“What really powers electric vehicles like the Chevy Volt” is not a question GM Environment and Energy Policy executive Kristin Zimmerman is comfortable answering, as you’ll see in today’s must-watch clip. ...Then things went south when someone asked, “So what’s charging the batteries right now?” Just to be clear, Zimmerman is no dummy. She has multiple degrees, including a Ph.D. in Engineering Mechanics.
As you’re about to see, it isn’t that she doesn’t know the answer — it’s that she doesn’t seem to want to admit it while showing off GM’s renewed EV efforts. “Well, it’s here,” Zimmerman said. “It’s coming from the building.” You can’t make this stuff up. Just watch the clip already.
When pressed, Zimmerman said, “Actually, Lansing feeds the building,” referring to the local utility company. “Lansing feeds power to the building.”..."
"Legislation that would require Michigan high school students take a personal finance course in order to graduate is headed to the governor’s desk after earning broad bipartisan support in the state legislature.
The state of Louisiana has now officially banned biological males from competing in women’s sports.
The Fairness in Women’s Sports Act passed the Republican-led state legislature and became law after Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards agreed to neither approve nor veto the bill.
"Threat actors have recently mobilized to violence due to factors such as personal grievances, reactions to current events, and adherence to violent extremist ideologies,including racially or ethnically motivated or anti-government/anti-authority violent extremism," DHS said...
Is DHS hinting that hordes of white supremacists and American First patriots will cause mayhem in an election year? Curiously coincidental, no?..."
After observing that midterm election results are closely linked to presidential approval, Enten explained the real problem for Democrats: Biden's approval on the economy is -26%, the lowest since Jimmy Carter in the late 1970s.
Biden's embarrassing marks on the economy are thus the "big drag" for Democrats because Americans overwhelmingly are concerned about the economy, especially in a year of sky-high inflation and record-high gas prices.
The Motor City is near the top in almost every category of regulatory obstacles for new dining establishments. “Entrepreneurs in Detroit face serious regulatory hurdles,” says the February report “Barriers to Business,” which was written by Andrew Meleta and Alex Montgomery.
The challenges are acute for aspiring restaurant owners, who must
pay 15 separate fees,
get clearance from nine city agencies,
submit to twelve in-person visits,
fill out 20 different forms, and
perform a total of 77 steps to comply with various regulations..."
The two former lawyers who threw a Molotov cocktail at a police car during the George Floyd riots have pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges and are expected to receive reduced sentences. As we noted previously, they were originally facing a much harsher sentence. ...Prosecutors in this case have bent over backwards to ensure shorter sentences for these two. Good thing they’re not Trump supporters..."
In a column for the newspaper published this month, the reporter chronicled the difficult journey with all of its pitfalls. It included a shorter range than expected, finicky charging cords, loads of slower-than-advertised charging stations, and large swaths of the country without any "fast" charging stations at all, among other hardships.
In the end, Wolfe said she and her road trip companion, Mack, spent more hours waiting to charge than they did sleeping — which is not exactly a recipe for a successful and enjoyable trip.
Environmentalists applauded the vote while German automakers warned there is a lack of charging stations to make the plan feasible.
"...Lawmakers voted to mandate automakers to cut carbon-dioxide emissions by 100% within 13 years, essentially banning the sale in the 27-nation bloc of new cars powered by gasoline or diesel.
EU lawmakers also endorsed a 55% reduction in automobile carbon dioxide emissions..."
On Monday, Biden authorized the Department of Energy to use the DPA to "rapidly expand" American manufacturing of solar panel components, building insulation, heat pumps, "equipment for making and using clean electricity-generated fuels," and power grid infrastructure.
Politifact, for example, will call criticism of President Biden’s actual words false based on what the president meant, for example, while affording Republicans no such benefit.
...Yet there was still a hope that eventually, a sense of integrity would surface and they’d knock it off.
"But recently Politifact, a Facebook-approved partner in so-called “fact-checking,” went to even more desperate lengths to protect a Democrat from legitimate criticism by way of using their vast power to slap a “missing context” label on some stories shared to Facebook that were critical of Politifact’s May 24th “fact check” of a tweet from Georgia’s attorney general that claimed Stacey Abrams supported Major League Baseball moving the All-Star game out of Georgia last year after the state’s election reform bill was signed into law. Politifact labeled the claim “false,” but our sister site Twitchy was among several that noted in their write-ups about it that Politifact left out the fact that the USA Today editorial Abrams wrote that they cited as “evidence” was actually stealth-edited after publication and after MLB made their decision in what some suggested was a deliberate editorial move designed to soften Abrams’ stance on boycotts in order to make her seem less supportive of them.
Here’s the thing about the stealth-edit, though.
Everyone knew it had been edited.
USA Today was blasted for the edit.
There are numerous news reports with evidence that the edits happened..."
The percentage of job listings that require a degree has dropped
Employers have started to look at training on the job as a better measure of skills than a college degree, according to one career expert. ...“On-the-job training is replacing the college diploma,” Coleman told The Fix through a spokesperson.
“To put it simply, the ‘knowledge’ that comes with a degree isn’t relevant to the job.” ...He said on his show that in 2017, 51 percent of job listings required at least a 4-year degree...in five years he could see the number of jobs that require a college degree drop to 25 percent..."
Four days and 2,000 miles from New Orleans to Chicago totaled $175 in charging costs
I thought it would be fun.
"That's what I told my friend Mack when I asked her to drive with me from New Orleans to Chicago and back in an electric car. ...Over four days, we spent $175 on charging.
We estimated the equivalent cost for gas in a Kia Forte would have been $275, based on the AAA average national gas price for May 19.
That $100 savings cost us many hours in waiting time. But that's not the whole story..."
He continued, "I took an oath to support the laws and Constitution of the U.S and the state of Florida. I did not take an oath to subcontract out my leadership to a corporation based in Burbank, California. They don't run this state ..."
People Living In Pro-Trump Counties More Likely To Die From Covid, Study Finds "People living in counties that voted Republican in the 2020 presidential election were more likely to die from Covid-19 than those living in counties that voted Democrat, according to a study published in Health Affairs on Monday, underscoring the effects of a partisan response to the pandemic as officials move to counter another surge in cases.
...Disparate mortality rates are likely due to structural, policy and behavioral differences in more conservative counties, the researchers said... CRUCIAL QUOTE “The impact of partisanship doesn’t only impact people of one political stripe,” Sehgal said.
“Not everyone who lives in a Republican county votes Republican...
Even in the reddest counties, you have people who aren’t able to vote oraren’t able to leave, and yet are subject to the policies and behaviors that surround them.”...
1534 - Jacques Cartier became the first to sail into the river he named Saint Lawrence.
1860 - The Ms. Ann Stevens book "Malaeska, the Indian Wife of the White Hunter" was offered for sale for a dime. It was the first published "dime novel."
1931 - Robert H. Goddard patented a rocket-fueled aircraft design.
1934 - Donald Duck made his debut in the Silly Symphonies cartoon "The Wise Little Hen."
1943 - The withholding tax on payrolls was authorized by the U.S. Congress.
1945 - Japanese Premier Kantaro Suzuki declared that Japan would fight to the last rather than accept unconditional surrender.
1959 - The first ballistic missile carrying submarine, the USS George Washington, was launched.
2000 - Canada and the United States signed a border security agreement. The agreement called for the establishment of a border-enforcement team.