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Greens (and Reds) Donāt Like Cars, Period
Late last month, Joe Biden was mocked for postingĀ a photo of himself in an electric vehicle (a GMC Hummer) that costs $110,000 and up.Ā And for touting a $7,500 federal tax credit that doesnāt apply to vehicles that cost over $80,000. In other words, the 46th president was ripped for confirming the stereotype that electric cars are a vanity passion for rich green liberals.
But what was less noticed, at least by the right, was that left-wing greens didnāt like Bidenās photo-op, either. You see, Middle Class Joe insists that he wants to replace internal-combustion vehicles with electric vehicles (EV), but the hardcore greensāincluding those within his own administrationāwant to get rid of cars, period. At certain times, as when he is trying toĀ appeal to the far left during his campaign for the 2020 DemocraticĀ nomination, Biden has said that he wants to get āmillions of vehicles off the road.ā Ā But that was then: Now Biden, eyeing his re-election campaign, wants to play the champion of Main Street, where they have cars, not the New York City Metropolitan Transportation Authority.
On my watch, the great American road trip is going to be fully electrified.
And now, through a tax credit, you can get up to $7,500 on a new electric vehicle. pic.twitter.com/n3iZ9etL4A
ā President Biden (@POTUS) January 30, 2023
Still, history shows that when green activists draw a bead on something, they often hit their target.Ā Thatās been the whole story of the green movement this past half-century, as it has shifted the Democratic Party from its New Deal blue-collar orientation to its current affluent-suburban affectation.
One of the greensā key concerns about EVs is lithium.Ā As we shall see, they canāt live without it, but they also canāt live with it.
The World Economic Forum (WEF, think Klaus Schwab and Davos) relatesĀ that each EV battery needs about 18 lbs of lithium.Ā And since WEF calculates that two billion EVs will have to be on the road by 2050 to meet its Great Reset climate targets, thatās a lot of lithium.Ā And of course, all the lithium a Great Resetted world needs wonāt just go into car batteries; the element is needed for wide variety of industrial and ecological uses.
But lithium production is currently only about 100,000 tons annually, so WEFās projections show that the needed ramp-up in lithium production will have to be, well, exponential.Ā For their part, greens donāt like to hear about the exponential growth of anything economic.
A particular flashpoint has been the effort to start up a lithium mine in Thacker Pass, Nevada, near the Oregon border.Ā That proposed $3 billion venture has been met by pushback from a coalition of greens, Native Americans, and NIMBYs. Needless to say, that was all the signal the Main Stream Media needed to choose a side. NBC News headlined last year: āThe cost of green energy: The nationās biggest lithium mine may be going up on a site sacred to Native Americans.āĀ And The New York Times added some more green liberal perspective:
The fight over the Nevada mine is emblematic of a fundamental tension surfacing around the world:Ā Electric carsĀ and renewable energy may not beĀ as green as they appear. Production of raw materials like lithium, cobalt and nickel that are essential to these technologies are often ruinous to land, water, wildlife and people.
For its part, the Biden administration, mindful of its environmentalist base as well as its EV goals, has tried to avoid taking sides on the fight.Ā Just on February 7, a federal judge ordered a further review of the project, so its future is unclear.
Thacker Pass in Nevada, the proposed site for a massive lithium mine. (Carolyn Cole/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Members of the Fort McDermitt Paiute Shoshone tribe and supporters gather for a circle dance for healing during a gather in opposition to the proposed lithium mine at Thacker Pass, Nevada, which has historical significance for the tribe. (Carolyn Cole/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
The hardcore greens want action against lithiumāand against EVs and against the Biden administration.Ā One such is Kate Aronoff, who writes for The New Republic, a venerable liberal publication, dating back to 1914, that has lately gone woke and left, as well as hard green.Ā Aronoff tweeted her own mockery of Biden for his Hummer tweet and then wrote in her magazine, āInvesting in mass transit, walkability, biking infrastructure, and other means of reducing personal car ownership . . . could reduce the amount of lithium needed.ā
This roughly $100,000 Hummer does not appear to qualify for the tax credit this tweet is advertising, which cuts off at $80,000 for SUVs https://t.co/Msd1PGvcO3 https://t.co/SMX5aSF3IB
ā Kate Aronoff (@KateAronoff) January 31, 2023
Warming to her anti-auto theme, Aronoff lamented that cars and trucks are getting bigger: āThe best-selling vehicle in the U.S., the F150 Ford pickup truck, has ballooned in size since it debuted in the 1970s . . .Ā Even the comparatively diminutive Mini Cooper has gotten 64 percent heavier since it debuted in the 1950s, and 61 percent larger.āĀ To Aronoff, this is all part of the grave crisis; indeed, the section of the magazine that she writes for is called āApocalypse Soonā (see below).
