Rivian CEO issues strong statement about people who purchase gas-powered cars: ‘Sort of like building a horse barn in 1910’::“I don’t think I would have believed it.”

      • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏@lemmy.one
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        1 year ago

        Whenever I see these razor thin LED headlights on vehicles, my first thought is are those COB chips getting cooled properly?

        It just comes across as very sus, a bit like form over function at the expense of headlight longevity

      • Illegal_Prime@dmv.social
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        And the fucking dangerous high front which is completely unnecessary on an electric car, why is it there. Not even the TESLA FUCKING CYBERTRUCK pulls that shit, say what you will about Tesla, but they understand how the differences between gas and electric cars can be taken advantage of.

    • 3laws@lemmy.world
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      So a $77-82k Suburban is good in your eyes then? How come? Why? Oh wait, you didn’t read the quote.

      • Phrodo_00@lemmy.world
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        Just because he compared it to a suburban doesn’t mean that the Mitsubishi mirage and used Corollas aren’t a thing.

        And sure the Chevy Bolt is 26k, but that’s still 5k more expensive than a new Corolla and has like half the range, and you can fuel the Corolla way faster.

        • wtfeweguys@lemmy.whynotdrs.org
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          Not with the $7500 federal tax credit, let alone (for CA) residents the tax rebate. It’s not for everyone yet but there’s plenty of people there Bolt is perfect for.

          Source: bought one. Is great.

    • olympicyes@lemmy.world
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      If you knew that he was referring to the purchase of a $80k Suburban in 2030 would that change your assessment?

      • BromSwolligans@lemmy.world
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        I think you know very well I would never engage with this possibility as a means of self preservation. Good day sir!

  • YeetPics@mander.xyz
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    Selling $80k electric cars and making comments like this is sort of like saying ‘let them eat cake’ in 1780

    • olympicyes@lemmy.world
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      If you read the article you’d see that he said that in the context of buying a Chevy Suburban in 2030. Suburbans start at $77k, so I don’t think his comment is that out of line.

      • 3laws@lemmy.world
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        It’s not, of course it’s not.

        But we know that legacy Reddit users never even bothered to read the articles anyway. Hurray! I missed-- not.

        • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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          Yeah but it’s still a fair comment because the cars are too expensive for anyone to buy The battery compared to another car that’s too expensive to buy doesn’t really make any difference.

          Because the thing about expensive gas powered cars is there’s also not expensive gas powered cars. So he’s comparing expensive electric cars to variable price gas powered cars.

        • Aopen@discuss.tchncs.de
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          I usually dont bother to read articles, because they are seo garbage. I glance at top comments written by true people to verify info instead

      • YeetPics@mander.xyz
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        1 year ago

        That context is great, but I haven’t seen any articles about the Chevy CEO saying such astoundingly tone deaf shit. 🤔 maybe the price isn’t what’s inflammatory.

    • DauntingFlamingo@lemmy.ml
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      Those trucks/SUVs weigh 8500lbs. Since there is no fuel tax being collected, these monsters are destroying the roads and not contributing to their upkeep. My city is passing laws to significantly increase the registration on these vehicles, according to their annual mileage. I’m all for going electric, but an 8500lb truck is not helping the environment

      • LetMeEatCake@lemm.ee
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        This is true, but fuel taxes are very low. Most states that are charging an EV “road maintenance fee” (with whatever phrasing they select) are charging way more than an ICE vehicle would contribute in fuel taxes. And while it is true that BEVs are heavier than ICE vehicles, all else held equal, and that road wear and tear is strongly dependent on weight… as I recall reading, the overwhelming majority of road wear and tear is the result of freight trucks and similar vehicles.

        I’m all for going electric, but an 8500lb truck is not helping the environment.

        The issue here isn’t that it’s an EV in this case. It’s that it’s a truck. I’d wager than >95% of people buying trucks in the US would be perfectly served by a four door sedan or comparable sized vehicle. Trucks have largely become expensive vanity items to act as an external signal of a person’s cultural identity. Contractors and similar that actually use a truck for truck purposes still exist, but they’re comically outnumbered by people buying trucks for no good reason.

        • jballs@sh.itjust.works
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          My conservative neighbor drives an F-150 (~5,500 lbs) and his wife drives a Tahoe (~5,800 lbs). But he had the gall to complain to me last week about the weight of my Model Y (4,400 lbs). It’s amazing what a little bit of oil and gas propaganda has been able to accomplish.

