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The new Speaker of the House deleted his entire website and his entire record of his podcast a day after getting the job. Wouldn't want people to have it.
Man, too bad there aren't any archivists who knew to grab it immediately.
By increasing transmission, the BIG WIRES Act enables us to build more clean energy. It could pass in an end-of-year omnibus bill if grassroots constituents like us give it a big push 🙌
Ask your members of Congress to cosponsor the BIG WIRES Act 📝
Call Now! https://citizensclimatelobby.org/get-loud-take-action/big-wires/
The tenants of techno libertarianism:
Markets can replace government.
Technology can replace work.
Crypto can replace fiat.
None of this is true and has been proven so.
Because of the rise in popularity of child-killing SUVs, conventional-engined vehicles bought in 2013 will, on average, have lower CO₂ emissions than those bought today.
There are countless news articles and studies that reiterate the point that electric vehicles “have fewer moving parts” or are “less complex” and therefore pose a threat to autoworkers’ jobs. Many cite a 2017 Ford presentation that mentioned a “30% reduction in hours per unit” as a benefit of producing EVs, or former Volkswagen CEO Herbert Diess, who said in 2019 the company would need to make job cuts due to its switch to EVs, which “involve some 30% less effort.” More recently, as the United Auto Workers strike has ramped up, a 2022 quote from Ford’s CEO Jim Farley that “it takes 40% less labor to make an electric car,” has been circulating.
But I couldn’t find any data, research, or even further explanation backing up these figures. Part of the challenge of digging into these claims is that it’s not clear what they even refer to. Are the CEOs talking about the labor required for final assembly, like dropping in the motor and putting on the doors? Are they taking into account the production of components, like the EV battery? Where do they draw the line on what constitutes EV manufacturing?
Do Electric Cars Require Fewer Jobs than Gas Cars — Or More? – Heatmap News
It’s really interesting how sometimes the narrative takes over without a lot of facts behind it. Because the EV narrative has fixated above the drive train, it misses how much labor is involved in battery production. It’s a key reason why battery plants also need to be considered part of the UAW, and can’t just be placed in anti-union states.