This map shows the cost of charging an EV at home across the U.S. Home-charging is significantly cheaper in all 50 states than fueling a car with gasoline.

Source: Yale https://yaleclimateconnections.org/2026/04/whats-cheaper-fueling-your-car-with-gas-or-electricity/ #energy #uspol

@Sheril

How much does it cost to use an electric train?

Where is the infrastructure for mass transit?

Why are personal vehicles still hailed as a viable answer to climate change's problems?

The sea is rising ever faster.

Elon's cars aren't helping anyone but Elon, and he's digging underground to hide from the rising tide.

@Sea1Am @Sheril other companies make EVs, not just Tesla.

@noodlemaz @Sheril

More trash for the heap. What is your point?

@Sea1Am @noodlemaz @Sheril What's yours? You're in favour of restricting disabled people to their homes? And you know that public transport can be EVs too? Trains, buses, etc. There are reasons for transport which aren't just individual people as well.
Why do you think it's an either/or? And I wouldn't touch a Tesla with a ten foot pole either but he's hardly the only option these days.

@ariaflame @noodlemaz @Sheril

In my ideal world disabled people wouldn't need cars at all. Ever heard of a 15 minute city?

In fact, I would rather people just left cities entirely and lived in small communities taking care of each other like we did before we were all enslaved by people like Elon Musk.

I'm sick of people pretending they're saving the world by buying an electric car, it's a lie.

Stop fooling yourselves. It's pathetic.

@Sea1Am @ariaflame @noodlemaz @Sheril Be the change you want to see in the world. Go live your life in a little communal town. Then once you're there (after you've worked your sustainable farm plot, shorn your sheep, contributed to the community goods, and helped your neighbor build their barn) you can safely scold others on the internet for living unsustainable lives.
@noodlemaz @Sheril @Jumpmed @Sea1Am @ariaflame Unacknowledged slavery to capitalism. You’ll be begging the Seas for the knowledge to live after your greed lets the billionaires of the world squeeze you for every bit of life in you. Your privilege will be your downfall.

@Jumpmed @ariaflame @noodlemaz @Sheril

I am building towards my goal, thanks. I am not rich like Elon Musk, so I can't do it all myself in one day. There is no reason to hold my opinions until I have reached some goal post set by someone who is in denial, and doesn't want to change.

I have made many sacrifices, and I will continue to do so, whether you like it or not.

Have a good day, kiddo.

@Sea1Am @ariaflame @noodlemaz @Sheril I live in Las Vegas and everywhere I go is less than 6 miles away. And I should transfer my prescriptions to a closer pharmacy, then my universe would shrink to less than 3 miles.

@jaypeach53 @Sheril @ariaflame @noodlemaz

Glad to hear you are fighting the good fight, comrade! The more we do locally for ourselves, the better. Thank you.

@Sea1Am @noodlemaz @Sheril You were the one implying people thought that. I certainly don't. But it's not a trivial exercise to shift everyone to your perfect community.
In some ways the people who want perfection before they want any change are almost worse than those who don't want any change at all.
But since I want to enjoy the rest of my evening I'll leave it there.
Tomorrow will be soon enough to return to teaching people about energy efficiency, renewable energy etc.

@ariaflame @noodlemaz @Sheril

I must insist you scroll up and look at my original comment. I am quite aware of the fact EVs are not all cars.

Idk what kind of day you are having, but I hope the rest of it goes better.

@ariaflame @Sea1Am @noodlemaz @Sheril There are disabled people who "need" cars, but there are (probably) many more disabled people who can't use cars, and who instead need good public transport and good pedestrian/bicycle infrastructure.

Car societies restrict people in many more ways than they enable people.

@ahltorp @Sea1Am @noodlemaz @Sheril We therefore need a mix. Good public transport, but for the times that individual (or group, or for goods transport) vehicle is needed, we want EV versions. We also should have good bike lanes, footpaths for easy walking etc. Better organisation of residential areas so that shops etc. are not long distances away.

@ariaflame @Sea1Am @noodlemaz @Sheril What we really need is a shift to a non-car-centric model. Cars can exist, sure, but they should not be the prioritised mode of transport. Cars should always be treated as the exception, and car-centric design should not be allowed to make using other modes of transport significantly worse.

This is not only about cities, in non-city environments roads have been made unusable for all vulnerable road users in large parts of the world.

@ariaflame @Sea1Am @noodlemaz @Sheril Car-centric culture is dependent on threat of violence to keep vulnerable road users off the road. It is vital to car-centric culture that people using roads or streets in ways that slow down car traffic are regularly maimed or killed, in order to instill a high threat level.

This is a very uncomfortable truth, but is easily realised once you actually think about it. Violence against pedestrians and bicycle users is not a side effect.

@ahltorp @ariaflame @noodlemaz @Sheril

I've experienced the violence of the road firsthand and I can confirm your statements. I've spent the past 5 or so years taking my electric bike out to work in a rural community, and I've had some close calls.

Let me tell you, biking around in the Canadian winter is not pleasant. But, it was a sacrifice I was more than happy to make to reduce my footprint, and I plan to continue to reduce it further.

Eden, here I come! One step at a time.

@Sea1Am On a related note, how is the sand/gravel situation where you bike? Here in Sweden both roads and dedicated bike paths are often treated with gravel after snow plowing, but many municipalities are very slow to get rid of the gravel in the spring, leading to many biking injuries and lots of dust inhalation.

Some major urban and suburban bike paths are "sweepsalted", which results in a clean surface, avoiding slippery gravel, but is probably not a reasonable solution for rural roads.

@ahltorp

In Ontario we use road salt instead of gravel pretty much everywhere, I think because there are salt deposits beneath the great lakes which make it cheap for us.

The salt gets all over the bike and corrodes everything, it's absolutely terrible.

I rode that bike until it was too far gone, I'm not sure what I'm going to do with it now. I might scrap it for the motor.

Soon, I'll be living/working at a farm this year and doing my best to get by just walking to town, or ride-sharing.

@Sea1Am I think they get away with using much less salt with the bike path "sweepsalting" method than when salting bigger roads, but the chain and wheels should be cleaned thoroughly after each trip anyway.

@ahltorp

Yea, it was never enough though. The salty slush got inside the crevices and just slowly ate it all away.

I had to replace a few parts over the years to keep it going, and I was never able to keep it clean enough in the winter.

Leaving it covered outside while I worked didn't help much.

It lasted as long as I needed thankfully.

I'll keep the battery for something.

They really want you to own a car and be a slave to the insurance companies that try their best not to pay out.

@ahltorp @ariaflame @noodlemaz @Sheril

And let's not forget the urban heat island effect. We deserve better.

@ariaflame @ahltorp @noodlemaz @Sheril

Our shortsightedness is causing us to settle for bad solutions. We can't cling to this lifestyle, it's destroying us.

The sea rise is accelerating beyond all the models predictions. The longer we wait, the more drastic our solutions have to be, and we have already kicked this can down the road for too long.

@ahltorp @ariaflame @noodlemaz @Sheril

Preach baby!

My disabled spouse doesn't appreciate people using her as a token to win silly arguments. My spouse agrees with me on 15 minute cities, and small communities.