The strangest argument has been put forward in defense of Senate
Republicans – who might as well be Senate Democrats – not rescinding the
titanic federal subsidization of electric vehicles – i.e., the $7,500 an
individual can deduct from his taxes (to be made up for by someone else’s taxes)
as a reward/inducement for buying an EV.
The argument is that the car industry must not be rattled by
“regulatory uncertainty.” It is used to the subsidization of
electric cars; therefore, ending the subsidies would be as wrong as – well,
let’s see – dialing back the ethanol mandate or making a bother about stoners
buying sushi with their EBT cards.
They are after all, used to it, too.
The ethanol make-workers might have to find productive work.
Stoner sushi-eaters might have to just work.
It’s horrible. Someone might be Triggered.
From an editorial in Automotive News:
“… given the precarious state of the EV market, it could have
been a big setback for the industry had earlier proposals to wipe out the EV
tax credit made it into law.”
Well, first, there is no market for EVs. If
there were a market – that is, demand – massive subsidies wouldn’t be necessary
to jump-start supply.
EVs are being propped up by subsidies; without the subsidies,
there would be very few EVs at all. They cost too much, rendering them
uneconomical. They take comparatively forever to recharge, which makes them
inconvenient. Hence, most people – most people- are not interested in them –
especially without generous taxpayer-financed assistance.
How would be it be a “setback” for the industry to stop having
to build cars it can’t sell unless they are propped up by subsidies?
Isn’t that – pouring money into a product for which there is
no natural market – the most precarious thing imaginable?
Or you could buy a $17k Corolla that goes 400 miles…
“The ultimate resolution should take into account the billions
of dollars in auto industry investment that is at stake…”
In other words, continue to throw good money after bad – because
hey, we’ve already wasted “x” amount of money. Therefore, waste more.
The Defense Department works on exactly this reasoning.
EVs are a neon-backlit, textbook example of a malinvestment,
if “investment” means putting dollars toward something that will return a
profit. Whether one likes electric cars – or pyramids or $35
million-a-copy fighter aircraft – is an irrelevant consideration, insofar as
economic considerations – which are the only considerations when it comes to an
honest market driven by real supply and actual demand.
Otherwise, it’s just pyramid building. Cheops, phone home.
If the industry thought EVs could make them money, then EVs
would be be made, abundantly. The idea that the industry wouldn’t invest
in something profitable absent coercion and subsidization is
right up there with the belief that you can leave your wallet on the seat of a
New York City park bench and expect to find it (and your money) still sitting
there the next day.
So why doesn’t the industry want to invest in
EVs? That is, absent the subsidies and mandates? It’s the Question Which Must
Never be Asked – right behind raising your hand about diversity being our
strength.
Whoops.
“EVs represent a multibillion-dollar wager placed by auto
executives into a technology that promises – eventually – to reduce harmful
greenhouse gas emissions,” saith the writer for Automotive News.
Well, perhaps a wager of the kind described by Michael Corleone
to his fiancee, Kate, in the original Godfather. He told the story of
his father’s enforcer, Luca Brasi, holding a gun to the head of the band leader
who had Johnny Fontaine under contract. Don Corleone wagered that either his
signature or his brains would be on the contract.
Force, always force. And always euphemized by amen-corner,
“embedded”-with-the- program press kit journalists such as those at Automotive
News. (Historical aside: The “embedding” of journalists was the
invention and practice of none other than Joseph Goebbels, Propaganda Minister
for the Third Reich. Just FYI.)
It is the job of a journalist to cut through the crap and
explain things in plain English.
An “embedded” journalist… reporting all the truth you need
to know.
But journalism has been replaced by almost
North Korea-style incantations of whatever policy the government apparat is
pushing, whether it is to rouse the public to support a war of terror or to
ramrod EVs down its throat. This is why the use of plain language for the
purpose of illuminating facts is rarely used by journalists today. Instead,
they convey what the reader is meant to think by use of loaded terms – “wipe
out” the electric tax credit, for instance; this is obviously a bad thing
– and by statements of fact that are not – such as “harmful greenhouse gas
emissions.”
In Stalin’s Russia, less-than-eager-acceptance of the Party Line
was pathologized; the skeptic was actually ill in the head. That is probably
next, here.
And why would auto executives give a tinker’s damn about a
“technology that promises – eventually – to reduce harmful greenhouse gas
emissions”?
Leaving aside the loaded/package-dealing/assertions-as-facts
editorializing.
People forget that businesses exist to make a buck.
It’s considered in poor taste – almost like passing wind at the
dinner table – to bring that up, of course. People have come to believe – via
the incantations of journalists such as those at AN – that the primary
reason for the existence of a business is to provide health care, promote
diversity and, of course, roll itself around on the grass like a labrador
retriever puppy whenever someone mentions “greenhouse gasses.”
The manufacturing of cars that people might wish to buy and
which the company can make a buck selling to them is the unmentionable
peripheral business which we don’t want to talk about – like changing Grampa’s
Depends. It has to be done, but . . .
But, like it or not, business is about . . . business. If one
wishes to stay in business. And the car business is no different. Where is the
profit in “reducing harmful greenhouse gas emissions”?
It only takes half an hour to “refuel”!
This is idiocy of a piece with a Vegan restaurant investing in
pork bellies.
Besides which, the extremely dubious presumptions (plural) taken
as facts that these “gasses” – we are talking about carbon dioxide – are in
fact harmful (ask a plant) and that EVs – which produce plenty of these gasses,
just indirectly – will “reduce” them. In fact, if the “gas” you’re worried
about is innocuous, inert carbon dioxide – as opposed to the actually harmful
ones – electrical generation produces a great deal and possibly more, in the
aggregate, than a gasoline engined car.
But to write or say this marks you as racist, sexist, a
“denier” . . .
“Congress was right to let the EV tax credits stand,”
concludes Automotive News. In order to “… give these investments
(there it is again) a chance to succeed.”
Why not let these “investments” succeed – or fail – on their
merits? Automotive Newsdoes not bother to address this question,
probably because it is leery of the public weighing the answer. The
subsidies are “hardly a drain on the Treasury,” the AN writer adds.
As if that $7,500 per individual give-away factored over
hundreds of thousands of such give-ways doesn’t necessarily involve counterbalancing
tax extractions taken from the hides hundreds of thousands of others,
whose taxes must be increased in proportion to make up the difference.
Farewell and adieu to you fair Spanish ladies . . .
. . .
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