What will it do for the vast majority of people in the near term, nada. I am sure there will be grateful construction workers and government contractors but they are a small minority of the country. Infrastructure improvement usually makes things worse before it gets better and takes years to complete.
I donât have anything against fixing actual infrastructure, just saying I wouldnât expect much immediate gratitude from a process that inconveniences people for years before it pays off.
There was a bunch of social spending and faux infrastructure in the bill, like the recharging stations. If there was a large demand for charging stations, the market would respond and provide them. Instead this is going to be like all the windmills, a government mandated demand, raising prices and lowering dependability.
The approval number for the president is in line with where most polls were during this point in former President Trumpâs term. But according to FiveThirtyEight, Trumpâs disapproval did not reach such heights until days before he left office, in the wake of the attack on the Capitol by a mob of his supporters.
I keep reading that as some kind of argument or justification.
Lib media literally tried to drive Trumpâs #âs down. Yâall trying to claim Biden doesnât suck because his numbers are a little better than the guy your team tried to destroy while heâs been propped up for months is a damn joke.
Our economy relies on oil and will for years to come. Changing technologies and supplies will someday change that. Spending billions on charging stations wont. The charging stations I see now are always empty.
Its like the government using taxpayer money to build gasoline stations in 1880.
Central planning types always think they can âengineerâ an outcome. It doesnât matter if it is social engineering or economic engineering, it is inefficient and regressive.