As a French, I had previously no opinion on Tesla and I could have bought one. I saw it as a geeky, high-end stuff.
But those days I see owning a Tesla as activism (probably unconsciously). I would preferably buy any another brand rather than being flagged as an Elon-fan in my neighborhood.
Out of interest is it his role in American politics or his interference in European politics or other things that you find more annoying.
I and British. I do not really feel there is much political significance in what car you buy, but I am definitely annoyed by his attempts to influence British politics (offering a political party a huge donation if they allowed an extremist to join - they turned him down).
Well, to me, he used to represent technological ambition, impossible achievements made real. Now he represents foreign interference, social violence and neo fascism. And we, European (and especially French people), have a very very low tolerance for social violence and fascism.
As someone who lived in the sud-ouest during the yellow vests protests, "very very low tolerance for social violence" is...not my general impression of the French people.
(Low tolerance for fascism, yes, obviously. But "social violence" is pretty much what passes for entertainment on a Saturday morning)
Social violence describes the gutting of social security, healthcare systems etc to the detriment of primarily the most vulnerable. Not the fact that people protest, however violently. It's just not the right vocabulary.
I don't know if that's entirely fair. France is staunchly secular, more so than most of its European counterparts. I could be wrong, but I don't think you can wear a crucifix or other religious symbol in French schools either.
I don't view political organization as violence, I view it as a healthy democracy - even if the country or people don't agree with the conclusions of that group of people. It is healthy that they feel comfortable expressing their wants and needs to the people with power to change it.
What Elon is doing in the US isn't organizing or demanding the system to be better; it's taking control of the system and saying he can do better.
The French are the European experts on social violence (and I am French)...
In fact OP's comment somewhat shows the often noxious atmosphere in France. Here in the UK I see Teslas everywhere and people don't say or do anything (maybe they comment on the neighbour's new Tesla at home but they are polite in public in a very British way, and criminal damage is a serious crime...) In France I can believe that a Tesla owner may fear that their car will be vandalised or that some random people might throw insults at them in the street if Tesla is labeled the wrong way...
Edit: TBH, I wouldn't even say that there is a low tolerance for fascism because historically and to this day, economic interventionism, strong state, strong leader, political violence, tendency towards authoritarism, social conservatism have been big part of the culture. That is balanced by a tendency towards anarchism at the same time...
At least in the UK the license plate lets you know when the car was registered, so it's simple to tell if they bought the Tesla before Elon went off the cliff fully. I'm not going to begrudge anyone who doesn't sell their car, my judgement is reserved for the people buying them now
It's harmless, it's a 6 month window. Number plate:
XX24 - registered between 1 Mar 2024 - 31 Aug 2024
XX74 - registered between 1 Sep 2024 - 28 Feb 2025
XX25 - registered between 1 Mar 2025 - 31 Aug 2025
etc
The first two letters of a number plate identifies the location where the vehicle was registered. For example, LA – LY covers London and MA – MY covers Manchester and Merseyside. Nothing personally identifying whatsoever.
If you're truly paranoid about such things you can always buy a car registered hundreds of miles from your residence, and in practice with an abundance of second-hand (used) cars in the marketplace from across all the UK, there's always a huge variety of registration letters driving about anyway!
Not the OP, but to me it's all of it. Just the nazi salutes would be enough for me not to buy Teslas (or StarLink), but at this point I would avoid any US car.
Well. the Wikipedia article on Henry Ford has a whole section entitled "Antisemitism" which starts "Ford was a conspiracy theorist" and details Nazi links.
So, what else is new in the world of Car Company tycoons?
See, the critical thing is, Henry Ford is, thankfully, very, very dead. Ford, the modern company, is not run by a 150 year old zombie bigot. It's a very different situation.
There's no such thing as a "genuine Musk heart goes out", there's only random shit people do in over-excited election result moments, in front of crowds. He's saying "thank you" while slapping his heart and mentioning his heart. It's on the level of cognitive malfunction not to understand this, or else, trolling.
It’s odd how Musk never seems to have that awkwardness cause him to make other random gestures which don’t look like Nazi salutes.
Similarly, while it’s true that the ADL tried to excuse it, that’s the opinion of their controversial new president and is far from a consensus position. Many other people, including their former national director, did describe it as a fascist salute:
Most tellingly, of course, is that extremists all over the world recognized and celebrated rated it. The whole “Roman salute” excuse started as a claim by Musk’s connection to the Italian far-right, apparently hoping that American audiences didn’t know that was a fascist symbol:
> Musk himself mocked those accusing him, threatened to sue, and has made jokes about raising his arm the wrong way. Nazi saluters don't do that, they're proud to nazi salute that's the point. But I suppose if you hate Musk you'll cling to your story even with evidence supporting the contrary.
This is simply intellectual dishonesty: while they say they’re joking, that doesn’t mean that they’re being honest when they do so, that other people are not allowed to disagree with that excuse, that the only motivation for disagreement is some personal hatred for Musk, or that personal opinions constitute incontrovertible evidence which cannot be argued.
A self-reflected sane person would see how that gesture in that context can be misinterpreted and would have avoided it in the first place. It's not like you can't express throwing your heart out only in this way.
So I guess it was deliberate. Deliberate to look like and walk like a sieg heil, only missing the quack. Maybe a provocation, but an unnecessary one and provoking with Nazi symbolism is completely unacceptable.
Surely you're having a laugh presenting that argument?
He's literally in the middle of saying "thank you"... that's what's coming out his mouth. Nobody in history has given nazi salutes while expressing elated smiling, laughing gratitude to cheering crowds, who in turn are not saluting back or even in the same universe as your nazi claim.
German here. He directly and openly supported the far-right AfD party in the last election by publicly asking people to vote for them, and by holding a video-call audience with the party leadership.
I don't care who votes what, but I certainly do not like when people who do not live here and do not have to deal with any consequences of an election result try do to election interference.
Clearly, if you want to buy a Tesla because of "Ecology" and "the Planet", there is no reason to do so anymore as your purchase directly funds the exact opposite of what you want to achieve. Same with superchargers.
Because he forwards political causes in the US and abroad that are vehemently anti-global warming and anti environmental protection in general (among other things...). This will likely more than undo any contributions he's theoretically made.
He's a co-president with Trump recently forbidding mentioning climate change in documents, destroying ecology research, pushing energy policy EO supporting fossil fuel producers, and dumping federal EVs and existing chargers in the buildings. It looks like he just cares about the profit from EVs and completely disregards the environment part.
The richer Elon Musk gets, the more he (appears) to use that wealth to skew politics towards anti-"eco" policies. By giving Trump an unprecedented $250 million during the 2024 election, he may have even been the deciding factor in funding some of the advertising that led people to decide to vote Trump, or to stay home instead of vote for Harris.
And needless to say, Trump's policies on the environment ("drill baby drill") don't exactly align with the hippie stereotype of electric car buyers ("no more oil").
He was literally and directly funding targeted advertising that told people in Muslim areas that Harris supported Israel and in Jewish dominated areas that she supported Hamas.
He was working with Stephen Miller, one of the crazier members of Trump's team (no easy achievement), on this.
fwiw microtargeting ads is extremely common, all presidential campaigns for the past 20 years at least have been doing this. If you're not cynical about ~everyone in politics you're probably drinking too much microtargeted kool-aid (your favorite flavor!):
A CNN investigation found that Vice President Kamala Harris is running contradictory ads about the war in Israel, depending on where you live.
If you live in Michigan, a state with a dense Muslim-American population, you will see ads about how she supports the relief efforts in Gaza, where she says she "will not be silent."
The Michigan ad states: "What has happened in Gaza in the past nine months in devastating, we cannot allow ourselves to become numb to the suffering," Harris is quoted in the ad.
If you drive East to Pennsylvania and flip on a television, you'll see the vice president at a different podium in an ad saying: "Let me be clear, I will always stand up for Israel's right to defend itself, and I will always ensure Israel's ability to defend itself."
For the second ad, taken from her DNC speech, the part where she advocates for peace in Gaza was edited out. CNN reports it was taken out so her message could be more strongly accepted by Jewish voters in Pennsylvania.
> Which is odd as it directly goes against his own interests.
His recent interest is power. He can use that for profit later in many different ways - he's working on firing people who wanted to investigate his idea of using X as a payment network, for example.
I mean, that hasn't changed in the last quarter so people buying Teslas before had already come to terms with the fact that they were buying an unreliable luxury vehicle they can't get rid of...
I know it’s a ceo playtoy but for me the cybertruck with its design quirks killed the brand for me. They are so many idiotic decisions on the truck that I just don’t trust the engineering and design teams anymore. I was driving with a colleague and we had to clean the headlights every 40 minutes because of snow…
> Tesla has consistently ranked low in CR's reliability surveys:
> In the 2021 Brand Report Card, Tesla ranked 16th out of 32 brands, down from 11th in 2020.
