• I live in the US and I will suffer, but I really want the rest of the world to give us hell. Fuck Trumpler and president Muskrat.

      • Maralago, then Disneyland, from there, probably Texas, Alabama, the bad Carolina and then Montana. The animaniacs should jump into a cool song for this.

        • 1 year

          once canadians/Europeans/ S.americans stopped vacationing there, florida will probably be dead before that happens. since retirees dont benefit the state in anyways, and is more likely to soak up all the tax money anyways indirectly

        • Dead_or_Alive@lemmy.worldBanned from communityEnglish
          1 year

          What the fuck did Disneyland have to do with Trump?

          They were targeted by MAGA, Facists and Desantis for being too woke and allowing gay pride days etc.

            • Dead_or_Alive@lemmy.worldBanned from communityEnglish
              1 year

              I’m sure they are kissing the ring because progressives are all too happy to abandon them.

              Who cares if they follow the market as long as they are headed in the right direction. They are a business, they will act as the market dictates.

    • As long as they don’t cut off gas to the PNW. Almost all the natural gas we use comes from Canada, and the majority of the voters there didn’t vote for this.

      That would be fucking brutal, no heat or cooking gas.

        • 1 year

          Gas is terrible until the power grid goes down in the middle of winter.

          Electric should definitely be the main go to but we should all have gas hookup for a backup heat source in my opinion.

          • Gas heating doesn’t work without electricity. Thermostat is electric, blower fan is electric. Modern furnaces even use electric ignition instead of running a pilot light.

          • That’s excessive compared to the extremely low risk of a blackout in developed countries (excluding the United States which has regular blackouts). To illustrate:

            US households spent 5.5 hours without electricity on average in 2022. Excluding major events like hurricanes, the number drops to 2.1 hours.

            German households spent a whopping 12.2 minutes without electricity on average in 2022.

            A portable gas heater, blankets and a camping stove are completely sufficient for the average person considering most longer power outages last for a couple of hours at worst. Exceedingly rare longer blackouts will always have a government aid program, such as a heated gym with free food, near your location.

            The only one’s who should really prepare for blackouts are:

            • the government
            • people who live hours away from civilization with very limited infrastructure connecting them
            • Breaking news: some countries have higher and lower population densities.

            • We were without power for almost a week during an ice storm a few years ago. There was no government shelter that I ever heard about. We had to stay at a friend’s house.

          • madame_gaymes@programming.devdeleted by creatorEnglish
            1 year

            If only there was some sort of invisible power we could harness from a large ball of fire 🤔

              • madame_gaymes@programming.devdeleted by creatorEnglish
                1 year

                There are these things called batteries, and they don’t have to be made from Lithium.

                Also, you could take it literally and burn wood to harness the warm energy surrounding it on a winter night.

                • Batteries are expensive, and having a solar array and battery bank large enough to power your home all winter would be prohibitively expensive.

                  This is why we ideally have a wide range of energy sources. It’s usually raining and windy in winter.

        • This is another one of those stupid feel-good statements where it feels good to say but completely hand waves away all the complexities of actually achieving this.

          Never mind the massive financial barrier to get people to switch away from gas in the first place (which the majority of everyone is not going to be able to afford so how do you expect that to work?) where does this money come from?

          But you now need to contend with electrical infrastructure changes to support that extra load. Where does this money come from?

          Sure in theory this is a great idea I would love to switch to heat pumps as I’m sure many others would as well. However the cost is egregious ($30-50k). And unless it’s supported with massive government subsidies (remember the US government just cut all subsidies for these sorts of things) then it’s not going to happen because people just can’t afford it.

          • It’s not a “feel good statement”, it’s reality. Gas is terrible. It’s responsible for a significant portion of climate change and gas stoves cause myriad health issues. This is basic stuff. Of course the transition isn’t all sunshine and rainbows but electrification is far from some insurmountable ideal, and it can be quite cost effective.

