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Elon Musk as Orren Boyle

Posted by $ jdg 7 years, 2 months ago to News
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This is what happens when government gives a "visionary" company subsidies and tax breaks in return for promises of job growth and revenue.
SOURCE URL: http://www.coyoteblog.com/coyote_blog/2017/08/elon-musk-as-orren-boyle.html


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  • Posted by chad 7 years, 2 months ago
    Giving tax breaks and subsidies encourages production of failed products and fails to encourage efficient operation because he knows he personally will still make hundreds of millions if not billions of dollars.
    I grew up in a small town (20,000) nearest large city was more than 100 miles away. Didn't stop a local boy from getting the Feds to subsidize his idea for a small airline to provide needed air service and jobs for the local people. Always sold the idea that his failing business was doing us a favor so we didn't have to drive to a big city for air travel. The paper used to report how much he was receiving in subsidies every year to make his idea work. I had a small print shop trying to make 30K a year and he had me subsidizing him so he could make 500K a year. I couldn't convince him that I was important too and needed some money from him! He managed to get a new airport built (in a poor location on poor soil that required rebuilding) where he owned land and sold it to the city at a nice profit. He keeps making large sums of money and traveling the world while I struggle to earn enough money to leave the county for a vacation. The promise that the 'help' will be scaled back one day never comes, they just find another creative way to get more. If his business had to stand on its own it would fail quickly and he would have less than I do, he only has more because he continues to plunder me. I have complained, voted and attempted to educate others why this is wrong and have failed to accomplish even a small goal while the taxing continues to increase on all levels and if I chose to resist I would be the one whose character would be slandered while I was carted off to prison for being an unwilling participant in the scheme. I don't see America ever becoming a republic again, it will continue to move to collectivism because of the emotional involvement of the masses.
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    • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
      So, it's interesting, I hear that a lot - I'm actually in the business of developing commercial companies into having a government division. The federal (and some state governments) are usually the largest customer in the market.. 1 out of every 5 or so products and services in the US is bought by the federal government, and they have a small-biz-first requirement. New businesses that include a diversity of commercial and government customers rarely fail, where basically 1 out of 2 new commercial-only ones will. People whine and complain about it, that those competitive procurements are too much work, they think it's a corrupt hookup, and it probably is for local city or county stuff, but not federal, it is extremely competitive and the best in the sales and biz-dev industry for every provider are always in their gov unit. I'm consulting fulltime right now for a competitor to LexisNexis that remained around $50 million a year while LN surpassed them over the last 2 decades and is now a billion dollar company with hundreds of millions in federal and state/local contracts while being largely unopposed - mostly benefiting from the global war on terror and providing electronic intelligence to the feds. In like 10 weeks, I have the client at best & final (head to head with LN) on 5 different contracts worth a new $7 million a year in total. Sure, it's a couple of weeks of schedule preparation, hundreds of pages of proposal writing, etc. There is a barrier, but anyone can do it, your friend didn't have some magical "hookup".

      As for the transportation subsidies... he didn't actually invent that. There is a rather obscure requirement for commercial aviation licensure to service any market where a US Congressman or Senator resides (so they can go back and forth to DC). For Delta to control MSP for example, they need to service all the tiny towns in Minnesota and North Dakota (at a loss) and covered by the volume in Minneapolis. It's also why there were also some hinterland airstrips in Alaska serviced by Alaskan Airlines, at a loss, only so AA can control Anchorage, Seattle, Portland, etc. Delta and United & such have to subsidize that stuff to get the licensure to operate in larger markets, they will charge as much as the market will bear and still fill their planes, but they do have to provide regular scheduled service.. The US Gov provides the dollars for the airports that make their business possible, and sells them they gate-access and landing rights, so... Realistically though, without that, you would never see air travel to Oklahoma or Wyoming or Nebraska, North & South Dakota, etc. The small towns with the couple of takeoffs a day with 20 or 30 passengers in them would never cover the cost of the airport, maintenance, staff, etc. I don't necessarily disagree with it. Requiring it by congressional district (although now gerrymandered) at the time kind of guaranteed that air travel would be reachable within a 2 or 3 hour drive from anywhere. Whether it would be affordable or reasonable is another thing, but would be available in the market.
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      • Posted by chad 7 years, 2 months ago
        The fact that he (the airline owner) didn't invent the subsidies is irrelevant to the fact that I should not have to subsidize his failing idea. As far as mandating that transportation should be available for a congressman it should not. If he doesn't like driving for four hours to get to an airport. . . .Move! Any business that hooks up with the government to survive and might fail if it had to succeed on its own is a business that should fail. The fact that it is difficult and requires work to accomplish the feat does not indicate a need or that the government should even be purchasing those services. Eliminate the bureaucracies and you will eliminate 70% of the "needs" of the government. If an airport needs to be subsidized so the people in a small rural area can have access then they need to accept the choice they made and not steal money from me to make their life more convenient. Since the system is corrupt any connection to it is corrupt just because you didn't bribe someone to get the contract does not indicate that the contract was necessary.
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        • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
          You didn't read the post clearly, the airlines don't get any 'subsidies' (that I am aware of), in order to get an FAA commercial passenger license and permit to operate, they have to meet various requirements - such as saturation of service.