> In 2022, Tesla ranked 23rd out of 28 brands with a reliability score of 39 out of 100.
> J.D. Power:
> In the 2023 U.S. Vehicle Dependability Study, Tesla had 242 issues per 100 vehicles, significantly above the industry average of 186, placing it 28th out of 32 brands.
> RepairPal:
> Tesla vehicles average 171 mechanical issues per 100 vehicles, compared to the industry average of around 120.
> 27th out of 28 brands in CR's reliability study (BusinessInsider.com and InsideEVs.com).
Elon vs Reform UK is extremely funny, because Reform is the wholly owned pet project of Richard Tice. A local real estate guy who's a mere millionaire and unimpressed at a foreign billionaire trying to run him over with superior money.
Nah, it's even funnier than that. It's majority owned by Farage the guy Elon wanted to oust, with Tice holding the rest, because as you say he's a money man whose pet project is giving Farage power.
Also, even Farage's most implacable opponents would concede that he's by far the most effective campaigning MP in the UK, as well as an avid Trump supporter, so dumping him would be a hilarious own goal if it was even possible especially when it's dumping him for not endorsing a football hooligan. It would also be history repeating itself since Farage's old party went from winning elections to being a complete irrelevance when Farage "retired" and the hooligans joined...
I thought he wanted Farage to let Tommy Robinson join reform in return for a large donation.
> It would also be history repeating itself since Farage's old party went from winning elections to being a complete irrelevance when Farage "retired" and the hooligans joined
IIRC the trigger for Farage to leave that party (he had already resigned as leader) was the new party leader wanted to form an alliance with Tommy Robinson's lot.
He wanted Farage to bend all the way over. Farage refused so Elon tried to oust him, completely misunderstanding that the Reform party is Farage. It'd be like if Elon had gotten in a spat with Trump during the election and tried to swap him out for Vivek as the head of MAGA.
It's remarkable how much both Trump and Farage are cults of personality. I don't think they could easily be replaced. I wonder if Brexit would have happened if Farage hadn't survived his plane crash? Or would the media elect another figurehead to put on all the talk shows?
> I wonder if Brexit would have happened if Farage hadn't survived his plane crash? Or would the media elect another figurehead to put on all the talk shows?
Seeing as the difference was 1.89%, even marginally less effective campaigning would've doubtless resulted in a vote to remain in the EU.
Farage is quite reasonable on many policy positions also and reflects the views of quite a lot of the British public who would prefer traditional values, less immigration and the like. While I don't think I'd vote for him personally he has a good chance of being the next PM.
I think its also that people greatly dislike the big parties, and have turned away from the Blair/Cameron "centrist" consensus.
AT the last election the parties that got the biggest increases in their share of the vote were Reform and Green. Two very different parties and they have little in common other than not being Labour or the Conservatives. I suspect they would have done even better without a FPTP system.
Yeah, they're quite _different_. I'd call Farage very good at what he does (lying, largely), but he doesn't have the same sort of cult of personality as Trump (or for that matter Musk).
I'm British and think Elon Musk does a lot of cool things. I don't really care about what he does in American politics, I actually think the idea that government needs to stop wasting money is a good thing.
But he tries to influence European/British politics without living here, often believing mistruths or things out of context. Americans moan (rightfully so) when Europeans try get involved in their politics, but are happy to do the reverse.
Regarding Tesla, the UK/EU is going to make zero effort to protect Tesla from Chinese imports that the US will. Musk has burned that bridge.
> I don't really care about what he does in American politics.
You should. Whether you like it or not, what he is doing in the US is going to affect you one way or another, irrespective of his meddling in UK politics. Even if he focused his attention solely on US, the world is connected and particularly the US/European relationship has been one of the defining features of geopolitics over the last 70 years. Musk and company are basically dismantling this relationship.
The current US administration will profoundly alter the relationships between countries and power blocks for the foreseeable future. The US will cease being a reliable partner for it's old allies the UK included.
Musk was doing many cool things, but currently his focus seems to be to dismantle democracy, and this should definitely worry you if you value freedom.
Not previous user, but as an Italian I am genuinely worried about how powerful and dangerous Elon is. The man effectively controls a good bunch of the telecom and space capabilities of the most powerful country in the world and its allies.
I want to have nothing to do with any of his businesses, socials, services and I'm extremely worried about doge and his presence in the US administration.
The person completely lacks any empathy, it's a full blown sociopath. His politics are just a reflection of his deep psychological malaise.
I have not driven the Mercedes but I have driven the Ioniq. It was a very nice vehicle. The showstopper for me was that it had no rear wiper. This seems like a minor thing, but I live in a part of New England where half of the roads are unpaved and during the winter the paved roads are heavily salted, so a wiper really is a necessity. The newest model now has this, but I already pulled the trigger on a new vehicle.
I ended up buying a Chevy Bolt during its final model year. This may be more of a reflection of my own history of buying inexpensive vehicles, but it is the best vehicle I have ever owned. I could not get over the price of the Ioniq. I just needed something that got me from point A to point B, and I wanted something that did so without gasoline. The Bolt far surpassed my requirements, and it was affordable. Honestly, I avoided American-made vehicles for a long time, having had bad experiences with the unreliability of a sequence of Dodges and Fords when I was younger. The Bolt changed my opinion about Chevrolet, although the CarPlay situation is pretty tragic…
FWIW, we bought an Ioniq 5 last spring, live in Michigan, and the lack of a rear wiper has been a non-issue completely. However, and this is a big caveat, I like the rearview camera and never use my rearview mirror as a mirror. Some people prefer the mirror, since the camera display requires you to shift your field of view in a weird way, and if you like the mirror, then the lack of a wiper would be a big deal. For me, I completely forget there is no rear wiper, and actually prefer it now as it makes cleaning snow off a tad bit easier!
I've had an Ioniq since last spring, and while I briefly looked at the Mercedes, it was never a serious contender for me given its cost. The ioniq is awesome, though. The only complaints I have are really minor. Now, part of my love for the car is that it is my first EV, and EVs are just way better than ICE cars - except for the range issue, and we just drive around town 99% of the time, so that's a non issue. It is just so much simpler, powerful, and fun than I expected.
The ioniq 5, specifically, is great, although I kind of wish we would've waited for the 2025 model. I like physical buttons (which is one of the reason I like the Ioniq) and the 2025 model added some more. Plus it has wireless Android Auto, and a few other nice improvements.
Oh, the only actual complaint, still minor, is that it's turning radius isn't the greatest. That's really the only thing that bugs me about it.
Have no hands-on experience with EQS, other than that it stands next to my door (neighbour's), but EQS is huge, costs 2x Ionic 5, has a 100 kWh battery, aerodynamics of a brick, presumably better suspension... a completely different segment.
I way looking at Ionic 5, but it was shortly before the facelift, so I could not even configure it anymore. Got a VW ID.7, very happy with it.
To me, people who ever said or believed 'vote with your wallet' or 'consumers made their choice' then complained about boycott or people not buying/threatening not to buy specific brands are hypocritical (and those unaware of how hypocritical they are are just idiots, because it's obvious).
Count how many things you bought Made in China over the years, purchases that have been directly funding the CCP to commit actual genocide and crimes against humanity for years, then apply your anti-Tesla-owner logic to that fact, then look at the clown you see in the mirror because that's what you are with that logic when you apply it to yourself.
And with that egg on your face, hypocrites like you dare lecture people for buying a car brand, just because the company's owner raised his right arm. Two-faced cherry-picking hypocrites. You have no logical arguments, just cheap appeals to emotional manipulation. It's best to be quiet and let people assume you're stupid than talk and remove all doubt.
BTW, did you know VW, BMW, Mercedes and Porsche used slave labor in WW2? What do you say about the owners of those brands? Why don't you all hate those users too using the same logic?
> You have no logical arguments, just cheap appeals to emotional manipulation
What? i mean, people who argue for "voting with their wallet" and then crying when people do just that are not hypocritical?
It seem very factual to me, where is the appeal to emotion? Is it on the "people who can't see how hypocritical it is are idiots" ? Where is the manipulation? I truly think that, i don't see a flaw in my logic there
> BTW, did you know VW, BMW, Mercedes and Porsche used slave labor in WW2? What do you say about the owners of those brands?
Yes, as did Renault, and i own one (well, i share the ownership of one). Honestly i don't care (like i don't care about people buying Tesla or not), i don't think people should vote with their wallet, i'd rather have people go out and protest or organize, because action is better than passivity. I was never in the "consumer made their choice"/"vote with your wallet" crowd, i always tought it was a discussion closer that people used to avoid thinking about issues. I'm quite happy however than a part of that crowd show how hypocritical they are, and i try to make them remember that.
