Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Government-Coerced Electric Car Demand
Government-Coerced Electric Car Demand
Dec 19, 2025 7:42 PM

When progressive elites discover that the average free-thinking American does not live according to their sanctified vision for our lives, they will resort to using the power of government to coerce the rest of us into doing what they want. For example, currently there is virtually no market for electric cars because not many consumers want them. However, this fact means nothing to elite progressive in government. The elites have decided that we should be driving electric vehicles regardless of what consumers want. So eight states are now collaborating to use various government measures to “encourage” the use of these vehicles that few people are interested in owning.

The New York Times reports that California, Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, and Vermont, which represent more than a quarter of the national car market, said they would:

seek to develop charging stations that all took the same form of payment, simplify rules for installing chargers and set building codes and other regulations to require the stations at workplaces, multifamily residences and at other places.

They said they would also promote hydrogen fueling stations, presuming that fuel-cell cars e more widely available. And they said they would promote “time of use” electric rates that would allow charging at off-peak prices, and expand incentives like high-occupancy lane access and reduced tolls and preferential parking. The states also said they would buy electric cars for their own fleets, and in some cases encourage their municipalities to do the same.

Among the measures proposed are arbitrary privileges including reduced tolls, lower utility rates, preferential municipal parking, and carpool lane permission for electric vehicles. The proposal would also require property owners to install chargers. The article notes that these additional measures will not “cost governments much” but no one seems to be aware that such initiatives cost businesses and consumers. A progressive is likely not to care about the additional costs that arbitrary regulations pass on to the rest of us. Deborah L. Markowitz, the secretary of Vermont’s Agency of Natural Resources, said the government actions were an attempt “to move the market beyond early adopters.” In other words, it is government’s role to act in the marketplace to get consumers to do things that the elites have decided we all need to do.

Building codes and regulations, not consumer demand, are supposed to encourage America to arrive at the goal President Obama set in 2011 saying, “With more research and incentives, we can break our dependence on oil with biofuels, and e the first country to have a million electric vehicles on the road by 2015.” The one glaring problem with this vision, again, is that the American people are not interested. Electric prise only 1.23 percent of car sales and, thanks to government pressure (especially those bailed out by Congress), automakers have produced more vehicles than consumers want, so automakers are now slashing prices. According to the Times article, General Motors is likely to cut the price of the Volt by $5,000 moving forward.

I wonder if progressives have ever considered that the best way to drive demand for electric vehicles is by a culture where individuals arrive at their own virtuous conclusions, rather than by the tyranny of building codes and regulations that create waves of negative externalities for years e.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Five marks of a Catholic school
Deal W. Hudson of the Morley Institute reports on an address by a Vatican official. The story is also reported here: Vatican Official Explains What Makes a School Catholic His name is one you should know. Archbishop J. Michael Miller is the Secretary of the Congregation for Catholic Education in the Vatican. That means he helps oversee Catholic education from kindergarten to college and graduate school throughout the world. I met with the self-effacing Archbishop over breakfast before his lecture...
Natural law and targeting whirlybirds
Psychiatrist and author Theodore Dalrymple has published a brilliant essay in the National Review highlighting the importance of the rule of law. He takes as a case study the looting in the wake of Hurricane Katrina: “New Orleans shows us in the starkest possible way the reality of the thin blue line that protects us from barbarism and mob rule,” writes Dalrymple. The essay questions whether such barbarism is inherent in human nature in crisis or if there are elements...
The mandate to work
Check out this editorial from the current issue of Christianity Today, “Neighbor Love Inc.” The editorial focuses on the importance of work and labor in the Christian life: “Business for the Christian is a form of neighbor-love, a way to fulfill the second Great Commandment.” The entrepreneurial calling is one that should be affirmed within a biblical framework by Christian leaders. CT recognizes that “the church has spent enormous energies on guiding our sexuality, but done little at the congregational...
Katrina: A chance to escape the welfare trap?
The Wall Street Journal editorializes today that President Bush has a chance to encourage a more free-market oriented approach to rebuilding the gulf coast: Instead of channeling more cash through the same failed bureaucracies, he should declare the entire Gulf Coast region an enterprise zone, with low tax rates for new investments and waivers for any regulatory obstacles to rebuilding. The Journal goes on to note that this event may be an ideal time for Bush to put a new...
Top Catholic high schools
The Acton Institute’s Catholic High School Honor Roll has released its annual list of the Top 50 Catholic High Schools in the United States. About half are repeat winners and half are new honorees. See the Honor Roll web site for more information. ...
Nonprofit training day in Fort Myers
Acton Institute’s Center for Effective Compassion is offering an intensive one-day event in Ft. Myers, Fla., on Oct 28, where nonprofits munity leaders will get practical, how-to skills to help them increase the “return on investment” for charity programs. Foundation grantees, munity and faith-based service providers, students and volunteers won’t want to miss this event. Read more about the event here. Key speakers include Rev. John Nunes, pastor of Dallas-based St. Paul’s Lutheran Church; Carol McLaughlin, chief programs officer at...
Bigger is not always better
Government is the only arena in which I can readily see that petence and failure, often of the staggeringly ignominious variety, is “punished” with an increase of funding and influence. Many others have observed this phenomena, perhaps most pervasive in the public education system. As we all know, the problem is always a lack of funds. But we find the same twisted logic at work following the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The inadequacy of government at all levels, with most...
The welfare trap
In Tuesday’s Wall Street Journal, Brendon Miniter notes that many of those stranded in New Orleans after the levee breaches were literally caught in a trap set by government “assistance”: We still only have anecdotal evidence to go on, and we can be hopeful as the death toll remains far below the thousands originally predicted. But it’s reasonable to surmise that Sen. Kennedy is correct about those who wanted to leave: Most people who could arrange for their own transportation...
Low Marx for poor memory
Samuel Gregg writes on a recent BBC Radio listeners poll that ranked Karl Marx as the greatest philosopher in history. Gregg reflects on the evils and atrocities that mitted by the political heirs of Marx’ philosophy menting that the materialist view of Communism removes any possibility of fulfilling the two mandments; loving God and loving our neighbors. Above all, Gregg wonders how people have forgotten what Marx stands for: “Why is Marxism’s red flag not treated with the same contempt...
State of nature redux
I’ve finally had a chance to respond to this piece on Tech Central Station, “The State of Nature in New Orleans: What Hobbes Didn’t Know” (Tech Central Station no longer active). In this article, TCS contributing editor Lee Harris takes George Will to task for his citation of Hobbes, to the extent that, as Harris writes, “my point of disagreement is with Hobbes’ famous and often quoted characterization of man’s original state of nature as one in which human life...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved