• MrOzwaldMan@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      Same, but I fear the risk of the car getting hacked giving the hacker the control or an EMP attack causing the electric car to shutdown indefinitely.

      • Tar_Alcaran@sh.itjust.works
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        5 months ago

        An EMP will brick any car from the past 3 decades. And also trigger ww3, so I’m not sure if you’ve got your priorities straight there.

      • MtnPoo@beehaw.org
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        5 months ago

        ICE cars are just as reliant on computers. Have you seen the articles on “your car is spying on you” and BMWs heated seat monthly fee?

        Plus, when you consider all the emissions controls required by the government versus the car companies trying to make the cars exciting for the consumer, the whole thing ends up one big giant mess of computer and sensors.

    • RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Toyota Hilux: the middle-east terrorist’s truck of choice.

      But seriously, those things are everywhere in the Middle East and Africa.

      • maynarkh@feddit.nl
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        5 months ago

        I guess you need a cheap, reliable, relatively high performance truck with good off-road capabilities with a large bed to mount weaponry on.

        What else would they use?

      • kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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        5 months ago

        The world doesn’t need an EV Mustang or $99K F150, it needs an EV Focus or Escort oor Fiesta level car that normal people can afford.

        • Midnitte@beehaw.org
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          5 months ago

          Which we won’t get with Ford deciding instead to focus on hybrids.

          Instead, the Blue Oval wants to focus on making more hybrids instead and says it will have hybrid options for all its internal combustion engine-powered vehicles by 2030.

          Also, apparently, people quite like the EV Mustang.

          But with Mustang Mach-E sales up 77 percent to 9,589 sold, and a 148 percent growth for the E-Transit, Ford is the country’s second-bestselling EV brand.

  • Not_mikey@slrpnk.net
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    5 months ago

    Lemmy:

    Go UAW, fight for higher wages and better working conditions

    Also Lemmy:

    I demand the cheapest car possible, I don’t care if its built by slave labor in xinjiang. If western companies can’t compete with third world labor costs then they’re obviously inefficient and don’t deserve to exist.

    • Mog_fanatic@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I mean I’d argue there’s some serious room to help out the consumer since the price of cars has been outpacing inflation pretty handily since around 2014 (and been beating it into a bloody pulp since 2020). There is some insanely obvious price gouging going on when the average price of a new car in 2024 is over 49k. There is room for BOTH higher wages and at least semi reasonable car prices for the American consumer. In my eyes if you clearly aren’t willing to help me as an everyday clearly struggling American today, then goooo right ahead and kiss my ass as I buy foreign if it’s cheaper.

      • Not_mikey@slrpnk.net
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        5 months ago

        The average purchase price has gone up because people are buying more expensive cars, eg. Large trucks, SUVs, luxury sedans, high end trims etc. not because cars are getting more expensive.

        If you look at lower end sedans there price hasn’t changed much. For example if you look at the Chevy Malibu the current base price is $25,100 , in 2014 the base price was $22,340 or $29,400 adjusted for inflation, in 2004 it was $18,700 or $31,067

        None of those are close to the $10,000 cars coming out of China because you just can’t make a car for that cheap in a country with high labor costs like the u.s., or even Japan or Germany.

      • ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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        5 months ago

        That added cost came in the form of dealer markups during COVID that never went away since theyre still selling. The manufacturers don’t have much control over what the dealerships do.

    • kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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      5 months ago

      Now look at how much the executives are being paid in the US compared to the coat of the vehicles…

      It ain’t the welders and wrench turners who are adding the most to the cost of vehicles.

      • LaLuzDelSol@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        As opposed to China where there totally isn’t a massive wealth gap between factory workers and their executives! Not like the CEO of Xpeng is worth 1.4 billion or anything…

        • davel@lemmy.ml
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          5 months ago

          It’s true, China Has Billionaires.

          Income inequality rhetoric ignores that a class can reap the benefits of work via public investment (e.g. a bullet train), even if bosses make more as individuals. Working Chinese people are seeing the fruits of their labour despite billionaires and inequality. To recriminate them for not demanding more is recriminating the virtue of patience.

