Sure they can be led to where they don't want to go, maybe they have to be brought kicking and screaming but they can be led.
People who become unhappy with what politicians do put the politicians out of work. The emotion-driven backlash against government is making my country increasingly ungovernable. Not all that many people believe that politicians make well-informed, intelligent decisions in the interest of the governed...less so where expert knowledge is required.
There's no good reason to think that the measures you're citing are going to mitigate climate change substantially. It's too little, too late.
European cars are generally more fuel efficent. They are also generally smaller. Sometime smaller to the point where they are illegal to drive in the United States due to safety issues (the Ford Ka was not sold in the US due to issues with the rear bumper and the rear wheels not being considered safe by US standards. It was sold in the UK though.) Americans had a tendancy to move things in their cars over distances. Small fuel efficent cars don't generally have capacity for such things. They work just fine for shorter distances and in major cities, but not in rural areas, nor in the urban sprawl of the American West. Los Angeles to San Francisco is over 600 kilometers via the shortest and most boring route (Interstate 5). In the Bay Area, people commute from as far away as Brentwood to San Francisco and back each day which is roughly 90 kilometers each way. Some drive to Sacramento and back which is about 140 kilometers each way. These are just some of the things done in California alone.
You know what people in America do as soon as oil prices drop fifty cents or so? They trade in for bigger cars.
Leading me to conclude that Americans' bodies are now so massive that only a Chevy Tahoe and up can move them, given the only thing I see most cars hauling is the driver.Americans had a tendancy to move things in their cars over distances. Small fuel efficent cars don't generally have capacity for such things...
(the Ford Ka was not sold in the US due to issues with the rear bumper and the rear wheels not being considered safe by US standards. It was sold in the UK though.)
This is true. We also like trucks a lot (not a fan, personally). And in the end it's not about what other people think we need, but what we decide that we want.Americans had a tendancy to move things in their cars over distances. Small fuel efficent cars don't generally have capacity for such things. They work just fine for shorter distances and in major cities, but not in rural areas, nor in the urban sprawl of the American West. Los Angeles to San Francisco is over 600 kilometers via the shortest and most boring route (Interstate 5). In the Bay Area, people commute from as far away as Brentwood to San Francisco and back each day which is roughly 90 kilometers each way. Some drive to Sacramento and back which is about 140 kilometers each way. These are just some of the things done in California alone.
Possibly because pickups are partially exempted from many of the fuel economy, emissions, and noise standards that apply to passenger cars. Another venerable bit of lobbying on Capitol Hill.We also like trucks a lot ...
Should they?Not all that many people believe that politicians make well-informed, intelligent decisions in the interest of the governed.
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