Let consumers and markets decide. If EVs are truly better, they'll win on merit—not because bureaucrats banned the alternative and stranded people who can't afford a $50k car.
Yes, but make it a gradual transition. Mandates push the industry forward without stranding workers, buyers, and charging infrastructure in the chaos of an overnight switch.
The planet is burning and automakers won't change unless we force their hand. Mandate the phase-out now and let innovation catch up.
No mandates—let the market kill gas cars when EVs actually win on price and convenience. Forcing it just jacks up costs and pisses off drivers.
Gradual transition respects workers and grids. It lets charging and EV tech mature without wrecking the economy.
Progress must be earned, not forced. Like a careful work of art, a gradual shift lets tech mature, supply chains adapt, and people embrace change without ruin.
Gradual transition keeps jobs and charging networks stable while steadily speeding up cleaner tech.
A practical plan wins: let invention and markets ease the change, sparing jobs and costs while still improving air.
Let the invisible hand pace the move with incentives and time; coercion harms workers and stalls innovation.
A gradual transition lets tech mature and grids adapt, avoiding shocks to industry and users. It protects jobs while charging networks scale up.
Slow, steady transition lets tech, jobs, and the grid adapt; it buys time for better batteries and cheaper cars.
Gradual transition: science needs time to evolve. Workers and grids must scale with retraining and investment.
A rush to ban gas cars hurts workers and families; push a just, gradual transition with regional plans and solid charging infrastructure.
Gradual transition. Make the tech beautiful and easy so customers actually lead the switch.