          In fact, much of what passes for “socialist” idealism in the West turns out to be a mirror image of bog-standard liberal-capitalist entrepreneurship propaganda: “I will be my own boss! I will run my own business!” This idealism appears unaware that the necessity of management is foisted upon us by logistics, not capitalism. Denial of this reality results in fantasies of perfect synchrony between perfectly autonomous anarchists.

          The “Fully Automated Luxury Communism” dream, embraced more by pundits with cushy lives than working people, also reveals a dark truth: western “socialists” have some awareness that a more equal world will mean losing first-world privileges. They cannot conceive of things getting better steadily and slowly, with hard work. And so they are forced to denigrate the Chinese road of self-sacrifice in favour of leisure-driven utopianism. The reality is that the victory of the working class over the capitalist class will usher in an era of hard but rewarding work, as opposed to hard work without reward.

          United Nations, 2019: Helping 800 Million People Escape Poverty Was Greatest Such Effort in History, Says Secretary-General, on Seventieth Anniversary of China’s Founding

          • LaLuzDelSol@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Sure man, I guess the nets on the sides of the factory buildings are there to catch workers who are jumping with joy because their work is so rewarding.

            I don’t deny that China’s economic ascendancy has been remarkable and a big win against poverty, but now that people have gotten past the starvation phase, I don’t think you can use the “high tide raises all boats” analogy. It sounds a lot like tricke-down economics to me, with some hand-waving that things are different in China because the wealthy elites are actually generous patricians.

    • maynarkh@feddit.nl
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      5 months ago

      My worries are not that they can’t compete, it’s that they won’t even attempt to.

      • LaLuzDelSol@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        They managed to survive the Japanese/Korean car invasions (with some help). They will certainly try with China although it’s trickier for a lot of reasons.

      • Not_mikey@slrpnk.net
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        5 months ago

        Car prices haven’t gone up, the average purchase prices of cars has gone up but that’s because people are buying more expensive cars, Large trucks, SUVs, luxury sedans, higher trims etc.

        If you look at lower end sedans there price hasn’t changed much and has even gone down. For example if you look at the Chevy Malibu the current base price is $25,100 , in 2014 the base price was $22,340 or $29,400 adjusted for inflation, in 2004 it was $18,700 or $31,067

        Auto workers wages have gone down but they’ve steadied in recent years in 2004 hourly wage was $21.71 or $36.07 adjusted for inflation, in 2014 it was $21.38 or $28.17 adjusted for inflation now they are around $30.

        So since 2004 the price for a car has gone down 24% and auto wages have also gone down 20%. The recent UAW contract wage increases with little to no increase in price shows there is some room for workers to get more out of that $25,000 cost pie, but there would be no room if that pie is shrunk to $10,000 to compete with Chinese manufacturers.

    • Pohl@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      It’s the same thing the right does with government. It is a truism that there is all sorts of “inefficiencies” where the money is going to the wrong people for the wrong stuff.

      In both cases, it’s sort of correct and sort of wrong. Corporations, governments, and any human institution beyond a certain scale (a few hundred people), will leak wealth into places it shouldn’t. It’s an unavoidable feature of our species as best I can tell.

      It’s fine to accept it, it’s fine to be angry about it. It’s silly to blind yourself to it in some places and whinge about it in others.

  • LaLuzDelSol@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I feel like a lot people on Lemmy, and people in left-leaning spaces in general, kind of have a blind spot on this one. People get that buying local is good, but not buying American.

    It matters where your money goes. People complain about the soullessness of modern American life, and how hard it is to find a good job, and how democracies are backsliding around the globe, and then they buy things from China that are cheaply made and, at most, slightly better value in the long run.

    This isn’t me trying to be nationalist or xenophobic but whenever anyone (including me because there’s no way to completely avoid it nowadays) buys Chinese goods you are supporting a government that is aggressively un-democratic, that actively supports Russia, and also has basically zero labor laws and an absolutely enormous wealth gap between the ruling class and the working class.

    And yeah I get a lot of Americans are hurting right now due to inflation but the solution isn’t to send money overseas. The best thing you can do for your neighbor is buy union and buy American.