My comment wasn't aimed at you, i couldn't have known you ever said "vote with your wallet", but i make it my duty to remind people who say that they should then shut up about boycotts.
But i guess you will probably avoid responding to that comment now that you understand how wrong you are (THIS is emotional manipulation, or a bad attempt at it :D)
You must have a reading disability or are trolling in bad faith. If you could read, you would see that I referred to people hating other people just for the brands they own as NPCs. But you couldn't resist and needed to rush for a cheap shot before even reading my comment fully.
That, or your incessant self-aggrandizing misantrophy rubs me the wrong way.
In a flagged thread where you refer to others you don't agree with as having mental illnesses, you try to defend yourself by suggesting that I might have a reading disability.
Here's what an impartial LLM has to say about your replies to my arguments using the reasoning deep thinking option:
>Please read these comments below. Is fredrikholm correct or did he misinterpret what FirmwareBurner was saying? Would you say fredrikholm was arguing in good or in bad faith towards FirmwareBurner ?
>Conclusion
Fredrikholm misinterpreted what FirmwareBurner was saying. FirmwareBurner’s criticism was specific to people who judge others’ buying choices, not a blanket dismissal of everyone who cares about purchases. Fredrikholm’s sarcastic reply exaggerates and distorts this into a broader attack, missing the clarification FirmwareBurner provided in response to palata. Thus, fredrikholm did not correctly interpret FirmwareBurner’s intended meaning.
Fredrikholm’s comment leans heavily toward bad faith. The sarcastic tone, misrepresentation of FirmwareBurner’s position, and reliance on a personal jab rather than substantive rebuttal indicate a lack of sincere engagement. While online miscommunication or emotional reactions could explain some of this, the overall approach—especially ignoring the clarification and contributing nothing constructive—suggests fredrikholm was not arguing in good faith toward FirmwareBurner.
In other words, you've been caught acting as what youngsters refer to as "a roach bitch" in the comments mate.
>And yes, "you must have a reading disability" is a personal attack.
How else would you address those who attack you in a way that doesn't break the rules, when they obviously are not reading your arguments and are instead pulling made up shit out of their ass to twist the narrative in their (malicious) direction? Now suddenly I'm the bad guy for calling them out?
Here's what an impartial LLM has to say about this thread using the deep reasoning option:
>Please read these comments below. Is fredrikholm correct or did he misinterpret what FirmwareBurner was saying? Would you say fredrikholm was arguing in good or in bad faith towards FirmwareBurner ?
>Conclusion
Fredrikholm misinterpreted what FirmwareBurner was saying. FirmwareBurner’s criticism was specific to people who judge others’ buying choices, not a blanket dismissal of everyone who cares about purchases. Fredrikholm’s sarcastic reply exaggerates and distorts this into a broader attack, missing the clarification FirmwareBurner provided in response to palata. Thus, fredrikholm did not correctly interpret FirmwareBurner’s intended meaning.
Fredrikholm’s comment leans heavily toward bad faith. The sarcastic tone, misrepresentation of FirmwareBurner’s position, and reliance on a personal jab rather than substantive rebuttal indicate a lack of sincere engagement. While online miscommunication or emotional reactions could explain some of this, the overall approach—especially ignoring the clarification and contributing nothing constructive—suggests fredrikholm was not arguing in good faith toward FirmwareBurner.
And yet I'm still the bad guy here for some reason.
You point out that they're not responding to what you actually said. You do it without saying that they have mental illnesses.
You even might say "this seems like trolling; I didn't say X at all..."
And, if it's clearly trolling, you flag it.
And you leave it there.
See, the conversation isn't just you and them. The conversation is you and them and all of us reading it. And if you go more over the top, more ad hominem than they do, then the rest of us reading it see you as the unhinged one.
Don't try to win the conversation with people who are in bad faith. You can't. (Don't even try to out-insult them. You aren't going to get them to go "Oh, hey, he used a better insult than me. Maybe he's right...") Instead, try to win the readers. You can't do that by being more insulting than the one you're arguing with.
> I do care about what I buy, I just don't care what others buy and what other people think about the things that I buy. Is that clear now? You need special flavor of mental illness to care and vocalize about the shit other people buy with their own money.
Are you fine with someone buying a human slave, then?
If it harms others or me, I will tell you about it. You can ignore it from a distance, but if you tend to purchase those things, the illness is not in my head.
And yet you felt the need to inject that viewpoint into a thread where everyone is pointing out their own personal preferences and not telling others what to buy.
> You need special flavor of mental illness to ...
I did not downvote you before, because I believe it's your right not to care (even though I disagree).
But being so far away from understanding why people may care as to say that they "need special flavor of mental illness"... you are the one who seemingly needs to learn about the world.
Even if you see it as a white good and not as activism then surely the fact that the resale value will be much lower may assist your decision, unless you're being an activist and choosing the car specifically for what it stands for, no?
You're free to (legally) spend your money how you want, but other people are free to form an impression you and adjust their interactions with you as a result. The car you buy shouldn't subject you to physical violence, but it's perfectly acceptable for people to choose not to associate with you or do business with you as a result and that's a consequence of choices you make.
Do you really know that for sure? Have you asked them if they'd think less of you if you bought a Tesla now?
I judge people by their actions, not the sins of their parents. The companies you list aren't run by the same people, so your question is irrelevant. If Tesla were to toss out Musk and ensure he has no influence then people would likely stop judging Tesla owners the same way they do today.
I'm responding to your comment in a public forum - why would you specifically choose the chance of a low return on your money vs other cars unless you're specifically choosing to be an activist, that's not activism?
What's wrong with making just one moral choice? Isn't it better than making zero moral choices?
People do what they can, based on what they believe is right (which you may well disagree with), their knowledge, skills, money and time available. That may not be all that much, they might be ill informed, but it is _something_. Perfect is the enemy of good.
Not giving a cent to Elon Musk seems like a reasonable cause if you believe he's gonna use that money for nefarious things. And at least for the things he's (very) publicly involved in, it's quite easy. Most people doing nefarious things do it in the shadows, and are funded in difficult to understand ways.
People judging each other for who they support by giving them money seems fair. You make some great points about what else they would probably see as problematic. This sounds like it could be a fruitful conversation without the name calling.
> To me, a car is a white good... As long as it fulfills my needs, getting me from A to B safely and cheaply, that's all I care.
Given that the resale value is the most significant factor of "cheaply" in a £40,000 asset, a negative brand image is an important factor here - even if you consider your fellow citizens to be NPCs.
When you buy something, you do participate in the cash flow that makes the seller/builder company function.
If that company has other activities or influences that you do not agree on, boycotting is not virtue signalling, it's voting with your money.
And while protesting some system from a place built with it may not be perfect, it is still better than refraining from protesting at all, if one has reasons to.
Most people soon forget and really don't care about these things.
The Volkswagen company originated during the Third Reich in an attempt to create an affordable car for the German people. Volkswagen used both Jewish and non-Jewish forced labor, primarily from eastern Europe. The company operated four concentration camps and eight forced-labor camps on its property.
I'd argue that, as horrible as that was, it wasn't as centered in one person as famous and important as Musk. Like buying phones we know were perhaps made by people treated like slaves in China, versus buying something that is represented by one famous person that wants to bring back slavery.
Yeah the whole "people's car" was actually a Nazi memcoin rug-pull scam. They got millions of Germans to put down deposits and make payments for "future delivery" of their "people's car" but zero were ever delivered during the third reich.
People selling their Teslas afraid of associating with Musk is the topic here and the point I'm making is that the current political climate around this company will be a footnote in history that most people will care little about (if not already).
This too shall pass, frankly I think it's a form of cringe virtue signaling.
It's also a form of collective punishment, "I won't buy Tesla because I don't like Elon" is certainly a valid opinion, but what about all the workers who have nothing to do with his politics?
> but what about all the workers who have nothing to do with his politics?
This is a preposterous argument, I'm sorry. Should I feel sorry for people who enable Musk's antics? Why? They get paid very well to work for him I'm sure.
I disagree with Musk's antics and as such I'm not going to give him money. What's so difficult to understand about this?
I don't care that in 20 years time he'll be forgotten. We are here and now, and the best way to send him a message that what he is doing is not OK is by hurting his wallet.
You're sending a message to Elon about as much as sending a message to Mars Inc by not buying a Snickers bar.
Sending "real" messages is more than not buying things from companies or people you don't like and then virtue signaling about it online from the comfort of your armchair.
And now it's a public company with a CEO so obscure that he _does not even have a wikipedia page_. "Oh, well, Ford and VW used to be run by evil bastards most of a century ago so it's improper to point out that Tesla currently is" is a bizarre argument.
Apart from the political implications, it certainly doesn't help that European news are full of reports that Tesla cars place last in national reliability rankings for EVs.