          Those rural people put food on your plate without it costing you $100 for an ear of corn on the cob. I would recommend you treat them with more respect, considering they also put conservatives in office, because if you live in the urban centers that you seem to think are the only elitists deserving of convenient access to air travel, you would certainly be in shackles by now with the types they would elect if unchecked.

          And what the fuck is up with accusing me of having any "connection" or whatever. I don't, I just happen to be very well-read. I do the research, unlike most here, which blindly parrot some quotes out of Atlas Shrugged and assume it as fact.
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  • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
    I'm going to walk a little more neutral approach.

    First, Tesla isn't a car company, it's a technology company. It always has been. Technology companies routinely trade at much higher multiples than a manufacturer of an otherwise commodity product. If anyone really thinks that the other manufacturers would have innovated into some hybrid and electric products WITHOUT the Tesla capitalization, think again, watch the movie, Tucker, first.

    Second, EVs are not evil. My wife owns a first generation Volt, she bought it new, put 75,000+ on it and it's literally had 1 trip to the dealer, for a slight vibration that turned into a bad drive shaft. It was actually a $200 part, took 20 minutes, not nearly as bad as it sounded, and was completely covered under warranty. She has an 80 mile roundtrip daily commute, and spends something less than $15.00 a week on gas. It doesn't pull our RV, so I have a huge Ram truck too, but for her commuting needs, it's perfect, and includes the carpool lane sticker, very helpful for 40 miles each way in clogged 12-lane California freeways.

    Third, SolarCity isn't evil either. Most people live with an obscured vision of utility costs as they live in (heavily subsidized) municipal utility districts that mix water contract revenue, state subsidies, federal subsidies, tax exemptions, and public pensions with their utility bills. We live in the full and open market of PG&E rural territory in northern California. Before we signed with SolarCity, we had a $575 average utility bill in the winter, and tipping close to $1000 in the summer for a 2205 sq foot single story house, where we were pretty much shivering in from October through May and sitting in the pool rather than inside in the summer because we kept the AC at something like 85 despite being 105 outside. With SolarCity's 10,000 watt solar array on the roof, I don't give a hoot how much power we use, enjoy a 70 degree house year round and recharges my wife's Volt every day. Our SolarCity bill runs about $150 +/- in the summer and maybe $50 in the winter. SolarCity does draw heavily from the bond market, they provide and install the panels for free and charge for usage of the power like a utility company. I paid zero, but if I connect to PG&E or Edison or whoever, you don't pay anything for that either, just a monthly recurring charge. SolarCity has never been a solar panel company, they have always been a new utility in development. Unlike a solar panel company, you don't buy panels, pay the contractor, get permits, inspections, etc., SolarCity manages all that. They just expect a normal payment like a utility company, pretty much forever (or up to 20 years when I can buy them for $1.00). I actually always have a nice new fully-loaded American-made pickup truck with the savings (Ram Limited, Ford Platinum, etc.). Compare SolarCity's balance sheet with how much PG&E borrows, and it's similar. PG&E has taken it on the chin from SolarCity, every year they get rate increases from the California PUC because of "increasing costs of fuel" - when fuel has only gone down since about 2011. In truth, their pension costs are getting too big for their shrinking customer base. Does Solar work everywhere? no, my brother lives in Minnesota, I told him not to touch it with a 10 foot pole, but for me, with like 330 days of full sunshine, yeah, works great. On the prairie, I would look at wind turbines. The SolarCity model works with or without subsidies. So they didn't get a rebate from California (and by the way, we were dark for a serious crisis for a long time with the Enron stuff... so that was the start of California's subsidies of other alternative providers - so we wouldn't see single mom's getting $3,000 power bills for a 1-bedroom apartment).

