There is a 0% chance Tesla beats Amazon, Microsoft, or Alphabet to the trillion dollar club. But, judging by the rest of your comment, at least there seems to be an excellent drug stockpile in the future.
There is a 0% chance Tesla beats Amazon, Microsoft, or Alphabet to the trillion dollar club. But, judging by the rest of your comment, at least there seems to be an excellent drug stockpile in the future.
That can potentially make a $25,000 Subaru Forrester cost $31,250, for a car that has no additional equipment.
“Republicans: We believe in _________.*”
Can the requirements be enforced through taxes?
Republicans - “We believe in states rights.*”
CARB was created to regulate CA’s emissions. Other states signed on because they wanted to follow the same standards. Has nothing to do with CA wanting to control the country.
I bought a Nash Metropolitan a while back in Arizona, which I shipped back to Japan... I trailered it and the one thing people don’t think about when buying such a car: it doesn’t really fit on regular U-Haul trailers! It was SUPER tight and I got lucky that it fitted, half of each tire was in the air on the ramps.…
76.4 percent of commuters drive to work alone. The Suburban defenders may be right about the vehicle’s versatility, but the odds are not in their favor that those vehicles are being used that way most of the time.
If he GTFO twice, does that mean he’s back where he started?
“Elon Musk has been sleeping on the factory floor“
I find it funny everyone went from ‘Tesla will never build 5k a week, Tesla is a failure’ to ‘that factory is very dirty, Tesla is a failure’.
Everyone will lose. Don’t think about FA, think about the supply chain.
Do you mean ‘блять’?
Or remove one of the seats and install a .50-cal machine gun for the ultimate Mad Max craziness. Actually, I was somewhat surprised the sticker is the only sign of his ammohumping-ness.
Keep hitting it with the log.
Scroll.
Your entire argument falls apart when you realize that California isn’t enforcing those standards on other states.
You seem confused. Of course the federal government has the right to pass a standard. But so does California, unless there is explicit or implicit preemption in federal law preventing it from doing so. The fact that California’s higher standards and disparate buying power are dictating what is sold in other states is…