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You know what I think is going on here?

These tech companies are walking dead, they're gonna get wiped out because the whole industry is hitting EOL.

The Empire is done, money printer is done, Jew Daycare is over. The future in 1st world countries is gonna be more militarized, right-wing, communitarian, and local. The future in 3rd world countries is going to be re-colonization.

And what's happening right now is that blacks and browns are being staged into positions that are about to go extinct, because the point is to push whites into the roles that are going to make sense in the next 2 decades.

The main reason they'd do it like this is because if you put hundreds of thousands of white men / natives out of a job overnight, you risk a civil war and possibly you get your throat cut and your assets get split up. With black and brown imports, you just stir up some ethnic resentment and they'll be easily put on a boat and sent back where they come from - or even put in a ditch. Because in any SHTF scenario, white men decide what's gonna happen because they're the war fighter demographic.
Well, we know that there is some amount of central planning that happens.

For example, the whole Climate scare through the 2010s prepped people to buy over-priced and under-performing electric vehicles, which in turn pushed R&D money into batteries, which has made the tech so that NOW, 15 years later, EVs actually make logical sense. And now it starts to look like the US military will not be able to guard the world's oil anymore. We were kind of prepared for this outcome...

Now you look at these tech companies, they absolutely positively depend on the US money printer to stay alive. Welp, money printer is about to stop working as soon as the petrodollar / navy thing stops working. These companies ARE shiny, but they're not THAT shiny...

Filling a company up with Indians will have two obvious outcomes:

1. The company will behave like an Indian company (e.g. Tata motors). Not horrible, but not as well as American companies by any stretch.

2. The company will lose any political support in America because it's effectively now a foreign company. One of the main reasons why you hire locally is because 1000 jobs = 1 senator. If you don't hire people, then you are at risk of being regulated out of existence because from the perspective of voters and government, you're just a piece of meat to be split up.

So you would only choose to do this if you had some very good reason.
I like them as a concept, but I just don't see them as being there yet.
New EVS (outside of China) are pretty expensive (especially without the rebates, if you're buying new). if you live in a wet, or hilly area, don't own your own home, have shitty and expensive public chargers you probably shouldn't buy one. The range question gets brought up too, especially for road trips, and it is a valid point, it's just not enough when charging is slow and in some cases expensive. While battery tech has improved a lot since the first EVS, things still have a way to go.

I could go on about how they aren't really green because of how they're made, where your energy potentially comes from, actually shipping the cars around the world and a whole other list of reasons, I'm not going to because of one simple and easy to use quote:
"It don't matter. None of this matters."
> I could go on about how they aren't really green

You'd be talking to the wrong person because this is not something I have ever cared about.

The point is economics & geopolitics of electricity vs. that of oil.

> I just don't see them as being there yet.

They are, but mass adoption is a social contagion. Once you hit about 20-40% A Thing Happens, and everybody just starts thinking "oh they actually work" and then from there it's an avalanche.

It's happened in Norway, and Denmark is following. This is just going to go country-by-country from here...

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Well, the point is that a country CAN actually go all-electric, you don't have that "oh shit" moment where everyone realizes this stuff is not gonna work.

The only impact of incentives is that Norway electrifies earlier on the battery price curve, but the curve is coming for us all...