I suspect it's actually the minority who would be unwilling to sacrifice. Most people sacrifice every day, seemingly more and more every financial quarter, but not for any greater good. Just so that wealthy minority can pad the bottom line they think will make them safe in an increasingly precarious world.
I’ve been forced to sacrifice. I rent a car to drive for Uber, and as a result of being forced to use an electric vehicle for this, I lose about 20% per day.
I’m glad the option exists, as a stepping stone up to buying a car.
But losing 20% of my revenue to charging time just feels insulting. It makes it so much harder to get to that next step.
I’m just barely scraping by, and if I could earn more I’d be out of this hole quicker.
They say the charging time is rest time, but I’d rather just have those two hours a day at home rather than in whatever grocery store parking lot happens to be the closest when my car needs a charge.
I also wouldn’t mind if it were an available option. The fact it’s basically the only option these days makes me feel so powerless.
Coal is not just a low percentage of power generation but it’s also highly variable by location. For example I believe West Virginia is still mostly coal so would lose most of their power, but my state has zero coal so no direct effect
I could put on my blue spangled coastal elitist snob hat and say hah, repugnicans getting what they deserve
It definitely can. It should not be, but it can be. Government is getting bolder with drastic dictatorial action, and just because we rely on something for safety and stability doesn’t mean it can’t be taken away in an instant.
We can reach the yellow line, it would just require telling the fossil fuel industry to get fucked, and rapidly investing in green energy, reducing waste, and probably stepping on the toes of the Millitary Industrial Complex.
Nuclear war or zombie apocalypse could be the yellow line. Aside from that, there’s no way to stop humans from using energy to improve their lives, and that’s a good thing.