Psiczar,

While I’m sure there are financial motives behind this that are backed by the US car industry, it also makes sense if you anticipate a war with China sometime in the future. You don’t really want a large proportion of your population driving cars manufactured by the enemy that can be switched off remotely.

Num10ck,

switched off? how about flooring it into valuable targets? seizing up the freeways? locking up certain passengers?

Psiczar,

Sure, I went for the economic impact option, but causing chaos is certainly another way they could go.

B0rax,

These vehicles can do much more. They usually have cameras (some are even required by law). Most of them are always connected to the internet, they could intercept and disturb communications.

This is true for most modern cars.

nekandro,

That’s not the worry. The worry is that China is accumulating all of this industrial capacity (like the US pre-WW2) and that car factories really aren’t that different from APC/tank factories.

Sodium_nitride,

car factories really aren’t that different from APC/tank factories.

What is this bs?

Crikeste,

We shouldn’t be preparing for war with a rising world power, we should be trying to achieve partnership.

But as Americans say: China bad, the slavery in MY prison system is justified.

Corkyskog,

We shouldn’t be preparing for war with a rising world power, we should be trying to achieve partnership.

Historically that has been a very grave error.

Ohi,

For an administration so desperate to cut back on global emissions, keeping cheap and apparently reliable foreign electric vehicles out of US market seems so backwards.

PanArab,
@PanArab@lemmy.ml avatar

US companies internationally will still struggle though. Might even make the US car market even more of a galapagos.

mlg,
@mlg@lemmy.world avatar

Big 3 had a decade to compete with Tesla whose cars are already considered lower grade by today’s EV standards because of quality issues.

Instead they spammed anti direct sell litigation while R&D twiddled their thumbs.

They’ll do the exact same thing again and eat some more bailouts after they inevitably fail again.

mister_monster,

It’s not going to work. It’s like when they tried to protect the US market from Japanese cars in the 70s and 80s. Look at the roads now, two of the big three (well, now four) american car manufacturers have gone bankrupt more than once. The one that hasn’t only makes trucks and one flagship sportscar now. US EVs can’t compete with Chinese made ones, it’s just that simple.

CowsLookLikeMaps,

Buy EVs time or protect american oil?

Num10ck,

protect the us militarys ability to force car manufacturers to make tanks/drones during wartime.

dessalines,

You must buy iphone, borger, and ford f-150 or the american economy will collapse. /s

ShimmeringKoi,
@ShimmeringKoi@hexbear.net avatar

Trying to buy uncompetitive US companies a bigger market share more like

Stern,
@Stern@lemmy.world avatar

It’ll work just like adding another lane will solve traffic.

gandalf_der_12te,

“We’re pushing the can down the road. Problem is, we’re running out of road.”

bquintb,
@bquintb@midwest.social avatar

Also, it might work. No one knows, this is news.

FMT99,

It might not work eh? Might it though? I hate this kind of weasel headline almost as much as the constant “slamming”. Just say what you’re going to say.

Beaver,
@Beaver@lemmy.ca avatar

The Biden Administration wants to hurt Mexico in order to protect American Automotive interests.

nekandro,

The US has done a great job of fucking Canada, now they’re turning their attention to fucking Mexico, too.

It’s giving Sino-Soviet split.

NoneOfUrBusiness,

Not that I doubt it, but what did the US do to Canada?

Pirky,
@Pirky@lemmy.world avatar

We’ve had logging tariffs on them for a bit, especially at the start of the pandemic when lumber prices were insane and getting rid of them would’ve helped lower prices a bit.

OutlierBlue,

Illegal tariffs. The Canadian lumber industry has taken them to court several times and win the cases. And nothing was changed. The US loves NAFTA when it benefits them. Not so much otherwise.

mister_monster,

NAFTA no longer exists, the trade relationships are governed by USMCA now.

intelshill,

Exactly. The US decides when it wants to follow the rules it created.

Beaver,
@Beaver@lemmy.ca avatar

Yeah I hate American pharmaceutical companies so much trying to pry Pharmacare from the hands of everyday people.

mctoasterson,

“Joe Biden wants to stop the bleeding in his poll numbers in Michigan” would be a better headline.

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