- Tags:
- Show more
- Pages:
- 1
- Words:
- 275
Watching the documentary makes me forget about the previous major betrayals such as those of the Ohio who had been promised protection against the hazardous waste incinerator. I liken it to the rollover on the average fuel economy standards and the efforts to realize the clean environment and global climate goals as spelled in the film. It is possible that we could hold Gore accountable for the government instigated damage towards world's climate but an equal share could be blamed on the Bush regime. The documentary is a call for everyone to wake up, assess and identify the dangers of climate changes chiefly caused by the unauthenticated manufacturing controversy. The ‘impact’ or rather the EV1, as the General Motors named its scientific invention of the electric car would have been a way out and a mega-solution for the carbon pollution that has remained the major debate for the larger ecological maintenance topic. The design had already reached an acceptable speed of 80 mph and a rate of recharge per every 70 miles. This was more than adequate for our daily coverage as we just cover distances from work to shopping centers all-around to home, a span that is usually far below the recharging distance. The closure of the production could be associated with the oil and gas barons who could not figure out losing their businesses. Where the blame was rested upon the GM’s counterintuitive corporate behavior and collision with the Air Resource Board, the hidden weight rests on the pressure from the automobile manufacturers, the Bush regime and mainly the oil industry. Afraid of losing drastically from the monopolistic production, transportation, and selling of oil and loss
Leave feedback