            The vast majority of HVAC equipment will be replaced on burnout, and when you do the economics of a new gas furnace (and almost certainly AC these days) vs an ASHP, it’s simply not $30-50k extra. There are state and local incentives, the federal tax credits, utility incentives etc., but I agree the IRA programs are on thin ice (even though Biden awarded funds before leaving). I bought a high end cold climate heat pump for just a few grand more than my neighbor who bought a furnace/AC with similar operating costs. You can get a cheaper ASHP and furnace for something in between cost wise. My state has tripled cold climate heat pump incentives and they are now very competitive with gas systems. I work in the industry and live this every day, it’s not some boondoggle, the grid updates necessary aren’t as dramatic as headlines imply and are already well underway to support vehicle electrification and load growth/resiliency. The PNW is quite mild and people are willing to pay for AC anyway due to heat waves (and wildfire smoke), so going straight to heat pumps is a very cost effective solution. Folks are cancelling gas service left and right and the remaining users will be left with rising fixed costs. Plus as I led with, gas is terrible for your family and the climate (and locally where the wells are).

        • Oh I’m sure. And Trump and other MAGA would look on with glee because they hate the PNW.

  • 1 year

    Vermont imports a quarter of its electricity from HydroQuebec. We’ve made it very clear this past weekend what we think of the administration. All the same, I completely understand.

  • “Vast amounts of fentanyl enter the US through Mexico from China. This is why we must slap a 25% tariff on Canadian aluminum and steel.”

  • Trump said Monday that “vast amounts of fentanyl got poured into our country” largely through Mexico and from China, and he encouraged car manufacturers to build plants in the U.S. to avoid the upcoming tariffs.

    If the media actually did their jobs, they would add the context that the US seized all of 20kg of fentanyl at the Canadian border last year. This claim is, according to the US government’s own numbers, absolute bullshit.

    They would also note that in order to enact these tariffs without involving Congress he has to invoke a “national emergency”, which is the only reason why he’s suddenly all about stopping fentanyl.

    • 1 year

      their [job]

      The majority of America doesn’t listen to things that don’t reaffirm their beliefs.

      If a news outlet doesn’t tell the people what they want to hear, another news outlet will.

    • 1 year

      If the media did their jobs, they would be discussing how the amount of drugs available is not the reason for the drug epidemic, that addiction and mental health are linked more deeply to socio-economic problems, including structural economic problems, issues of social mobility, the destruction of the social fabric etc.

    • 1 year

      The media is doing their job. It’s just that their job is to normalize fascist rhetoric.

      • 1 year

        its called sanewashing, all of the MSMs have been doing this with trump.

    • They would also note that in order to enact these tariffs without involving Congress he has to invoke a “national emergency”, which is the only reason why he’s suddenly all about stopping fentanyl.

      This was actually new news to me, and I watch the news every night. Thanks for sharing this!

      I was imagining scenarios where people were free-basing maple syrup or something.

      This comment is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

      • I was imagining scenarios where people were free-basing maple syrup or something.

        Are you not? I guess, if you’ve never had Canadian maple syrup I understand

              • Heh, they’re a legit place but I’ve only been there in person. I didn’t even know they had a website

                You can get those maple candies everywhere. They’re absolutely delicious.

  • As a Minnesotan, that would be very bad news for anyone here enjoying having relatively okay power bills. Unfortunately I have to agree with Ford; we totally deserve it.

    • 1 year

      I mean yeah, your country is threatening our countries sovereignty. I hope our leaders do anything in their power to stop that from happening. Sorry man. Most Canadians feel the same way.

      • 1 year

        As you should. I’m from the US and what our President is doing is inexcusable. The US are definitely the baddies here.

    • 1 year

      cutting off oil is more devestating, thats probably thier next move.

  • wise_pancake@lemmy.cadeleted by creatorEnglish
    1 year

    I would love to see short brief interruptions.

    Not enough that period due, but enough that it’s a huge pain when computer systems go down and network switches have to reboot.

    • They are all on battery or gas backups. They would need to be weeks long outages to kill any data centers.

      • wise_pancake@lemmy.cadeleted by creatorEnglish
        1 year

        Data centers sure, but the cash at grocery stores, and office computers, etc. aren’t on UPS.

  • I live in the US. I hope the world destabilizes our very flawed government and “democracy”

    A two-party system is barely a democracy.