Gov't Funded Electric Car Company Goes Out of Business 195
thecarchik writes "Consider yesterday's collapse of electric car company Green Vehicles an object lesson in why it's a bad idea for cities to invest in the risky business of start-up car companies — perhaps especially start-up electric car companies. Even such companies with a viable product have seen their fair share of financial troubles, but Green Vehicles did not even have a product to sell off at a fire sale. The city of Salinas, California learned that lesson as Green Vehicles shut its doors, costing the city more than $500,000."
Just cities? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd say it's a bad idea for *anyone* to invest in a company that has no product and/or does not make money.
Business plans are a dime a dozen; ability to execute is an uncommon skill.
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So many people don't understand the amount of work that's involved. Any class in entrepreneurship will push that starting a business takes many long hours, with almost no days off, and you should expect to lose money the first few years.
After seeing a promise of $700,000 in tax revenue a year, I sincerely hope the business plan didn't state that was in the first year. You ALWAYS plan for losses in the first couple of years (at least that's what I was taught.) That should be a sign to anyone investing in a s
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The real story here is a city employee deciding to invest in a bad investment. This happens all the time. The investors think they have a good deal, and it's someone else's money, and rarely does anything bad happen to this person.. Usually these aren't even elected officials so the voter anger gets aimed at their boss instead.
They are called start-ups (Score:3)
It's a big thing for people in the USA to fund companies that have no product and/or does not make money, the companies are called 'start-ups'.
A big thing in Silicon Valley, where people fund a couple of geeks with a half baked piece of software and a crazy idea (or a couple of marketing wizards who promise a good idea and have a flakey demo). Also big in the space industry, [bbc.co.uk] NASA has invested billions into companies that are promising a working earth to space person-rated spacecraft, and in most cases have
Government should never try to pick (Score:2)
the winners or the losers because in the end we usually are the losers.
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Ah, but then you'd be leaving out the vital message that anything government does is bad, and even when it isn't, government can't do anything right, so we should let all the rich people keep all their money because they earned it.
The story is vaguely interesting, but I don't know how it made it through the firehose unedited, especially with that biased bullshit line.
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I'd say it's a bad idea for *anyone* to invest in a company that has no product and/or does not make money.
Yet these concerns seem not to apply to computer-related companies, which is why you get tech bubbles and not small plastic widget bubbles.
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source [wikiquote.org]
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And yes, thou should study. Hard. Aim for Engineering or Ph.D, preferably in combination.
In the six or seven years it takes to get an undergraduate degree and PhD a true entrepreneur will have already created a profitable business. And he will have made use of many people with engineering qualifications and PhDs along the way.
Having no interest in entrepreneurship myself, I'm not bothered either way, but it is a fact that being an entrepreneur has very little to do with working hard for formal qualifications.
Having a computer science PhD may get you a cool job at Google, but it won't tea
Shocking (Score:2, Insightful)
A "green jobs" investment that went sour. A car without a market. Socialists everywhere scratching their heads.
Yes the pun was intended.
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I'm confused too. What do Socialists have to do with venture capitalism and entrepeneurship?
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I believe it's a suggestion that the investment was made based more on an ideological basis (i.e. the desire to be seen as supporting "green jobs") than on a robust economic analysis. Not that this has anything to do with socialism...
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Any "robust economic analysis" which ignores the environmental damage our current economy is doing is sheer folly.
However, instead of picking individual winners and losers, the government should just impose a dollar-a-gallon carbon tax and let the market sort out who stands and who falls on the new green playing field.
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Few seem to realize it any more but the actual definition of Socialism is government ownership of the means of production.
The city buying into this company is a classical example of socialism.
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Are government "investments" in the bond market ok? The stock market? The real estate market? Can they invest in luring large employers? Retail stores?
Why would investing in some less traditional market be any more socialist?
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What's the difference between a government investment and a bank investment, which is apparently proper capitalism? In both cases you're dealing with a faceless beaurocracy that really doesn't understand the business it's investing in.
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It's funny and sad at the same time that you replaced "pursuit of happiness" with "property", as if the two were interchangeable.
