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Wordy... this is a whole lot of repetition but I will try to address your points. Quote:
But my point remains the average mpg stood still for 20 years because gas prices went down. And I felt like a chicken little saying over and over again something should be done. You ideal is reactionary society and that is not practical. We cannot wait until the world bakes before we do something about the possibility that it will. Quote:
I run a small buisness and there burden net% wise is lower then mine. Quote:
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What is really funny is I was agreeing with you on the very point you started this with. Quote:
regulation caused low MPG??? going to have to prove that one. Quote:
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Free market or not no co should be allowed to put the US at risk with there tactics. Quote:
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Can we get back on topic please.
"And just like they did in the 70s they'll stop making those huge boats and move to more fuel efficient economical cars that people are demanding. You know, supply and demand? It's already started. I hear commercials constantly advertising the MPG of the featured automobile." Innovation in greatly increasing the miles per gallon right now are abundant. Innovation in changing to alternative fuels is abundant. And basically none of it is going into mass producting and hitting the US market. An environmentalist citizens group, GreenCars in California took a first generation Prius that still had a dash board set up for plug in electricity and retrofitted it with batteries and plug in recharging. The result was 180 miles per gallon. Tesla, a foreign company, was the only one to react and has just put out a fast sports car hybrid getting 220 mpg with new battery technology. They will soon market a family hybrid. So why is this innovation not on the nationwide market? The fact is, the American automakers have been lethargic if not flat out against innovation like this. Then Ford just came out with a diesel car for Europe getting 63 mpg. Why isn't it being marketted in the US? How much would it cost to run it on biodiesel? (Most likely far less than gasoline).
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