I'm Spanish and I've seen many friends dismiss Tesla because of this notion of their cars being cheaply made and because most people here live in flats, and the shared garages don't have sockets for charging them. Many people are leaning towards hybrid vehicles with autonomous features like Hyundai. The suscription model for a car also plays a big role.
If you can't charge an electric car, you shouldn't take a hybrid either, it's the same problem. If you only charge the battery when braking the overall CO2 footprint over the lifecycle of the car is higher than if you had a thermal vehicle.
The reason is a combination of markedly higher CO2-equivalent emissions for manufacturing (two motors instead of one + big battery), increased weight for the same reason which causes an increase in fuel consumption + elevated tire/brakes degradation + decommissioning of the car causes more emissions. And this doesn't include the other negative externalities such as the ecological impact of the additional metal and rare earth extraction.
Hybrid cars only make sense from a CO2 perspective if you charge them and drive exclusively on electricity inside cities, with only an occasional fuel refill before long distance trips.
No, good hybrid drivetrains charge the battery during normal driving not just breaking. It saves gas by avoiding the least efficient RPM ranges of the engine.
~80%(battery & conversion losses) of 35% fuel efficiency easily beats 100% of 10% fuel efficiency. Using a 200HP engine to creep around a flat parking lot or run the AC while waiting etc is simply inherently inefficient so they turn the engine off. As a bonus you get that quick EV acceleration without an oversized engine that’s rarely operating efficiently.
As to emissions from car manufacturing, don’t ignore emissions from gasoline manufacturing. People get these comparisons wildly wrong by only looking at tailpipe emissions and ignoring upstream extraction, refining, and transportation emissions over the 25+ lifetime of an average car.
> two motors instead of one + big battery ... elevated brakes degradation
You might be simplifying a bit too much here. The most successful hybrid powertrains are built from the ground up as hybrids and the "hybridized" parts actually replace ICE parts that aren't needed anymore. For example, the HSD system in a Toyota hybrid replaces the clutch, gearbox, starter and alternator, and the result is much more robust.
Also the brakes on a hybrid usually degrade slower, because of recuperation.
Just out of curiosity, wouldn't it be a no-brainer for the owner of the building to layer the roof with solar panels and fill the garage with chargers? Seems like free money in a country with lots of sunshine.
The usual problems with this approach are 1) the roof is not big enough for solar panels to power multiple chargers and 2) the power is generated when people are not at home (and probably using their car to go to work).
Then the obvious solution is to put solar panels over parking spots at work. Doesn't need to be that much power, 1-2kW is enough if the car sits there all day (for typical distances people commute with cars)
Yes, a bit tangential, but I feel hybrids were discarded too quickly (the 2030/35 ban on new petrol cars includes hybrids) when they should have probably been encouraged as a stepping stone and because indeed in many European areas charging at home is a challenge.
It's just that we don't see it in the geopolitical west, as it's all happening in China, which is currently by far the single largest passenger vehicle market in the world.
Personally I drive a hybrid because that was the most electrified car I could afford back in 2017.
And on top of that - there is a lot of good competent competition now, gone are the times were the Model 3 was pretty much undisputed king of cheap-ish EVs. The only thing they really still have going for them is the Supercharger network, but honestly fewer people seem to care than you'd think.
I'm surprised they're still not much worse than other, long established companies. Modern EVs are newish tech, TESLA is a newish company and the Model 3 is built to be "cheap".
And the TÜV's HU is a very thorough checkup. Failing it is easily caused by neglecting regular maintenance or careless driving. If you absolutely need to pass your test, befriend your local DEKRA guy, let him have a short look, and get your HU done early.
Tesla was always going to face a harder time at some point (leaving politics aside).
They had a good time because they had this 'cool' image and had no real competition for a time, although their quality and realiability issues (in addition to American cars' reputation) were known.
But now you have alternatives both on price and quality as all the European and Japanese incombents have an EV lineup and Chinese are pushing hard. So they are becoming one brand among many in a cut-throat market and don't really shine in any aspect.
agreed, I made money on tsla but even I would have avoided the product like the plague, it is tat, and now that Toyota no longer helps with the design it's likely even worse.
Interesting stats. I notice cheaper cars start to dominate in later years.
One obvious conclusion is that they are cheaply made but I wonder how much is the possibly sensible decision of owners of low cost cars to skip expensive regular maintenance and wait for something to fail a legally required test before getting it fixed?
Now that I think about it, I think the last time these stats were shared there was some chatter about these faults being caught and fixed by service mechanics before the test in other brands. Can't quite remember the mechanism by which such fixes wouldn't be counted in these stats though. Possibly just Tesla fan copium, there's a lot of that about.
I dropped my car to dealership and asked them to do MOT for me as service. They will first check everything and likely call me for approval to fix it. Or if under warranty do the repairs under warranty without prompt. Thus clear visible issues will be handled even before car arrives in inspection. This covers things like tires, lights, but also suspension components or if OBH tells something is wrong.
In general the inspection is not even attempted if there is something to fix.
People who skip the regular maintenance either don't understand the outsized impact it will have on long term reliability and the eventual costs, or they do but they have more pressing matters to address with that money.
> In general the inspection is not even attempted if there is something to fix.
Where I live in Central/Western Europe the sheer number of cars which can't possibly drive in legal conditions (rolling chimney stack exhaust or stadium light headlights) astonishes me. They get the "all green" at the inspection regardless of what needs to be fixed.
Well because you can remove all of this for the inspection and then put it back on after, even if we ignore straight up bribery to pass the test, which still exists in places. It should be the job of the road enforcement teams to find these people, stop them and impound the car until it's brought back to a road worthy condition. And there are some European countries which are very good at this and if you drive with some wonky car that is clearly not compliant you will be stopped, and some where such enforcement is almost non existent.
> Well because you can remove all of this for the inspection and then put it back on after, even if we ignore straight up bribery to pass the test
I'm not talking (only) about after market modding, rolling coal, or xenon upgrades but about plain old unmaintained clunkers. This is deep in "bribery to pass the test" territory. and law enforcement isn't willing to do anything about it on the road even if spotting these cars is trivial. Look out for a smoke plume during the day, or for the rolling artificial sun at night.
And this is in the country which is the source of clunkers for everyone else, not the destination.
Many cars in the belt from Lithuania through Poland down to Romania are cars imported from Germany and USA with status "totaled". The reincarnation procedure includes deactivating and cutting off ad blue, DPF and other sorcery.
There should be no scheduled maintenance the first two or three years, other than maybe tires and oil change, but skipping those don't "cause defects".
Typical faults that cause failure are; uneven brake force, badly aligned headlights, uneven tire wear, play and wear in suspension components, and so on.
> It's as if all these news articles are useless...
But the news article linked in the post is based on the official ranking of TÜV in Germany. TÜV does a thorough inspection of each car registered in Germany, every 24 months. Roughly 20% of the cars fail that test, and the ranking is simply based on these numbers. Corresponding agencies in other countries had very similar rankings.
In addition, people are finding out that an EV is not a high-tech product (except for maybe the battery), and can be made just as well and cheaper in low-wage countries.
I think Elon saw the writing on the way a long time ago.
So he's in the process of trying to pivot Tesla to a self-driving taxi, humanoid, energy company. In addition, he's trying to buy as much time as possible by lobbying for huge Chinese tariffs in the US.
That's not it. He did that stuff to frame it as a tech company not as a car company. WeWork did the same thing. If you are seen as a tech company. Not just another normal company then you can justify the ludicrous evaluations you are getting. While dismissing questions about why your company is worth more than any of your competitor with saner financial statements.
Maybe I'm naive but I don't think you need to construct an argument of ill intent/deceit to explain Tesla's actions and marketing. Nothing Tesla has done is in conflict with the strategy laid out at the beginning which was to first sell expensive cars, and then selling increasingly cheaper cars.
FSD is not in the strategy to frame it as a tech company, but to make use of software margins. If you can sell a car that cost 30k to manufacture for 40k instead of 35k because it has software on it, that greatly improves your margins because the software doesn't have manufacturing cost beyond the initial R&D.
There's a lot about Elon to dislike, but his business ideas are sound. At the same time I fully believe his behavior is going to run Tesla into the ground which will be a real shame. He really took the incredible amount of goodwill they got for being the first to make a car that could be both cheaper and better for the environment in the face of both established car companies and the oil industry, and he just flushed all that goodwill down the shitter.
Tesla's saving grace would be to produce cars at a competitive price point, I think money always trumps politics, and with tariffs on Chinese imports that might be achieved, but they'd still be losing the European market and any extra margin they might have gotten from their previously good reputation.
That strategy is just for raising money, as far as I know Tesla doesn't raise money from investors anymore. Although you do have to keep stockholders happy and framing as a tech company helps with that.
