ddrueding
Fixture
I think we (NorCal) should just start charging you (SoCal) triple for all the water you use, serves you right for living in a desert
I'm sure you thought of this when you wrote it, but one of the things they certainly couldn't afford was a 10 year old car or truck. My grandmother lives on a very modest fixed income in a very small town. She was given the opportunity to sell her house and move into a less expensive managed apartment complex. The primary reason she declined was that it was too far to walk from the grocery store and her doctor.
Owning a car is a luxury. Living far enough from downtown that you need a car is a luxury. Every city I've been to in the world has a lower-class section right in the middle.
Owning/operating a car is not a right, nor is owning a color TV or internet access or many other things that seem to be slipping into the "deserved" category.
My cell is only two years but I am considering upgrading. SmartPhone life cycles are pretty short.
Oh, I'm a firm believer in that premise.American voters, by and large, are just plain stupid...believe that!
WTF, diesel is still $4.99 at the local station, but regular gas just went up yesterday, another 10 cents to $4.45! That's 24cents in just 7days!!! At this rate we would see $7/gal gas before the November presidential election. So what's Obama going to do about that, lol? Nothing, but idiot voters flock to the superficial hype of "Change we can believe in"...until the next election when no change happens, and they will then 'believe' in the next orchestrated hype campaign slogan. American voters, by and large, are just plain stupid...believe that!
Not to start a party war but what exactly has Bush done for gas prices? What's Mcain's plan?
I think it was unfair to point out Obama in this case.
Not to start a party war but what exactly has Bush done for gas prices? What's Mcain's plan?
I think it was unfair to point out Obama in this case.
This article is a pretty good summary of some of the problems.
What do you mean?
helps drive prices to wildly unrealistic levels
The hoax of "peak oil"
this costly fraud
recently admitted
Actually, what has any politition done for anybody but himself?
Bozo :joker:
At the absolute bottom of the pack was the Lexus 600h, which costs $18,858 more than the LS 460L, the most comparable non-hybrid model in the Lexus lineup.
Our analysts figure that the 600h, which combines Toyota's electric hybrid drive with a 5-liter V8 engine, saves only $189 a year in gas versus the 4.6-liter V8-powered 460L.
If fuel prices and all else remained stable it would take 99.6 years – 1.49 million miles of driving -- for the big hybrid to earn back its price differential! That's up from a mere 68.6 years, or a million miles, in March.
see, dd is only one online tonight . Hey, and now my main ISP seems to be able to access SF all day today (no, it's not a Mac problem, you twitterific™ trolls )WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama plans to propose the first-ever national emission limits for cars and trucks as well as average mileage requirements of 35.5 miles per gallon by 2016 — all costing consumers an extra $1,300 per vehicle. Obama's plan couples for the first time pollution reduction from vehicle tailpipes with increased efficiency on the road. It would save 1.8 billion barrels of oil through 2016 and would be the environmental equivalent to taking 177 million cars off the road, senior administration officials said Monday night.
The plan also would effectively end a feud between automakers and statehouses over emission standards — with the states coming out on top but the automakers getting a single national standard and more time to make the changes.
They're going to make sure that the only cars you can buy are the little unsafe death traps people aren't willing to buy now on their own. They're going to take away our freedoms by doing it in the name of the environment. :arge:
My limit has been reached. People have tried to help you with your problem accessing the site. But you have not only not followed their advice, you've taken to insulting those who tried to help, including me. Udaman, you are now on my ignore list.Hey, and now my main ISP seems to be able to access SF all day today (no, it's not a Mac problem, you twitterific™ trolls )
Uh... You must be smoking something good. If GM wants to keep selling 20MPG 400+HP car they have to offset them with sales of 40+MPG cars to put the CAFE average where it has to be. It's not good enough to offer 40+ MPG models. They have to actually sell them. CAFE standards are based on sales, not what you offer the public. So, in order to lure people into buying the high MPG models they have to sell them at a loss in order to get their CAFE numbers up. At some point it's just not possible to offset the large high power cars people actually want to buy by giving away tiny, high MPG, death traps to meet the CAFE requirements anymore. So, they will stop making the large, high power, low MPG cars people want to buy. This is exactly what the gov't is banking on.I find that highly unlikely. You said the same thing about CAFE, and you can still buy 1000+HP cars that get single-digit mileage if you want to. The only thing this is going to do is change the cars that the mfgrs. are marketing hard. You act like everyone knows what car they want, when the vast majority are more like cattle; buying whatever they are told. I say tell them to buy the tiny hybrids, so I can buy whatever I want.