Moreover, Aronoff is not just worried about lithium, or the size of carsāsheās worried about cars themselves. In her article she cited Andre Gorz, a 20th century French Marxist, who wrote in 1973, āThe worst thing about cars is that they are like castles or villas by the sea: luxury goods invented for the exclusive pleasure of a very rich minority, and which in conception and nature were never intended for the people.āĀ So we can see: 50 years ago, Gorz was a red who thought cars were only for rich people. Ā (As a general rule, Marxists need to get out more.)
Yet now, long after his death, Gorz and his anti-auto sentiments, which were based on red commie class warfare, Ā have been drafted into a new kind of class warfare: the green cause of depriving the proletariat of its preferred mode of transportation.Ā Itās this sort of intellectual fusionāred and greenāthat has led critics to refer to greens as āwatermelons.āĀ In fact, in 2021, Aronoff published a watermelon-y book entitled, Overheated: How Capitalism Broke the PlanetāAnd How We Fight Back.Ā (Back in 2014, the like-minded Naomi Klein published a book with the subtitle, āCapitalism vs. the Climateā; and thereāre many more similar titles in that watermelon patch.)
But our focus today is not the class struggle, but rather, the car struggle.Ā Which is ongoing.Ā In January, a lefty-green group, the Climate + Community Project (CCP) called for āless miningā and, of course, fewer cars:
Reordering the US transportation system through policy and spending shifts to prioritize public and active transit while reducing car dependency can also ensure transit equity, protect ecosystems, respect Indigenous rights, and meet the demands of global justice
Not surprisingly, when CCP outlined its plan for a Green New Deal, the personal car gets it with both barrels:
Transportation often exacerbates social inequity and racial injustice within and between communities. Its infrastructure speeds the movement of those who are better off, to the detriment of those who are most in need. In far too many communities, governments, planners, and engineers prioritize vehicles over people.
(For what itās worth, CCP is careful to provide the proper pronouns for its staff, and bills itself as being financed by the Tides Center, which Breitbart News has covered extensively, if not admiringly.)
Car Companies Look Beyond Cars
So where does this anti-car movement leave the automakers?Ā They have to be careful, because while they are in the car-manufacturing industry, they are also in the government-subsidy-collecting industry.Ā For instance,Ā General Motors declared Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2009, and was subsequently saved by $51 billion in federal help. Since then, all the automakers have been immersed in myriad green subsidies, leaving them extraordinarily attuned to whatever Washington wants.
This ongoing boondoggling led Sen. John Thune (R-SD) to gripe in 2022: āAmerican automakers have been on the receiving end of historic amounts of taxpayer money, yet we see them raising vehicle prices right when theyāre preparing to receive even more government support.ā So the South Dakotan proposed a legislative remedy: āMy common-sense bill would make automakers choose between grants and loans that subsidize their manufacturing operations or having the vehicles they make remain eligible for the expanded electric vehicle tax credit. Automakers shouldnāt be able to double-dip at taxpayersā expense.ā Thuneās bill did not pass.
One leading auto expert sees the day when the automakers will be phasing out of cars as we have known them. In a 2017 essay about the future of automation, Bob Lutz, a Detroit legend, connected EV to AV (autonomous vehicles). In Lutzās view, cars of the future will not be cars, theyāll be āmodulesā in a mass-transit fleet, a kind of blend of Uber and a bus company.Ā Lutz, born in 1932, is himself an old-time car enthusiastāa āgearheadāāand so he didnāt pretend to be happy about such a development.Ā As he wrote in Auto News, āEveryone will have five years to get their car off the road or sell it for scrap or trade it on a module.āĀ In other words, the Little Deuce Coupeāor any other kind of car that speaks to individualism and the freedom of the open roadāwill be replaced by Big Brother and the Driving Company, controlled by some combination of the Department ofĀ Transportation and Silicon Valley.Ā Sound good to you?
A illustration conceptualizing a smart city grid with autonomous vehicles. (iStock/Getty Images)
Still, it sounds good to some. Some in the cities wonāt mindānot much privacy in a metropolis, anyway. Ā As one recent headline trilled, āCar-free futures: How European cities are embracing green transport.āĀ It is certainly true, of course, that itās common for people living in dense cities not to have cars.Ā And yet here in the U.S., less than 20 percent of the population lives in the 100 biggest citiesānot all of which are dense. But to put that another way, more than 80 percent of us live in places where cars are for sure a necessityāand autonomy, too, is nice.Ā As an aside, have you noticed that the same people pushing transport āmodulesā have also been pushing Covid lockdowns, mask mandates, and vaccination requirements?Ā There is a commonality of control.Ā
Journalists look at the interior of Baiduās Apollo RT6 next-generation autonomous vehicle during its unveiling in Beijing on July 20, 2022. The Apollo RT6 is designed for fully autonomous driving with detachable steering wheel, and is set to join the Apollo Go ride-hailing service starting in 2023. (NOEL CELIS/AFP via Getty Images)
Indeed, the anti-auto momentum of the green left is growing.Ā And here again, the big automakers are complicit. In 2018, Ford Motor Company announced plans for an āinclusive, vibrant, walkable mobility innovation district.ā [emphasis added]Ā In other words, Ford seems to be okay with a post-private-car future, especially if the greens continue to shower it with greenback subsidies.
