Trump Administration, In Biggest Environmental Rollback, To Announce Auto Pollution Rules (nytimes.com) 279
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The New York Times: The Trump administration is expected on Tuesday to announce its final rule to roll back Obama-era automobile fuel efficiency standards, relaxing efforts to limit climate-warming tailpipe pollution and virtually undoing the government's biggest effort to combat climate change. The new rule, written by the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Transportation, would allow vehicles on American roads to emit nearly a billion tons more carbon dioxide over the lifetime of the cars than they would have under the Obama standards and hundreds of millions of tons more than will be emitted under standards being implemented in Europe and Asia.
Trump administration officials have raced to complete the auto rule by this spring, even as the White House is consumed with responding to the coronavirus crisis. President Trump is expected to extol the rule, which will stand as one of the most consequential regulatory rollbacks of his administration, as a needed salve for an economy crippled by the pandemic. [...] The new rule, which is expected to be implemented by late spring, will roll back a 2012 rule that required automakers' fleets to average about 54 miles per gallon by 2025. Instead, the fleets would have to average about 40 miles per gallon. To meet the new number, fuel economy standards would have to rise by about 1.5 percent a year, compared to the 5 percent annual increase required by the Obama rule. The industry has said it would increase fuel economy standards by about 2.4 percent a year without any regulation. The new standard would lead to nearly a billion more tons of planet-warming carbon dioxide released and the consumption of about 80 billion more gallons of gasoline over the lifetime of the vehicles built during the terms of the rule, according to a recent draft of the plan. The report says about 20 states are expect to sue the Trump administration to undo the rule in a case expected to be resolved by the Supreme Court in the coming years.
Trump administration officials have raced to complete the auto rule by this spring, even as the White House is consumed with responding to the coronavirus crisis. President Trump is expected to extol the rule, which will stand as one of the most consequential regulatory rollbacks of his administration, as a needed salve for an economy crippled by the pandemic. [...] The new rule, which is expected to be implemented by late spring, will roll back a 2012 rule that required automakers' fleets to average about 54 miles per gallon by 2025. Instead, the fleets would have to average about 40 miles per gallon. To meet the new number, fuel economy standards would have to rise by about 1.5 percent a year, compared to the 5 percent annual increase required by the Obama rule. The industry has said it would increase fuel economy standards by about 2.4 percent a year without any regulation. The new standard would lead to nearly a billion more tons of planet-warming carbon dioxide released and the consumption of about 80 billion more gallons of gasoline over the lifetime of the vehicles built during the terms of the rule, according to a recent draft of the plan. The report says about 20 states are expect to sue the Trump administration to undo the rule in a case expected to be resolved by the Supreme Court in the coming years.
Just symbolic (Score:5, Interesting)
Automakers won't even bother to read this as they know the next administration is going to reverse this as one of their first actions in office.
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Yeah, auto manufacturers can't really react that quickly. Unless we get 4 more years of the Trump administration, don't expect the SUX 9000 to be released anytime soon.
"Next administration" will only be a thing in 2025 (Score:2, Troll)
The DNC is nominating child sniffer with _dementia_. Trump could basically shut down his campaign at this point and he'd still win in a landslide.
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Lol ok
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> The Supreme Court will be His if he is reelected
That sounds good to me. :-)
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Automakers won't even bother to read this as they know the next administration is going to reverse this as one of their first actions in office.
And let's face it, if they want to keep selling cars anywhere other than America they will need to develop more efficient engines anyway.
VW (Score:3)
Are you going to give VW their money back?
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Can I have one of those diesel VW's they seized now?
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I have one. Since they "fixed" it, it gets 32mpg instead of 41mpg actual. I'm more worried about CO2 and am happy to burn 3x more DEF to keep the other emissions down. DEF is cheap. Give me back my power and economy.
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Like whatever... Easy come, easy go (Score:3, Insightful)
That's the nature of the executive order. Very whimsical.
If you want effective rules, congress has to write a law.
