From The San Francisco Gate, 8/2/06:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2006/08/02/notes080206.DTL&feed=rss.mmorford
Lick My Silent Sports Car
How much has Big Auto lied?
Take a drive in this four-wheel electric orgasm, and find out
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/object/article?f=/g/a/2006/08/02/notes080206.DTL&o=0
By Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist
Oh my God do they ever lie.
All of them:
Big Auto, Big Oil, BushCo, Pennzoil and Havoline and Saudi Arabia and
crusty Alaska Senator Ted Stevens and the oil lobbyists and lackey
scientists working for the Department of Energy and all the rest, on
down the line and right up to your garage door.
Lie lie lie lie lie like evil little ratdogs because they are, after
all, corporate greedmonkeys and war profiteers and duplicitous
oil-sucking cretins (is that too polite?) who would eat their own
mother's heart for a notable uptick in share/barrel price.
Nevertheless, it's always a bit of a jolt when you see it all up close
and personal and they basically rub it in your face.
Just look.
Look over here.
It's a new sports car.
http://teslamotors.com/index.php?js_enabled=1
It's a new sports car that looks deliciously like a Lotus Elise and
reportedly drives like Michael Schumacher's wet dream and goes from
zero to 60 in about four seconds with so much torque and freakishly
instantaneous power it makes the gods swoon.
This car, it has a top speed of 130 mph.
It has a range of 250 miles.
It also has GPS navigation and air-conditioning and air bags and it
surely will come with a very badass sound system.
It has heated seats and (I presume) iPod integration and Bluetooth.
You know, just like a real car.
Oh, and by the way, this car?
It's completely silent.
It is 100-percent emissions-free.
Doesn't even have a tailpipe.
Because it has no internal combustion engine of any kind.
It's not a hybrid.
It's pure electric, powered by a "3-phase, 4-pole AC induction motor,"
which I'm sure is rather impressive if you know what the hell it
means.
But it means one thing for certain:
The only oil in this car is in the buffing fluid for the leather
seats.
It's called the Tesla Roadster, unveiled just recently to a gaggle of
giddy auto peeps in Santa Monica and coming to an elite showroom in
about a year for around the price of a Porsche 911
http://jalopnik.com/cars/news/mechanical-resonance-the-tesla-motors-press-intro-complete-with-governator-188590.php
That's right, it's not a prototype.
Not some eccentric inventor's crazy basement fantasy.
It's a real car.
Street legal, drivable, gorgeous, available soon.
The Tesla guys have already earned their share of press, given how
they managed to wrangle millions in backing from the Google boys
(among others).
Rumor has it that the Guvernator himself, after going for a test drive
during last week's press day, has already placed his order for one of
the little luxo speedsters, presumably to feed to his fleet of rabid
Hummers.
Did I mention the Roadster costs about 80K?
Who cares?
The price is irrelevant.
The fact that this car even exists in such a pure and obvious and
performance-oriented form, does.
Simply put, it is the most flagrant proof yet that we have been
brutally, savagely misled.
See, they lie.
And they've been lying for years, decades.
They lie about how difficult it is to replace the internal combustion
engine.
They lie about how unfeasible it is to eliminate auto emissions
without sacrificing real performance (the 130-mph Roadster's
lithium-ion battery system is estimated to be twice as efficient as a
Prius and three times as efficient as a hydrogen fuel cell.
http://www.greencarcongress.com/2006/07/tesla_reveals_h.html
Not to mention Tesla's fabulous solar option
http://teslamotors.com/learn_more/faqs.php
But they lie, most of all, about how much we still require foreign
oil, because these billion-dollar corporations claim they can't
possibly afford to develop sufficiently advanced technology in your
lifetime to create a 100-percent emissions-free, oil-free, ultragreen
vehicle that still has all the comforts and performance of a regular
car.
Nice pipe dream, they say.
Here, have a bloated SUV, they say.
Sorry about all your dead kids in Iraq, they add, smirking like a
chimp and blowing their noses into a big pile of Halliburton profits.
Did you already know?
Did part of you suspect that we could be, if we were directing our
country's massive resources at all correctly, already mass-producing
the technology that could quickly wean us from our dependence on
foreign petroleum?
Did you already calculate that if even a fraction of the $300 billion
-- a truly staggering amount -- we've wasted on BushCo's failed and
disgusting war could have gone to revolutionizing our nation's energy
infrastructure (like, say, funding large-scale development of the
Roadster's technology),
instead of annihilating a pip-squeak nonthreatening nation over its
oil reserves while simultaneously serving as the most successful
terrorist-recruitment poster in world history, the United States could
be considered the epicenter of integrity and invention once again?
Of course you did.
But oh wait.
Such an obvious, lucid redirection of resources and ideology would
require someone with true vision in the White House.
Someone with integrity.
And intelligence.
And fearlessness.
And an articulate understanding of complex ideas.
And a Congress to match.
Never mind.
I know, it's not exactly a new story.
Just go see "Who Killed the Electric Car?" for proof of how corporate
greed eats innovation like so many CornNuts.
Then go see "An Inconvenient Truth" for a story of brutal denial and
sheer idiocy among the political and corporate elite.
Then rent "The Corporation" to see how social responsibility ranks
right up there with modest golden parachutes on the list of U.S.
corporate values (though that may finally be changing, given the
undeniable business woes caused by global warming).
Voilá America in a nutshell.
But Tesla is different.
They're an independent company.
They don't have to answer to the Bush or ExxonMobil or GM.
Indeed, its execs say that any sales of the pricey sports car will
help propel its core technology even further and maybe create an
economy of scale to make mass production of regular cars much more
feasible.
In other words, screw the monoliths;
enthrall the wealthy individual enthusiasts first, sex up the media
with cool pictures and dazzling performance, prove you can make
serious profits with green technology and the big corporations will
have to follow.
Sure, why not?
Why couldn't the Roadster's ideal combo of sexiness and performance
and entrepreneurial grit trickle down to the consumer mind-set and
generate some fanatical buzz, force some change, help take us back to
a culture where true innovation and radical thinking aren't considered
a threat (sorry, GOP) but rather the mark of a vital and thriving
country?
Hell, mass-produce that Roadster motor and toss it in a nice little
Audi TT or even a Ford Focus, slow it down a little and add a trunk
and slice the price by 60 percent and advertise it as zero pollution
and zero trips to the gas pump and a big throbbing middle finger to
Saudi Arabia and BushCo and distended world-humpers like this guy,
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/1027-06.htm
and watch the eager throngs line up.
Of course, these cars do need one thing to juice their love:
electricity.
Which we are, at over 100 global-warmed degrees all over the nation
last week, straining like mad to produce in sufficient amounts to keep
our air conditioners cranked to stave off the dire heat problems
created, ironically, by all those years of lying.
But hey, one massive ecological crisis at a time, you know?
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