And by the way, I know quite a few people that don't pay taxes and they haven't lost neither their life nor liberty, nor have men with guns came. I suppose it may be it's different in the US.
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It's called tax evasion, and is a felony. With fines, jail time(up to five years), or both. You go to jail automatically if you can't pay the fine (though I'm not aware of cases that the judge just specified a fine despite it being an option), or the back taxes. In which case the government can liquidate your assets to pay the back taxes.
You don't lose your life, but you do lose your freedom and pursuit of happiness: sound better than property. Some historians will argue that property was intended as the Br
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Actually, no, welfare, retirement funds, etc are all cut-off until you pay off the debt, as far as I know.
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* pay taxes
* pay rent / mortgage
* not beat up people I disagree with
* pay for groceries
* wear clothes
* feed our children
* pay for a haircut
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What's special about "green projects"? Does the same concept not apply to prison projects, or foreign regime change projects, or central bank projects, or aerospace projects, or public school projects, or neighborhood park projects?
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It goes like this ok? Hierarchically organized groups of people are more powerful as a general rule than individual people, even than the same number of unorganized people. So one way or another, you're going to get hierarchical governance, and one way or other, you're going to get schooled by and taxed by your hierarchical governors. This will come either from the gangleader whose turf you find your sorry ass in, or from some possibly more legitimate semi-democratic kind of leadership.
These are your only a
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Startup electric car company fails to start up. Shocking.
If you can't afford to do it, don't do it! (Score:5, Insightful)
It may not be an impossible task, but if inventing the next generation of EV were easy and cheap--and in this context, I'd suggest that a $500,000 investment is cheap--then everyone would be doing it.
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It's not impossible. My co-worker has produced, for far less than $500,000 a fully functional, 100% legit, electric-only vehicle. He uses it to commute to work, or at least he did, until he quit to pursue creating more with his new company. And oh by the way, he drives it on public roads because it's DMV certified. And it will also beat a porche at a drag race. Fun, eh?
http://evdrive.com/ [evdrive.com]
If they couldn't turn $500k into a prototype, then they did not have the required skills to create the prototype in
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Can't see a cost anywhere on that page, but if it isn't less than 75K, it's a waste of time. I can buy a Tesla Model S for about that that gets over 200 miles per charge. His gets 140. And if there are issues, he has to fix it (no warranty).
Building electric cars is not exceptionally difficult. Building one that doesn't suck that gets good range for a reasonable price is.
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It's easy to produce something cheaply when someone else has paid 99.99% of the costs.
You cleverly forget to mention that someone else has done 99.99% of the work needed to get that certification.
Had your co-worker actually had to pay for engineering the body and suspension, getting the orig
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No, but you are confusing a conversion kit (which is what your buddy produced) with a brand new vehicle (which is what the company that went under was attempting). Apples and oranges.
We have 100 years of designing lightweight electrically powered computer cars? We
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Except your friend didn't. According to the web site you already need to have something to start with... an existing car. It's a nice little niche product but nothing like what Green Vehicles is trying to do.
It's unlikely you can build a prototype of a next gen electric car for $500k, but this was more like an electric motorbike with a roof. Try comparing the photo of the prototype BMW 'Clever' [leftlanenews.com] shown off 2006 running on natural gas, and the Green Vehicles [allcarselectric.com] from the summary. Similar concept, and BMW did this
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The electric motor will easily outlast the driver, even if you start driving at age 16 and keep on driving continuously for your entire lifetime. My only concern is that his radial load on the motor's output side bearing has factor of safety of 1.0, that's too close to my taste. He may need to replace that bearing in a couple of years; the motor will be otherwise fine.
$500k unlikely to have been the entire bankroll (Score:2)
It may not be an impossible task, but if inventing the next generation of EV were easy and cheap--and in this context, I'd suggest that a $500,000 investment is cheap--then everyone would be doing it.
It's doubtful that the $500k was the sole source of funding for the company. It's far more likely that it's the city that's out of $500k from things like forgone property taxes, perhaps the 'factory' went up on public land that was given to the company worth ~$500k, etc... Meanwhile there's lots of other investors out there that have lost their investment.
