures, and wanting to avoid that, is certainly not fear. Thats an educated approach that has served many well.
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