It’s Time To Admit It: EVs Are EVIL

Loading

We’ve had enough of the left’s guilt-tripping anyone who drives a gasoline-powered car. If anyone should be ashamed, it is those who are smugly plugging in their cars each night.
 
They are the ones responsible for raping the planet, poisoning entire communities, enriching genocidal tyrants, and creating a massive hazmat problem while doing nothing to stop “climate change.”
 
Does that sound harsh?
 
Here’s one recent bit of evidence. A Bloomberg investigation found that the aluminum Ford is using to build its “eco-friendly” EV pickup comes from Brazil.
 
“There, in the heart of the Amazon, rust-colored bauxite is being clawed from a mine that has long faced allegations of pollution and land appropriation,” it found. A class action lawsuit against the mining company accuses it of polluting the water, causing cancer, hair loss, neurological dysfunction, birth defects, and increased mortality.
 
While all cars use aluminum to cut pounds, EVs use far more to offset the enormous weight of the batteries themselves.
 
“For consumers seeking to lower their carbon footprints, the environmental and social costs of electric vehicles may be greater than they realize,” Bloomberg says.
 
No kidding.
 
Here’s the dirty, rotten truth about EVs.
 
EVs aren’t “zero emissions” vehicles. All an EV does is shift the emissions elsewhere — namely, over to gigantic monopoly power companies that burn natural gas, coal, garbage or, horror of horrors, employ nuclear fission. Plus, making electric cars releases far more CO2 than is emitted in the production of conventional cars.
 
EV enthusiasts say these aren’t problems because over its lifetime, an EV will produce fewer total CO2 emissions.
 
But that claim depends on a wide range of variables — such as the range of an EV, how long the batteries last, the energy source used to produce electricity, etc. — that can dramatically affect the EV’s carbon-cutting picture.
 
One study by the University of Michigan found that EVs can emit more CO2 than conventional cars. It said that depending on the fuel used by power plants in a given area, an EV can produce as much CO2 as a gas-powered car that gets just 29 miles per gallon.
 
EVs aren’t cheaper to operate. Another selling point of EVs is supposed to be that, while they are far more expensive to buy, they are cheaper to drive. But that depends entirely on the relative cost of electricity and gasoline.
 
A study by the Anderson Economic Group found that with gas prices on the decline and electricity costs climbing, it’s cheaper to operate a mid-priced gas-powered car than a comparable EV, particularly when you factor in the extra time and hassle involved in recharging an EV.
 
EVs are built with slave labor. While gasoline is produced almost entirely from domestic supplies of oil, the lithium, cobalt, graphite, and rare earth minerals needed to make batteries mostly come from places such as China, Congo, Indonesia, Iran, and other countries that are noted for gross human rights violations, and are often mined and produced using forced and child labor.
 
“The road many of these materials take to consumers is littered with human rights abuses,” says Human Rights Watch.
 
Take the cobalt mines in Congo, where most of that stuff is found. Siddharth Kara, a fellow in public health at Harvard, describes it as “modern-day slavery. It’s not chattel slavery from the 18th century where you can buy and trade people and own title over a person like property. But the level of degradation, the level of exploitation is on par with old-world slavery.”
 
EVs are environmental rapists. Mining and refining the minerals needed to make EV batteries is also an environmental disaster. To make just one EV battery requires 25 pounds of lithium, 60 pounds of nickel, 44 pounds of manganese, 30 pounds of cobalt, 200 pounds of copper, and 400 pounds of aluminum, steel, and plastic.
 
Writing in these pages, Ronald Stein noted that “you must process 25,000 pounds of brine for the lithium, 30,000 pounds of ore for the cobalt, 5,000 pounds of ore for the nickel, and 25,000 pounds of ore for copper. All told, you dig up 500,000 pounds of the earth’s crust for just one battery.”

Read more
 

5 1 vote
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
10 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Wind and solar are not the future and EV’s are not the answer.

Where does the electricity come from, our aging ad fragile grid.
Existing power plants are projected to retire at a faster pace than installations of new units, and dependence on renewable projects are threatening widespread power shortages, according to a new report
Hospitals better check their diesel back up generators.

The future is electric. The modernized grid needed for wind and solar is the same grid that will be needed for fusion.

Just keep repeating what the liberal masters tell you to.
Mining for the minerals is a eco disaster, windmills in the ocean killing whales, the blades cant be recycled. Have you seen the electric car and scooter graveyards?
comment image

Lithum mine
comment image#keepProtocol

This is not an electric vehicle in the lithium mine
comment image

Last edited 1 year ago by kitt

“Being Hung Out To Dry” – Republicans Get Big Win, Dems Furious After Biden Caves And Will Sign Bill He Previously Opposed

Electric may be the future but solar and wind is not. They require more energy to produce them than they will ever produce.

Sure dude; China’s solar panel manufacturing plants are powered by electricity by coal. Which works regardless of time of day or weather. There’s not enough minerals to get everyone in an EV. As they get more scarce the price goes up.

We don’t need Wind Turbines or Solar Panels cluttering up the landscape we don’t want EVs forced upon us by Biden and his fellow Democrat’s/Globalists we need to get ourselves out of the United nations and move them to Moscow and ditch the WEF,CFR and the rest of them all