“It must be because of M.I.T., my relationship with M.I.T., very smart. I say, 'What would happen if the boat sank from its weight and you’re in the boat and you have this tremendously powerful battery, and the battery is now underwater, and there’s a shark that’s approximately 10 yards over there?” Trump said. “By the way, lot of shark attacks lately. Did you notice that?”

In land locked NEVADA.

    • @RaoulDook
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      735 months ago

      The electric boats that Obama is making us use are dangerous because of the weight of the batteries, and this will cause all boaterists to be dead from shark attacks. Should be obvious to all Americans who know what’s going on.

      • @erp
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        105 months ago

        Yes, I’m something of a motorboaterist myself…

      • @eltrain123
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        95 months ago

        Wait til he finds out aircraft carriers are made out of metal and concrete…

        It’s not about how heavy they are, it’s about buoyancy. Fortunately, the engineers building boats aren’t as dumb as him.

    • @jordanlundOPM
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      255 months ago

      I guess? Electric boats are heavier because of the batteries? 🤔 Hard to tell where he was going with this.

      • mad_asshatter
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        175 months ago

        🤔 Hard to tell where he was is ever going with this.

    • @Wrench
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      105 months ago

      I’m guessing he was told to mention that lithium batteries can explode if water gets in as a talking point against EVs, and his brain went to boats and sharks.

      On a related note, I suspect all of his rants against using teleprompters (and his own lashing out at venues because his teleprompter was broken) is because his eyes have degraded to the point he can’t read them anymore. So these rants are him trying to hit his talking points from memory because he physically can’t follow a script any more.

      • @CheeseNoodle
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        35 months ago

        Uplifting tangentially related note. Both the US and China (and soon a lot of other places) are already starting to produce sodium batteries (in actual products not just in labs) that sacrifice a bit of capacity for being way less volatile, require no or little rare earth metals and are less prone to discharging over time.

        • @[email protected]
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          35 months ago

          I’m for EVs, but solid state batteries are more promising for mobile applications. Sodium is a pretty big risk in water too.

          Sails or onboard generation (wind and solar) are also an interesting solution on these huge ships. But the main problem is producing goods unnecessarily far from consumers so save a few dollars (subsidized by the environment).

        • Adderbox76
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          35 months ago

          borderline illiterateness

          I’m sorry. But I have to. I’m sure you’re a very smart person, and you speak well, and that this is likely just a tiny little oversight in an otherwise fine and literate mind.

          But the irony of not knowing that it’s actually “illiteracy” and not “illiterateness” is just a little too funny not to at least poke a bit of fun at.

    • @frubikon
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      5 months ago

      It’s about the cost overrun of the Gerald Ford class carriers electromagnetic launch catapults where he demanded the switch back to steam and the naval architects laughing at him. His grudge devolved into this abstract hypothetical concept of him sitting on the catapult capacitors and getting zapped when the aircraft carrier sinks because of all its weight.