HoosierDaddy
Well-Known Member
That the best you can manage?
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That the best you can manage?
Why I don’t explain anything to him nor worry what he thinks of what I can or can’t do!Greg’s is a sniveling, boorish, babbling old buffoon, and when he is called on it, he acts like a petulant child stomping his feet, inserting his fingers in his ears and holding his breath until his face turns blue.
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So in your mind the market is already restricted due to the current mandates (Things like the compulsory fitment of catalytic converters, seatbelts etc)?Free markets and mandates are opposite of each other. Central planning never works.
Like was stated in one of the above linked articles, if governments got out of the way the free market would get us to carbon neutral a lot quicker and without pain.
You can’t connect the dots looking forward no one can. You can only connect them looking back.So in your mind the market is already restricted due to the current mandates (Things like the compulsory fitment of catalytic converters, seatbelts etc)?
Precisely how do you expect a completely free market to fix the problem? What incentive does a fossil fuel company have? Given that they’ve already had decades to do something, doesn‘t it look somewhat like a failed experiment?
To some extent you’re right.You can’t connect the dots looking forward no one can. You can only connect them looking back.
In todays society there are no needs until the manufacturer makes a need for it. Right now smartphones where a need that was made and people can’t seem to live with out them.To some extent you’re right.
However, it’s pretty reasonable to expect that each manufacturer will do whatever it takes to achieve the maximum market share that they can achieve, as they do right now.
Certain parts of the equation shouldn’t change.
Have a look at the diversity of vehicles available right now and ask yourself why you’d expect that diversity to change as we move forward. I can fairly confidently assure you that Toyota aren’t making coupes, sedans, hatches, vans, wagons, utilitys and who knows what else because they believe in diversity.
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To some extent I agree. New technology tends to find uses that can be marketed. 100%In todays society there are no needs until the manufacturer makes a need for it. Right now smartphones where a need that was made and people can’t seem to live with out them.
This is the argument that many like me have made and maybe you can meet me half way. If the market itself said that they would start manufacturing EVs or Hybrids because that’s how the market is heading then I am 99.9% positive that many even folks like me would have seen this as a positive.
It has become a push a hard push by powerful government elite and unelected agencies world wide. The same ones who laws don’t apply to. Why folks like me question if there’s an ulterior motive. That’s the biggest issue. Plus I have an insight how at least my government works so that’s why I don’t trust those here in the US who make and implement the laws.
Honestly I hope that I am 100% wrong in what I think. It’s just really hard not to have these questions and doubts in my mind when I have seen the brutality the US government has committed all in the name of “freedom” all over the world.
I do think eventually catalytic would have made their way into vehicles eventually. Maybe a little later than the actual push. But if you look nation wide here in the US there are places that have emissions test to be able to operate your vehicles and others don’t.To some extent I agree. New technology tends to find uses that can be marketed. 100%
In the case of the hybrid, you’d have to be nuts to NOT want to buy one when you’re looking at your next vehicle purchase.They’re quite simply a lot cheaper to run.
As I’ve said before, the taxi guys over here absolutely LOVE them.
As for a battery only EV, again, they already fit into a lot of peoples lives quite easily. is the current batch of EV’s appropriate for everyone? Clearly not.
The primary difference between us is that I have faith that the car companies will come up with solutions over the course of the next decade or so. They’re literally being incentivised to do so by the mandates. Is it really that different from them having to solve the issues of constantly changing emissions targets, the removal of lead from gasoline, the introduction of crash testing etc etc? At each and every point, they’ve managed to find solutions that work.
By analogy, catalytic converters didn’t exist until the government forced them to exist. They were the direct consequence of government policy. Do you think they’d exist if the government didn’t intervene?
The free market is driven by what the public wants. If the public wants seatbelts then cars with them will out sell ones without. So all cars will get seatbelts.Precisely how do you expect a completely free market to fix the problem? What incentive does a fossil fuel company have? Given that they’ve already had decades to do something, doesn‘t it look somewhat like a failed experiment?
Hello; Thing is the fossil fuel/ ICE industry has made tremendous progress over the decades. I got my drivers license in 1963 and drove 1950's cars for a long time. They were not very reliable, got poor fuel economy and started to wear out not long after 50,000 miles. Bias tires might get you 15,000 to 20,000 miles.So in your mind the market is already restricted due to the current mandates (Things like the compulsory fitment of catalytic converters, seatbelts etc)?
Precisely how do you expect a completely free market to fix the problem? What incentive does a fossil fuel company have? Given that they’ve already had decades to do something, doesn‘t it look somewhat like a failed experiment?
Remember this little jewel, 1974 Mustang ll?Government mandates in the 1970's gave us 35 years of crappy cars.
I remember 125 HP V 8's that got 18 MPG on the freeway. Today we have 460 HP V8's that get 26 MPG on the freeway.
It took 35 years for the tech to match up with the mandates. So instead of letting the market dictate the future Gov mandates kill the high HP ICE cars.
Hybrids are a great match for 95% of the population, yet they are being passed over in favor of a system that will not work in mass. This is the problem with central planning and mandates.
Exactly. Catalysts ONLY happened because they were the only way to meet emissions targets set by governments in law. Without the law - no catalysts. Yes cars are sold in markets where they may not be needed, but only because car makers are not going to sell two varieties of one car when it is cheaper to make them all the same.By analogy, catalytic converters didn’t exist until the government forced them to exist. They were the direct consequence of government policy. Do you think they’d exist if the government didn’t intervene?
Making argument that catalytic converters would happen without regulations on a forum where just about first (idiotic) mod is to remove them is one of the most bizarre I've seen to date.Exactly. Catalysts ONLY happened because they were the only way to meet emissions targets set by governments in law. Without the law - no catalysts.