          • DauntingFlamingo@lemmy.ml
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            I don’t think it’s propaganda that EVs are heavy as shit for their size. Automakers are really upfront on that fact. You trying to call it propaganda illustrates your bad faith argument. You’re misusing that word and diluting the meaning.

            4400 vs 5800 isn’t much of a difference, considering the sizes of the vehicles you listed. You are essentially driving a midsize truck but without the utility of a truck. Your neighbor has two trucks to your one. The top trim Tacoma weighs the same as your lower tier Tesla. Tesla Model X Standard Range comes in at 5,185 pounds.

            I think we can both agree your vehicle is extremely heavy for being a small, low/mid tier passenger vehicle. Some Teslas are not eligible for the $7500 tax credit because they weigh so much.

            I like how you can’t respond to this. It really hammers home my argument and calling you on your bullshit. Thank you for the votes, because that means I know you read the comment but have no idea how to respond!

        • DauntingFlamingo@lemmy.ml
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          My city doesn’t allow big trucks on our roads. The wear and tear of roads is heavily dependent on weight, as you and I both stated. Weighing 3500lbs more (the weight of a Toyota Camry) than even the largest personal vehicle is a problem which I hope they solve soon.

          I’m not sure why people think it’s propaganda that EVs weigh 1.5x or more than a standard sedan. It’s a fact, and it’s easy to find information. The tech crowd wants to call anything that hurts their opinion bullshit, but they refuse to look it up. It’s right there on the manufacturers’ websites. I sincerely doubt the owners of Rivian or Tesla are in on some government “propaganda” to lower their own sales.

          I appreciate the votes. That proves you read the comment but have no idea how to respond, because you can’t.

  • macarthur_park@lemmy.world
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    It’s important to read the full quote from Rivian’s CEO before complaining about $75k electric trucks:

    “I think the reality of buying a combustion-powered vehicle … is sort of like building a horse barn in 1910,” he said. “Imagine buying a Chevy Suburban in 2030 … what are you going to do with that … in 10 years?”

    He’s comparing buying a Rivian truck with buying a Suburban, which has a base price of $57k for the lowest tier configuration (LS) and a $76k price on the High Country configuration.

  • kaitco@lemmy.world
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    Um…does the CEO know that horses are still a thing and that horse barns (aka stables) are still in use? Also, the invention of the automobile didn’t instantly displace the horse. It was well into the 1920s before they became a regular sight.

    Also…there’s lots of reasons to buy gas-powered cars these days. For one, not everyone lives in a home where they can install the necessary charger, so you’d always be on the “hunt” for charging stations, and fuel cars are generally cheaper at this time. Once we see the market flooded with EV cars, the prices will come down and fuel cars will no longer be the norm, but we’re likely a decade or more away from that.

    I get what the CEO is trying to say, but it’s still incredibly tone-deaf.

  • generalpotato@lemmy.world
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    What he actually meant to say was:

    “I’ve got my head so far up my ass that I think everybody should be spending $100k+ on a truck regardless of their need or financial circumstances. I’m also incapable of doing my job, which is why my company can’t produce enough units, even though it’s largely a solved supply chain problem. This is how I cope with my shitty existence on this planet.”

  • CaptFeather@lemm.ee
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    I just looked up the price for a Rivian truck and holy shit is this guy for real? Lmao. Just another out of touch CEO virtue signaling. If he really felt this way he would make them affordable lol

    • niisyth@lemmy.ca
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      Startup costs need to be softened with a costlier higher margin vehicle. Cannot achieve quality mass production of cars from thin air.

      • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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        Right but don’t make vulgar statements about how fabulous you are, and how stupid everyone else is but not buying your fabulous expensive car that’s fabulous and expensive, but that’s fine because you’re a startup.

        • niisyth@lemmy.ca
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          The comment is taken out of context if you’d maybe read the article. It’s a comparison between a Suburban and Rivian who are in the same bracket.

  • T156@lemmy.world
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    CEO of an electric car company recommends that people drive electric cars.

    Doesn’t really seem like much of a headline.

    The statement might be more significant if it was a CEO of a car company that made diesel/petrol cars who said it.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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      It’s more the tone deafness. Most people couldn’t afford either a car or a horse barn in 1910 just like most people (in America anyway) can’t afford an electric car.

