• Fogle
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    131 year ago

    I own an electric car and I accept maybe I’ve been luckier than most but my last basement suite the landlord put it in completely of his own will and his own dime at my request. He reused some old hot tub wiring and it worked great. And my current apartment I had them pick their preferred electrical company and paid for it myself since it was just a plug like 3 feet down from their sub panel.

    So far I’ve not had a ton of issues finding places. It definitely limits where you can live with some places only having street parking or just not having the capability of putting in a charger or plug but there are definitely places out there

    • @psvrh@lemmy.ca
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      31 year ago

      Look, if the rich don’t want you to have a house, they certainly don’t want you have a car.

      In all seriousness, this is why it’s called late-stage capitalism: because at this point, it’s going to be fatal to it’s host. We’re nearing the point where there less and less value to extract from labour because they’re already underpaid for the value they generate and over-leveraged because debt was an easy substitute. At the same time, the wealthy are increasingly desperate for ever-larger returns.

      Electric cars, if not personal transit in general, are probably going to be the iceberg that the ship of capitalism breaks on: the wealthy don’t want to pay taxes for roads and charging infrastructure, and they don’t want to pay for public transit, but they also don’t want you to have a home where you can charge your own car. But they want you to buy stuff, and they expect electric cars to sell for higher prices than gas ones.

      Something has to give, here.