• @[email protected]
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    15 days ago

    Their point being electric cars still burn fossil fuels at generation and other alternatives aren’t discussed much at all in the MSM, however what a lot of foreigners don’t seem to get is our public transportation is trash and bike lanes are mostly non-existant except in nicer cities.

    I live 15ish minutes from work, I own a hybrid vehicle that gets good mileage but I also own an ebike, if it were safe for me to bike to work, I’d do it. But I have no option aside from either entering a highway (which I don’t believe is even legal for an ebike) or going over an extreme distance out of the way to have any kind of roads (which don’t have sidewalks or bike lanes and have a MPH of 50 assigned) I can not safely do it.

    • RideAgainstTheLizardOP
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      25 days ago

      I’m not sure how we got here, but when discussing EVs this criticism always comes up, and forgive me if I’m making an incorrect assumption about you but it’s almost always from someone living in a North American city. Your points are valid in the context of your own area, but the world is a lot bigger and there are so many regions that have developed to require cars that cannot be switched to primarily public transport. Public transport can link small towns to each other for example, but they cannot bring every single inhabitant to and from their own address, and not everyone is able to just get out and walk instead.

      The simple truth is that electric vehicles are better than vehicles that run on fossil fuels, and that is a valid and sensible opinion to have. Yes we should also have more public transport and walkable areas, but that is not a valid point against the introduction and distribution of EVs.

      • @[email protected]
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        24 days ago

        Maybe you misunderstood, I was agreeing with you and was saying how it’s not currently viable for me living in the suburbs in the US to use my electric bike to get to work, even though I don’t live far.