The US Used to Demand the Best Tech. Now We Ban It
4 hours ago
- #US-China Trade
- #Electric Vehicles
- #Automotive Industry
- Ford CEO Jim Farley expressed reluctance to give up the imported Xiaomi SU7 Chinese EV, showing its appeal even to legacy US automakers.
- Influencer Marques Brownlee's glowing review of the Xiaomi SU7 Max highlighted its advanced features, software integration, and affordability, yet US regulations block such cars via a 25-year import restriction.
- US policies, including tariffs, bans on foreign drones and routers, and national security concerns, prevent Americans from accessing advanced, affordable Chinese products like EVs, batteries, and solar tech.
- While US startups like Aptera aim to create efficient, solar-assisted EVs, they struggle with funding and scaling, contrasting with Chinese automakers flooding global markets with low-cost EVs like BYD's models.
- Elon Musk's contradictory stance includes warning about Chinese EV competition but not opposing tariffs, while Tesla shifts focus to high-margin vehicles and robotaxis, raising doubts about his commitment to affordable sustainable transport.
- The US appears trapped in a closed-loop system of scarcity and dependency, with barriers protecting domestic interests, as China embraces competitive capitalism and the US moves toward a controlled 'kickback' economy.