The Assholishness is the point (Score:5, Insightful)
Many consumers -- and Trump -- seem to think that GM develops their 2020 models in late 2019. No -- just a new drive train can take 5 years to get from concept to production. Other parts might take less time but it is expensive to change them just on a whim.
So the vast bulk of R&D over the past several years was all assuming that they Obama-era limits were going to be in place. This "gift" from Trump is no gift at all unless they want to scrap their R&D over the past 5 years or so.
They aren't going to do that because what they have been working on is better than what they would have had to offer otherwise. This is true of both ICE and EV plans. And some major auto-makers have the objective of all-EV anyway.
So at the end of the day this is just a demonstration of how big an asshole Trump, McConnell, and all the cronies can be. An all-too-big segment of the voting public loves this about them. They stuck it to the libs once again and they ain't following no lib rules and that's what they want to see. It's a big f-u to anyone telling them what they can and can't do.
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So at the end of the day this is just a demonstration of how big an asshole Trump, McConnell, and all the cronies can be.
In other words, vice signalling.
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Mandating 1.5% doesn't mean manufacturers won't go over, it means they won't be punished if they can't do better. Mandating 5% may just mean they have to pay fines for failing to reach an impossible goal.
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AC on point for a change, congrats.
Engines are software tuned for mileage, emissions, and even sound levels. They can take advantage of relaxed mileage standards by making vehicles more powerful, which everyone seems to want even though even base models are all capable of getting you a speeding ticket.
And how were we going to get to 54 MPG? (Score:4, Informative)
The automaker response has been two fold - build small displacement gas engines and build electric cars.
The small displacement gas engines are typically turbo charged and gasoline direct injection (GDI). I have to admit that turbos can be a hoot to drive but just know that as soon as that turbo kicks in the mpg goes way down. Drastically down. Like, worse than a V6 down. And since they are ramming all that turbo air into the engine block, creating much higher compression ratios, the engines simply won't last as long as normally aspirated engines do on average. The increased complexity also leads to higher repair bills. Remember those stories about the 2007 Lexus with the V6 that has 500,000 miles on it and it's still running like a clock? I'm betting that none of those little turbos will run that long. Not even close.
GDI is an interesting technology and does use fuel more efficiently but it leads to a big problem - premature carbon build up on the inside of the engine. If that goes unchecked it will lead to premature engine failure. So on the gas front both of the solutions lead to shorter engine life and higher repair bills.
I love the idea of electric cars but there are some real issues with it. For one, cobalt. Most lithium ion batteries use varying amounts of cobalt and last time I checked 60% of the world supply of cobalt comes from the Democratic Republic of Congo. Not exactly the most politically stable region in the world to say the least. Mining cobalt is an extremely dangerous practice both environmentally and from a direct human exposure standpoint. It basically contaminates everything it comes in contact with. Not to mention that much of the mining is done through exploitative child labor practices. So there's that too.
The other concern I have is the impact on the electric grid. In the USA roughly 2% of all cars sold are 100% electric. What happens if that goes to 20% of all cars? Will the grid be able to withstand it? Not without some serious upgrades and I don't see anyone rushing out to do that.
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Realistically, unless you make everyone drive a Toyota Prius or a worse tin can, then goal of 55MPG fleet economy is unattainable. Brand new car models, even compacts with tiny engines, are struggling to demonstrate fuel economy better than 35-40MPG.
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Re: And how were we going to get to 54 MPG? (Score:2)
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I know you were taking the piss, but the irony is that even that is better, because a generator runs at constant load tuned for efficiency cf an ICE which must respond to varying demands. That's how REX vehicles can get so far despite tiny gas tanks and small engines: the engine runs at constant load to replenish the batteries, which can cope much more efficiently with varying demand.
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the engines simply won't last as long as normally aspirated engines do on average.
What's gonna die first, the engines or the electronics? I've got a 2005 car, 3-4 months ago some electronics started going south. I'm looking at $2k to replace the computer I think is responsible (several things failed at the same time, the only common item is the computer). I could do it myself for about $300, but then my keyfob won't work anymore. If I want the keyfob to work I either pay the $2k, or buy a $2k doohicky to sync my keys to my new computer.
