Yeah, but you can sell your F-150 or Silverado any day of the week without Elmo threatening to sue your ass into oblivion.
Yeah, but you can sell your F-150 or Silverado any day of the week without Elmo threatening to sue your ass into oblivion.
But he could have resold the others.
I am going to assume that if he had bought an F150, that yes he may have been in the same situation and he would have sold it. The difference is that Ford is not going to fine him for doing so
How can anyone justify this treatment? How can people continue to make excuses for such an objectively flawed and compromised vehicle?
Let’s hope the glue doesn’t unglue when brake fluid leaks. People buying cybertrucks are seriously stupid and have a bad case of worshipping at the altar of the fraudster.
Wow, so Tesla couldn’t even find a bracket at Home Depot.
wait hold on: you mean you need brakes? doesnt everyone automatically get out of the way? shocking.
Which begs the question: what should the rest of us do if we see a CT on the road with us?
especially if you have and or picking up kids and other people that don’t know and just graze the sides of it and then have to take them to the ER. That it completely unacceptable.
Wow, they can’t even do brakes right. I’m not really that surprised, but the incompetence is stunning, even though it shouldn’t be by now.
You would have to have some sort of Stockholm Syndrome to find the CT an acceptable product.
It’s about fucking time. Musk is like Trump in that doesn’t think he should ever have consequences for his bad actions.
Scrooge McDuck never messed up his companies. Elon doesn’t even have the right to sniff Scrooge’s spats.
Let’s be clear, he had nothing to do with actually making the rockets or their ability to land other than paying the people who did the actual work.
Elon absolutely amazes me for how he’s trashed his own reputation. He’s gone from being Tony Stark: “Yes, I can make rockets simultaneously land on their tails.”
I’m guessing they don’t have much of a chance as it’s not explicitly written into a buying agreement, but they should have more. Companies get way too much latitude in their advertising, and Tesla takes it to the extreme. Calling their product full self drive shouldn’t be allowed to begin with.
I get it, this act of piloting a vehicle is quite complex, and developing technology to replicate that is hard. But to deliberately fleece 1000s of owners with the promise that “it’s just around the corner” for nearly ten years? Yeah, you’re cheating people at that point.
Tesla Cybertrucks garner a whole lot of attention, and apparently, one guy who bought his stainless steel behemoth didn’t realize that.
Saw one in the Costco parking lot yesterday. They look so much worse in person.
Whether he wants to admit it or not, buying this monstrosity IS an attention seeking move.