It Begins . . .

Guest Post by Eric Peters

I expected it to happen, but not this quickly.

California officials are, apparently, “mulling” a ban on cars with internal combustion engines, according to an article in the industry trade publication, Automotive News. If they more than mull and pass a ban, CA would be the first American state to do so – following the example set by several European states, including most recently the UK.

Part of the reason it is happening so quickly is because of amen-corner support from American publications like Automotive News.

Perhaps they should reconsider changing the title of their rag. Because it isn’t “news” when you editorialize – and AN editorializes egregiously in its “news” coverage.

Have a look:

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“The internal combustion engine’s days could be numbered in California, where officials are mulling whether a ban on sales of polluting autos is needed to achieve long-term targets for cleaner air.”

Governor Moonbat, one of the “officials’ who is “mulling” the ban . . .

Italics added.

Egads.

“Polluting”? The mind of the reader instantly conjures images of respiratory masks and blue smoke coughing out of tailpipes – which one sees coming out of the tailpipes of new cars as infrequently as one finds straight-up news sans editorializing in Automotive News.

My high school journalism teacher would have yanked my yearbook privileges had I written the sentence quoted above and tried to pass it off as “news” rather than something for the editorial page, which is where it belongs.

AN is more-than-tacitly agreeing with the “officials” who are “mulling” a ban on internal combustion engines by conceding the premise: IC cars are polluting fiends and must be dealt with.

How else can the sentence quoted be interpreted?

Fait meet accompli.

The premise isn’t questioned. No context is given. The AN editorialist does not adduce an iota of evidence to support the smear; he – perhaps she? – merely deploys the smear, which the reader is expected to swallow whole without bothering to chew.

This is of course absolutely necessary to further the agenda of the “officials” who are “mulling” the ban on internal combustion engines – their leader being Governor Moonbat.

It cannot be questioned whether IC engines pollute – nor how much defined.

So, let’s do that.

Most people who aren’t car people probably don’t know that the EPA itself awards the designation, Partial Zero Emissions Vehicle (PZEV) to internal combustion engines powering numerous currently-in-production cars. These are not electric cars or even hybrid cars. They are simply cars with internal combustion engines that emit so little in the way of harmful effluents that the regulatory Grand Inquisitor itself – the EPA – classifies them officially as Partial Zero Emissions Vehicles.

And the rest – the ones that don’t quite meet the PZEV bar – are photo-finish close. The difference is measurable in terms of perhaps 1 percent – usually a fraction of 1 percent – PZEV vs. the not-quite-PZEV.

There is no such beast as a new car that “pollutes” – if that word is understood to mean what it ought to mean. That is to say, what it once meant.

Once upon a time.

If you dial back the clock to 1966, the year before the very first (and very basic) efforts were made to reduce and control the unhealthful byproducts of internal combustion – mostly the byproducts of imperfect combustion, such as unburned hydrocarbons – you would find that, indeed, internal combustion-powered cars polluted.

A great deal.

Fast forward to 1975 – the first year that catalytic converters came into widespread use. These chemically converted the byproducts of imperfect combustion within the car’s exhaust system – before they reached the exhaust tip and entered the surrounding environment.

Cars polluted a great deal less. On the order of 50 percent less.

Consider this the lowest-hanging fruit.

Move forward again to the mid-1980s. Fuel delivery had become infinitely more precise via the replacement of the mechanical carburetor with computer-controlled fuel injection, which could (and did) maintain the optimum air-fuel ratio at all times, continuously self-adjusting.

Around this same time, catalytic converters got more sophisticated as well.

Pollution declined yet again – and once again, by double digit percentages. By the early 1990s, internal combustion engines produced on the order of 85-90 percent less in the way of harmful exhaust byproducts, via the double-pronged advances in controlling the combustion process and treating the exhaust after the fact.

Even more precise fuel delivery (port fuel-injection) and ever-smarter-engine controls chalked another few percent off the remainder.

We are now – and have been, for the past several years – at the point that any new car’s internal combustion engine is almost “zero emissions” in terms of the harmful things that formerly smogged the skies and formerly caused health problems in humans.

Current-year cars are 97-98 percent “clean” at the tailpipe – according to the EPA’s own standards.