      • SeattleRain@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Their labor conditions are significantly worse than modern American work conditions let’s not kid ourselves. Although this never bothers people when it comes to goods made in Mexico.

      • MeaanBeaan@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Yes, let’s try to pick apart the one hyperbolic statement he made and completely ignore all of his other valid points. Let’s also link a very biased article about Wikipedia that has absolutely nothing to do with anything as some sort of proof that China is some bastion for workers rights. It’s not like they literally force people into labor camps simply for being minorities or anything.

        The US is far from perfect but let’s not pretend they somehow have worse labor rights than freaking China.

    • Fidel_Cashflow@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      also has basically zero labor laws and an absolutely enormous wealth gap between the ruling class and the working class.

      China’s congress literally just passed a law a few days ago requiring all companies over 100 employees to have employee councils as a mandatory organ of the company structure

      Article 17(2) of the Revised Company Law now stipulates that the assembly of employee representatives shall be the basic form of the democratic corporate governance system and that this shall apply to all companies. That means, regardless of whether a company is private or state-owned, whether it is a limited liability or a stock corporation. This is a notable development, as democratic corporate governance as a requirement for all companies is set out in national law for the first time.

      An Employee Assembly shall be convened at least once a year, and more than two-thirds of the employee representatives must be present at the plenary session of an Employee Assembly. Elections and votes on relevant matters at an Employee Assembly require a majority of all employee representatives.

      • Kultronx@lemmygrad.ml
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        5 months ago

        don’t be too hard on him, americans are taught from birth bizarre propaganda about their country, they can’t help it naturally

    • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Buying local/national is fine when the quality is there. But I’m not putting my face into a grinder just to bail out American corporations.

      • Fidel_Cashflow@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        ah, but don’t you know that all 1.4 billion people are brainwashed and can’t think for themselves??? Something something tiny man square???

    • billgamesh@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      Voting with your dollar is a myth (it’s a myth that workers have any vote, not that the dollar controls the imperial core). China offering a viable alternative to not being able to afford cars because companies have arbitrarily inflated prices is great. Arbitrarily spending a lot more money that will mostly go to shareholders in the US is not going to help the worker

      • LaLuzDelSol@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Voting with your dollar is a myth? So if the IDF (or ISIS, if you prefer) drops an amazing new EV for $10k, with all money going straight to weapons procurement, you’d buy it?

        • billgamesh@lemmy.ml
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          5 months ago

          Very much a strawman argument. China can offer cheap electric cars because they aren’t paying american car company CEOs. Also, your argument supposes that American manufacturers aren’t supporting IDF…

  • umami_wasabi@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    If it pass safety standards without all those smart and data collection bs and being reliable for 7+ years with easy part sourcing I might give it a try.

  • cobra89@beehaw.org
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    5 months ago

    Until they’re testing and pass NHTSA standards, fuckin nope.

    Maybe people will change their minds once they see the aftermath of high speed crashes in these things. Or crashes with a MUCH heavier vehicle. With the weight of EVs these days you NEED a car that’s designed around safety.

  • Zeroxxx@lemmy.id
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    5 months ago

    I personally own Ioniq 5 but that is because Hyundai has better after sales support in my country than emerging Chinese OEMs.

    Not to mention existing Chinese cars currently do not possess enough battery capacity and efficiency for my taste.

    Once they fix that atrocious after sales support, I will reconsider them.

    FYI, Wuling Air EV probably has the 2nd biggest sales number here in my country but people who own them complain alot about maintenance and spare part supplies.

    • bastonia@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      You have to drive 250km to do your grocery shop then another 150km to drive your kids home? lmao

  • VodkaSolution @feddit.it
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    5 months ago

    80s: You wouldn’t buy a Japanese car!
    90s: you wouldn’t buy a Korean car!
    00s: you wouldn’t buy a small Italian car!

    • aeharding@vger.social
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      5 months ago

      If they want our loyalty, make fucking better cars

      I mean, in the spirit of the post, make fucking cheaper cars

      Cars have been getting expensive AF

      • Certainity45@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        Cars has been so poorly made dor 1 or 2 decades now, that I respect most people who drives late 90’s to early 00’s cars.

