Posted on 09/11/2023 6:41:49 AM PDT by Red Badger
There may come a day when America and Americans are ready for electric vehicles. Today is not that day and it seems like we’re not even close. Nonetheless, the Biden-Harris regime and state-level Democrat tyrants across the country are bent on trying to force us into them, which is why Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm took a PR trip with an NPR reporter in tow.
When they made the decision to invite journalist Camila Domonoske with them on their four-day trip, they didn’t expect the headline to be, “Electric cars have a road trip problem, even for the secretary of energy“.
According to the article:
But between stops, Granholm’s entourage at times had to grapple with the limitations of the present. Like when her caravan of EVs — including a luxury Cadillac Lyriq, a hefty Ford F-150 and an affordable Bolt electric utility vehicle — was planning to fast-charge in Grovetown, a suburb of Augusta, Georgia.
Her advance team realized there weren’t going to be enough plugs to go around. One of the station’s four chargers was broken, and others were occupied. So an Energy Department staffer tried parking a nonelectric vehicle by one of those working chargers to reserve a spot for the approaching secretary of energy.
That did not go down well: a regular gas-powered car blocking the only free spot for a charger?
In fact, a family that was boxed out — on a sweltering day, with a baby in the vehicle — was so upset they decided to get the authorities involved: They called the police.
Clearly, it’s not what NPR was expecting nor what the White House was hoping to happen, but kudos to the radical left-wing state-run outlet for not killing the story.
A family with a baby in the sweltering Georgia heat were victims of White House privilege. It’s truly disgusting that they would be so desperate for positive press that they would cause harm to this family for the sake of good optics. Thankfully, those optics have been upended.
Regular people don’t have advance teams to reserve charging slots for them. But even without the advance team causing problems, this story would have highlighted the idiocy of the green push onto a country that has nowhere near the proper infrastructure for mass adoption of electric vehicles.
As Nick Arama from Red State noted, we may not have even heard about this story if the family hadn’t accelerated their grievance:
Good for the family who wasn’t taking that nonsense and called the police on them. The police couldn’t do much, however, because it’s not illegal to do what the Secretary’s team did. But realizing they had a potential PR nightmare on their hands, they “scrambled to smooth over the situation, including sending other vehicles to slower chargers, until both the frustrated family and the secretary had room to charge.”
Americans need to see how low the White House is willing to go to try to prove EVs are good. They tried to manufacture good optics. Leaving a family with a baby to suffer in the Georgia heat ain’t it, chief.
Smith and Wesson?.................
But the GD communist government will continue to shove these heavy, inefficient vehicles down our throats. Where does the electricity come from? FUBAR
DOH! Stoopid is as stoopid does. Dumbassery personified. Dear branDUHn (b)adminisration......🖕
Any day Granholm is exposed as the fool she is is a good day.
😂👍. But the lemmings keep following.
Only a total fool would buy an EV. GM and Ford deserve to go bankrupt. They cannot sell their EVs despite the huge, ridiculous capital investment.
“Help, help police! I’m a liberal douchebag driving an electric car on a hot day with a baby inside and I can’t charge my car because the people I voted for are blocking all the charging stations!”
[[There may come a day when America and Americans are ready for electric vehicles]]
There will,never be a time UNLESS you can run them with air conditioner on or heater on for pong trips in brutal weather, and charge times of around 5 minutes tops, and as many charging g stations/pumps as there are gas stations/pumps today, and ranges over 500 miles before charging need, and replacement batteries come down to $1000 or so I stead of the $25,000 currently, and and and
I'm not anti-EV. I'm anti-forcing to EV's. When I type about pros and cons of EV's it's about use cases (if one's particular needs and wants are best met with an EV). That said, I simply don't see a practical reason for a large EV pickup. Anytime you use it for large loads you greatly reduce the range. They should have made EV versions of the smaller trucks. People who buy those tend to use them mainly for commutes with every now and then small pickup chores. Those are potentials for an EV matching one's use case (assuming other things are also true, like have a place to charge at home, drive enough commute miles to warrant needing to save on gas, is married and need two cars anyway so you have an ICE car for long trips that an EV won't do, don't live up north where the cold winters make EV's perform horribly, etc.).
For example, back in my early 20's to mid 30's I had a small 4-cyl pickup that was great for my needs. I used it mainly for commuting to work (in the early years for commuting to both full time work and part time to college). Even after I finished college and had more free time my pickup chores were small -- mostly things like putting dirty lawn tools in the back. By the time it got worn out enough to have to replace it in my late 30's, my pickup chores became more frequent and often heavier. So I replaced it with a larger pickup.
If EV pickups had been a thing then, I'd had been interested in one back when my pickup chores were light (small EV pickup) but not after I started every now and then pulling a trailer or carrying a bed of heavy cargo (i.e. cinder blocks to help a family member way out of town, or every now and then pickup chores for the church).
