Any time the government pushes a technology or product that people don’t want, trouble is afoot. From Nick Giambruno at internationalman.com:

25 refrigerators.
That’s how much the additional electricity consumption per household would be if the average US home adopted electric vehicles (EVs).
Congressman Thomas Massie—an electrical engineer—revealed this information while discussing with Pete Buttigieg, the Secretary of Transportation, President Biden’s plan to have 50% of cars sold in the US be electric by 2030.
The current and future grid in most places will not be able to support each home running 25 refrigerators—not even close. Just look at California, where the grid is already buckling under the existing load.
Massie claims, correctly, in my view, that the notion of widespread adoption of electric vehicles anytime soon is a dangerous fantasy based on political science, not sound engineering.
Nonetheless, governments, the media, academia, large corporations, and celebrities tout an imminent “transition” to EVs as if it’s preordained from above.
It’s not.
They’re trying to manufacture your consent for a scam of almost unimaginable proportions.
Below are three reasons why something sinister is going on with the big push for EVs.
You’ll laugh so hard it hurts when they try to fire up EV powered military ships, tanks and planes.
It won’t be funny though when there is nothing to power farm equipment, sewer/water systems, the ecomony. (Idiocracy spell)
You’ll have plenty to time to think about it as all personal mobility is no more in the 15 minute bug/pod land.
Something sinister?
It’s called the Frankfurt School Long March, Cultural Marxism, CRT/DEI and Yuri Bezmenov tried to warn us.
There is thing called internal quisling traitors that is very hard to overcome, even prominent Romans spoke of it.
Tatius agreed to this, whereupon she opened one of the gates by night and let the Sabines in. Antigonus was not alone, then, in saying that he loved men who offered to betray, but hated those who had betrayed; nor yet Caesar, in saying of the Thracian Rhoemetalces, that he loved treachery but hated a traitor; but this is a very general feeling towards the base on the part of those who need their services, just as they need certain wild creatures for their venom and gall; for while they feel the need of them, they put up with them, but abhor their vileness when they have obtained from them what they want. – Romulus (Plutarch)