So have the military cut its own throat? That will never happen. The CIA themselves own huge stock in oil co.s among others even health care cos. Car manufacturers could build cars that ran on ocean water or magnets. BUT What do you think would happen if all the sudden there was no longer a need for oil? A lot of pissed off powerful people? All you have to do is look at a map and you can see the military strategy involved. Since 911 they have taken a particular Interest in Central Asian energy. Iran is next. Oil is here to stay.Because the military has already made a huge commitment to help market it. They are guarding pipelines through Afghanistan and Iraq everyday.
Global energy security =/= Investments in oil companies.
This tired old debate needs to be brought out to pasture and put down. Oil is a global security threat, threatening every single nation on the planet. If U.S. forces had ignored the oil producers in the Middle East and had let them be captured or destroyed, the world would have delved into chaos and the wars in the Middle East would have looked like children playing in sandbox.
Alternatives to combustion engines certainly exist, but it's about economics, and those alternatives are not economically viable at the moment for one reason or another.
Batteries and EVs in general (specifically their price, pre-subsidy) are still too expensive and inefficient to take down combustion engines, and not to mention the fact that there is no electric grid on the planet to the best of my knowledge that could handle ubiquity of EVs, and on that note, EV's are charged almost entirely by fossil fuel generated electricity, so EV's merely shift the burden elsewhere.
Nuclear is not a boogey man. There are designs for reactors that could (at scale) be made efficiently and have 0% risk of any nuclear meltdown like we are familiar with. Thorium reactors are a proven technology, and yes, their byproducts remain radioactive (and far less so than conventional materials) for mere hundreds of years. This isn't even to mention fusion, which is also an inherently safe technology that hasn't received nearly enough governmental focus and is actually the future of energy, not your solar and wind. Fusion is also believed, with the proper materials, to be capable of miniaturization and scaling, meaning potentially operating vehicles, think planes and ships, homes, remote outposts, etc. Fusion in principle works the issue has been always that we lack the materials to conduct it and produce more energy than we put in. That is quickly changing thanks to many developments in science ranging from magnets, artificial intelligence, super materials like graphene, etc etc that weren't even imaginable at the turn of the century.
Solar and wind are stopgaps at best, and at worst, failed government subsidy programs that are mis-allocating funds.
The reality is the markets are changing and there are hundreds of alternatives to fossil fuels popping up every day, it's only time before economics kicks in and they become successful financially, government policies be damned. Take a toke and realize that things aren't as dire as many would like to have you believe. There's an insane amount of technology being worked on that would blow your minds if you spent 30 minutes a day reading about it as I do. Humans have always been driven by necessity, and our transition away from our environmental practices will be no different.
Oh yeah, and I'm a conservative leaning independent. To the OP, don't be so quick to throw an entire constituency, many of whom support alternatives to fossil fuels, into the same boat. Based on your rhetoric you clearly voted for Hillary the "Deplorables" Clinton. It's your kind of black and white thinking that has ravaged the Democratic Party and precluded me and many like me from offering support. The average American is and has been always centrist, and the sooner our politics stops moving to either extreme, progress will be made.