What's really sad is right now I could buy a
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GDI is an interesting technology and does use fuel more efficiently but it leads to a big problem - premature carbon build up on the inside of the engine.
Wait, what? You should have stuck to the 5 or 6 claims you were most confident that you were repeating properly, because whatever you were trying to remember here you botched it. And if you understood the subject, you'd have caught whatever your mistake was.
Now go and look up what GDI actually is, and see if what you said makes sense.
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Re:And how were we going to get to 54 MPG? (Score:4, Insightful)
1. Cobalt is used to desulphurize oil products. And that thing you typed your comment on has cobalt in it as well. So if now's the point at which you've found your conscience about child slavery in the DRC, you're a bit late to the party.
2. Cobalt % in Li batteries for EVs is going down over time, partly due to supply chain risks. Chemistries are being improved continuously.
3. The damage done by mining cobalt to the environment is absolutely dwarfed by the damage done by extracting oil (never mind actually burning the oil). Nothing to do with cobalt comes close to a Deepwater Horizon, for example.
4. The additional grid load is nowhere near as much as you think it is, because people kid themselves about how much they drive. 37 miles per day per driver, on average, in the US. At 3mpkwh, that's 12kWh of electricity per day (3 is pretty low but I want to avoid over-claiming here). The average US household currently uses about 30kWh of electricity per day, mostly at times when EVs are not going to be charged, and you'll also be able to reduce the amount of crude oil you're refining which also saves electric power (about 1kWh per gallon, but obviously crude oil is still going to be refined for other products, it's a quantitative change not a binary on/off). So there's a material increase, of course, but it's on the order of 20 to 40% extra capacity per household that's required for a conversion to a 100% EV fleet, and just 5 to 10% extra capacity for a 20% EV fleet. US electricity usage per household increased by more than 20% in the 20 years from 1990 to 2010, so it's not like the industry is incapable of growth to meet new demand.
Whatever kills us faster (Score:2)
They're OK with it. They have Yachts,
that's it? (Score:2)
The "prevent climate change" ship sailed about a decade ago with barely anyone on it. We are so far beyond preventing AGW, it's simply unreasonable to discuss the possibility any more. AGW is gonna happen. Most or all of Earth's ice is gonna be gone. Every single climate region on the planet is going to fundamentally change. We've caused a mass extinction. None of this is going to slow down. Not for a long, lon
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No way. Diversification in all things. We need to stop shitting in the bed, too.
This EPA rule-change is just a short-sighted unstable idiot, campaigning.
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So, I'm being realistic here: the most likely outc
Ancient Chinese saying (Score:2)
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Of course, no one read or understands the rules (Score:4, Interesting)
They are just upset because, you know, Orange Man Bad. Here, from Wikipedia, is what Volkswagen said when they refused to sign on:
"Volkswagen responded to the July 29, 2011 agreement with the following statement: "Volkswagen does not endorse the proposal under discussion. It places an unfairly high burden on passenger cars, while allowing special compliance flexibility for heavier light trucks. Passenger cars would be required to achieve 5% annual improvements, and light trucks 3.5% annual improvements. The largest trucks carry almost no burden for the 2017–2020 timeframe, and are granted numerous ways to mathematically meet targets in the outlying years without significant real-world gains. The proposal encourages manufacturers and customers to shift toward larger, less efficient vehicles, defeating the goal of reduced greenhouse gas emissions."
So maybe the rules could use some tweaking
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So maybe the rules could use some tweaking
Indeed, and a sane administration would raise the Truck rules, not lower the passenger car rules. Orange Man is Bad. I'm not sure why people here seem to think that's an insult to those who disagree with him.
In any case we will just laugh from afar in amusement as Americans kill themselves while that very same Volkswagon goes about their business meeting the stricter emission standards set in other countries (clearly under threat of legal sanctions).
Re:Of course, no one read or understands the rules (Score:4, Insightful)
So maybe the rules could use some tweaking
That quote is saying that the law doesn't do enough to reduce greenhouse emissions. The "tweak" that Trump is pushing here eliminates any sort of greenhouse reduction at all. You've gotten this completely backwards.
