ICE or EV?

Which car(s) will you be buying next?

  • ICE ICE Baby (morekaos dinosaur option)

    Votes: 15 32.6%
  • EV forEVa (unicorns for all)

    Votes: 24 52.2%
  • PHEV (I still have range anxiety)

    Votes: 5 10.9%
  • Hybrid (can't plug in yet)

    Votes: 5 10.9%
  • Alternative fuel (Hydrogen, vegetable oil, etc)

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Other

    Votes: 1 2.2%

  • Total voters
    46
NEW -> Contingent Buyer Assistance Program
Oil is taking money from your pocket too.

EVs are better tech period. Just because you don't think so doesn't make it true.

There are many nascent technologies that are a slow burn. Apple was not the first smart phone.

Do you still have a land line? Cable TV? AOL?
Oil isn't a boondoggle, it's a resource in high demand. In fact, EV's have a huge number of petroleum based components within them.

It's simply your opinion is that EV's are better tech, but 99% of Americans don't agree. Tesla has been around for over 20 years and they haven't caught on. In fact, many consumers revile Teslas and don't give a second thought to the also-ran EV market. This is an example of you being highly biased due to the Irvine bubble that you're trapped in.
 
Model Y has been a top selling car for years... Globally.

Is America your universe? Opinion of the world is shifting towards EVs.

Stop holding morekaos' hand.
 
Decent sales but doesn’t even crack the top 5 and keeps falling down the list, not exactly catching on well…All 7 ahead of it are hybrids or ICE….🤷🏽‍♂️👎🏽😂😂🦄🌈

#8 (and falling) Tesla Model Y: 146,000 units sold (estimated)​

The Model Y remains the top EV, racking up 146,000 sales according to Automotive News estimates. Still, that's down significantly from the 195,000 estimated sales from last year, as Tesla deals with the changeover to the refreshed model.

#1 (and rising) Ford F-series: 399,819 units sold​

Ford's F-series lineup of light-duty and heavy-duty trucks remains the king of automotive sales, with a 12 percent rise in Q2 contributing to a 17 percent increase in the first half. This figure doesn't count the electric F-150 Lightning, which fell by 17 percent over the first six months of the year to 13,029 units.
 
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