preacher4truth
Active Member
With an electric plug-in cars, I see this as tantamount to pulling up to the school district's gas pump (remembering back to the days when school districts had bus fleets).
Yup.
:thumbs: :laugh:
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With an electric plug-in cars, I see this as tantamount to pulling up to the school district's gas pump (remembering back to the days when school districts had bus fleets).
Your kidding right!?! Go take a look at all the batteries in a hybred car then look at a single cell phone battery.I can't see it as being that serious. Maybe I'm being blind, but I don't think so. Someone asked earlier if it is also stealing to charge your cell phone or tablet at an office or the public library, for example. Everyone does that and neither asks nor does anyone say anything -- most don't anyway.
So, if you can charge your phone without a second thought, why not your car, which isn't taking any more electricity than the smart phone is?
Takes $2-$4 to fully charge an electric car.Your kidding right!?! Go take a look at all the batteries in a hybred car then look at a single cell phone battery.
Did the man take what was not his? Yes or no?Takes $2-$4 to fully charge an electric car.
The iPhone5, for example, requires a quarter -- 25₵ -- to work for a year.
So it's more. In perspective, quite a bit more. But it costs much less to charge up an electric car than it does to drive it from the Missouri state line to the Oklahoma state line on the Kansas Turnpike, for example.
God bless you too, brother.Finally, something upon which we can agree. :thumbs:
I see you edited this. Too late, though. Ah, well...............................
Oh, you finally asked one. Third edit, right? (I posted the other two, in case you forgot.)Ah well. Answer the question.
From the technical aspect -- that is, does the power belong to him -- yes he "stole." Again, we're talking five cents, and yes, taking five cents is still stealing. There is no reasonable way to justify this, particularly if there was any past history of him being asked not to plug in at the school, or if the cop told him he was stealing and he chose to stay plugged in. But that isn't the case. The police officer told him he was stealing, he unplugged, and then two weeks later is served at his front door with an arrest warrant. This, Aaron, is the height of ridiculousness.Did the man take what was not his? Yes or no?
With an electric plug-in cars, I see this as tantamount to pulling up to the school district's gas pump (remembering back to the days when school districts had bus fleets).