So much if the transition to electric power in transportation the more your economy is tied to the grid the more the economy is interrupted by the grid when it goes down. And it will go down.
What happens when the grid goes down due to a massive hurricane or tornado and your cars are electric, freight transports are electric, emergency vehicles are electric, school busses are electric, and farm equipment is electric?
I will be one of the last to switch away from fuel based transportation because of the above. It doesn't make good sense to be overly invested in one source of energy for your individual survival.
One of my bosses just got back from Europe - 300 mph train, ticket was $40 from Paris to Antwerp (I think).
All buses and taxis are electric. Fares are less than half of what they are here.
More than a couple of big rigs running the roads in the US are electric and more are coming in the months ahead.
What you either dismiss offhand or ignore entirely is that there are more than a couple of ways to generate electricity in a renewable manner. Everybody I know gases up before a storm now - prepping an EV is no different, and for people that have them that’s what emergency generators are for. Tornadoes typically don’t wipe out whole cities, and hurricanes usually only cause extensive city-wide damage to coastal towns. That’s the cost of living on the coast and most accept it.
You won’t be alone - they’ll be plenty of people driving gas vehicle unless they outlaw them, which they may but not in our lifetimes; the rest of us just won’t ever be in line or waiting around for an oil change. People will, as they always have, set their priorities as they see fit.