The Left is doing it wrong.

We need to stop calling it the green New Deal; and call it the Patriot Power Act.

We’re not trying to go green or “Woke”. No! We’re making ’Merca energy independent! We’ll stop importing oil from the tourist countries! And be energy self sufficient!

—BRANDING!!

  • FiveMacs
    link
    fedilink
    469 months ago

    Or…stop defining everything as left/right and make things for people. Stop the divide, it’s what ‘they’ want.

    • @Cheems@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      149 months ago

      That is just not how it works. I wish it was, but someone will always make literally whatever political

      • @nilloc@discuss.tchncs.de
        link
        fedilink
        English
        2
        edit-2
        9 months ago

        As long as money can control politics it will. Post scarcity might fix it someday, but so many things have to happen before then—that will disadvantage vested interests—that it’s hard to imagine humanity making it there.

      • @Old_Dude@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        -39 months ago

        Online, there’s always this division and blame on either the left or right. In my real life experience amongst friends, people are more willing to have a normal conversation about different opinions without all the outrage like I see online.

        • @AA5B@lemmy.world
          link
          fedilink
          19 months ago

          Definitely not my experience. I live in a “blue” area but …. A friend up north gets worked up about vaccines, and his wife runs a daycare! He’s educated and intelligent but has entirely off-base assumptions. My brother in the Midwest works for a car manufacturer …. still thinks electric vehicles are a fad that don’t work and never will. “Look around you” does not compute because it’s “just Tesla” and everyone knows they have poor uplift and loosing tons of money and only survisipve on government handouts

    • @21Cabbage@lemmynsfw.com
      link
      fedilink
      English
      109 months ago

      Well the unfortunate part of that is it isn’t working and a solid 30% of the population will just call you ‘woke’ and ignore you for saying it.

    • Fonzie!
      link
      fedilink
      39 months ago

      Stop the divide, it’s what ‘they’ want.

      You’re sending some conflicting signals, my Mac

      • FiveMacs
        link
        fedilink
        -2
        edit-2
        9 months ago

        Companies are not people, so no…I’m not.

        Political agendas are also not human, so again I’m still not.

        You’re one of those that love to cause divide.

  • Ænima
    link
    fedilink
    379 months ago

    And we can call wind farms, “Jesus Farms!”

    • @Cabrio@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      26
      edit-2
      9 months ago

      And vaccines can be “immunity guns”. Want to keep your kids safe? Give their immune system guns!

      • @Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz
        link
        fedilink
        119 months ago

        Keep on going. You’re good at this.

        Next, try to come up with suitable branding for teaching stem literacy and critical thinking.

        • @Cabrio@lemmy.world
          link
          fedilink
          17
          edit-2
          9 months ago

          You mean “Gun Manufacturing” (Mechanical Engineering), “Bunker Building” (Civil Engineering), “Things Hitting Things” (Physics), “Explosives, Toxins, and Poisons” (Industrial Chemistry), “DIY Alternative Medicine” (Pharmaceutical Chemistry), “Owning the Libs” (Law), “Ripping off the IRS” (Taxation and Accounting), “How to be Offensive” (Language theory, reading/writing comprehension), “How to win at Gambling” (Mathematics, Statistics) “Why Libs Think Like Pussies” (Philosophy), “War” (Geography, Geo-politics, International Studies).

    • @AA5B@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      49 months ago

      It’s those libtards and their hot air. Let’s use that nonsense to power good old ‘Murican homes and factories

    • KSP Atlas
      link
      fedilink
      39 months ago

      minecraft 1.20.1 java edition vanilla Jesus farm (75 jesus/h)

  • @Cryophilia@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    359 months ago

    Democrats suck at branding.

    Private companies do not, though: https://www.sempersolaris.com/

    Veteran owned, uses made in America parts, offers military discounts and they have a program where they do free installs for struggling vets.

    Their tagine is “declare your independence from the power company”

    I interviewed for a job with them once and they actually sounded very competent too

    • @dangblingus@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      89 months ago

      Maybe they’re good at branding, but they suck at marketing.

      If your product exists, fills a niche, solves a problem, and is the right price, but no one is buying it, then you suck at marketing.

  • @CoffeeJunkie@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    26
    edit-2
    9 months ago

    Patriot Power is real, and it really sucks. It’s the solar power offerings through 4Patriots, weak-ass off-brand Chinese batteries & weak, overpriced solar panels. The only good things 4Patriots offers is survival food & sun kettles.

