Yep, and companies like Amazon are TERRIFIED that the dam is beginning to break, now that Starbucks now has a union in New York. Workers have never been more agitated and ready to organize, and for good reason- the pandemic showed their class was MORE than willing to toss their health away the instant they could, and only provided basic protections when workers weren't coming back. When I used to hear people claim the stimulus checks were keeping people from working I was near ready to throw down.
neptronix said:
The problem with LFP is that it's larger in size than regular lithium and exacerbates the range anxiety and car weight problem.
Next generation technologies like solid state batts would be a lot better.
I just bring them up because I've read they're more environmentally friendly, and they're a literal "decade-use no replacement" battery; their hardiness easily defeats two of the biggest oppositions to EVs (that are dying off fast) of battery longevity and fire risk. I keep cautious optimism on Solid-state, we've been working on them for quite awhile.
neptronix said:
You do political canvassing huh.. i now get you a little bit better, lol.. ( also, thanks for holding back )
That bit about people knowing something is wrong but not knowing what to do about it is a symptom of most Americans finally learning that electing the 'right people' isn't going to result in positive change anymore. What we do in our political system is rotate leadership between two parties in a checkerboard pattern.
Yep, and I'm in healthcare too on the emergency side. I've protested all my life but really cranked it up in the last several years, had a few death threats in doing the canvassing (EDIT: Way, WAY more while at work). I'm not sure what you're okay with me going into deep details (even if I keep an even tone) but suffice to say... I never felt threatened
by the people making the threats, because they were largely elderly and overweight. I do however, feel
very threatened by the absurdity and cult behavior they have. I had 3 separate moments where mentioning of a name activated this Pavlov's-dog like rage where they threatened to shoot me on their doorstep, only to stop when I squared up, hand on hilt, and demanded them to repeat. One even did it in front of their whole family and toddler grandchild and went into a screaming rage, it was wild.
I think the issue is going to seriously require some ground-up rethinking of politics in general, but it'll demand some very even-keeled observations of how politics in America *works*, and how honestly shitty it is to be a politician. There's been great articles- One by The Atlantic on congresswomen comes to mind, I think it was published in 2018- where they detailed how wildly
little ~$250,000/yr actually is as a salary when you have to pay your staffers, pay for your flights, office space... I think in the article senator Murkowski detailed how lobbyists literally
wait for something to happen where you need cash and free time (sick family I think was the thing) and that's how they get them. It's why I firmly believe, that term limits without serious anti-lobbying laws and public resources for all elected officials will be doomed to fail.
neptronix said:
That's super important. Religious communities, anarchists, and business people understand that problem the best, but the idea that we could function as a society without centralized management by working together ( requires community ) is a foreign concept to the generations of people who have lived under centralized management. Also, the idea that a 'looser leash' is unappealing because having a society would now require more personal responsibility.
We're going to live under governments we don't like for our entire lifetimes, just like everyone has over human history, because a majority of human beings prefer, and have preferred for ages, to be subservient to a leader, and they don't mind if that leader is abusive or not. So really, all the political bickering in most countries revolves around what KIND of abuse people prefer to receive, lol.
The real vote you can make in the USA is voting with your feet, or voting with your dollars. Most people are too distracted by governmental elections, that they fail to realize, and use this awesome power they have.
Or just the sheer number of things that local systems preform for average citizens- it's a very real "When you do things right, people aren't sure you've done anything at all" position. It's so ironic to me, that anarchists now have turned from kids writing the A into people who keep reconsidering the roles of government in peoples lives lmao
As for the subservience, totally agreed. Disposition- D/R/whatever- next to the name changes so much about how people perceive a law, even if the words don't.