ajaxwidow
Ash
ajaxwidow

But don’t you think these are classic Tesla / Musk moves / logical fallacies? What I mean is scenarios in which they assume something hasn’t been done before because everyone else is an idiot, instead of considering that other very sophisticated auto manufacturers who literally spend every waking moment thinking about

What is this “testing” you speak of? Tesla is a tech company, a la “move fast and break things”*, not a car company.
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* doesn’t actually “move fast”, introduces promised new models years late, sometimes never

That’s not a dumb question.

Others will be wet sanding theirs every weekend to keep the surface rust at bay and swear up and down they’ve done nothing and it’s still perfect. 

This looks good to you??

Of course Tesla does extensive testing. That’s what their customers are doing now.

It’s impossible to pin down on only the descriptive “not too hard to form”.

“test-ing...? What is this word???”

Well you can never escape the industrial fallout all over the roads, so I guess this was doomed from the drawing board?

Learned something new today. Thanks!

It seemed to work fine for the DeLorean, so there’s that.

Others are in favor of their Cybertrucks developing orange stains, saying that they’re looking forward to the patina the stainless steel may develop.

Ok he may have cheaped out on the stainless steel here, but when the time comes to go to Mars I’m sure he’ll use nothing but the best materials.

(the most unnecessary /s ever)

How did Tesla start selling these without testing this? Every vehicle I know of spends time in an accelerated corrosion environment before being sold to customers.

“feel the adrenaline of free fall at 13,000 feet above sea level.”

More accurately, it costs the people who pay cash or don’t have cards with rewards programs. Being poor is expensive!

But not personally. You pay those marked up prices no matter what. Plus, even cash isn’t free to a merchant. There’s security, handling, and theft costs associated with cash they don’t incur with credit cards. 

Most boomers and conservatives like people who “say it as it is.” It doesn’t matter if what they are saying is accurate.

The best part is, all that cash back literally costs me nothing as I haven’t paid a dime of interest in 15 years or so.”

Dave Ramsey is a boomer tool.  He friggen hates credit cards--even for those that are able to control their spending and take advantage of the protections and potential rewards/benefits they provide.  Plus, he thinks 15 year mortgages are actually a realistic option; when it absolutely isn’t given today’s wages and