@aelluswamy@elonmusk@kylaschwaberow What people ought to be talking about is that this guy drove a car straight into a house at 73 mph and actually lived to lie about it. That’s some great safety engineering!
Here is a huge positive to modern life that gets no press.
I have an old 2009 Toyota, and the AUX port crapped out about a year ago. Went to YouTube. Young, enthusiastic guy explains how to fix it.
It is not obvious - involves taking the dashboard apart in a counter-intuitive way, but once you see it, it's a 15 minute fix.
There are actually dozens of videos showing how to do this, and they collectively have well over 200k views.
Had this happened in 1995, I would have just lived with it. But the combo of the replacement AUX jack available from Amazon and the video of the simple (but not obvious) fix, I fixed it.
I HAVE DONE THIS DOZENS OF TIMES. Replaced the control panel of my dishwasher. Replaced the ice maker in the fridge. Fixed a wonky sanding head on my drill press. Mastered a bandsaw technique that I use for my sculpture. On and on and on...
I think it is likely no exaggeration to say billions of fixes and skill upgrades have been performed worldwide that would not have been performed if it were not for the instruction freely given peer-to-peer on YouTube.
Take a moment to be happy about this. The busted item keeps performing, rather than going to the landfill. The person learning and doing the fix gains a sense of mastery and saves money. It's an unmixed blessing.
Stop doomscrolling. Think of what is busted in your house, find the YouTube video on how to fix it, and fix it.
It’s semi fair. Gas tax is calculated based on how many gallons of fuel you use.
The EV tax is just a flat fee so the people who drive more actually win out and may pay less the people who drive less actually pay More for going Less miles.
I’m not sure this is the best way to go about this. In NC I already pay a flat fee of $214.50 as an EV owner for a “road tax”. It doesn’t matter how much you drive you still get taxed unlike the gas vehicles. Not sure I would say this is fair, it’s maybe reasonable.
If it takes the place of the egregious state EV fees then I'm all for it. Otherwise, pound sand as the state fees already more than exceed the gas taxes one would ordinarily pay. This would just be an additional tax implemented to punish EV drivers. With EVs In looking at close to $1000 in state fees right now.
i genuinely feel like every recruit for NC State should attend a Carolina Hurricanes game. Just to show how passionate and special Raleigh is.
Truly a city just ready and waiting to EXPLODE. It gives goosebumps every time.