No it seems he really wants to pivot tesla away from cars to services like Apple. Sell the hardware but have the massive profits on services. Remains to be seen if the strategy will work out, it is a very risky bet.
And Canada, which has, as I recall, a one hundred percent tariff on something like a BYD or any other car made in China, even if they did submit them for federal road safety compliance testing.
Nope. There's no way to disguise or explain away his recent actions: Elon's actions are clearly those of a person who has grudges against certain segments of society and wants to use political power to fix them.
If he just wanted tariffs on China he could have just imitated Miriam Adelson: give the Trump campaign $200M & state your demands without mincing words. Or, split the amount between both parties and ride whichever horse that comes out on top.
EV doesn't have to be a high-tech product, although you need some fairly high tech stuff in the charger and BMS; the problem with modern cars is (1) protectionist questionable tech mandates like backup cameras and tyre pressure sensors and "phone home in event of crash" which inflate the BOM and (2) the need to add "features" to inflate the margin, like complicated dashboard computers and subscription heated seats.
This is why average Chinese drivers are picking up huge numbers of moderately priced EVs that the West is preventing from being sold.
I honestly and unironically think that our EV(a Volkswagen e-UP) is what most buyers actually want, but what manufacturers aren't making. It's simple, everything inside is using normal analogue dials including the one for battery level, it gets ~150-180 miles of range out of its 36kWh battery(even Tesla doesn't do those kinds of efficiency numbers), it doesn't have satnav just a factory holder for your phone.......that's all you need. You get in, turn(!!!) the key and go. It works day in and day out. No software updates, no phantom braking, no beeping at you because it read a sign wrong....it's what an EV(and I'd argue - any car) should be. Obviously package it in a larger body for people who need the space(eGolf exists and uses exact same EV drivetrain), but yeah stop cramming EVs with every gadget under the sun, most people don't want it and they certainly don't want to be paying for it.
Yes, yes it does. Why is it inconceivable that people don't want to give money to Musk? It's called voting with your wallet. I may like the car, but I deeply disagree with the business owner's views and deranged behavior over the last couple of years. The easiest thing I can do is to give my money to someone else instead.
Ultimately it doesn't matter whether Musk truly believes some of the lunacy he says, his actions speak for him. I disagree with his actions and don't want to support him. He could make the best car in the world for all I care.
It's not so simple with companies, if you view them as a single entity, because they are composed of many individuals and you interface with them at different layers.
In the case of Tesla, you have a very public figure embodying the figure of the company. If Tesla has the best EVs it's not really Tesla that has them but _Elon Musk's Tesla_ (whether that's true or not in terms of his stocks doesn't matter to the general public).
Same with SpaceX. It's not SpaceX's great engineering team launching rockets that people remember, it's "did you see Elon's latest rocket launch? amazing!"
The fact we don't remember who VW's CEO is speaks volumes about this (in the opposite way).
If it was 1940, I'd avoid buying one. If you are aware of the Volkswagen profits going directly to a known nazi supporter, I'd love to know.
People can change, as can ownership of companies. If Musk divested himself completely of Tesla, I'd be happy to buy one. I have no bias against Tesla or it's employees, I have a bias against the owner currently hard at work trying to destroy democracy in the US and across the globe.
More to the point, are you deliberately trolling or you genuinely do not see the point being made?
The market will remain irrational longer than you can stay solvent. Stock price is not directly tied to a company's performance. It's tied to investor sentiment of a company's performance in the future.
I mean both. Investors tell themselves a stock price will go up due to company performance. Performance can mean a lot of things to different people and isn't necessarily tied to fiscal performance. No one is buying stock and thinking, "this company will tank, and that will cause the stock to shoot up" outside of very specific situations and events.
Exactly, which is why this stock is going to zero. ZERO.
In the US, cars are a huge part of people's identity, and brand is everything. It's a major purchase and a multi-year commitment.
Imagine you don't follow politics closely, but you're in the market for a car sometime in the next 12 months. All of a sudden when you go to the Tesla dealership, you have to fight your way past protesters. You start to see Teslas spray painted with swastikas for some reason. You hear the phrase "swasticar."
Tesla is destroying their most valuable asset (their brand), which takes years to build and usually can't be rebuilt. As sales begin to take a meaningful hit, institutional investors will start to get out, and it will be a feedback loop that will force the price down. They'll sell the assets to Ford for pennies.
I hope you make out. TSLA has been taking a beating over the last month. I think a lot of (tech) stocks are about to crash. I think the tariffs and government layoffs will finally burst the bubble that the FED has been trying to pop for a while.
OP, probably like me, isn't putting money against Tesla.
And at some point, reality comes crashing down.
Tesla will not dominate the autonomous taxi market. Basically every major car company has tech comparable with Tesla (Mercedes, GM, etc).
Tesla will not dominate the battery market. Heck, I think they still DON'T make their own batteries (it's all collaborations with LG Chemical and other chemical companies and they have shared licensing and stuff).
And you can fool some people all the time and all the people some time, but you can't fool all the people, all the time.
Once Tesla becomes a bit player in China (Chinese companies are ruthless), gets mauled in Europe (starting to happen), what could possibly justify their market cap? The US? It will be saturated at a certain point. India? Not growing fast enough to make up for it, the Indian economy is 1/7th the US one and Indian disposable incomes are probably 1/50th the US ones...
To be fair, in the US, Tesla has the best FSD, by far.
But in the EU the self-driving software they released sucks (even Mercedes has way better system, at least in Germany, and takes liability on their shoulders), other electric cars have better finish, and they have support for things like Stalks, that European users actually want, due to roundabouts.
Seeing 'the best FSD' in a sentence is odd - it makes it sound there are multiple FSDs out there, and Tesla's FSD is the best. At the same time, it is not actually self-driving, rather it is a supervised system that has been called FSD for marketing and false promise purposes.
It's crazy! They have a 149.04 PE ratio! Their humanoid robots are behind Chinese counterparts, in fact, they are catching up rather than leading. Tesla is losing ground to other EVs while being lower in quality, more expensive, and carrying a negative connotation due to Musk. Taxis? Look at Waymo or the self-driving system currently working in China, sold by Huawei (ADS v3.2). The only thing they have is their CEO, a charlatan, selling tales about future.
Yes but the stock has obviously not reflected reality for a while. Tesla as a car company never justified the stock valuation, which implied it would take over 100% of the entire US market.
I got one recently (UK). Luckily my pals are nice people, so rather than give me a hard time about Elon, they instead complemented my car on how much luggage will fit in das boot.
We all thought that the 88 mph easter-egg was an easter-egg for Back to the future. But in reality, it might be the other 88 (see, "what means 88 in germany")
Also, the decimal ASCII code for capital letter X is 88, and Musk likes to quote the infamous “14 words” slightly paraphrased.
Damn strange coincidences.
I can’t believe I bought a car from this dude. Never again. (He also lied to me about FSD for years after I’d already paid for it, but now that fraud pales in comparison to all his latest insane bullshit.)
I guess he just doesn’t need us, his customers, anymore now that he’s captured an authoritarian government.
I see several Teslas a day and have never thought to associate the personal property of an individual with with the political beliefs of a shareholder of the company that makes it.
I'm curious what you are compelled to do when you see a Volkswagen.
In 4+ years if we are 4 years into a global war, involving mass genocide, and 10s of million of dead, and your neighbor buys a Tesla, I would be fine if you defaced it with a sticker.
As a car enthusiast, I know that the history of VW is nuanced. And you should know that also.
Right now, with Tesla, there is no nuance. It's as clear day. A meme-lord douche is currently CEO and I absolutely detest what he currently stands for. When I see a Tesla, I see said douche sieg heiling.
Agreed. But it is history. For example, you'll know that it was the allies who effectively restarted VW as a practical solution after WW2 and who can be credited with its existence.
Tesla is here and now.
I wouldn't buy a VW before/during WW2. I wouldn't buy a Tesla now.
Not making the two equivalent - but who knows where history is going. We're talking about a US government with fascist tendencies, openly flirting with a mafia superpower.
I'm very annoyed by this; if Europe is serious about the EV transition and the ban on new ICE sales, it should not be putting trade barriers in front of cheap EVs!
They're to protect Europe's car manufacturing industry, which is a significant industry which directly and indirectly employs a lot of people and circulates a lot of money. Part of that industry is green technology, which is exactly what Europe needs to build up. Europe has a challenge in that it wants to keep local manufacturing industries but also make sure that they are environmentally and socially responsible, which costs a lot more than other countries without those concerns and cheaper costs. I'm no fan of the ridiculous trade wars but totally free trade hasn't proved to be an outright success. I know the playing fields aren't level but I don't know what the sensible middle ground solution is.
