There is much less concern among drivers to make sure their cars are “green” than to make sure their cars are bulletproof.
Armormax founder and CEO Mark Burton says customers are investing money to make sure their car parts are bulletproof, a trend that has emerged in the past year and a half. According to Burton, “At that time we were doing about 85% of our business here in the United States for foreign clients, and now that has completely changed.”
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Democrats have spent more time focusing on charging EVs than charging violent criminals, and the result is an increase in crime in 2020 that hasn’t returned to normal levels three years later. It’s no surprise that residents of cities experiencing this increase are a little fond of how easily glass windows are broken by bullets.
Electric vehicles, meanwhile, are an afterthought for car owners. Only 4% of people own an electric vehicle and only 12% of drivers are “seriously thinking” about buying one. This comes as both the state of California and the Biden administration try to force people to buy electric cars over the next decade.
Bulletproofing your car to ensure you’re safe driving around Baltimore can be expensive, but so is an electric car. Why pay more for a more unreliable form of transportation when you could use that money on bulletproof windows?
This is the calculation many drivers make. The abstract threat of climate change is far less real than the tangible threat of a career criminal shooting up your car in a major city. Who knows? Maybe Elon Musk can put another spin on those “bulletproof” Cybertruck windows.
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