These companies all make big trucks with V8s and/or large luxury sedans and/or high-powered sports cars, and none of them have anything to fear from this regulation, as they also make and market decent small cars.
You seem to be missing the fact that all the car makers are going to stop making those cars because they won't be viable under the new requirements.Not a chance, Stereodude. The mfgrs. will stop running ads for big trucks, and stop marketing SUVs as mandatory if you love your kid, but they will still be there. They may even put some margin back in the big car market, while running ads for small cars and talking them up a bit. But they won't stop making them. They can't, really, or they will lose that entire market to Toyota, Mazda, Nissan, Hyundai, VW, Audi, etc. These companies all make big trucks with V8s and/or large luxury sedans and/or high-powered sports cars, and none of them have anything to fear from this regulation, as they also make and market decent small cars.
If you have enough money sure... Assuming those vehicles are still made, which seems doubtful, they will have to intentionally make them very expensive to discourage people from buying them so they can keep their CAFE numbers up.People that really want big SUVs will always be able to buy them, people who want sports cars will always be able to buy them. Most of the market don't have a specific need/want, and will buy whatever they are told is cool. The 'cool' market has been SUVs for years, because that is where the big margins have been; getting people to buy $50k vehicles they didn't need.
That's a pipe dream. People in the US don't want those kinds of cars. It has nothing to do with advertising. It has nothing to do with seeing the value. The vast majority of people in the US simply don't want tiny cars. If the rest of the world had a free car market and realistically priced gasoline (without a pile of taxes to fund their socialist programs) they'd drive the same type of cars we do. Those car sell in Europe because the price of gasoline is sky high and they tax cars based on engine displacement. People buy small fuel efficient cars because they can't afford anything else.Did you know that in europe you can get a GTI with adaptive chassis control and adaptive cruise control? Not in the US market because they claim US buyers don't see the value (that the rest of the world does) in small, premium cars. Why not? Because of the marketing that has been brainwashing the cattle-like masses for over a decade.
You're delusional man. You can market the heck out of something and still not sell it. Cars aren't popular music on the radio. You can't force people to buy certain cars by advertising the heck out of them.To re-iterate my main point; the auto industry can redirect the bulk of their car sales simply by redirecting their marketing budget. They haven't done so so far because of financial incentives. This is simply changing those incentives.
The Honda Civic and Toyota Corolla wer respectively the 6th and 5th most sold vehicles in the U.S. last year. Both have been top rated by the IIHS for their 2009 models (those who were sold during the second part of last year). Both offer better than 30 miles per gallon.People in the US don't want those kinds of cars. It has nothing to do with advertising. It has nothing to do with seeing the value. The vast majority of people in the US simply don't want tiny cars.
Uh, those aren't small cars. The Civic and Corolla used to be small cars. The current Civic is larger than the Accord was 20 years ago. The current Corolla is larger than the Camry was 20 years ago. They also won't meet the new requirements, so I don't see your point.The Honda Civic and Toyota Corolla wer respectively the 6th and 5th most sold vehicles in the U.S. last year. Both have been top rated by the IIHS for their 2009 models (those who were sold during the second part of last year). Both offer better than 30 miles per gallon.
People in the U.S. don't want to buy those cars?
Yes, but the problem is they can't sell the required number of Cobalts needed to hit the CAFE numbers at a price point that allows them to make money on the Cobalt. They lose money on every fuel efficient Cobalt they sell now, and that's with the current CAFE standards. You can't break the laws of physics, so there isn't a lot that can be done to make the Suburban more efficient without making it a lot less useful... You can't make the Cobalt more efficient to help your average without make the per vehicle loss even greater.The A in CAFE does stand for Average, so for every Suburban GM sells, they'll need to sell a Cobalt or two to bring up the average. This may limit the supply of guzzlers but it certainly won't take them off the road. And it should encourage manufacturers to innovate towards higher economy in those vehicles.