Comments by "LRRPFco52" (@LRRPFco52) on "Cash Jordan"
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@vikvc Mexico has the most top homicide rate cities in the world, including the top 1-7 slots, 9, 10, 13, 14, 29, 30, 33, 38, 44, & 50. So 17 of the top 50 cities for homicide in the world are in Mexico. New Orleans, Baltimore, Detroit, Memphis, Cleveland, Milwaukee, and Philly are also in the top 50 in the world for homicide.
The lowest top 50 city is San Luis Potosí, Mexico, with a rate of 29.06/100,000 people. NYC is around 3 or 4 per 100,000 residents. New Orleans is 70.56 per 100,000 for reference. This might explain why your friend wants to move to NYC.
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@johnwayne2140 The mining industry can't support the politically-set goals of adoption. It's not scalable, nor can the power grid facilitate it.
25 nations make up the LI-ION mining sources for batteries, ranging from China, Canada, Indonesia, Chile, Brazil, Argentina, Australia, South Africa, etc.
This assumes the US Navy will provide security for the shipping lanes and continued free trade under Bretton Woods from the 1940s.
Even if we magically increased mining capacity, it still won't meet global demand and will overload the power grids of every nation that tries to increase their EV fleets.
All for what?
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@airchie2 For lithium, cobalt, nickel, manganese, graphite, aluminum, copper, steel, and iron, they are all in high-demand already and limited supply/exploratory yields for new mining possibilities.
The mining industry has been exploring for most of these elements (steel is a generic term for various alloys of course made from several elements) for centuries in many cases.
Demand for LI-ION batteries has been very high just for computers, PEDs, and military applications for decades and the mining supply side limits still are what they are. Meanwhile with oil and NG, there are constantly new fields being discovered and re-discovered (Kharkiv and Odessa being 2 examples).
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