    There are plenty of people on the right who would love energy independence, but problems include cost, infrastructure, and implementation. I’m team solar panel/nuclear power, but every few years…the solar panel tech gets way better than it EVER was. So when is the right time to plunk down tens of thousands of dollars?? It’s just now starting to get really good.

    Wind turbines are also getting much better. And it’s about damn time.

    The biggest financial problem is energy storage solutions, spend $5-10K per battery, and have it lose 40% of its effectiveness after 5 years?? Yeah, no thanks, I’m not an idiot.

    But we’re coming up with (ACTUAL, WORKING, COST-EFFECTIVE) solutions for that problem, too. Sand, gravity, and waterfall batteries.

    All this to say, the technology is just now starting to get serious traction & legs under it. ¯\(°_o)/¯ It’s not ready…until it’s ready. The ‘greenest’ things we can do, right now, involve reducing our usage & upping our efficiencies (via new windows/doors, insulation). That’s the smart money.

    • @RGB3x3@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      59 months ago

      I just heard about gravity “batteries” that involve lifting concrete blocks to store potential energy, then dropping them to generate electricity with a turbine. It’s probably the most interesting thing I’ve heard of in a while and such a clever way to store energy without needing a battery.

      • @Bgugi@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        119 months ago

        The math doesn’t really work out for gravity batteries. A fifteen ton block dropping 100 feet releases about a kwh of energy.

        Or you could just have $150 worth of lithium batteries.

        • @HughJanus@lemmy.ml
          link
          fedilink
          29 months ago

          How much energy is released is not as important as the ratio of how much it takes to lift vs. lower (AKA “efficiency”)

        • @Zippy@lemmy.world
          cake
          link
          fedilink
          19 months ago

          This. Thanks for doing the math. The only way it makes any real sense is if you a have geographical features that can store the energy. Ie right near a mountain and a large body of water high up. And even with that, it often only makes economical sense at exsisting dams where you can pump the water back into the reservoir and the generation systems is already paid for and in place.

        • @CoffeeJunkie@lemmy.world
          link
          fedilink
          -19 months ago

          See I’ve been skeptical about the gravity battery, too. I’m glad to see it developed, toyed with, but I like very simple ideas with very few, if any, moving parts. Gravity battery? Moving parts, cables. Would be a nightmare to work on if it broke down, possibly dangerous with the stored potential energy.

          Much safer: sand battery. BTUs are expensive, you’re probably heating your water, and depending on the winter climate where you live, you are using electricity to convert to BTUs so you can heat your home/not die. I say skip the middle man!! Convert the extra energy generated from solar/wind/whatever…store it in the fucking sand as heat.

          I also look at the sand battery’s simplicity, serviceability from a post-nuke/EMP/grid-down/post-apocalyptic standpoint. Should I be unfortunate enough to survive. It’s so…practical. Solar panels should only get hit <15% damage from EMP. It gets the electricity. Sent to large copper rods, acting as heating elements. Heat the sand. 🙌🏻 Sand will cost a few thousand & never degrade. Rods, cheap enough, have some spares. Those shitty LiPO batteries play out during the apocalypse, as they literally always do? You’re SOL.

          • @skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de
            link
            fedilink
            19 months ago

            first, it stores heat only. you can make it work with 1000L or so barrel of water and this gets you supply for days. second, you’d want this thing to service entire small community, because otherwise square-cube law fucks you hard. you need also all the auxiliary devices like heaters, pumps, control hardware that looks the same no matter if you make it work for your house or small village

            • @CoffeeJunkie@lemmy.world
              link
              fedilink
              19 months ago

              That is correct, it stores heat only. A little bit about my situation: I have a drafty AF, 3200 sq ft farmhouse. Yes, I know I need to fix that…all things cost a lot of money, to do well.

              A hot water tank tie-in would be excellent too, of course.

              Additionally, I’d put the heated sand to work heating a large concrete driveway, a sidewalk in the winter months. While this can be classed as a “luxury”, I view it as an investment in my health & well-being, as well as reducing risk & increasing my reliability. Eventually I’d like to throw up a polebarn style garage, with heated concrete pad, pull on the sand battery to heat that as well. Winter is a big problem where I live!! And a massive pain in my ass.