They will NEVER make that mistake again. They will do more road trips, but magically EVERY EV charging station will be fully functional, but with no customers.
Why? Because the owner of the planned EV charging stations will declare them as ‘inoperative’, so the apps will show that to all but our masters.
“White House privilege”
😅👌
My buddy from Michigan tells me that Granholm is a total psycho. :)
Think of all the wattage that’s going to have to be charged up in batteries to do all that, and then what’s going to happen if there’s a collision and those batteries get hit just right. Or wrong...
Exactly. We will never have the infrastructure to keep pace with the demand for electricty when they force us all to elect everything like they are doing- some states it is almost now illegsl,to install fossil fuel using items in a new house- forcing everyone to go all electric
Rolling blackouts and brown outs will become a daily thing in many heavily populated areas.
And let’s not forget the massive losses that will occur when storms hit and fubar the electric grid for days, weeks on end in some cases.
There is a feller in TN with a youtube channel that does it...
well he uses two 5 gallon cans.. and they are cars that would never pass inspection. but...
Exactly- there are uses for ev in certain areas and situations if one so chooses to use one, but overall, it will be a bust if they force everyone into electric only vehicles.
I’d also like to know what they will do when they do force everyone into e.ectric everything, and nothing changes climate-wise- issue us all refunds? Compensate us for the hassels of electric vehicle ownership in certain climates? They will never admit a mistake, and will simp,y claim that “we must do more to help the climate” whatever that means
or some other s bag state that will not let you have a firearm like NJ. Think about being stopped on say Central Avenue in Newark awaiting a few electrons to get into your car while surrounded by the “locals” admiring your wallet, your clothes, your vehicle, well maybe not the vehicle, and your life.
Or a MLK or Malcolm X boulevard in any city.
50kW – 120kW are rare to find.
Not for us. We recently drove on a 1,500 mile one-way trip in our EV car with nothing but 150kW and 3050kW chargers until the last charger about 10 miles from destination (50kW) we used to in case our family members couldn't help us find a place to charge when we arrived in the middle of the night. But do your homework before getting an EV. Make sure the places you normally drive to on road trips have good chargers. And don't get an EV unless you're married and need 2 cars anyway so that the ICE can be used if you one day decide to take a road trip through Montana for the first time in your life. (Or drive a road trip up north in the winter, which I don't plan to every do.)
Normal 3kw chargers take 10 to 14 hours.
When I charge at home I usually have it set on it's lowest Level II setting of 5.6kW, but that's because I have solar. Mine can charge up to 9.6kW with the Level 2 charger I have.
So for that one hour, or 4 to 6 hours, or 10 to 14 hours, while on road trip, what does one do? Read a lot, maybe?
I don't know about your wife, but on road trips my wife askes to stop every 200 miles anyway to walk around for 10-15 minutes. LOL Since we got the EV 15 months ago I haven't gone on a road trip without her. I'm sure that day is coming and I'll probably take the ICE pickup. But until then, a lot of us family men were stopping every 200 miles anyway.
What if stuck in south Memphis? Or in middle-east Baltimore? Just sit there and charge?
I've yet to see where the other EV users on the plugshare app lied about conditions at a charger, including if it was safe (i.e. well lit for night, in a public area). With getting 200 miles with it charged to 80%, you can opt to charge elsewhere. Otherwise, take the ICE car.
It just does not seem very practical unless you are just going from the house to the country club and home again in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.
That's actually a bad use case for getting an EV. EV's aren't worth the cost unless you drive enough miles to warrant a gas savings to at least break even. IMHO with the gasoline and power costs in Alabama, that's about 12K miles per year. That accounts for things like when I get an annual car registration I have to pay an extra $200 EV fee to account for the fact that I don't pay gas taxes (not fussing, it seams reasonable, just an example of many pros and cons to list out before buying an EV). If you drive less than that per year, the extra costs for an EV probably aren't worth the gas savings. If you drive a lot more than 12K per year an EV is worth considering. If you produce most of your own power like I do with solar, that breakeven point is about 10K miles per year.
My wife and I put 26K miles per year in our EV, with about 22K of those miles charged at home (the other 4K miles gets into costs to charge on road trips vs cost of gas on road trips). With solar producing 82% of all the power we need in our now all-electric home, including charging the EV, that means those 22K miles of local charging added to my power bills less than 4K miles of grid pull. At 16 cents per kWh (the true kWh rate after adding in the riders and state tax that my power company adds), it cost less than $45 in power to drive those 22K miles. So we're a great use case for having an EV. We wouldn't be if we drove only 4K or 5K miles per year, even with most of the charging being free.
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