Thick_Piece

Thick_Piece t1_iujhh6a wrote

Reply to comment by Cobdain in Accurate by seanner_vt2

The opposing view would be that progressive policies have led to vermont being a state that only the rich and large corporations can afford.

The states largest employer is the state and there is a vacuum of money leaving the state in retirement funds.

Less regulations would allow for actual starter homes and density building that is not subsidized by the state.

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Thick_Piece t1_iujgxri wrote

Reply to Accurate by seanner_vt2

Reducing regulations and taxes is the way forward.

It is backwards to increase taxes to subsidize housing to make it affordable.

The people who have been in charge of vermont for decades created a state where only the the rich and large corporations can afford to live here and large corporations can succeed.

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Thick_Piece t1_irpg4wo wrote

One of my employees was driving through the notch on the way to work and there was a person laying in the middle of the road taking pictures upwards.

They almost died…

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Thick_Piece t1_irftide wrote

I will take your disclaimer to heart as I have no knowledge on the matter. I was thinking of trying to figure out how to do the same with the standard deep cell marine batteries as I figure my electrician could figure out how to transfer some of the generator power over to the batteries or simply use a battery tender to do the same. Then Tesla came out with these batteries and I wondered if it was an option.

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Thick_Piece t1_irfoz6g wrote

As far as using your generator to charge it, I have a kill switch in my electrical box so I can directly connect my generator with a 220 plug.

Would it know the difference? I am curious as I wanted to get those batteries and figured I could just cycle back and forth. Use the battery until it is dead, start generator, charge batteries and have the house running on the generator.

I honestly have no clue how they work but they must know when the power is coming through the lines instead of a generator?

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