As european and a driver of a model 3, I would also not consider buying a tesla again. It's not the car, it has some flaws, I never bought into the FSD bullshit and basically knew what I was going into. But now it more and more feels like driving a car with a huge swastika sticker on it, and I don't see that going away in the foreseeable future.
"Best" part of that story is that the court protected Musk's "freedom to insult" and considered it was an insult and not defamatory, so there is really no justice on that planet.
He's the got ear (and more) of the President of the United States at a time when the Executive Power in the US is the strongest it has ever been, if any "aspiring founder" sees that as a thing not to emulate then they should start thinking about doing something else with their lives.
And considering a lot of them probably are aspiring to emulate it, everyone else should be figuring out how to avoid this sort of power consolidation and capture.
Well the US have been very clearly saying that NATO is pretty much dead.
And NATO-countries are very much considering the US an unreliable partner. Also it's interesting that you wrote "partner": 2 months ago people would have said "allies", now it's "unreliable partner".
Even if the insanity ends in four years (which is starting to seem increasingly unlikely tbh, does anyone still believe next elections will be smooth and fair?), the US will be considered an unreliable partner for much longer.
A reputation of reliability explicitly means not pulling tricks like these. If you do, it means you're unreliable.
NATO doesn’t have to rethink anything, NATO is an extension of EUCOM for all intents and purposes. That’s why the title of Supreme Allied Commander Europe goes to the same guy that runs EUCOM.
If people try to go back to the way things were in 4 years they're stupid. Trump threatens allies, nakidly goes after political enemies and makes 'jokes' about becoming a dictator and the people love it unless/even if it negatively impacts them.
Hell, Korea almost turned into a dictatorship in the last few months and Yoon still has a lot of support even after being found out and removed. Democracies are fragile and the only way I can see them surviving is if power isn't concentrated.
Over 50% of Tesla's sales are model Y which is going through a version upgrade at the moment. The new version is widely publicised, much better than the old one, and will be available in the next few months. Why would you buy a model Y now?
A big dip was also observed during the model 3 upgrade in Q1 2024.
Everybody is obsessing so much over Elon's behaviour right now that they are glossing over important other factors.
Much as people want this to be political, I think it's just business. The European EV market has rapidly become very competitive and Tesla just aren't keeping up. They haven't launched a new model for several years, but there's a flood of new cars from European, Korean and Chinese brands that offer very compelling features and value.
The Model 3 was supposed to be a breakthrough in affordable EVs, but it's now twice as expensive as the cheapest EVs on the European market. It also isn't particularly small by European standards, which leaves Tesla with nothing to compete in the very popular city car and supermini segments.
Tesla's cars aren't particularly sexy or novel any more, they're just a bit weird. European brands are selling EVs that look and feel like normal cars, come with the backing of a trusted local dealer, and aren't very much more expensive than their internal combustion counterparts. The huge drop in Tesla sales was entirely predictable based on market fundamentals.
Hard to believe anyone is still buying them at all. Surely the company is totally irredeemable in the eyes of the vast majority of their customer base.
Beside the person of Elon himself, there is another thing too: Tesla cars are old. Yesterday's design with yesterday's features. There hasn't been a new Tesla since what... a decade? Sure, Cybertruck exists, but that's not really comparable to a Tesla 3 for example, in its function, target customers and price...
But that really isn't true either. The model 3, for example, has undergone 3 or 4 refreshes that change a lot. They have not dramatically changed the exterior of the car, which I know a lot of people think is absolutely critical, since an 8 year old model 3 looks almost identical to a new model 3.
Most car makers haven't released new models in a long time, they just update their current models, and make them visibly different from the outside.
Now… if you were talking about the lack of new feature _in_ the car, then I would be happy to agree. And if you want to talk about the _still_ lacking functionality of automatic wipers…
Yes - Tesla seem to make very big changes under the hood that aren't obvious from outside so you don't realise they're actually refreshing the models. For example at a refresh of the Y they changed it so that the whole floor was battery and the seats etc bolted to that. Massive castings come and go. Pretty huge updates.
What's the benefit to the customer? Usually the silent changes are for making the product cheaper and increasing profits. Did it provide more leg room or battery capacity, or something else?
True. Norway is an EV leader and a few years ago the only real option for an affordable long range EV was a Tesla. The Nissan Leaf was next popular as it was a perfect city car but useless for the drive to the mountain cabin. Now there's a range of cars of all sizes and budgets in both the new and used car markets and Teslas are the "meh" brand.
Every single Tesla ad I've seen is for the cybertruck. Which you can't get in my country. I researched cars online when I bought a car last year and saw a lot of youtube and Facebook ads for Tesla ever since, and I basically viewed Tesla as "the cybertruck company". Is it like this in the EU?
Remember that... we don't have numbers yet from Tesla in Europe after Musk did the Sieg Heil.
I live in Europe and people absolutely went batshit crazy about it, not only in Germany. People really despise that gesture.
I'm willing to bet sales in Europe for Tesla FY2025 will be terrible.
I know many Tesla owners here that are considering selling the car because they are also afraid of the car dropping even further in price because too many people will want to sell it.
I'm in the Netherlands and the used market for Tesla has already dropped like a rock. It is flooded with cars from leasing companies who after 5 years now want to sell them on for deprecation and tax purposes.
On average, yes. But if you look on a voting map[0], you'll notice that the majority of those votes comes out of the former DDR. In many other areas, much less than 1 in 5 voted for the brownshirts.
If you look even deeper, at people's actual attitudes[1], you'll see that far-right positions are approx. equally distributed in Eastern and Western Germany - the kind of people voting AfD in Eastern Germany (currently) just vote CDU in Western Germany.
No, the point I am making is that it very much depends on their location if this "1 in 5"-average is even remotely true. And looking at overall population statistics and concentration of jobs, it's comparatively likely that somebody migrating to germany is _not_ in those areas.
>> This is comforting, as an Argentinian living in Germany. 1 out of 5 people here voted for the AFD...
My fundamental aim here was to show the poster, that it's likely not as bad where they are - and since they are a migrant, I assumed that they were likely not in those really bad areas. Intended as a positive message. Sadly, I apparently butchered the delivery of this message, as several people interpreted it completely differently.
> I know many Tesla owners here that are considering selling the car because they are also afraid of the car dropping even further in price because too many people will want to sell it.
I know some who are considering selling the car because they are afraid of what other people will think knowing they drive a Tesla.
I would encourage you to watch the whole video of the incident, with sound, and then put your hand on your heart and honestly say you think that was a sieg heil. (but don't throw it to the crowd after)
It was not a coincidence that it looked like one. Nobody with knowledge of contemporary history would make a gesture that could be interpreted as "Sieg Heil" by mistake at an event that is watched worldwide.
Why do people keep saying that Elon is on ketamine? What news did I miss? Did he check himself in a rehab? Did he do something outrageous a a party? I am curious. Thanks!
> “Ketamine is helpful for getting one out of the negative frame of mind,” Elon Musk told an interviewer last year. The unelected man currently gutting US federal programs isn’t the only one who thinks so. Ketamine, approved decades ago as a surgical anesthetic and long used as a party drug, is the off-label mental-health treatment of the moment. It induces a “trancelike” state of “sensory isolation,” researchers say, and may temporarily boost the brain’s neuroplasticity—which, in theory, makes mental ruts easier to escape. At the same time, ketamine abuse can be deadly, and the drug remains illegal to use without a prescription. (Musk says he has one from “an actual, real doctor.”)
I've watched it, many people have, and have still firmly concluded it was a purposeful action. It's debatable whether it was a true "I'm a Nazi" move or a "I'm a troll" move but the smirk on the face, the long, long history of trolling and antagonizing opponents, the previous comments from Musk that the left was calling him a Nazi, etc... all indicate that he intentionally did something provoking.
This is even more true for the latest copycats from CPAC, which show that the Fascist salute is being normalised and becoming a MAGA symbol. Think about that. Whatever Elon's original intent, the American right is now knowingly doing the fascist salute, not as satire but as a open sign of their politics and provocation to their opponents.
I watched the video with sound quite a few times. It was totally heil hitler salute. (Not to bring up the statement Elon made about how Germans should stop apologizing for holocaust. At that point even the anti-defamation league gave upon him. Elon is fascist to the core)
I don't understand why modern day Germans would have to apologise for the holocaust either, maybe I'm out of touch.
I also don't know why HN keeps these Elon posts up because they're always a shit-show of reddit-ness and I believe most other similarly high-conflict subjects would have been nixed by now.
In France, Tesla Model Y is -57% (compared to Jan '24) at 640 units in January, while other brands are growing at 2813 (Renault 5), 1548 (Citroen E C3), 1177 (Renault Scenic), 762 (Peugeot 3008), among others.
Actually, I think they went "batshit sane", what other reaction could a sane person have after seeing that happening on live TV, during the POTUS investiture?
