An actual ban would (of course) mean you couldn’t buy one for any of the millions of homes with gas hookups, which of course you can. Let’s not pretend you don’t know the difference between a state banning the sale of a particular item and trying to discourage it’s future use by building new kitchens without gas. If NY and CA go through …
An actual ban would (of course) mean you couldn’t buy one for any of the millions of homes with gas hookups, which of course you can. Let’s not pretend you don’t know the difference between a state banning the sale of a particular item and trying to discourage it’s future use by building new kitchens without gas. If NY and CA go through with strictly not allowing any new homes to be built with kitchen gas hookups (I’m skeptical), then there will still be millions of existing ones, which many people might prefer over the gas-less ones, potentially forcing a reversal of the policy. And the idea anyone would come and take your gas stove is even more ridiculous than the idea you couldn’t buy one. But if those who wish to fight culture wars couldn’t misconstrue or take things out of context they wouldn’t have much to complain about.
An actual ban would (of course) mean you couldn’t buy one for any of the millions of homes with gas hookups, which of course you can. Let’s not pretend you don’t know the difference between a state banning the sale of a particular item and trying to discourage it’s future use by building new kitchens without gas. If NY and CA go through with strictly not allowing any new homes to be built with kitchen gas hookups (I’m skeptical), then there will still be millions of existing ones, which many people might prefer over the gas-less ones, potentially forcing a reversal of the policy. And the idea anyone would come and take your gas stove is even more ridiculous than the idea you couldn’t buy one. But if those who wish to fight culture wars couldn’t misconstrue or take things out of context they wouldn’t have much to complain about.