              Please be kind, I’ve heard talk like this before, but tbh I don’t know what it means: > “because otherwise square-cube law fucks you hard.”

              What does this mean? 🤔 ELI5? TIA, I like these convos. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

              • @skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de
                link
                fedilink
                29 months ago

                Additionally, I’d put the heated sand to work heating a large concrete driveway, a sidewalk in the winter months

                please invest in good winter shoes and shovel. first, you need massive amount of heat to warm up all that concrete and then melt ice, but it’s not enough. you also have to get rid of liquid water entirely because otherwise it’ll just freeze again but now it’s glossy and flat surface of ice

                square-cube law

                when making sand battery, what you’re actually interested in is mass of sand. however you can’t conjure perfectly spherical globe of dirt suspended in vacuum, you have to put it somewhere. you need a tank, and one with hefty insulation. now: mass is proportional to volume, which is proportional to r^3 - cube. price of tank and amount of insulation needed is proportional to its surface - r^2 - square. the bigger you make it, the more sand you get per square meter of tank surface, meaning that storage costs go down with scale. that example from finland serves entire community for example

                square-cube law provides some hard limitations on what is practical and what is not, for example it explains why big animals move slower than smaller ones. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Square–cube_law

                • @CoffeeJunkie@lemmy.world
                  link
                  fedilink
                  19 months ago

                  I have plenty of boots & shovels. 😂 Again, it’s not a matter of “luxury”…I am concerned about both personal health & the snow being gone in a timely fashion after a snowfall.

                  Men who shovel snow are at an increased risk for heart attacks. And that’s just heart trouble; let’s not forget general sprains, strains, & aches. Possible slip-and-falls, I can’t imagine having a bad fall when I’m in my 70s, 80s+.We often see a few significant snow events per year, and to have a surefire way to automatically melt it would be great.

                  To be fully transparent about my situation…I have a big-ass tractor, too. I can clear the snow without physical exertion. But it’s over at another property, and after a fresh snowfall, I sometimes have to “schedule” time with the tractor jockeying against my parents & my sister, BIL. Annoying.

                  …but that’s not all, with the tractor method. Extremely, dangerously cold situations can even become too cold for tractors to operate. The diesel will gel unless more questionable additives, methods are used. Operating a tractor is not free, either, and puts more hours on an expensive piece of machinery. There have also been maybe 4 times where I’m clearing the snow, and some kid is on the road in his $2K car, and gets way too close to my $90K tractor when we’re all slogging in terrible, soggy/cold/poor visibility conditions. I’m always polite, of course, but then they leave & I audibly bellow to myself I don’t fucking need this. I don’t!! Why should I haggle with family, operate this good equipment, around the general public if I could avoid that entirely with a heated concrete driveway?

                  So the only real concern with the square-cube law is physical space occupied, and/or cost. Space isn’t an issue on the farm. 🤠 And sand by the ton is cheap. I was personally thinking about digging a big-ass hole to hold the sand. Line it with junk bricks and/or more concrete, only put money into an insulated “cap”.

                  The water left on the driveway is an interesting thought, but the driveway won’t be perfectly flat. It’ll have a downward slant, towards the road. If you think it’s enough of an issue, I could maybe put some designs in the concrete that route snow melt run-off off the concrete & into some grass on either side. I know people that heat driveways & they’re fine/dry; it can be done, I’ll ask around. I know it’s marketed as a luxury, but I want heated driveways normalized.

                  I DO need a lot of heat for this heated driveway, I know it’s ambitious, but I have plenty of reasons for wanting it. Outlined above. Heart attacks/hospital visits? Expensive, waste of time. Tractors, “sharing” operation costs, risk of accidents…expensive. Waste of time. I’m going to pay any way you look at it. Why not pay for a recirculating heat pump, its operation & watch my problems literally melt away??

      • @DrQuint@lemm.ee
        link
        fedilink
        7
        edit-2
        9 months ago

        Yes. And it works.

        It’s called a Dam.

        The catch is we spend 0 energy on the upstream water.

      • @satanmat@lemmy.worldOP
        link
        fedilink
        29 months ago

        Energy storage is THE issue…. You want to be a billionaire? Figure that out.