This is not 100 percent “clean,” of course. But then neither is the electric car, notwithstanding its “zero emissions” regulatory honorific. It may not emit at the tailpipe. But emissions are certainly created during the manufacture of its hundreds of pounds of batteries and at the utility generating plants that produce the electricity upon which it depends for locomotion.

But the point here is that there is little meaningful difference between the “zero emissions” electric car and the Partial Zero Emissions internal combustion car – or, for the matter, the next-down-the-ladder IC-engined car.

The battle has been won. All cars are extremely “clean.”

Some, however, are more politically correct than others.

AN does not delve into these distinctions. Instead, its writers parrot the politically correct line.

The car press used to know about cars – and generally liked them, too. The typical car scribe was, if not a gearhead, at least a tinkerer who understood mechanical things and appreciated them, too.

He drove – and liked driving.

The people in the car press today are a different species. They are people such as the egregiously editorializing author of the article we’ve just dissected – and the person who urged some months ago that the Dodge Demon be banned. They seem to hate cars and loathe driving – and those who do not loathe it.

Brock Yates is spinning in his grave.

And my teethe ache.

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23 Comments
BSHJ
BSHJ
September 29, 2017 10:13 am

What idiots read their printed drivel anyway? Nevermind, that is beside the point. The real issue is……government knows best for us, right?

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
September 29, 2017 10:15 am

Oh, California. Please do it. Please.

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
September 29, 2017 10:19 am

Electric vehicles create more pollution than ICEs but the pollution is in a different location…But I can’t see CA doing this, when Mexicans can’t afford electric vehicles…

Anonymous
Anonymous
  pyrrhus
September 29, 2017 11:56 am

“Immigrants” would get a 20 year exemption.

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 29, 2017 10:20 am

The Civil War settled the issue of a right of the States to secede from the United states, but does the United States have the right to secede from California?

FWIW, the IC engine will not go away until it is replaced by something better that people want instead of it, and nothing meeting that standard has been developed yet.

JK (the other John)
JK (the other John)
  Anonymous
September 29, 2017 7:31 pm

The Civil War did not settle the right of states to secede. Secession is not mentioned in the Constitution which means it is retained as a states right. And, the federal government has no power to terminate the existence of a sovereign state. However, under Article V, the states have the power to call a Convention of States, with no meaningful involvement of Congress, where their delegates can propose, and ultimately the state legislatures can ratify, any amendment to the Constitution that they choose. Including the dissolution of the three branches of their agent, the federal government and all departments and laws created under the federal government.
The Founding fathers were geniuses, especially George Mason who suggested this portion of Article V.

steve
steve
September 29, 2017 10:23 am

Are these new fangled electric cars charged with some type of ephemeral fairy dust? Oh, that’s right, 50% of electricity generated in the US is by the Darth Vader of energy-COAL! OMG, how can it be?
So, I’m polluting more with my electric vehicle than if I bought a Mazda with that new fangled gas “diesel” that gets 50 mPG? And generating tons of crap in the production of batteries? And the infrastructure needed to service all the new electric cars would cost $trillions? And I’d have to wait hours recharging on extended trips?
Yeah, I’ll take that Tesla, thanks because I’m a mindless douche bag. Have a nice day….

Lovin'Life
Lovin'Life
September 29, 2017 10:36 am

I recall those same publications blowing smoke about how my vocation was going to experience a real financial enhancement in the mechanics take home pay due to a lack of intelligent techs that would keep up with all the technical advancements the author has described.
Meanwhile, the manufacturers true intent was to eliminate the need for mechanics entirely. Those trade publications were merely talking my ilk into hanging in there a tad longer.
What their message is today is we need to go Electric because government subsidy is necessary to do so.
Perhaps utility companies would be the best play for this charade

TPC
TPC
September 29, 2017 11:49 am

Good bye agriculture. I’d love to see them try to plant and harvest without using combustion engines.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  TPC
September 29, 2017 11:03 pm

tpc,
we do need something for displaced workers to do-handplanting ain’t so bad once you get the hang of it–

TreeFarmer
TreeFarmer
September 29, 2017 12:14 pm

We had to live in CA for 13 years while earning a living there. The day after we quit working in 2011, we became residents of another state almost overnight. Since we’ve left, CA has done nothing but raise taxes and fees on the poor bastards who still have to live and work there. When we travel throughout the West, we purposely go out of our way to avoid the state. We don’t want another dime of our money ever going towards any CA fuel tax, sales tax, or any other “user fee”. We thought CA couldn’t get any crazier, but it never ceases to amaze us. Banning IC engines sounds bat shit crazy, but never underestimate the capabilities of the people who run that place!