I would not buy it anyway because it's too expensive and I don't want an EV but if I was looking for this kind of car, seeing the CEO acting so stupid would put me off
Actually, people are realizing EV are better than advertised. Batteries are lasting longer than the warranties. Also, Chinese EVs are very inexpensive so this indicates the price of EVs everywhere is going to drop a lot in the near future, even if Chinese EVs are banned or tariffed in some countries.
I mean I would be embarrassed in front of everyone I know if I got one independent even of my own feelings.
Here in Norway there is a ridiculous number of Teslas. I think just in the houses I can see on my street I count 5 of them.
So perhaps understandably many in Norway are still in denial about the nazi salute. Media talked about "strange arm gesture" at the time.
But the 14 US flag posts on X should remove any doubt.
Also the effect is clear: Bannon did a less veiled and undeniable salute, with much less attention since Musk had gone before.
Accidentally signalling that you are a nazi and being too stressed and embarassed to properly apologize about it? Perhaps. But twice in a month? Don't think so.
I'm wondering to what degree Elon's political activism would have affected his wealth if he owned a boring commodities business. That, I think, is the only niche that creates a loophole for Elon-style social activism. Whether your company sells bulk minerals, or exports millions of tons of wheat, iron ore, or coal, your customers are mostly faceless corporations and you can quietly funnel money to politics or even take a public stance without losing money.
That Koch model is hard to replicate when your main cash cow are high-end, $50k to $100k consumer devices that people spend months researching before making a decision.
Good, now our (european) politicians should stop forcing companies like Volkswagen, with an incredible history and technological background, giving money to Musk for carbon credits. Use the same money to improve public transportation and the long term impact on CO2 will be better for sure. Not only civil cars are a trivial part of CO2 emissions, but there are many other effective ways to improve things: avoid trucks to move goods, in favor of trains (we have good trains on average) and boats, like 30/40 years ago. Public transportation, as I said. Warming systems... All changes that could have greater effects without destroying our car industry. For reference: Volkswagen has 650k employees. 300k in Germany, 350k outside.
What shocks me with European automakers is that all small EVs have disappeared from their offerings. Renault Zoe, Twingo, VW Up, etc. SUVs on the other hand are absolutely everywhere. Public transports are the ultimate solution of course, but we can't do without cars after decades of car-centric urban development.
I live in a city with one of the best public transport systems in the world. Anywhere I want to go, there's a bus/tram/trolleybus/subway that goes there and leaves in less than 15 minutes. It costs $150 a year. If that isn't luxury then I don't know what is.
> according to a report from the European Environment Agency
and I don't know how they got to their numbers. Don't have time to read it right now but do you see a mistake in my calculations? I think I used valid sources?
Shouldn't that be 1% of emissions in the world? Btw, still more practical to address other stuff. Not that EV are a bad idea, but you can't force such change: the EU plans failed, because people don't have often a viable setup to switch to EV, so it should be made more incremental and together with other infrastructural changes.
Yeah, c/p mistake, thanks for noticing. ~1% it is.
> Not that EV are a bad idea
From an engineering point of view, if we were to solve the pollution problem, and if the numbers above are not terribly wrong, then the EVs are not an answer. There is a huge (operating) cost attached to rebuilding the whole industry with apparently a very small impact. And I'd say with a reasonably large negative impact since we see many automotive manufacturers folding under the EV pressure.
> because people don't have often a viable setup to switch to EV
I agree and I would also add that not that many people can afford buying a new car for ~40k EUR. For many people this is inaccessible.
I have a Tesla, and up until Elon did a hitler salute, I was more then willing considering that my next car would be a Tesla too (my main annoyance being that windshield wipers was enabled/disabled on the screen on model 3s).
After the Hitler salute? Nope. No. Absolutely not. I want absolutely nothing to do with anything new that man ever comes up with again. Which hurts, given how much I've loved watching SpaceX launched, and how much I've loved watching Tesla get cooler and cooler.
What are you going to get instead? I think that Chinese EVs are flooding the market but it's absolutely not better to support China than supporting Tesla. Hyundai/Kia - maybe an option, primarily because people don't know that much about South Korea :)
I find it very sad that purchasing a car from a publicly traded company with tens of thousands of employees is somehow interpreted as supporting the politics of the CEO of said company. Life shouldn't be politicised that much
> it's absolutely not better to support China than supporting Tesla
I disagree. Right now, I wouldn't criticise anyone who buys a Chinese EV. But I would put stickers of Musk doing his nazi salute on Teslas I find in the streets.
> Life shouldn't be politicised that much
That's what one says about political topics that don't impact them. Go tell Ukrainians that they should buy Russian products because "life shouldn't be politicised that much".
> But I would put stickers of Musk doing his nazi salute on Teslas I find in the streets.
I know people who were so upset about the other side (in that case, Republican voters) that they said that they (the other side) should be deported from the US. I think this level of mania is too much and it is the real life manifestation of what people do on the Internet. I recommend that you put a sticker on the car when the owner is there, and look them in the eye.
> Go tell Ukrainians that they should buy Russian products because "life shouldn't be politicised that much".
I am likely much-much closer to this problem than you think (personally and physically), and I absolutely think that what's happening in Ukraine and what is happening in the US right now is incomparable.
You know, Ukrainians and Russians still live and work closely in many parts of the world because they can differentiate between Putin and the person who's in front of them. You're not beating Elon with your stickers, just screwing up a day of a random human person who has bought a car they liked.
Yes it is sad, but the stakes are too high to ignore. I don't know where you live but in Europe most people are very disappointed in recent actions by the US. Any decision, from small to large, now should factor in if it benefits Europe or the US. It is a matter of being reciprocal.
Musk is the one politicizing it that much, we're just responding to it. If he shut up and stopped his nonsense, it would quiet back down.
I almost never judge a work by it's creator, but sometimes the creator really goes out of their way to make me ignore that principle. Musk, Kanye, and a handful of others.
The ethnic cleansing Uyghur concentration camps are probably the biggest one. Also threatening Taiwan, which is a lovely country I would hate to see destroyed. Besides that the social control the government exerts is pretty frightening to me (I've lived in China).
All that said I still see China as less of a direct threat right now.
Some good points, I was aware of them, but comparing to the current US it doesn't seem as bad.
I just don't know how bad the Uyghur was/is considering the propaganda that both sides would push, with China not letting independant investigators or reporters do anything in and the whole US manufacturing consent media and US government propaganda. Then them calling it a genocide while Palestine is not.
> I find it very sad that purchasing a car from a publicly traded company with tens of thousands of employees is somehow interpreted as supporting the politics of the CEO of said company.
I'm sure there were also good people in IG Farben who just wanted to get through their day during WW2, right?
Nobody would bat an eye if some random shmuck on the Tesla manufacturing floor held some silly ideas, but arguing that the extremely public facing CEO of a company gets a pass because he's just one of many at a large firm is a wrong take, I'm sorry.
The CEO is the company. If the janitor posts a silly youtube video doing a sieg heil, the janitor is in trouble. If the CEO of the company does a nazi salute, the company is in trouble.
>I find it very sad that purchasing a car from a publicly traded company with tens of thousands of employees is somehow interpreted as supporting the politics of the CEO of said company.
But this is the reality, parts of your money go to the CEO salary, and if the sales are good the CEO will get a giant bonus that he can use to buy a president/dictator and convince them to do super insane shit.
There was a news yesterday where twitter AI system prompt had a filter for Trump and Elon, they were caught and they reversed it, IMO that topic should have been a bigger thread here
Obviously it wasn't a Hitler Salute. Are you cross-trolling from reddit, or associated with a competitor EV brand? Both?
The whole point behind any salute is clear communication and intent. It wouldn't make sense to back-pedal a nazi salute.
Americans fought the Nazis and lost 400k young men. If you honestly think a leading American businessman or politician would align with Hitler ideology and try to pump up the crowd using a nazi salute, I would suggest taking a vacation because your judgement is seriously impaired.
There is a long string of veiled and plausably deniable nazi references from Musk now.
No the intention wasn't to make a crystal clear nazi salute. The intention was to make a veiled salute, gradually testing the waters and reducing society's defenses. Same as the long string of similar things on X.
And if YOU got half the worlds press to talk about your arm -- would you not issue some clarification or apology where you explicitly rejected nazism?
The motivation isn't to unequivocally support nazists as you assume.
It is to slowly rehabilitate the symbols and remove society's immune system. This year, it is seen by many Musk fans as just about for LOLs and joking around.
But already Bannon did the salute properly and now he is "only the 2nd one". See how Musk cleared the way for Bannon's more explicit salute?
In 2-3 years, people will as a consequence have less knee jerk reactions against the real nazi groups. In 4 years, Trump can openly use the symbol if he so wishes, as it now represents a new movement and not the "old", and so on.