    Now, I don't agree with heavy subsidies, and that stuff needs to end, and will end with Obama gone. But, assisting American companies to compete globally is practically required until we fix our horrible trade imbalances. (At least when I had my panels installed) SolarCity only used American and Canadian manufactured solar panels. The local solar guys were selling cheap Chinese crap. My panels have a 50 year warranty, the Chinese stuff tends to be 5 or 10. The inverter and other components they used were all Honeywell, 3M, or Bendix, all of which employ a lot of Americans. I also did this during the depths of the recession, and it felt good to know that it was putting people back to work. I talked to one of the installers and he said it was the best job he ever had - benefits, good pay, education reimbursement so he could finish his degree, etc. I felt like I was fixing current and future problems. They seemed to hire and train people that were low-skilled, not recruit away from the other utilities. He said that he was a high school dropout and now had his GED and was going to school 50% time for his electrical engineering degree.
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    • Posted by edweaver 7 years, 2 months ago
      If we had a limited government, subsidies would not be needed. People would have more money to invest in these ideas. The people that believe in a product would subsidies them. The ones that don't wouldn't be forced to pay for thing they don't want to. This would be a true, Free Market.
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    • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
      Disclosure, I don't own or short Tesla, I'm actually long on Fiat-Chrysler, after buying my most recent Laramie Longhorn, I felt their product was extremely competitive and the stock was very under-valued. Actually, Jeep by itself is worth more than all of Fiat-Chrysler right now.

      Do I love EV's? I'm neutral. I'm a gear head, love the performance, it will suck the paint off the doors of anything else. She might upgrade to a Tesla 3 when they become generally available, but otherwise considering a Volvo when they go all-electric in a year. I don't miss doing all the maintenance on the wife's car.. no oil changes, etc.. I don't miss any of that crap because I didn't ever drive it and didn't pay attention until the dummy light was on. Now it just never needs anything. Perfect for her. I personally like the growl of a HEMI V8 or a Cummins Turbo-Diesel.
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    • Posted by freedomforall 7 years, 2 months ago
      So is Solar City a profitable business prospering off your utility payments, or is it being kept in business like Tesla by transfer payments from other taxpayers to pay your utility bills?
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      • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
        Actually, if you look at their financials, their mistake was trying to operate in more markets (like nationwide) instead of just staying in the desert southwest where the financials work. Their consumption-based billing only works if the meter is running off the panels, too many cloudy days and they don't make anything.

        So, I used to negotiate power contracts. You are really, really trying to pin down the wrong person with the subsidies BS for fossil fuels... stop watching Blaze and FoxNews snippets.

        700%. That's the margin the fossil utilities make on power provided by the federal government. Your tax dollars buy hydro power plants, which are then reimbursed by long-term infrastructure bonds, and that bond interest is paid by hydro power contracts. The hydro contracts are as crooked as it gets - the utilities make massive donations to campaigns, and for example, the Dept of Energy has 30 year contracts to sell power at around 3.3-4.7 cents per kwh to the utility markets (depending on the region). Here in CA, PG&E buys for about 4.3 cents, guaranteed for 20 years, and sells to the consumer for 26 cents (off peak) to 38 cents - or even up to $1.00 on-peak).

        There is a LOT of cash from $50-$75 billion companies that really don't like any competition at all, because they are used to a protected monopoly. How do they respond with losing customers? RAISE PRICES! Why? Because a lot of poor people with bad credit scores or rental homes have no choice. That's really, really sad.

        That cash pushes the "subsidies" narrative - which is all of about $5.2 billion a year in 2013 for solar (and we spend $32 billion a day beyond entitlements - or about 0.5% of the DoD budget).

        The coal industry got $1.075 billion (in really only 3 states - paid for by 50) that same year,
        Biomass $621 million (yeah - cow shit),
        Geothermal (something that really does work) - $345 million,
        Smart Grid modernization (to utilities) - $29 billion (but they cry foul at tax rebates for solar because they don't get to 'service' the rebate,
        Nuclear - $1.6 billion,
        Conservation got more than Solar - $7.5 billion in tax credits for new windows on your house, insulation, etc.. - These are often 'serviced' by the utility and they keep 33% for the paperwork.
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        • Posted by freedomforall 7 years, 2 months ago
          So you feel its fine to take subsidies from taxpayers because others also take subsidies from taxpayers.
          I do not agree.
          I appreciate you have some knowledge in this area, but it is not relevant to my question.
          Is Solar City a profitable business prospering off your utility payments, or is it being kept in business like Tesla by transfer payments from other taxpayers to pay your utility bills?
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          • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
            Stopping crying about Solar or Tesla subsidies because that forwards the Fox & Blaze narrative (when they don't disclose the authors short the stocks and are long on Duke Energy or something), and instead, criticize all subsidies.

            Take them all away, it doesn't change the purchase decision I would have made. So my bill might have been $170 a month instead of $150, it was still a hell of a lot better than $600 to $1000 to PG&E.