Not saying this makes it all that much better, or less of a gamble.
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Who exactly expected to have a fully functional prototype of a sale-able electric vehicle with a $500,000 investment?
The linked articles don't include the full story.
http://www.montereycountyweekly.com/weblogs/news-blog/2011/jul/18/green-vehicles-in-salinas-closes/ [montereycountyweekly.com]
Salinas city officials announced Monday that Mike Ryan, president of Green Vehicles, said he had closed the headquarters due to a lack of investors. Green Vehicles was selected in 2009 to receive a $2.7 million grant from the California Energy Commission, and was required to raise matching funds.
"The reason why we failed is because we failed to raise the $2.8 million in matching funds," says former VP of Green Vehicles, Lee Colin, a Pacific Grove resident. Green Vehicles had planned to start making cars by the end of 2011.
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we can afford to pat down babies (Score:2)
because holy fuck, you remember when that baby blew up the empire state building?
god damn it, load me up with a nother 10 billion dollars worth of backscatter x-rays, and dont ask me to give you an itemized list and keep those god damned auditers off our backs!
remember 9/11!
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It's been done before. And at least one EV company in existence today based acquisition of funding for its entire line on a "prototype" they bought from another group which developed their car for very little.
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Perhaps you'd get sick less if you didn't imagine horrors nobody said.
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No. He says that investing in what is pretty much blue-sky development takes a lot of ressources.
The government should absolutely bankroll such ventures: if you invest enough in enough of them for long enough, it will pay off. And only states typically have the ressources and patience (they do, look at CERN, or the moonshot, or the Manhattan project) do do that on a significant scale.
But an electric car on a 500 000 $ budget is magical thinking. Almost as dumb as "tax cuts will help the budget balance". Onl
Why single out car companies? (Score:3)
> it's a bad idea for cities to invest in the risky
> business of start-up car companies
Perhaps it's a bad idea for cities to heavily invest in any high risk venture. But it should be noted that we don't all come out and cluck at them when their risk pays off.
Anyway, if the good people of Salinas wanted to risk $500 thousand in a questionable startup, it's a free country (sort of). I imagine other cities have squandered far more money on far worse ideas.
Not all people would have wanted to (Score:2)
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Good plan. If there's a citizen that opposes it, the government shouldn't be allowed to do it.
If nothing else, your plan would have the virtue of saving lots of taxpayer money.
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Risky is not the same as questionable. The Japanese cities invested in the mag-lev bullet train. In this case it paid off. London invested in building a railway system underground. Now we can't imagine the city without it. I think it was questionable rather than risky as common sense tells us that is seriously underfunded.
However critics love a failure. Look how people crowed when the Segway failed to change transport as we know it (ok not a city investment but just an example). However we don't know yet i
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It turns out that Cali taxpayers may be on the hook for Salinas' failed investment:
"Salinas plans on asking the California Energy Commission to reimburse the money it lost."
Nothing scares me more than the combination of green religion with socialism.
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update: Green Vehicles already got $187,000 from the California Energy Commission, on top of the over $500,000 from Salinas.
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Not socialism, mind you.
Salinas gave this bussiness investment in order to get them to build their factory/HQ there so they get more employment. It happens all the time (either directly or through tax cuts or infrastructure investment) as it is one of the few ways a government can promote bussiness in its area in a capitalistic country. Of course it ends with a "race to the bottom" where every town is ready to outbid its neighbours in order to get some relief / allow politicians the chance to brag about it
Meanwhile.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Too bad they wern't 'too big to fail' while making nothing.
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You realize it's hundreds of billions, right? And over short term, bailout loans of several trillion dollars were made as well.
You realize virtually all of it was payed back, with interest, right?
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I think you have that backwards..
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Re:Meanwhile.. (Score:4, Informative)
Paid back TARP $$ and then took Federal loans at 0% interest with largely no strings on how to spend it [consumerist.com]
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Yes, and grocery stores provide something of value too. That doesn't mean bailing out ones that make fucktarded decisions is a good idea; we can settle for the non-fucktarded ones.