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        That’s true but you have to consider how much of the car market is made up of used cars. When I was last shopping for cars (4 years ago) there were hardly any EVs in my budget and the ones that were, were 10 year old Priuses. Most people frankly don’t have the income to buy anything more than a gas car. (Market for EVs may have changed since my experience). The way I see it is the CEO is making a good point while also shitting on poor people.

        • AA5B@lemmy.world
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          The first response from Google shows me several late model used Nissan Leafs for around $15k. Those didn’t have much range but plenty for most people’s day to day

            • redfellow@sopuli.xyz
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              I believe that from his comment (“what are you going to do with that in 10 years”), he was implying buying new cars. I see nothing odd in buying used ICE cars, but I wouldn’t dish out for a new one at this point.

              Now if you buy a used car for 10k now, you’ll probably have a harder time getting value out of it in 10 years vs. EV.

            • MumboJumbo@lemmy.world
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              Not only the cost, but there’s also the issue of infrastructure. I as well as many others in my city don’t have a garage and park either on the street or on a parking pad in the alley. I wouldn’t imagine a power cord running to a vehicle lasting very long because of the scrap prices of copper. We’ve got a long ways to go.

    • GamingChairModel@lemmy.world
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      Average transaction price for a new vehicle in the U.S. is already at $48k. Plenty of electric models are below the average price by now.

      The fact is, if you’re considering buying a new car, you’re already on the richer side. So this message is mainly aimed at those richer Americans considering a $73,000 F-150, that they might want to consider a $73,000 Rivian instead.

    • GiddyGap@lemm.ee
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      All these products have to come to market in order for prices to eventually come down. People need to see that they have viable options to gasoline cars.

      In Norway, more than 80 percent of new cars sold are electric. There are many other options that don’t cost $73,000. Rivian is just one option.

  • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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    How to tell the entire world that you’re rich and entitled.

    Have you seen the price of electric cars it’s ridiculous. No way I can afford one.

    Also never mind the fact I have no way of charging it because I only have access to on-street parking. If they really wanted to help they should bring down the cost of their massively overpriced vehicles and also invest in distributing charging points around the country.

    Isn’t the ultimate plan supposed to be that they’ll be at least one charging point and every highway at least every 8 mi?

    • Viper_NZ@lemmy.nz
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      It depends where you are and what market segment you’re looking in. In NZ you can buy a fully electric MG ZS EV (7 year warranty) for almost the same price as a base model Toyota Camry.

    • Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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      A new Renault Zoe is about 23 000€, which has a driving range of about 400km. Second hand they go for about 10 000€.

      Yeah, there are many luxury EV brands, but those aren’t the only ones existing.

  • Geek_King@lemmy.world
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    Please pay for my apartment complex to install charger plugs in our garages then.

    I’m totally onboard with EV’s, I just can’t have one right now.

    • sin_free_for_00_days@sopuli.xyz
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      If you just have a regular plug in the garage, it works. I thought that I would have to get a special outlet put in, but after plugging in at night for a couple months I realized there was no need. Figure about 5 miles per hour recharge. I have an older used Leaf that was relatively cheap.

      • Geek_King@lemmy.world
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        I don’t have any electrical plugs in my garage. The best I can do is commandeering a 60 watt bulb socket with one of those adapters that turns it into a socket. Also, I don’t think the apartment complex is rigged up to charge tenants for the cost of running that bulb and garage door opening either. So they probably would be pissed if I started charging a full EV in there.

        • 3laws@lemmy.world
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          They won’t even notice. Unless you live in an electric supply desert, charging an EV 0-100% is ridiculously cheap.

    • SCB@lemmy.world
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      still use plenty of fossil fuels from coal plants

      This is disingenuous as fuck and you know it. Updates to the grid are by far the most effective means of limiting carbon release. Tying engines to the grid maximizes gains in solar, wind, etc that not doing so does not.

      There is no serious plan for climate change mitigation that does not involve EVs.

      • Pohl@lemmy.world
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        Not disingenuous. True. Grid power is still dirty so electric cars are still dirty. Probably about a 50% improvement in carbon emissions based on the most common fuel mix in the US for an e car.

        Clean transportation by car is a luxury that we do not yet have.

        • SCB@lemmy.world
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          You don’t engineer for what you currently have. You engineer for where you want to be.

          Renewable energy is the fastest growing segment of the energy market by a mile, growing exponentially.