            Solar City isn't taking cash payments from taxpayers, there isn't a mechanism to do that, they are selling their credits earned on the Cap & Trade market to other heavy-polluting industries. The right of the public to protect the environment is sound case law, and was actually led and passed by Nixon (the EPA act). Ask Flint, MI residents how they like their water...

            We make a hell of a lot of money in the US, if splitting off a few pennies of it to protect the environment is needed, so be it. Lake Erie literally caught on fire once. We know what the lack of environmental laws and protections look like, so I'm not really opposed to financially punishing industries that dirty the air or water to raise funds the clean it up with. It's way better than taxing people in Arizona to pay for coal sludge cleanup in West Virginia or an oil spill in the Gulf. If that means rewarding companies that take it to the other extreme, why not?

            My only reservation is that you don't see the same level of innovation in wind energy that would help the poorer small rural communities in the midwest. I kind of hope something happens with that.
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            • Posted by freedomforall 7 years, 2 months ago
              Don't know what the Fox or Blaze narrative is or if it has any relevance.
              I favor free markets and individual liberty. Musk and his looting is the topic of discussion. His looting is not defensible because others do the same.
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              • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
                Fox Business News used to bang on Tesla until recently when they realized the technology licensing potential.

                Glenn Beck has always had some less-than-baked opinions.
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            • Posted by mccannon01 7 years, 2 months ago
              Let's see if I got this right. You disparage Fox and Blaze and then try to weave a story that seems to allude if the taxpayer or someone else doesn't subsidize solar or Tesla, then Lake Erie suffers a risk of catching fire again. Uh-huh. Also, I'd love to have a wind turbine put up on my property to satisfy all my energy needs. Except I would only need to get you to pay for it and then I'd be good to go.
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          • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
            What's their cost of production? The power comes off the panel, it goes about 20 feet through a heavy gauge wire, to the circuit breaker box, and into my house. In fact, 12 hours a day, I sell back power to the grid at about 1/4 of what I pay for it at night... so to be honest, I'm really subsidizing my neighbors by putting power into the grid at 4.7 cents and buying it back at 28 cents.. so I probably lower their bills, to be quite honest. SolarCity charges me about 15 cents.

            At an average of $100 a month, I'll pay around $24,000 over the term of the 20 year contract for a system that on the building permit was listed as $16,500. I did that because the going cost to"buy" the same $16,000 system in California from the local shady dealers was about $40k.

            Their business model relies on access to low-rate solar bonds (via Wall Street), and they sell a lot of them... just search for SolarCity on eTrade's bond market.

            You didn't answer my question, local public utilities are subsidized to like 500% of what SolarCity is per customer. I'm not bitching about PG&E over-charging their customers dramatically while crying poverty. If I turned off Solar City and used PG&E, I'm not saving the 'taxpayers' any subsidies. You make this sound like it's this or that, and it's not.

            And... I pay a hell of a lot in taxes, the couple of rebates I have enjoyed, honestly, was like a 10%-off coupon, at most. I pay more in taxes, every year, than probably 70% of the US population earns in a year. It's not as if people that can afford this stuff are making $5,000 a year in total income and getting a $7500 tax credit. Good Grief.

            Let's make this interesting, post the state you live in and who your utility company is.
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      • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
        To answer your question, none of the solar companies "worked" those subsidies into place, they were offered - actually going back to GW Bush days, and that is kind of what made the new technologies economically feasible. With 2000 customers, no utility breaks even, when they reach something like 2 million or so like SolarCity is probably getting close to, they probably don't need subsidies anymore.

        Some markets are not friendly to private capital - for the same reason people parrot the 'subsidy subsidy subsidy' march that the large utilities spend millions to publicize (while taking 5 times more in their own annual hand-outs), investors want immediate return, and that's not possible with new infrastructure. It takes years to reach cash-flow neutrality, so I don't necessarily disagree with tax credits for a temporary approach (to spur demand).

        it's amazing to me how many so-called conservatives are pissy over methods of income tax savings. I went the renewable route for tax and economic savings, while it was probably a big reason for us to do so, I didn't buy the wife a Chevy Volt to drive 2 miles a day, she drives it 80 a day and it makes sense with or without the one-time income tax credit we got 6 years ago.
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    • Posted by $ 7 years, 2 months ago
      First, Tesla is a milk-the-taxpayers company first and a technology company only second. If Musk had to raise all his capital privately, he might still be in business, but not nearly as big as he is. In effect he is buying on margin with the taxpayers being forced to buy his bonds.

      Second, while the idea of EVs is not evil, building them now (as production models, not just prototypes) is waste to the point of idiocy -- because if you consider their entire life cycle including manufacturing, no EV has yet achieved either energy or money break-even. What's more, the cheapest Tesla, even after the subsidy, costs over $60k. We should not be subsidizing anybody who is in a position to spend $60k for a car.