Thanks for playing, now go back to believing in whatever crisis the government is pimping today.
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The good citizens worked hard for that money. Did they have a vote about how it was being "invested" in some feel-good scheme their know-it-all leaders wanted?
This may come as a surprise to you, but the United States is a representative democracy. The people don't have to vote on every little thing. They chose representatives who they felt would look out for their interests. Those representatives spent $3 per person on one particular venture. That single venture didn't pay off. Others likely did. The people are most likely still quite happy with their elected leaders, and probably don't know or care about this.
The only reason you're hearing about it is beca
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The United States is not uniformly a representative democracy. Examples where it is a direct democracy:
1. Referendum and initiatives on state ballots.
2. Cases where the Town Meeting system of government is practiced.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Town_meeting [wikipedia.org]
There is no particular reason that this town could not adopt this form of government.
Having lived in a town that used the Town Meeting system I'd say that it is not actually better than the representative systems as meeting turnout tends to consist of cla
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Even in the case of areas with referendum and initiative, the fact remains that the people do not vote on every little thing. They would never have seen a bill spending such a relatively tiny amount.
And the Town Meeting system (which I am well aware of, having spent some time living in Connecticut), is rarely true direct democracy. Maybe for really tiny towns, it might be, but in most cases you have a Board of Selectmen who do most of the governing. They put policies up to a vote, and the system ends up
half million? (Score:3)
Ummm, so they invested a half million and the company failed. It seems to me that more than half new businesses fail, as a matter of fact, the last time I checked new businesses have a failure rate of around 80% in the first five years of business. If your starting a new business with a new product, then the odds are stacked against you. Does that mean we stop trying to launch new products? If we stop trying to invest in new projects then I guess the only way to open up new funding is by legislating income for current product lines, which doesn't seem like a viable way to do business.
So the county invested in a new business and it failed. Chalk it up as a loss and move on. While the taxpayers might not like the way the gov is spending their taxes, cities/municipalities, counties, states and national governments do this all the time. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. But I'd rather fund a new startup that fails, rather than fund the good-ol boy network that siphons money off the top to fund their retirement account. It doesn't sound like the failure was due to mismanagement or corruption, just that they weren't able to continue and that it cost more than expected. This happens all the time. A half-million is a small investment and though it didn't work out this time, the only way to "win" is to make investments in the future. If all the bugs had been worked out before the company went into business there would have been no reason for the gov to invest. They gambled on a decent return and it failed. But one failure shouldn't be held up as an example to bash investing in the future, which is the slant the article seems to imply. If we don't invest in better ways of doing things, where will we end up?
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But I'd rather fund a new startup that fails, rather than fund the good-ol boy network that siphons money off the top to fund their retirement account.
Or they could refrain from confiscating people's hard earned money at gunpoint to hand out to favored group, whether it's the good-ol boy network or some green nonsense.
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Your money you earn isn't yours anyways.
You are the last step in a giant network that money travels through to get to you... before it goes off to somewhere else.
Taxes are the price you pay to keep that network operational so that money flows through you.
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Not sure how you mean socialist/communist. Money doesn't belong to people really, the government can chose to flood the market with more cash and thus make the money that you hold practically useless. Since cash in the US is all fiat money, it doesn't represent anything of value and is only worth as much as the government allows it to be worth. In the current economic system, money is generated by depositing money in the bank in order to generate debt through loans. For each dollar you deposit, the b
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Yeah, I can see your point on that, but I think it's a matter for the citizens to take up with the people authorizing this rather than a guy that writes articles saying that the industry in the whole isn't doing enough to help out other people. That was my main point of contention. Personally, I'm in favor of spending money on research rather than a lot of projects that the government funds. Someday we need to change the economic indicators to consider other things rather than just cash flow. I think
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Why is people in /. so obsessed with the "green" issue? It is like showing a red cloth to a bull.
Local (and national) government court bussiness to setup shop in its area. If this company, instead of electric cars, wanted to create some compound toxic to people and wildlife that was to be sold to India, it probably would have get the same investment, as long as they promised to get jobs to the town. And if it would have failed, it would not have been mentioned in /.