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  TreeFarmer
September 29, 2017 11:45 pm

Old Phil from NYC said that when he was in Florida, all he heard was how Cali girls were so fine. Then he comes here and he hears all the talk about Florida girls.

It’s funny that the only folks badmouthing California are somewhere else. Dickheads. I suspect their neighbors think they are assholes. Which they are. Miserable malcontents. Move to Philly you fuckers, I hear it’s paradise over there.

TreeFarmer
TreeFarmer
  EL Coyote
September 30, 2017 9:48 am

I went to college just outside of Philly and lived in Philly when I was in my 20’s. It was fun as hell, but I have to say even CA is marginally better than Philly! It does have the weather advantage.

Fjord
Fjord
September 29, 2017 12:41 pm

So how are goods going to be transported?
Carrier pigeon?

AC
AC
  Fjord
September 29, 2017 3:13 pm

Magic.

AC
AC
  Fjord
September 29, 2017 3:20 pm

I’ve been seriously considering buying a small piece of property in Arizona, and using that as the legal residence for my extended family: AZ driving licenses, AZ car registration/plates, mail forwarded to our actual residences, and so on. I’m still looking at the legal issues.

If CA goes ahead with this newest insanity, many people will probably do something similar. What choice will they have?

AC
AC
  AC
September 29, 2017 3:21 pm

This wasn’t a reply to someone – comment system is being retarded.

Iconoclast421
Iconoclast421
September 29, 2017 3:13 pm

It would be the best thing that could happen to california. With the loss of the ICE comes the loss of personal transportation to millions of californians…. because they will be priced out of the outrageously overpriced electric car market. That will hit the state’s GDP and make them less of an influence over the rest of the nation. This will bring some badly needed downward pressure on electric car prices and will also help push forward battery technology. All at the expense of a bunch of dumb liberals. What’s not to like?

NickelthroweR
NickelthroweR
September 29, 2017 4:47 pm

Greetings,

This will generate an incredible amount of pollution. Check this out.

It takes the same amount of energy to move a car regardless of the engine moving the car. Simple.
An ICE car converts about 30% of its fuel into forward motion. If you take that same fuel and burn it in a power plant, by the time it gets converted, transported & converted again, only 10% of the fuel is converted into forward motion.

Electric cars are only 1/3rd as efficient as a car with an internal combustion engine. People that drive them so as to virtue signal are wasteful f*cking assh*les.

Hondo
Hondo
September 29, 2017 9:35 pm

Remove all ICE’s from the roads immediately. Use all government employees, prisoners, drug addicts, and the incarcerated to pull the little two wheeled carts like we see in the old China movies to take us to work and back. Then they can work the weekends transporting freight around town. Use the retired military and ptsd veterans to transport freight on the interstates. They can install a sail in front of their mouth and as hard as they blow about their benefits they should cover at least a thousand miles daily. Problem solved. thanks

yahsure
yahsure
September 29, 2017 11:06 pm

Electric cars cause pollution in other ways. What happened to the whole hydrogen car thing?
I drive older paid for vehicles. One is easy on gas the other? Not so much. I already pay a tax at the pump for driving something that is hard on gas.California is one weird place. Uhauls coming out of CA. Every day on I-40. I can already see effects from too many folks from there with strange ideas they bring here. az will be a messed up place if these refugees have their way.

Luminae
Luminae
September 30, 2017 12:23 am

I believe the PRC has already put this out, so Moonbeam’s a follower on this.

Problem is there ain’t enough juice for it, even with OJ out. On hot days the grid’ll go snap, crackle, pop faster than a NK EMP.

Gnarly, dude.

Truther
Truther
October 2, 2017 8:59 am

A business man that travels and sleeps 4 nights in a hotel every week and drives 1,200 miles weekly……imagine that the best electric vehicle will only go 300 miles per charge and takes 8 hours to charge. That man now can work approximately half a day not the 16 hours he usually does by leaving at 7am and having 4 mtgs per day and arriving at 10pm to his next hotel. These morons will lose nearly every productive tax paying citizen within 6 months. Real estate will crash and businesses will close up and it will be the democratic jungle they always wanted. Good for them!!!!!!!