      Third, subsidies and utilities with controlled prices are evil, and using the excuse that "the neighbors did it too" is pathetic. And trade imbalances don't matter. If there aren't enough jobs in the US it's not foreigners' fault; it's because the US is taxing and regulating job creators to death. To fix it we've either got to make them stop, or go off-the-books and defy them.
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  • Posted by Herb7734 7 years, 2 months ago
    Without going into details (you can do that if you've got time on your hands) Musk's entire Tesla adventure is a fantasy that only has credence because of his apparent successes and a reputation as a multi-millionaire. However, I think the the entire Tesla manufacturing project is an unsustainable, imaginative loser that would fall to pieces without subsidies.In other words, this is not a self sustaining project. If I am right, Musk or no Musk, it doesn't deserve to exist in a free market. As to free markets -- well, that's another topic for future discussion.
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  • Posted by Temlakos 7 years, 2 months ago
    The only part of the Elon Musk empire that's working at all, is SpaceX. Even that is a public-private partnership. So instead of a dizzying variety of contractors, NASA need deal with only one: SpaceX, the company that "does it all."

    But what would happen to SpaceX if NASA folded up shop completely? Musk hasn't even begun to stir any private interest in the "service" he provides. Maybe this is the kind of shortsightedness that has ruined his "on the ground" ventures in ground-based solar power and electric cars.
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    • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
      US Gov / NASA isn't much of that market, there are over 20,000 satellites in space, the commercial launches are quite a bit more revenue for him. SpaceX isn't the only game in town, there is also Blue Origin and Sierra Nevada, and a few others. Privatization was what space exploration needed, NASA was too slow, too many people waiting for retirement instead of innovating.
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      • Posted by Temlakos 7 years, 2 months ago
        I gather, then, that if someone tapped you to troubleshoot the Tesla empire, you'd keep SpaceX, even if you had to ditch the rest.

        That's good to know. And I have a proposition: space-based solar. To develop that, you need heavy lifting of materials into space--first with a rocket, then with a skyhook with an equatorial anchor, a counterweight beyond the GEO distance, and a GEO station. Once you have that in place you start to build the largest satellites you can imagine. You build some parts on the ground, and assemble them in space. I predict you could supplant nuclear energy and go far beyond the present coverage of nuclear with this technique.

        Question: who among the three companies you named, could develop that first?
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        • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
          Tesla/Space X/SolarCity would be miles ahead on that obviously. It's not a heavy stretch for any of them, but Space X is the only one developing a heavy-lift rocket right now. Sierra Nevada Corp is building their DreamCatcher shuttle thing or whatever it is called for astronaut transport to/from space, and they will be bankrupt soon as it's not really usable for much else and they are too far behind Space X.

          Blue Origin is probably going to focus on the commercial satellite industry. Virgin Galactic seems only interested in tourism.

          The Russian Government and the European Union had most of the commercial space-launch market, the Air Force does almost all of the CIA / NSA / NRO launches out of the California desert (and that won't change).

          Picking off commercial market share from the Russkies and the EU seems pretty easy for Elon Musk... to answer your question, I would bet on him every time in that scenario.

          Putting it in perspective, the entire NASA budget is something like $32 billion. Their launch business isn't a big piece of the pie, add to that the US Government has to get the best price by law, etc., and it's a prestigious thing to do business with NASA, it's not a money thing. He gets the NASA / Space Station business though, and he is cheapest with the landing & reusable rockets, and he wins everything else by default. The numbers look like it's 1/3 the cost of anything else with his reusable rockets.
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    • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
      There is a pretty large commercial satellite market for Space X, Blue Origin, Sierra Nevada to split. 20,000 or so satellites in orbit, the US Gov is really one of the smaller markets for that.
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    • Posted by $ 7 years, 2 months ago
      SpaceX's biggest problem is that even with NASA relatively dormant, both ESA/Arianespace and Russia are offering subsidized satellite launches. If private space operators can't charge enough to cover their costs, they can't operate and effectively get re-nationalized. That's what's happening here.
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  • Posted by freedomforall 7 years, 2 months ago
    For every Model 3 sold, the taxpayers will be supporting Elon Musk with an additional $7,500 to $10,000 in subsidies via rebates to buyers. If Musk sells the 500,000 units he claims to expect, taxpayers will have given him another $5 billion to ruin the free market in vehicles.
    I am proud to pay no income taxes in support of this Boylesque looter.
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    • Posted by DrZarkov99 7 years, 2 months ago
      Actually, once he sells 200,000 the federal subsidies get dialed back, ending once he hits the 1,000,000 sales point. That doesn't make it right, but at least there is a limit to the giveaway. I don't see California limiting their subsidies until they reach Gov. Brown's million car target.
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      • Posted by freedomforall 7 years, 2 months ago
        Thanks for the details, DrZ. I have little doubt that there will be another irrational excuse to extend the subsidies, since we continue to give Musk more loot after he has proven his "productive" tendencies. But most people believe the propaganda.
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    • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
      I still kind of think that's a leap. The subsidies don't go to Tesla, although in California he gets the Cap & Trade credits, but that marketplace isn't worth shit, it's raising a couple of million a year - all the companies fled or just adapted and don't need them.

