zhathras13
zhathras
zhathras13

I hate to say it, but I don’t think the judge is entirely wrong for deciding there is not a conflict of interest here. While Media Matters wants to make the link between this affecting Musk through X means it will affect Tesla - when you look at the actual evidence - ie. look at all of the completely bonkers things

You can make the motions. but something tells me you do not have the money to pay for the level of lawyers you would need to make that even remotely sound like a valid legal case (and if it does not even sound plausible, you will likely also wind up paying for the other sides lawyers due to judicial sanctions.)

I find it finny that everyone is wanting to blame the cruise ship or their passengers - when the fault entirely lies with the government agency that runs the port.

Nice to know that their definition of comfortable does NOT include if you are 6ft tall in the back seat. The CR-V hybrid was crossed off our list because I literally cannot sit in the back seat of that vehicle without my head hitting the roof (because the hybrid does not have a trim that does not have a moonroof)

The plug-in hybrid is a great idea. The Volt was an OK car built by a crappy manufacturer. I took an honest look at the Volt - found it to be uncomfortable, cheap feeling, and made by a company I didn’t feel was verry trustworthy and decided to go in another direction.

As a reminder - lots of companies patent things they don’t actually have any plans of using. If they have an idea that they think might somehow be worth something to someone, and it has not already been patented, they will file a patent for it.

The thing is while greyscales are less likely to to be the color a given customer would prefer, they are far less likely to be a color that a given customer hates.

While it is an interesting idea, one of the major problems is who owns those utility poles. Depending on where you are those could be owned by one of the utilities (which utility depends on the location), or by the city - which means all sorts of red tape in getting anything like that put up.

Bradley appears to be unable to write article titles that are not clickbait exaggerations to the point of being outright lies.

Bradley appears to be unable to write article titles that are not clickbait exaggerations to the point of being outright lies.

Members of the U.S. Supreme Court have just voted down legislation

Generally they have specific rules that once the podium has occurred, the results are set for that race - disqualifications after the race podium has been set will not change it.

Only offering refunds for the Base Eggs and Base NFTs (value in Etherium - which is of course worth less dollar value than when when the NFTs were sold) and if you take that refund you are also giving up any claims for the ZOO tokens or Hybrid NFTs (which they are not offering anything for)

According to the lawsuit, it was late in the evening with no traffic, he had just gone through a light he had slowed down to get the green for - then shortly after thought he had missed a turn, so let off the gas so he could try to read one of the dark side-street signs.

At that time the cop came up on him at a higher

By way of comparison, the Channel Tunnel - which is actually three 35 mile tunnels run parallel to each other  - was dug in 6 years....

Except the demographics of the study also show that the Republicans you rail against were actually more likely to know about the EV credits than the general public...

Of course the proposed solution is “leave it up to NASCAR.”

Of course, the Jan 6 rioters actually had permits for the assembly.

Batteries are more expensive than all of those parts - the batteries in an EV start at around $9k (currently around $140/kwh)

Of course, the property owner is going to be on the hook for the fines - and will have to sue “X” for the damages.