          I don’t have my numbers at hand, but renewables account for something like 80+% of new energy growth in the US.

          • Pohl@lemmy.world
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            Yes. The OP is about how TODAY it is silly to use ICE. Today it is silly to pretend that electric cars are clean. They will be at some point. At that point, I will agree with the obnoxious CEO from the article. Today, he is wrong, very heavy (7-8k lbs) coal powered trucks are not clean.

            Make them smaller!

            • SCB@lemmy.world
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              Purchasing EVs sends price signals. Big trucks are in demand, and it’s easier to cater to demand than shape demand when you’re an emerging market.

              • Pohl@lemmy.world
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                Seriously the epa doesn’t even bother to rate mpg in vehicles that approach rivian weight. An f250 probably gets a combined 15mpg. It weights 6k lbs vs the rivians 7k. if your only seeing a 50% cut in emissions with the switch to electric. A rivian truck is pretty much the same as an ICE car that gets around 30 combined.

                There are a million reasons that drive them to make these monsters. But the climate isn’t one. I don’t care about the market forces. I care about cutting CO2 emissions. These vehicles do not help that mission today. The CEO is wrong. His vehicles don’t make sense TODAY except as a luxury product for rich people to signal their virtue. That’s it.

                • SCB@lemmy.world
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                  I don’t care about market forces

                  Then you are not serious about impacting climate change.

    • SMITHandWESSON@lemmy.world
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      in before, “but I need my enormous vehicle because once every 13 years I haul 3 2x4’s and am too dumb to use a roof rack or rent a truck for the day!”

      I win!!!

      My enormous eletric vehicle (plug-in Rav4) is powered from my home solar panel system, and I use it to transport my dogs to the park a couple of times a week.

      I’m completely guilt free!!!😃

    • ilmagico@lemmy.world
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      The rivian truck (I call it “froggy”) is actually a pretty small pickup truck, by american standard … have you seen a F150? (including the electric “lightning” version)?

    • grue@lemmy.world
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      Even a subcompact automobile takes up an entire traffic lane and an entire parking space, and providing such spaces is what ruins cities.

      The future is designing our cities for walking, biking and transit, not replacing our disastrous car sewers of gasoline cars with disastrous car sewers of electric cars.

  • bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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    If they had decent range ones for just a bit cheaper…

    It’s minimum like $30k right now and that’s just too much for most

    Plus a lot of people still don’t have anywhere to charge them.

    Otherwise I’d have liked to have gotten one

      • bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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        Really? Can you actually get them at MSRP in any decent amount of time?

        And is that federal? I thought Chevy ran out of their tax incentives…

        • dynamojoe@lemmy.world
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          Not as of last January when I tried to buy one. I was able to test drive one and found it acceptable but it was the only one available, it was significantly over MSRP (it was Premier trim, so >$35k) and I could order one but they flat out told me I’d be waiting a minimum of five months.

        • bushpilot@lemm.ee
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          GM did run out, but the rules changed in 2023, so there is no more cap. GM and Tesla get the incentives again.

  • NebLem@lemmy.world
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    A giant electric “luxury” truck is still a giant “luxury” truck. Buying one over the other is like buying a cruelty free synthetic beaver cap over a cap made from an actual beaver. Yes it probably is better, but you are still wearing an ass on your head.

    It’s 2023, most people live in urbanized areas where a truck is similarly ridiculous, especially the modern “luxury” models. Those that actually use their vehicles for hauling things at a farm want real work trucks and tractors (regardless of engine type) with lower and longer beds.

  • grue@lemmy.world
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    Buying any car, electric or otherwise, is 'Sort of like building a horse barn in 1910’.

    Real sustainability comes from changing the zoning code to cease outlawing walkability.

    • rich@feddit.uk
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      I don’t own a car anymore and haven’t for two years now. I walk everywhere. Around 10 miles most days through the countryside and coast from town to town.

      Healthiest I’ve ever been, I can eat what I want a lot of the time too. I’ve got basically no body fat and I have a ridiculous amount of energy. I feel constantly refreshed too, before I was lethargic and overweight.

      I live in the UK however in a very pedestrian orientated location where I can do this without issue. Or get a bus or train if needed. I have absolutely no idea how it would be possible in a rural area or a car centric city. I guess it wouldn’t be, and the people in charge are not willing to change.