      The people buying Tesla vehicles for $65k to $115k are going to buy it with or without the $10,000 tax credit.

      Although, we did buy the Volt a particular year because we were anticipating a large tax bill, and it did bury that.

      It's not earmarked for Tesla though, all manufacturers get them... it's a sliding scale, there used to be a tax credit for Toyota Prius-style hybrids, and and up to a maximum for a full electric. On level, I think it's been a good thing, you are talking less money than the US borrows in a single day, and it played (one of several parts) in diversifying our economy during the recession and helped us regain energy independence. We now have options, OPEC doesn't control us, the US president probably doesn't really even need to talk to them anymore, unlike the 90s when we were holding court like a bunch of kids assisting a priest for communion in the Saudi palace. Oil is stuck at $30-$40 a barrel, and it will stay there. I remember a few years ago when it was at $120 and were totally f*cked as an economy. Every recession is preceded by spikes in oil prices, having the diversity now stabilizes prices for airliners and other heavy consumers. People used to laugh at the idea of an electric car, and Tesla completely changed their opinion - even the pro-stock drag strip guys ask for a handicap if a stock Tesla 4-door is in the other lane.

      The game changer though is going to be Nikola. Diesel drivers have literally been bent over a barrel for a long time with fuel prices, Nikola will open up a ton of free cashflow for their industry.
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      • Posted by freedomforall 7 years, 2 months ago
        We aren't talking about the tiny number of buyers at $65k to $100k, sco. Would Tesla sell the units without the $10k rebates to the less wealthy buyers at $40k up? No, many buyers would go elsewhere.
        You feel the transfer payments from taxpayers to buyers are fine as long as all manufacturers are looters. I do not agree. Looting is looting.
        You feel its ok just because its "only" $10 billion, (or $20 billion, or $40 billion.)
        You sound like a federal politician talking about only a billion or so for the greater good.
        TANSTAAFL.
        Its fracking that gave the US a way out of the middle east stranglehold on oil pricing, not electric cars. They are an insignificant part of the cars sold and less than trivial effect on oil use.
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        • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
          There will not be any Model 3's sold at $40k... guaranteed, just look at their option packages. The average is going to be like $65,000.

          It's pretty hard to buy a nice new pickup under $60,000, and Ford manages to sell 800,000 units a year, so there are many more $60,000 buyers than one might think.

          So, if the Model S buyer didn't buy a Model S, would you assume they would go and buy the Chevy Impala? I doubt it, maybe a Cadillac, doubtful, probably a Lexus Hybrid for $75,000 and most of that going back to Japan.

          I think you missed the point... are you honestly saying oil did not get exploration subsidies for fracking? You can't be that naive. Did they pay for that public land they were exploring on? No Way. They pay an extraction tax, if they find it. Pennsylvania alone gave a $1.6 billion tax credit to Shell to build ONE refinery. The total of all state, local, and federal "jobs" subsidies and tax breaks to oil? $550 billion EVERY YEAR. Look at the ripoffs they were happy to do with little old grannies and their life's savings. As soon as oil prices looked shaky, they had shady brokers dialing for dollars to grannies to "get in on the oil boom" and sold them oil wells subject to "management fees", "transportation fees", and "storage fees" before ever getting a dollar in revenue. Damn, I thought those phone calls about the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to own an oil well in Pennsylvania were never going to stop (until I changed my number).

          So, in my case, I pay like $80,000 a year in taxes, not including property tax or sales tax. Let's call this what it is, it's a 10% off coupon for a year. If people can buy a $65,000-$120,000 car, they are ALREADY paying a shit-load in taxes, there is no free lunch there.

          I don't necessarily agree with any of it, I'm just extremely offended at the hypocritical bullshit the anti-solar/renewable people have without calling the kettle truly black as it is.