        Electric cars are a joke in terms of quality. How they don’t have self-dignity at all?

  • huquad@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    Auto industry looking at their overly inflated prices, “well well well, if it isn’t the consequences of my actions.”

  • Zerush@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    Even Xiaomi has released the SU7, a real Tesla killer and also way cheaper. But not for the US market, but for the EU.

    • lemmus@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Absolutely. So many sensible sized European cars aren’t sold in the US because bullshit market research says small car bad big truck good.

      • Moonrise2473@feddit.it
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        5 months ago

        But the European market is also pushing bigger cars and SUV.

        The smart is now a 4 meters SUV

        The Volkswagen up (small 4 person car) is out of production and they’re selling nothing under 4 meters

        The fiat panda (another small 4 person car) is in the process of being redesigned and the mockups look like a huge range rover SUV

        Skoda, after retiring the citigo, has the Fabia that’s relatively small (almost 4 meters) and the rest are huge

        Most automakers are giving up on the cheap and small compact car segment, leaving a big gap for Chinese automakers

        • maynarkh@feddit.nl
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          5 months ago

          The smart is now a 4 meters SUV

          Is it? I haven’t heard about it, I’ve seen some weird concept picture, but the Fortwo as currently being manufactured is still the same 2.6m long car as it was in 2014 as per Wikipedia.

          The Volkswagen up (small 4 person car) is out of production and they’re selling nothing under 4 meters Skoda, after retiring the citigo, has the Fabia that’s relatively small (almost 4 meters) and the rest are huge

          They are the same company. The Skoda Citigo and the Seat Mii are both just rebadged Volkswagen Up cars.

          The fiat panda (another small 4 person car) is in the process of being redesigned and the mockups look like a huge range rover SUV

          Those mockups are actually the redesign of the Panda Cross, which was an SUV-ish thing they introduced in 2014. Fiat still makes the subcompact 500, having recently made an electric version.

          Some EU automakers are doing weird stuff, but if you look at the electric car market for example, at lest where I live, locally produced electric kei trucks actually outsold Tesla at some point.

      • shalafi@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Nope, it’s the government’s mileage standards. If you make a truck with a shorter wheelbase and track, it has to hit higher gas mileage standards. Easier to make a big truck that’s allowed worse mileage.

        https://youtu.be/azI3nqrHEXM

        Also, I did a brief stint selling cars in the 90s. One of the salesmen explained it like this, "What’s the real difference in a big truck and a small truck? Same engineering effort, same production work, all that. Hell, same parts for most systems.

        More steel on the big one, and steel is cheap. We can charge a premium for the larger truck."

    • cosmic_cowboy@reddthat.com
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      5 months ago

      The massive size of vehicles in the U.S. is ridiculous. I think a lot of people would buy smaller, cheaper cars if they were on the market.

      • antler@feddit.rocks
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        5 months ago

        The EPA makes really tight emissions targets for vehicles under a certain size or the auto makers have to pay a fee iirc. Pretty sure they the medium sized stuff out of existance, an unfortunately I’m guessing the same fees would apply to imports too.

      • toastal@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        I think folks bought into SUVs since they were bigger & selfishly less likely to take more damage in a crash. As such, with SUV tanks everywhere, being a pedestrian or in a small car on the road on in an SUV’s trajectory can often lead to lethal injury.

    • htrayl@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      No, most of us are broke because we insist on ensuring that suburban mcmansions are the only places to really live. When you spend 30% on driving and 40% on housing, suddenly you are broke.

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        5 months ago

        it’s like you’ve never heard of roommates. If you get a third job and find a couple people, i’m sure you could afford to rent a shed

  • whotookkarl@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Not scary for the auto workers who want to work on them, build them, supply parts for them, etc or the families who want affordable EVs. More scary for the wealth class who didn’t reinvest enough into updating their facilities and processes to stay competitive businesses. The government already gave them extra time with the embargo but that isn’t going to last forever.