      • grue@lemmy.world
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        I have absolutely no idea how it would be possible in a rural area or a car centric city. I guess it wouldn’t be, and the people in charge are not willing to change.

        I live in a car-centric city, and am relatively civically engaged. Speaking from personal experience, for most of the people in charge, it’s not that they’re unwilling to change; it’s that they’re so indoctrinated from having grown up in American car-centricity that they don’t understand the problem or the alternatives enough to realize that there’s anything to change to. They’re like the people in this thread, who think “infrastructure” means things like adding EV chargers to suburban-sprawl parking lots or trying to get public transit to serve neighborhoods of single-family houses. They have no comprehension of the scope of the problem, which is that the Suburban Experiment is a failure and that the geometry of low-density, car-centric development makes it unsustainable, unaffordable, and unhealthy, regardless of how you power the cars.

        Even when they support things like transit-oriented development or abolishing minimum parking requirements, they tend to think it’s the exception to be implemented in certain areas instead of realizing that it needs to be the default way we do things now.

    • whofearsthenight@lemm.ee
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      That would barely scratch the surface, I’m afraid. For quite a lot of America, not owning a car is simply not feasible. I don’t have a large friend/family group, but in 4 cases now, we’ve had to relocate our families a town over because wages aren’t keeping up with cost of living. So we all have long commutes now. There are no buses, trains, etc. We were priced out of housing market. When my landlord sold the property and forced my move 5-6 years ago, I could rent and pay 30% more for a smaller place, I could buy for what I was paying if I wanted to move my family of 5 into a two bed with no yard, etc, or I could move a town or two over pay a bit more, and get a decent size house for my family. Today if I had to buy a house, I couldn’t even come close to affording the place I live in now, especially not at 7-9% interest compared to the 3.5% I got.

      Now I guess you could still say fuck me I should have given up my dogs, moved my family into a shoe box and just walked to save the planet, but even then that’s not really feasible. In a town of 60k I moved from, there is only bussing, and even then they don’t run often enough to a wide enough range of places that you’re not building in additional hours of the day to get where you’re going. And they often don’t run past 7pm or before 7am. And that’s most of America. Even in large cities, public transportation is severely lacking compared to the rest of the civilized world.

      Biking in the US should also help be a stopgap, but our whole society is so fucking car centric even that’s even not really feasible. Aside from the fact that most of infrastructure rarely has bike lanes or even places to store bikes, its still lacking severely from “I’m just going a few blocks over to the bodega” every few days and is more like “just 5-10 miles to the grocery store.” And this is just looking at my tiny little town where I live that is nowhere near as bad as somewhere like Houston, which is far more populous and also even less dense and less traversable by anything that’s not a car.

      In 2023, saying people shouldn’t own cars is either ignorant of the issues around it or just classist. The Rivian CEO saying shit like this, with a starting price of $73k, is just more classist CEO bullshit. We don’t even have the charging infrastructure at the moment to support everyone buying electric, not to mention I’d be willing to bet that 50% or more of this country can’t even afford the starting price on whatever the cheapest electric is.

      • nbafantest@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Real sustainability comes from changing the zoning code to cease outlawing walkability.

        Reply:

        For quite a lot of America, not owning a car is simply not feasible

        WHY IS IT NOT FEASIBLE WHOFEARSTHENIGHT? IS IT BECAUSE OF ZONING? ITS BECAUSE OF ZONING ISNT IT

    • gian @lemmy.grys.it
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      1 year ago

      Buying any car, electric or otherwise, is 'Sort of like building a horse barn in 1910’.

      Let’s say that it depend on where you live. In a big city maybe a car can be useless (or less usefull), but in a small town like mine a car is basically the only way to move around since public transportation is really limited.

      Real sustainability comes from changing the zoning code to cease outlawing walkability.

      Even if you remove all the private cars in a city, you will discover that you will substitute almost all of them with small/medium trucks to deliver all the groceries/products you (end everyone else) need in your life. And I say it living in a small town where I can almost do the day by day chores without using a car.

      • puffy@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        A single delivery truck carries 100-200 packages, if everyone drives to the store instead, you’d have 100+ cars on the road. There is a huge difference.

        • gian @lemmy.grys.it
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          1 year ago

          I am not sure that there would be a so huge difference, especially outside some big cities and especially if you add also the public transportation to the game.

          But maybe I am wrong.

          • nbafantest@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            It would be quite large. The vehicles per household would decrease to about 1 instead of over 2.