          I spent 4 years in the desert, fighting wars for people that don't really like us too much to "protect the free flow of oil". Here's an idea, don't use the shit anymore. We have spent trillions in American blood and treasure for that stuff, and while I'm not saying "give it up", where there is alternatives we can slowly and cost-effectively develop, we need to. Yes, we produce our own, but it's a world commodity, if there is another war in the Middle East, do you think the ND oil extractor is going to sell it to you at a discount, or charge $5.00 a gallon at the pump because that is what the market will pay? you are an idiot if you think anything other than the obvious.

          I don't think any one solution is the answer, but I think many different sources of energy that suit different sectors of the economy and different regions are the right way. Do you know what we STILL pay in California for gas? About $3.50 a gallon in the cities. The cheapest anywhere here is like $3.00. Why? We don't have any refineries anymore, we have puke-leftists, and we have a corrupt government. Am I going to pay $3.50 just because I want to bleed crude oil? No, that's stupid.

          We're going to retire in Idaho, we may or may not tow an EV behind the motorhome 6 months out of the year, or just buy something simple like a Subaru, no idea, needs change, but to blanket-cry what political belief or wishes are against reality?

          If you don't live in California, it's not costing you much at all... And to be honest, our incomes far out-pace what we get back from the federal pie by around 20% in 2013, and probably close to 50% now in the recovering economy.

          If you live in South Carolina, North Dakota, Florida, Louisiana, Alabama, etc.. Shut the Fuck Up!. SC gets about $8.00 back in federal subsidies and spending for every $1.00 in taxes... My home state of Minnesota really gets screwed, less than 50 cents on the dollar. Texas even grabs about a $1.50 for every $1.00.

          https://www.theatlantic.com/business/...

          Do you really think Detroit would have ever started putting better entertainment systems in cars without Tesla's laptop screen on the dashboard? They innovated in the Silicon Valley way, investors throw them cash hand over fist, they make a good product, they will probably make a great product, and in the meantime they don't give any car dealers a cut so you have that backlash that isn't exactly unbiased either. If you look at the ancillary benefit to the industry - like Toyota and Nissan sourcing their batteries from Tesla, or Volvo deciding that all-electric looks better than an internal combustion engine for their fleet in the next couple of years, whatever, ultimately, Tesla can always earn a giant profit by LICENSING their technology to the others. That is what Wall Street knows. Let Elon try to outrun the others for a while, he may do it, or with the giga-factory now online in Nevada, he may just become a supplier to the others and make a ton of revenue that way. Would you rather Tesla make money selling lithium batteries made outside of Reno in one of the poorest parts of the US, or would you rather send it to Samsung and Panasonic? Ultimately, it's going to be a battery and self-driving-car/truck software company.
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          • Posted by freedomforall 7 years, 2 months ago
            Your entire argument continues to be that it's fine to sidle up to the trough because others are doing the same. I do not agree.
            So by your reasoning, Tesla is great for taking from the taxpayers and so are all the other looters. It's just a hidden cost to all the customers because customers might not continue to use the same amount (or buy the car) if they could see the real price of what they are buying. Better not let them know, and government can act as the conduit for the cost, after taking out their sizable graft.
            I'd rather see Tesla compete in the free market without stealing from the taxpayers to line his pockets.
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            • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
              I happen to agree, but it's not a level playing field unless the gigantic subsidies to oil companies and other car companies are ended at the same time.. Ever happen to notice that GSA recycles their fleet when the car manufacturers are a little soft on sales? What about Hummer selling a very basic truck to a consumer for $100k that the taxpayers paid for the R and D and manufacturing of. The taxpayers spent billions on shit Relient K cars from Chrysler in the 80s to save the company.

              The system existed long before Elon Musk came along, he's just very good at pulling every lever.

              You are just kind of falling for the wrong narrative. Teslas are not built with United Auto Worker labor, soo....
              Sure they got a dilapidated plant in the Bay Area from Toyota/GM for cheap, but they were never going to make $15k Matrix minivans there again where the cost of living demanded at least $80k a year per worker. It was home plate for Tesla, Pontiac went bye-bye and Toyota didn't care - just moved to a cheaper state. Tesla taking it over meant no hazmat for the taxpayers to clean up.
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              • Posted by freedomforall 7 years, 2 months ago
                I'm not "falling" for any narrative. The thing I respect is the free market, no subsidies to anyone. Musk is a looter. I won't support him since I do have a choice.
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                • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
                  So, because you don't have a choice with the others, those are ok to not criticize as well?