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Agreed. The fix of this "fix" should force trucks down the same path. Electric trucks are the clear future for most "I want a truck that matches my really cool looking, really clean boots" purchases. In the city that's 90% of truck purchases.
That will more than hit the overall fleet target with no change to the models people buy for farm/construction work.
But the electric ones will do zero to 60 in 4 seconds, cost less to operate, etc.
The problem with "in the city" is many people in the city have no place to plug in a car or truck. I often found parking multiple blocks from my place. Even in the suburbs most pickup owners park outside because they don't fit in the typical garage. So you'd have to install some kind of outside charging station.
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What a legacy... (Score:3)
President Trump is expected to extol the rule, which will stand as one of the most consequential regulatory rollbacks of his administration
It's sad that, beyond the utterly inept handling of the current Corona virus pandemic, the the biggest part of the legacy Trump will leave behind is what he's undone. Most of which will probably be restored by the next administration.
Re: What a legacy... (Score:2)
So, by implication, China, South Korea, India, any place in Europe have got a handle on Covid-19? Or what?
dumb fuck that he is. (Score:2)
The only goods about this, is he will kill so many Americans that we will very likely vote in Biden (which really means the VP). Hopefully, it is somebody like Amy klubachar and not warren or sanders. We need somebody that understands, 'ALL OF THE ABOVE', WRT Nuclear, Geothermal, hydro, wind and solar. Likewise, they will put on an intelligent carbon tax.
Re:Fucking asshole. (Score:4, Informative)
The hypocrisy you're imagining is not without real-life precedent [snopes.com]. Any response to this post, not containing the "Yes, Al Gore is a fucking asshole" will be ignored.
This is pretty bad, I see that regular Vaseline no longer does it for you. Have you tried the more advanced, Menthol-containing kind?
Re: Fucking asshole. (Score:2)
Have you got any actual arguments, or is it just scraping the bottom of the personal insults barrel.
What did you say? He did it too?
*Then I expected you to be better than that!* At leasr if you want to win the argument.
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Yes, yes, Commie. Arrested and thrown into GULAG [realclearpolitics.com], that's right!
Time to cure the Weak Liberalism with Strong Communism! [thepeoplescube.com]
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Meanwhile, indoctrination camps in the US are commonplace. They typically start with children. Example: https://www.mtgilead.org/summe... [mtgilead.org]
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Meanwhile, indoctrination camps in the US are commonplace. They typically start with children. Example: https://www.mtgilead.org/summe [mtgilead.org]... [mtgilead.org]
You're not wrong. Try talking to anyone who was raised full-on Catholic, Mormon, or 7th-Day Adventist. Even if intellectually they know it's bullshit and they don't need to adhere to it, it's so thoroughly ingrained in them that they backslide without constant vigilance against it.
I was brought up in a methodist household. But by age 9, when I started to think for myself, I was an atheist and remain that way a few decades later.
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An opponent resorting to pure name-calling. Can a debate victory be more complete?
That's not name-calling, that's just a statement of fact.
GULAGs weren't for indoctrination, you moron. They were hard-labor [gulaghistory.org] death [hoover.org] camps — and Sanders' most active backers are day-dreaming about sending half the nation into such...
No, Sanders supporters are not day-dreaming about them. That's just wet fantasies of a projecting right-wing rag. Right-wingers have for a while longed to go back to the time when they could punish people for thoughtcrimes, so they think that left-wingers want that as well.
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Blah blah blah WORDS WORDS WORDS
Sure thing, Comrade. Tell Vald 'hi' for me. xD xD xD Also tell him you failed again, spotted right away. Go back to Internet Influencer School and actually pay attention this time (LOL just kidding, off to Siberia for you).
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If you're not deranged, you're not paying attention.
The pollution in question (Score:3, Insightful)
is gases, not particulates that can be removed by an expensive air filtration system.