Indeed, itās even possible that the phrase āauto makerā will become obsolete, as the manufacturers transition themselves into some sort of Uber-ish new business model, enabling them to abandon actual auto workers, trading them in for cheaper cubicle people.
One who caught this anti-car trend early was Donald Trump.Ā In 2019 the then-president told a crowd, āThey want you to have one car instead of two, and it should be electric, OK? So tell people, no more cars. No more cars.ā
But of course, when they say no more cars, they donāt mean no more cars for themselves.Ā And here weāre not just talking about such lifetime limousine riders as Biden and John Kerry.Ā In 2019, The New York Post reported on Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY): āSince declaring her candidacy in May 2017, Ocasio-Cortezās campaign heavily relied on those combustion-engine carsāeven though a subway station was just 138 feet from her Elmhurst campaign office.ā It seems that in just a two-year period, AOC took more than a thousand trips on Uber and other app-ride platforms.
Of course, fewer cars on the road is good for those who still have cars. So, if all goes according to plan, Biden, Kerry, AOC, and the Davos crowd can look forward to zipping along in emptier streets.
Joe Bidenās LegacyĀ
At least through Election Day, 2024, Biden will insist that heās in favor of personal cars, tilted, of course, toward EVs.Ā But after that, who knows, because as Biden says, the climate crisis is an āexistential threat.āĀ So with all that weighing on him, donāt be surprised if a second-term Biden administrationāif there is oneātakes a turn toward building his ālegacy,ā which will be defined as harder-core greenism.Ā As one ally of the Biden administration said to Politico last year:
Do you know how many cryptocommunists are now working for the Biden administration? How many former Bernie Sanders staffers who are pretty fāing deep in the White Houseās policy nexus? The revolutionary socialist phase has kind of faded for the left.Ā But the flip side of that is that a lot of those people have infiltrated to the highest levels of Democratic politics.
As they say, personnel is policy.Ā So if Biden wins re-election, in 2025 we can expect a tighter squeeze on personal carsāeither because they emit too much carbon or require too much lithiumāand a greater emphasis on āmodulesā and other kinds of mass-transit.
This is how Biden can grasp for the title of Greenest President in History.Ā That might not seem like such a great title to you, dear reader, but you donāt face the prospect of funding a presidential library.
President Joe Biden speaks during the UN Climate Change Conference COP26 in Glasgow, Scotland, on Nov. 2, 2021. (Erin Schaff/The New York Times via AP)
In the meantime, here at Breitbart News, this author has warned that the greens were not going to give up on another of their long-term goals, getting rid of gas stoves. And in fact, just in the past few weeks, thereās been a flurry of green reports and MSM touts, as well as scoops from Fox News and Bloomberg News on ongoing Biden administration efforts to snuff out stoves.Ā A headline on February 6: āU.S. officials eye new route to ban gas stoves.ā On February 7, The Boston Globe expanded the greenās anti-household agenda beyond stoves, worrying that ācooking appliances arenāt the only household items that run on methane gas,ā and citing the menace of furnaces, water heaters, and fireplaces. Ā āWe should be very concerned,ā said one worrier to the Globe. Ā (Happily, thereās also pushbackāeven pushback you can wear.)
You see, the greens and their climate modelers are sure that they everything figuredāand so we have to do it their way. SoĀ even truly startling developmentāsuch as the news, reported on February 10, that a piece of the sun had broken off creating a tornado-like twirl on the sunās surface, and is something that nobody had in their modelāwill have no effect on the declared need to save you from your gas stove. Ā Indeed, as the greens get more aggressive, theyāre coming, too, for your lawnmower. Ā And needless to say, green zealots such as Greta Thunberg oppose everything.
Yes, theyāre still coming for your stove. And they want your car, too.
https://www.breitbart.com/environment/2023/02/18/pinkerton-the-greens-arent-just-coming-for-your-gas-powered-car-theyre-coming-for-all-cars/
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Born in Syracuse, NY. He holds a bachelor of science degree in communication from Florida Institute of Technology with specialization in technical writing, business, public relations, marketing, media, promotion, and aerospace engineering.
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