                  Incidentally, Chevrolet has sold far more Chevy Volts than Tesla has sold - almost more annually than the total Musk has sold in several years of Model S production. Chevy gets the same $7500 tax credit. Just saying.
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                  • Posted by freedomforall 7 years, 2 months ago
                    ME:"The thing I respect is the free market, no subsidies to anyone."
                    YOU respond:"because you don't have a choice with the others, those are ok to not criticize as well"
                    Your conclusion has no basis in anything I have written. You want to discuss Chevy and GM feeding at the trough, start a thread and post some links to supporting data. GM has been at the trough feeding right alongside Musk at the taxpayers expense. GM was roasted for their bailout and Musk gets a pass ? Rubbish.
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                    • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
                      Point Taken.

                      Energy and Infrastructure is really hard, investors are always wary of returns, it takes longer to develop new oil reserves than 2 or 3 business cycles will last.

                      Public money has unfortunately always been ears-deep in this stuff.

                      To answer your question about Tesla - Actually, I think they would do ok without the subsidies, they don't have any problem raising capital and it would really only force them to license some intellectual property. I understand Elon's disinterest in doing that, because they are so far ahead than other car companies -not only on the EV thing, but on battery technology, self-driving, the "summon" thing that pulls the car out of the garage or valet on it's own, etc.

                      Ask ourselves how many tractor-trailer drivers are going to stick with $3.00 / gallon diesel fuel, and probably $200k a year in fuel expenses, versus switching to Nikola fuel-cells with 3x more torque, double the towing capacity, and keeping up with 65 mph traffic on steep grades instead of driving 25 mph for hours. My guess is, quite a few of them will. Tesla is way ahead on batteries, and Nikola (the truck guys) are going to buy their batteries from Tesla. The Fuel Cells are great for long duration, but they still need a big battery as a capacitor to moderate the output. Between the two, that's about a 1500 mile range on 10 cent a gallon hydrogen.

                      How many vehicles on the road are big rigs? Quite a few of them actually... and most of them are pretty old. $200k in fuel savings equals a lot of room to finance a replacement with.
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                      • Posted by freedomforall 7 years, 2 months ago
                        I agree the big rig companies/drivers should be interested if the Nikola rigs deliver.
                        So when is Musk paying back the loot to the taxpayers?
                        Has GM paid back their bailout yet? ;^)
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                        • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
                          People keep thinking this is complex... Electric cars are the most basic of any automobile, they have like 1/10 of the moving parts. Every diesel locomotive is an electric vehicle, the diesel only turns a generator that charges a battery that turns the electric motors.

                          The only challenge Nikola has to deal with is the hydrogen distribution, but they are doing it the right way, with 1500 mile ranges, the distribution gets pretty easy because you don't need one on every street corner. Especially if you can ultimately plug the thing in and get a 100 miles down the road after a few hours of charging, I suspect they will do fine. Electric motors have gobs of torque and towing power compared to gas or diesel, it's not even a close horse race.
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          • Posted by slfisher 7 years, 2 months ago
            where in Idaho?
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            • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
              We love Pocatello, go there quite often. Have also spent some time in Bear Lake, but I can't picture actually "living" in Bear Lake. I like to elk hunt, and we want to spend some summers in Alaska with the RV, maybe go a little further south in summers, Pocatello is kind of ideal for both.

              Better political climate than I have been trapped in as well for the last 20 years... California used to be rather politically conservative, and if you look at it on a map, 90% of it is very, very deep red. We just can't overcome the lefties in LA, Sacramento, and San Francisco though.
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              • Posted by slfisher 7 years, 2 months ago
                All of the Idaho cities are starting to turn blue, or at least bluish, as they grow, though. Be warned. I expect you'll find people more like what you're looking for in Coeur d'Alene.
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                • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
                  I like Coeur d'Alene, just don't see a lot of property options, I need a couple of acres, motorhome type garage, ideally backed up to some hunting land or at least some rifle target shooting.

                  Seems like Boise and CDA had more of the subdivision stuff. I'm open to suggestions, spent a couple of days in Boise and Mountain Home as well, just like all the valleys around Pocatello. Sun Valley seemed very lefty.
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                  • Posted by slfisher 7 years, 2 months ago
                    Sun Valley is also very expensive. Generally, the further away from the cities you go, the cheaper it is.
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                    • Posted by scojohnson 7 years, 2 months ago
                      To be honest, coming from one of the (now) highest-priced areas of California (after 20 years in the same house), I won't be terribly price sensitive. It was pretty pricey here when I bought long ago, but it's gone rather stratospheric over the 20 years I have lived here. I probably won't have a mortgage on the house here when we sell it.
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                      • Posted by slfisher 7 years, 2 months ago
                        Well, there's that. I bought a two-bedroom condo in San Francisco in 1991 for $137,000 -- ground floor, no parking, no yard -- and in 2002 I moved to Idaho and bought a two-bedroom, one bath house with an acre of land, chicken house, barn, outbuildings, irrigation, garden, fruit trees, for the same price.
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