The main gas in question is CO2, which is colorless and odorless and certainly not harmful to human in the concentrations in question. The increase in CO2 comes from allowing cars to not have as high a reduction in the amount of fuel they burn or not that high as many electric cars. An indoor space can have much higher CO2 concentration from people breathing than the highest projections for future outdoor CO2 concentra
Re:The pollution in question (Score:5, Interesting)
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A large truck is not an SUV, which is what the previous poster was talking about.
but in general, americans have WAY bigger trucks than they need. People in countries where the biggest locally marketed trucks are smaller than an F150 still manage to haul things just fine.
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If you got
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Probably a matter of time before his brakes fail or a wheel flies off if he's overloading a 4-cyl.
I agree with you - you buy the right vehicle for the job. Don't expect to safely transport massive payloads with a vehicle that wasn't designed for it. Terrain isn't mentioned, either, another big factor.
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It won't make cars more affordable. The prices have gone up because of increased content and compliance with crash test standards that he isn't relaxing.
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This is about MPG standards, not particulates.
Mild hybrids have no drawbacks, they are cheap and not heavy. They also provide seamless engine stop-start and enough power for a heated catalyst.
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Re: Fucking asshole. (Score:2)
Yeah, whatever.
The world + dog knew Trump was an asshole from the get go.
Do you actually want Biden... Mr. âoeno commentâ on his sexual assault accusation, let alone on wtf his son was doing in the Ukraine, or why he was on side with Obamaâ(TM)s âoeDrone Tuesdaysâ extra-judicial killings.
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Re:Fucking asshole. (Score:5, Insightful)
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The lesson from EOs is that elections matter.
Presidents have an enormous amount of discretionary power.
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Thats a great point! Maybe we will actually vote in congressional politicians that will create a LAW rather than living in hope that we don't get a regime change ever in the future (never happened before, look at every other country. nope not possible)
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I didn't like the way Obama did it but it's okay if Trump does the same thing in reverse the same way because I agree with it!
LOL WUT
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More equivocation form a Trumpanzee.
Relaxing pollution standards on cars is not good. You clearly think so too otherwise you'd have simply said it was good.
Re: Fucking asshole. (Score:2)
Good luck doubling the standard vehicle efficiency in 4 years and never mind the economy got a big bat to the head. It would effectively mean removing every gas vehicle from production. The industry is naturally moving to EVs, but it is going to take another decade.
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Precedent: he's tried to have his yes-man in the EPA punish California for having a higher standard than the other 49 states by taking away their exemption. Not much of stretch for him to find some way to punish automakers for also having a higher standard -- if they actually do that.
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And why should a state decide on what is a federal issue?
LOL well why shouldn't we? We're clearly smarter and looking farther ahead than other states so why shouldn't we lead?
It's a federal issue.
That's your opinion, and it happens to be wrong. Didn't your boy Trump make a big point about states having more power? Apparently that doesn't mean California so far as you're concerned, LOL, so apparently it's okay for states to, say, decide to limit access to abortion, LGBTQ rights, womens' rights, and the rights of non-white people (especially when it comes to elections), but it somehow
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And why should a state decide on what is a federal issue? California was given an exemption for smog reasons (half a century ago, when cars were much dirtier) because the state of California was suffering from smog uniquely at a state level, and that's it. CO2 doesn't cause smog or any other state-level problems. It's a federal issue. California setting its own MPG rules doesn't make any more sense than California deciding on matters of the FCC and forcing electronics manufacturers to either make two separate products (one for California and one for the rest of the US) or go with the California rules for the whole United States.
So what you're saying is that states' rights are only important when the states do what you want? Why shouldn't California get to decide the rules for products sold in California? Wouldn't that be the libertarian philosophy that people keep talking about around here?
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Climate emergency (Score:3)
We are well past climate change and into climate emergency.
Please try and keep up.
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It's the Climate Crisis you blundering buffoon.
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How old are you?
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Re:talk is cheap (Score:4, Insightful)
Leave your car at home and use some other form of transportation.