Yet here a lot of people seem somehow visc
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you sound like you were a cog in this plan to use 500k of city money to lure the other investors to dumping money into the city..
if they wanted to gamble, they should've gone to vegas, at least there doing due diligence is pretty easy(even though if it means that you'll end up knowing that you're going to give the casino money). investing isn't just about giving money to some guys, not all product ideas are equal and not all entrepreneurs are equal worth giving the money, which you pretty much imply
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Hmmm, no I wouldn't say learn nothing. The question of whether or not the government should be investing is a different issue that the taxpayers should have an interest in deciding. I don't know the specifics in the case; however, many governments offer incentives and grants to businesses in the gamble that they will provide jobs and taxable income in the future. Heck, the Federal government provided and investment to the banking community because they felt that the failure of many in the banking commu
At least Aptera is still going... (Score:2)
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Yes, it is difficult to create new technologies that have the capabilities of older ones plus a few extra benefits.
Thank you for stating that out.
Dontcha just love (Score:2)
All those green jobs?
Salinas has lots of green....lettuce (Score:2)
Government is the probelm (Score:2, Insightful)
A little is lost on where the tax money came from. A homeless man buying booze. A retired man on a fixed income paying more for his food. People who really cannot afford to give a cent. Taxation in the name of government tampering with the free market is the most insidious device yet conceived by the mind of man.
Forever will these well meaning busy bodies toil in the name of our betterment, because they do so free of guilt, thinking honestly that the strong arm of government is the way to prosperity.
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You're deluded. To just pick one of the many obviously wrong things in your post: you claim that it is offensive to think that the government is entitled to some share of our individual profits. But we wouldn't have those profits without a functioning government.
To paraphrase a wise man, taxes are the price we pay to live in a civilized society.
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"free market"is sort of a funny idea. You need to get over adam smith, hmm, and real real quick. But nicely done polemics. With respect to governments investing, try this.
US government (feds) can print money. If they invest that money in (to keep it simple for you) infrastructure, then that supports the general welfare (remember that up in the unamendable preamble of the constitution) which, as intended, gives everyone a better shot at the pursuit of happiness, which often means some possibly greedy, bu
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US government (feds) can print money
And by that very act, devalue that which is already out there. Instantly. Thus they're not really printing money, they're just taxing the rest of the economy by that much. So why not just leave the currency alone, and levy normal taxes to build that bridge? Because then people would have to actually decide if that's what they want in exchange for taking home less pay.
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Your silliness stems in part from the idea that money as you are thinking of it is real
No, "money," per se, doesn't have anything to do with it. The government's ability to print it at will shows that it - in and of itself - is not real, in terms of value. But it's a mechanism. a lubricant, by which real value (effort, wares, etc) is transferred. The actual value in play doesn't change unless someone actually produces something or does something constructive. Printing money to build infrastructure is just an indirect way of transferring another part of one person's daily effort into some oth
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Thank you. Although you need to carefully note that I said money as you think of it. I assert that money, seen in a very unpopular way, can be real and much more and an accounting zero sum scalar. "scalar" is sort of mathy. Do you get any grasp of the word?
And you never ever touch on anything other than "transfers" and I do like to talk about "creating". Hah, the math reference is very much to the point with you. :-)
So let me ask *you* a deep question. Let say we both have the idea that "general welfa
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Glancing at your response., I do not immediate see anything much for me to disagree about therein, in the response you made. Does that puzzle you? But this particular thread set is about government investing in what might be a "profit" making enterprise, some sort of green thing. Let us see if I can help you out here. You do understand that nothing anyone can say about anything is "True"? So there is going to be an aspect of what you say that is "not True". One way to get at *policy* to be derived fr
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The Federal Court Restructuring Plan was never enacted into law, so there was nothing illegal or corrupt about the Supreme Court's rulings on the New Deal legislation.
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Well, for shits and giggles, I did. The most worrying fact from that article is that pencil erasers are colored with cadmium tint. WTF, mang? Thas fucked up.
