Nice. I agree that is what Mr. C probably thinks. Would need to clarify what the "kid" he is referring to actually is. My definition of kid is not old enough to have the family/house responsibilities.BECAUSE I JUST FINISHED SOMETHING AT WORK and am entertained by this, i think what mr. c was saying is something like this :
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But we live in the Heartland, not the Coast.
In this 11-state footprint, an estimated 34.3% of the total population (approx. 9.4 million out of 27.4 million) lives outside of a city or metro area of 50,000+ people. This is significantly higher than the overall U.S. average, where only about 14% to 19% of the country lives outside an MSA. [1, 2]
There are vast swathes of north america where you really do need a large truck to get your business done and an electric version is nowhere near up for the job.
Steve can you bring up 20 gallons of diesel, we had to pull a semi out of a ditch.
Steve can you bring up 100kwh of electricity.
I have lived in 4 different "cities" over the last 50 years. The biggest was 68k. Currently in a city of 42k. Not a good comparison to LA, or Chicago. As far as "lifestyle" goes, there are many more trucks towing recrational and construction trailers in a typical city than Ag trailers in the "country".11 "heartland" states have around 27 million people of which around 35% live outside cities, so you're talking about 9-10 million people. around one in 38 americans live in the situation you're describing
Not passing judgment on people's choice to drive EVs. They work for some Americans. Now let's respect somone's decision that they don't work for everyone. With a "family" of ~50, there are 3 EVs. 2 are my brother's (he also has a diesel van), the 3rd is a nephew that only drives it to work; Ascent used for all other transportation. It works for them.this is why it's kind of silly to say EVs don't work for americans because towing, hauling tons of s*it, driving thousands of miles without getting gas, and so on.