That's pre-Corona thinking in a post-Corona world. Ride the infection bus? Get together with some co-workers and infection-pool? I think not.
the humble bicycle (Score:5, Insightful)
Or you can ride a bicycle. It will keep you fit, also, lowering risk of several diseases. Also lower risk of affecting the air of other people.
Granted, it's easier (also socially more the norm) in Copenhagen and Utrecht, but it's quite possible in many cases in US cities too.
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You can ride a bicycle `till the cows come home and it sure as fuck won't turn you into a biker.
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If you insist on having a McMansion in the boonies instead of a flat close to work, that's your decision. And you're unfit precisely because you're a smug prick (sorry for the insult but I'm mirroring your words) to use a pollution-spewer instead of a bicycle.
That car + fuel + suburbs house also cost way more than a flat + bicycle, so you're ruining your wallet in addition to my lungs. The poor are doing fine with bicycles, feet, and buses (unless they also decided on a car!). And the elderly tend to hav
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I love this fallacy that all jobs are in the city and all people drive into a city daily. I work from home, I live in the middle of nowhere. If I want to visit a friend, that's a 30 minute car ride on a highway. Want to go to the grocery store? 15 minute ride on a highway. Want to go to a movie? 20 minutes on a...you guessed it, highway! Its below 40F 9 months of the year. I'll stick the climate controlled box that can do 80 mph.
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Advocating some reliable, affordable, and accessible public transit would be more effective.and help more people than claiming bicycling will save the world.
The only sort of public transit that would really work where bicycles don't is something like Lyft or Uber. When your bus routes are hub-and-spoke, as they are every place I've seen, it can take you an hour or two to go a short distance, as you have to go far into town, wait for a transfer, and come back out again.
That can work well enough for commuting, if your employer hires mostly people who can't afford a car and so of course locates itself along a major bus route. But it's a usually a very bad optio
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At some point equilibrium will be reached, infection rate to already immune to not yet infected. At some point once again a bus ride will be nothing to worry about. We're sorta in the times of after 9/11 if you're old enough to remember that. We don't know if its gonna get better or worse, but we're gonna fight for the best we can.
We'll how how soon habits formed for weeks and months die out. We still have the entirely pointless TSA, we never returned to pre-9/11 airport security. It's still a post-9/11 world.
I am sure of one thing: all the nations granting emergency powers to their governments with no sunset clauses are going to see a permanent difference between their pre- and post-Corona worlds.
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Ah, the new Corvette - the most high-tech Chevy yet to be driven slowly and carefully in the middle of the road.
Re:He's making the choice yours, not the governmen (Score:5, Insightful)
Trump is taking that decision making authority away from the federal government and giving it to the American people.
No one will stop YOU from driving a less polluting vehicle if you so choose. Your money, your choice.
Pollution is an externalized cost, ie the bill still has to be paid, but it's paid collectively, not just by the people doing the pollution.
For instance, when you go on vacation you go business class to save money. But when it's a company trip you'd rather go first class because it's the company, not you, paying the bill. That's why your manager needs to approve your expenses.
So if you were the only one to suffer your vehicle's pollution then go crazy.
But everyone pays when you generate excess pollution, that's why it's the responsibility of the federal government to regulate pollution.
You may argue that the level of regulation is excessive, but to claim "Your money, your choice" is just bad economics.
Re:He's making the choice yours, not the governmen (Score:5, Insightful)
All exhaust pipes should blow out the front of cars, then we can let the market decide.
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You're 100% right about externalized costs.
But "when you go on vacation you go business class to save money"? ARE YOU KIDDING ME? Business class costs a fortune compared to economy. Only a rich person would think of that as saving money.
So you make sense, except for your "They have no bread? Well, let then eat cake!" comment.
My bad, I don't fly enough to remember the different classes offhand :)
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Trump is taking the decision making authority away from the federal government and giving it to the American people. No one will stop YOU from personally avoiding a COVID-19 infection if you so choose. Your lungs; your choice.
(I have yet to meet a libertarian who had any common s
Re: Borrowing this Planet From the Kids (Score:2)
So what?
Almost all presidents are. With the possible exception of Eisenhower.