EV Owners Have Their Say, Part I: Reviewing Who Killed the Electric Car? - Page 3

Part of: EV Owners Have Their Say

For me, the environmental good effects were frosting on the cake.Randy Pollock and Betina Pavri, Caltech alumni, wrote:

We enjoyed it. It was bittersweet: wonderful to see the excitement the cars generated when they were released (especially Tom Hanks on the David Letterman Show), but hard to relive the disappointment. Perhaps it seems silly, but it was heart wrenching to see the EV Pluses ready to be shredded, and wondering if one of them was ours. We loved that car.

We really hope that the movie finds an audience, and we intend to tell everyone we know to go see it. It is so important that the public hear this story, because it didn't get the coverage it deserved when the electric car was 'killed.'

In part two of this three-part series, these EV owners describe their personal histories with the EV. In part three, I will describe how I acquired my EV.

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Article Author: Purple Tigress

Former theater critic for the LA Weekly and Los Angeles Times . For the last five years, an editing slave at a dot-com but recently laid off. Currently an under-employed freelance writer and artist.

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Article comments

  • 1 - Sam

    Jun 30, 2006 at 12:11 am

    Being one of the lucky few that GM deemed "worthy" to lease this car, this film brought back all the rage I felt when it was finally pried from me with threats of legal action. This film is a must see for anyone who cares about not only America's geopolitical future, but more broadly the air we all breathe not to mention, the ever rising cost of gasoline.

    That said, it has one major flaw in the sense that in my opinion, it failed to hold Democratic politicians as guilty as Republicans. I'm afraid that may mistakenly alienate many viewers and I say that as a Democrat. I guess I feel the message of the film is too important to be delivered with any partisan bias so if your politics lean towards the right, please try not to be offended. Remember that this particular murder was one of those truly rare bi-partisan endeavors. For example, the ZEV Mandate that enabled the EV1 was passed under Governor Wilson, a Republican and the man who pulled the trigger essentially killing the ZEV mandate (and thereby, the EV1) was none other than Alan Lloyd. He just so happened to work at the pleasure of a Democrat, Gov. Gray Davis (who correct me if I blinked and missed it, never appeared in the film!) So Davis was let completely off and Lloyd (the actual assassin) treated with less comtempt than Bush Jr. or Andy Card (who were also guilty, but only by association).

    That said, the facts presented in the film that I had personal knowledge of, or experience with, were 100% true. Just don't forget that the actual asassin was Dr. Lloyd because he still makes his living as a con-man. He fronts as an environmental scientist hyping at the very least a very unlikely if not flat out fantasy future with hydrogen fuel cells.

  • 2 - Andre

    Aug 03, 2006 at 1:40 pm

    just saw the movie. I have to say that I'll never buy another GM car again, electric or otherwise. To waste resources in the way that GM does it (in addition to crushing cars that EV owners were willing to buy) makes me NEVER want to do business with that company ever again. I'll get my next electric Prius or Ford .. whatever.. but not GM.

  • 3 - William Meadows

    Aug 07, 2007 at 12:04 am

    With all the love of the EV-1, did anyone save the plans of the car so someone else could use some of the design features, ideas and espically the improvements from it to privately build a new unit that might be better or made more available without the interferance of the automakers or the oil industry? Are there any service plans, parts lists or maybe other manufacturing hints that would enable a conversion of an existing car to electric. Just wondering...

  • 4 - Tom O'Neill

    Jan 17, 2009 at 9:49 am

    GM, the company who not only abandoned the EV 1 but sought to obliterate its existence, is insisting on taxpayer money to perpetuate its own existence. In the long run is that kind of a company, with such power over our transportation needs, our environmental needs and the economic needs of working people a help or a liability to our society?

  • 5 - gnomædh

    Feb 23, 2009 at 5:34 pm

    Even just thinking about the death of the EV1 program fills me with rage! I still can't believe our society's utter stupidity when it comes to NOT mandating efficiency upgrades on regular vehicles and NOT effectively guiding our industry away from fossil fuels... We're going to pay for this quite dearly in the very near future, I'm afraid.

    I was so inspired by what happened to the EV1 program that I started looking into different alternate technologies for transportation. I have found a few interesting possibilities along the way... There is hope yet before our society utterly hits the wall.

    Let's remember the EV1 period as an example of what not to do with innovative technological change, but rather a reminder that technology is dynamic and ever changing and we should look at growing with it rather than sticking our heads in the sand.

    I think that Peak Oil is about to spank the Scrooge out of the car manufacturers and force a total rethink of what it means to have mobility in the 21st century.

    Let's see what the future brings...

    Open your minds!

    thanks; gnomædh

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