• 162 Posts
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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • Why not both?

    You’d absolutely need to do both, unless you wanted all sorts of malformed incentives.

    Generally speaking, the revenue from a pigouvian tax needs to be spent mitigating the problem that generates the revenue. Otherwise, you end up with something of a Cobra Problem, wherein excess consumption is seen as a revenue driver that the state subtly promotes.

    Isn’t this article about UK?

    I’m just speaking from personal experience.

    If you want to talk shit about the UK, you can always point to HS2. Cancelled out of spite by the outgoing Conservative government. Chronic mismanagement of the rail network has been a lead weight around the British economy for decades.









  • they’re >50k and made in China lol

    The Model 3 is $38k and made in Freemont, CA.

    This rule exists to exclude BYD, XPeng, and the constellation of other Chinese EV companies, whose enormous productive capacity are swamping the East Asian auto industry with cheap EV compacts and small trucks.

    Incidentally, BYD had historically operated an electric bus factory in Newmarket, Ontario. But operations ceased thanks to cut backs in the Toronto Transit Commission. They may try to repurpose the plant to begin manufacturing consumer-ready vehicles, but its still up in the air with respect to US/Canada trade relations and Canada’s own shaking economic situation.



  • The unoccupied part of Cyprus is a functional democracy.

    There’s two ways to read this and one of them is very funny.

    But sure, put all your chips on Kyriakos Mitsotakis and tell me about the freedoms enjoyed by Greek Cypriots in 2026.

    At the time of accession, it was hoped that the EU would catalyze a solution to the Cyprus problem altogether. Greek-Cypriot nationalists fucked that up.

    Inducting Cyprus while denying longtime NATO ally and European trading partner Turkiye was already guaranteed to land flat. Opening the floodgates for money and military aid into Cyprus, via the EU relaxed trade and travel rules, yielded predictable results.





  • Turkiye has been waiting in line for EU membership since the 1987

    After the ten founding members in 1949, Turkey became one of the first new members (the 13th member) of the Council of Europe in 1950. The country became an associate member of the European Economic Community (EEC) in 1963 and was an associate member of the Western European Union from 1992 to its end in 2011. Turkey signed a Customs Union agreement with the EU in 1995 and was officially recognised as a candidate for full membership on 12 December 1999, at the Helsinki summit of the European Council.

    But… Turkiye’s a majority Muslim country. So Portugal, Spain, Austria, Finland, Sweden, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Romania, and Croatia all got to jump the queue ahead of it.



  • A big joke about these mainstream publications is how quickly they’d open their pockets to accept fossil fuel industry native advertisement money. WaPo, NYT, WSJ, The Economist, et al - they’d always have some kind of AEI industry flak or Heartland Institute goober or Saudi stooge pen an Op-Ed about how fossil fuels are inescapable and alternatives don’t work / cost too much / have a secret downside orders of magnitude worse than O&G.

    It was the same “We Report, You Decide” bullshit that FOX News played out in big bold letters for their rube base. The fishwrap editions just knew how to play their cards closer to the chest.