        Pumped hydro, is great, but there are very few places where it is feasible

        • @skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de
          link
          fedilink
          29 months ago

          there are many nifty ways to do it. i like molten silicon for example https://silbat.com

          but how about shift in perspective? if you want to get in on all renewable power source, maybe it’s you who should adjust power consumption a little bit instead? fortunately most of energy used is used up for heating, and you can plug all excess energy into heater, store energy in big barrel of water for all your heating needs, and skim electrical power when available + maybe batteries as a higher priority

          • @HughJanus@lemmy.ml
            link
            fedilink
            19 months ago

            if you want to get in on all renewable power source, maybe it’s you who should adjust power consumption a little bit instead?

            What makes you think they haven’t already?

            • @skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de
              link
              fedilink
              19 months ago

              in some places energy for individual customer is cheaper at night, but the real deal is with large industrial power consumers, like arc furnaces or aluminum smelting plants. these things have special arrangements that allow grid operator to regulate some % of power in return for cheaper energy, either by remote control or on schedule. in principle the same thing could work for thousands to millions of water heaters, making it work like a large, one way “battery” soaking up peaks in energy production

    • @skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de
      link
      fedilink
      English
      1
      edit-2
      9 months ago

      but do you need stored large amounts of electric energy? most of energy use is in form of heat for space heating and hot water, and for storage of that all you need is big barrel with multiple heat exchangers (coiled pipes + baffles). put in heat from solar concentrators, heat pump maybe, furnace and you’re good in all situations

      problems only really begin if you want to start up welder on cold winter night

      other than that, generate energy from solar + wind turbine, top up battery, dump excess in heat pump or water heater. have small petrol generator to service surge capabilities. this will be enough in majority of cases. this is also the logic national energy grids operate on, with the difference that you can’t set up pumped hydro storage in your backyard, most of the time

      • @fiah@discuss.tchncs.de
        link
        fedilink
        19 months ago

        problems only really begin if you want to start up welder on cold winter night

        or try to cook dinner on your induction stove. A good hot water storage should reduce the need for electrical power storage but won’t eliminate it

  • @Furbag@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    239 months ago

    They already kinda do that, at least in my area. There’s a company that advertises on AM radio called Semper Solaris and they go hard on the support the troops/vets angle with their sales pitch. It’s pretty cringe, but it must work because they keep their advertisements running pretty much every commercial break. Not that you need to try very hard to convince a Californian to get solar panels installed on their roof. “Make the sun pay your entire electric bill” is also pretty effective advertising.

  • @Blackmist@feddit.uk
    link
    fedilink
    English
    239 months ago

    You just have to tell them oil is dug up by brown people and solar is made by white people.

    I’m sure they can think up a new name for it themselves…

    • @Potfarmer@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      69 months ago

      We can take it further… Light comes from the heavens, the domain of the lord almighty. Oil comes from the depths of hell on earth, domain of the devil. Do the right thing Christians, just like you always have, support the anti-devil white people solar power alliance.

  • @CarlCook@feddit.de
    link
    fedilink
    229 months ago

    Seriously though, the German liberal party (FDP) has dubbed renewable energy “freedom energy”.

  • @1984@lemmy.today
    link
    fedilink
    21
    edit-2
    9 months ago

    Would absolutely work in USA.

    The word patriot is like a button for mind control.

    • Jojo
      link
      fedilink
      89 months ago

      It’s true. I hear those geese didn’t get a visa when they came here from Canada.

  • dinckel
    link
    fedilink
    159 months ago

    The issue isn’t in the name. The issue is that a lot of people just don’t even want to know what any of this is, and blindly voting for something is bad, no matter how you look at it.

    Screaming “woke” at everything is a cultural/educational issue, so I’d rather see resources being spent on that

  • JackbyDev
    link
    fedilink
    English
    149 months ago

    I’m pretty sure I’ve seen “Patriot” type branding for massive battery backups targeting preppers.

    • @LukeMedia@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      59 months ago

      For sure, I got one from a family member, the solar panel only put out 15W with no load drawn. The battery was pinched in the casing as well. I was surprised to see it did have proper voltage protection, though.

    • @RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      5
      edit-2
      9 months ago

      Present “normal” person with new information: “Huh, that’s not what I heard. I’ll go check it out when I get some time.”

      Republicans: “It’s a liberal plot by George Soros and the liberal MSM run by illegal aliens and that traitor Hunter Biden! Did you see what that Clinton did?!”