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Okay I read the libertarian essay. It's a bunch of bull that makes me question your sanity.
What it is claiming is that a product produced by a for-profit company is made without any one person having total knowledge of every aspect of it's creation. That is because they contact others, who know how to do parts of the job, and they contact others, and so on and so on. Rather cool.
And then this idiot makes, for no reason whatsoever, a claim that because the EVVVVIL GUBERMENT tries to do it, for some reason th
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Ok. Compare any private industry - say UPS with the U.S. Postal service. Where do you think money is spent more wisely? Even when heavily subsidized by federal and state governments, the UPSP cannot turn a profit, they are in fact 15 billion dollars in debt today [sunherald.com], meanwhile UPS and all companies like it turn a profit every year, have better customer service, sell a better product and are not forced by the government to go to work every day but rather they filling the needs of others just like you do wh
How is this News? Gov't Does this ALL the time (Score:2)
Gov't does this all the time. Local, county, state, federal gov't will cut deals all the time. Often paying for infrastructure, capital improvements, bonding, loan guarantee and even direct/low interest loans. California Teachers Penchant is one of the largest investors in the country, with billions on the line. On a federal level the US gov't gifts hundreds of millions of dollars annually so that private business get preferential treatment and/or avoid tariffs. So what's the news here? How is a green
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This is /. Talking about green issues (and more of failed green projects) is like moving a red cloth in front of a bull.
My guess is that a guy in a Prius stole their lunch when they were in pre-school.
A single failure doesn't equate to a bad plan (Score:2)
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in fact this story demonstrates that ONLY the government should be doing this; as it's too risky a business proposition for private enterprise. Governments don't HAVE to make money on these ventures.
Economic calculation. The reason why no private venture went for this themselves is because all the private investors who are capable of acquiring $500000 capital in the first place were all smart enough to see that the risk isn't worth the reward here, so the business venture is not worth undertaking at all. That's the key - not all business ventures are worth undertaking, even if they make you feel warm and fuzzy thinking about them they might actually be huge wastes of money. If a government project fail
Only $500000? Phfft! (Score:2)
Wrong Conclusion (Score:2)
You could have a debate about the wisdom of the government's involvement, but startups fail all the time. Highlighting one as a cautionary tale teaches nothing, other than "don't invest in a startup unless you're willing to lose your investment".
EVs are not viable (Score:2)
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500,000$ may be a lot for an individual, but a city? Not so much. Especially one of 150,000 people. They're going to live through it.
Good point; however, imagine if the project had been properly scoped and managed, and had been able to turn out a product with a little more time and money invested. What if they could have produced their own fleet of EVs for city use? Would that have justified the cost? Does the city own the electric power generation or distribution, allowing them to effectively give away the razors to local residents so they could then sell the blades for a bit more profit? Were they going to sell the cars on the open
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The town in which I live has 450,000 people, and we are spending $762,000,000 on a second line for the tramway. The same was spent on the first line completed a few years ago. So $1.5bn on a few electric trains that only serves a tiny fraction of the city. $1,400,000 was spent just on planting trees along the side of the first tram line, three times the budget of this tiny EV project. So no, $500k isn't much for a city.
Phillip.
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I'm in Portland, where public trans is a huge deal. 1.5 Bn sounds like a lot, but if it's done right, it can pay off in spades.
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How about this: It's a bad idea to use the money of tax payers to do anything involving risk outside of national defense. Leave the whole capitalism thing to the capitalists.
Because capitalists always have the best interests of the human race at heart, and will never do anything that will adversely affect the economy. (How did that global financial crisis work out for you?)
The world is based on technology and infrastructure created by government investment. Sure there have been failures, but no system will have a 100% success rate.
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The problem is that Keynesianism has been around for so long, people have forgotten what capitalism was like without it.
It was nasty. It was unstable. I almost collapsed several times.
sadly i have to agree (Score:2)
but the republican leaders are just as bad as the democrats though. both of our political parties are horribly corrupt and incompetent.
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This company is actually lured to relocate from San Jose. More Green Jobs.