I mean, Elon has been pretty busy with X and kowtowing to tRump...
I mean, Elon has been pretty busy with X and kowtowing to tRump...
“Still love the truck though!”
This used to happen to my PC gaming joystick all the time.... in the 80s.
They’ve gone apeshit lately with all the backlinks. It’s maddening.
I can’t stop laughing at the crooked steering wheel after a U-turn. These proud owners are starting to seem like the abused partner in a relationship who still defends the abuser and sticks around for some delusional reason. It’s ridiculous.
Most expensive SUVs have caught on to that short coming and now offer glass break, interior motion and inclination sensors or some combination of the 3. I think GM added a package with all three in like 2016 or so.
I have to assume that the “peeling” of the window is because of the laminated “not bullet proof” glass. Seems like the Cybertruck continues to create more problems than it solves.
That’s one moral of this story. The other is that Cybertrucks are the shallow-hole-in-your-mattress-as-indoor-plumbing version of motor vehicles.
Another brilliant move by Elon! He invented a car so safe that even people who break in don’t get hurt!
zombies lack the fine motor skills to peel an orange, its totally safe.
I am guessing the laminated glass used on the door windows allows the “peeling.” If it were tempered glass like most cars, they would have just popped it with a spring punch.
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/Qd6Zt2LkoTu5E5to/
Well, from what I’ve heard, that window might only be indestructible on other planets?
The Cybertruck, famously marketed as the vehicle to safely ride out the zombie apocalypse in...
So is there video of the actual break-in? I’m not clicking on the two dozen links the the article that likely do not point to anything other than other Jalop stories to try to find it.
If it’s loud, then you need the noise ordinance for your city enforced. If it’s not breaking the law, then you needed to pick a better city to live in. Or not buy right next to what looks like an industrial zone right on the other side of the neighborhood. Telling other people what they can or can’t do with their land…
I am a lawyer in Florida that does this exact type of law (community associations). Your description of the argument is spot on. I expect we will see many HOA’s make the same argument to force owners to battle it out in court.
Not even that. The HOA has to change their bylaws to reflect the change for existing homeowners. The Legislature can’t pass any laws that will modify an existing contract unless the contract itself has verbiage that updates the contract to comply with changing laws.
Sounds like my HOA, and a big part of why it wasn’t a deterrent to buying here. We have pretty thin rules, and I don’t mind dealing with the ones we have, so there were no life adjustments I needed to make. In order to change anything, including the HOA dues, it requires a 70% approval in each district (there are 9…
This thread sent me down a rabbit hole. Apparently the Kaufman dudes were condominum renters, and sometime after they had established contracts with tenants a law was passed that allowed periodic rent adjustments commensurate with the consumer price index.