Conspiracy alert. Amusing how you'll settle for a half-baked nazi salute in order to hold your argument.
What would be the end game? Self-sabotage every gain they made winning the election? Real nazi salutes are like fingers down a blackboard for the majority of people. They also look different to what he did, and are delivered not with elated gratitude, but with authoritative posture.
Giggling "let's go to Mars" super-nerds are not toying with actual Nazism. His choice of hand motion was clumsy, that's the crime.
> would you not issue some clarification or apology where you explicitly rejected nazism?
Not if I thought those making accusations were "woke morons." Why would Musk play your game of needing to apologise for something he never intended?
Straight from the cancel culture playbook: "He may not be racist, but has anyone actually heard him reject racism?"
Corner someone with accusations until they're forced to make a statement. It's an attempt to legitimise the complaint. Musk is not playing by those rules. As much as that might irritate you, surely you can respect someone for, dare I say it, following his heart.
With this interpretation at least I hope you agree the 14 US flags were intentional?
It can of course be read as "trolling the ones who think he is a nazi".
Problem is that kind of double-signalling and layers of irony is so widespread in white supremacist circles on the internet.
Musk's X/Twitter history has been steadily going in a direction, he wasn't a "going to Mars nerd", he was a "going to Mars nerd whose Twitter history showed someone clearly falling down a political rabbit hole" (and BTW working for someone who pardoned people who assaulted police officers as long as they did it for him -- an act that has nothing to do with left vs right politics or what people vote for, but is easily associated with authoritanism)
Curious what you think of Bannon's hand gesture...
Whether you or I see a conspiracy or not the nazis out there have got the message. The support for the AFd, for which their leader thanked him publicly, has just accentuated it.
Same salut as Hitler. It’s pretty obvious but also: Musk is not from the USA, and what about the KKK in the USA? You can get that vacation to read a few books.
Last but not least, he back-pedaled because he’s a fucking idiot full of drugs.
Shareholders like him enough to support an irrationally high price/earnings ratio of (currently) 165 or so — for comparison, "normal" is (from what I understand) 15-20, and BMW's is just under 5.
I won't be surprised if Tesla shares lose 90% of their current price, which is part of why I've sold all my shares and don't even feel too bad about having missed the exact timing of the peak.
As I understand it, Musk's stake in Tesla is roughly half his net worth.
And while SpaceX currently has a monopoly on the affordable launch market, my understanding is that's about to go away. I wouldn't like to be SpaceX seeking new government contracts under the next Democratic administration.
> I wouldn't like to be SpaceX seeking new government contracts under the next Democratic administration.
I think the limits of government contracts are why they've diversified into Starlink. Even without political aspects (which Musk may not have planned correctly for), the global mobile broadband market is just bigger than the pot of money governments want to spend on spying and weather forecasts.
What may well mess him up that side is that even if he gets a monopoly in the USA satellite broadband industry, China has no reason to sit back and just allow US dominance over their geopolitical zones of influence, and will fund their own. Even aside from Kessler cascade risks (I have absolutely no idea how far away that really is), the competition risk is real.
They launched Starlink because the opportunity was there and vertical integration gave them better cost structure and speed of execution than putative competitors. Commercial demand for payload space is substantial and growing and lacking in quality competition so they're probably less beholden to govt than many other space contractors
But yeah, vibes are shifting from "well more realistic European launch options would be a nice thing to have but SpaceX's cost/kg and schedule is very good" to "actually it may be necessary for security for governments to back launch competitors and OneWeb"
The drop didn't begin until Elon's salute on Jan 20th, so only the last 1/3 of the month. February is going to show a much larger drop, possibly around 90%. Tesla board members are already selling their stock because they know it's going to crash hard when the February numbers come out.
On top of alienating the target audience, it doesn't help that Musk is going all in associating himself with people who will give up their fuel nozzles when they pry them from their cold dead hands.
Guess it'll depend on how things go. I imagine a lot of people are like the Robert McCabe guy:
>I thought that someone with his business acumen would have come in with a fine-tooth comb and actually found it instead of coming in with a wrecking ball and destroying people’s lives for no reason. https://www.nj.com/politics/2025/02/trump-voter-shocked-to-g...
We are very much shifting away from Tesla/Musk topic.
Here in Europe we've all seen what happens when you inflate the socialistic bubble, especially with government jobs. Greece have not yet fully recovered to this day.
The number of respondents isn't what is important. The important thing is that the people polled are representative, which typically means they are as diverse as the population as a whole. Do you have any reason to think they're not as diverse as the population as a whole?
>Just a reminder: People supporting Elon do not typically post here or on reddit.
There are subreddits where for sure Elon fans are posting, I can see them in the Tesla one, I have no idea where MAGAs and nazis are gathering but I bet Elon fans are tehre too
It is not about subreddits and their count per se, it’s about the fuzz around some topics. Algorithms detect boiling shit very well and apparently today there's no reason for Elon supporters to throw shit on the fan.
I feel somewhat vindicated seeing no pro-Elon comments here anymore (or very few). I've been saying since 2017 that he's crooked and full of sh*t, when he engaged in union-busting while describing himself as a "socialist". Now that he's overtly showing his incompetency, stupidity and rancid ideas to the world, people see him for what he always was. A failed father abandoning his children, a pathetic man cheating at video games to seek attention, a mediocre self-serving neonazi.
HN is extremely (American) left-leaning. Do you not remember the threads about the murderer of the health insurance CEO? Any thread about US politics? Or just the simple fact every thread about office politics or workplace relations is VERY pro-unionisation, VERY anti-manager. HN highly favours higher taxes, higher minimum wage, trade unionism, work from home, open borders, net zero etc. Of course it is an American leftism rather than European leftism or Commonwealth leftism which have different focuses.
They're probably in the minority here like they are in real life, but there's plenty of right wing extremists, just scroll through any politics trump/musk thread in the past few weeks and about Israel for the past year.
Even the current administrations project 2025 comes from right wing tech extremists (mixed with christian faschists) that believe that tech CEOs should be feudal kings in a broken up America, I don't think any website is closer to this than hackernews.
Honestly, until very recently, I haven't felt that at all. Just look at the thread on Trump winning the elections. You might be right in that the majority of users may be democrats, but that doesn't mean they are all pro-union, pro-redistribution, etc.
I wouldn't call management-bashing leftist, everyone engages in that, even if right-wingers refuse to go further than individual action.
If you post anything pro-Musk, or even anything questioning people posting deranged conspiracy theories about him without evidence, you just get flagged and downvoted and yelled at.
Why bother engaging? Lefties in America are mad they lost the election and lefties in Europe are mad that Americans are expressing their opinions about European politics. They are angry, and don't want to engage in good faith or have a real conversation. So why bother trying to engage with people that just want to rant.
It is like if your girlfriend comes to you and rants about her day. She doesn't want to debate the issue she is ranting about and if you tried to do so you'd be reading the room very wrong.
Your entire comment, by the way, is inaccurate. He is not incompetent or stupid, obviously. He isn't failing: the EU is putting tariffs on EVs made in China because it can't compete on price. The rest of the stuff is just pathetic. Nazi! REALLY? That is the level of discourse on HN now.
The weirdest part about Europeans is they were totally cool with the U.S assisting im sabotaging the NordStream pipeline. They accept U.S imperialism whole heartedly and now that we're withdrawing from running an empire they're mad.
I've seen some weird meltdowns from people who were Ukraine boosters saying they should ally with China. Russia and China are allies though, so this doesn't make much sense. Europe is so ridiculously weak militarily and ideologically opposed to spending money on defense that all they can do is talk. They're just a minor player on the world stage now, like South America or something. At least South America decided war was a bad idea in the 19th century with the war of the Triple Alliance and smartly sat out all the 20th century's wars.
I'm a Mrs Thatcher fan in the UK and I'm angry about Musk supporting the Afd and saluting- and of course calling a hero cave diver a paedophile. I am very angry about his incredible behavior and statements about Ukraine.
I'm from Rhodesia - not far from where Musk was - and my dad was called up to fight the communist guerillas there that you Americans helped to get into power.
I'd be interested to know how do you spin that to make it about "lefties?"
It is sad. Also, because people who do post something that can be construed to be "pro-Musk" on one issue can also post "anti-Musk" statements on other issues.
Apart from the leftists, the pro war lobby is also mad at peace talks. And they have many more organizations like USAID.
"USAID is pro-war", "Russia is pro-peace", "freedom is slavery", etc. It's impressive how you're able to completely disconnect your critical thinking. Fox News, Rogan and X really did a number on you, poor soul.
Musk is one of the largest beneficiaries of the "pro-war lobby", through government contracts. See how well DOGE will go after that, you might be surprised. I won't.
We don't care about Vance expressing his backwards views in public, we care about America allying with fascist Russia against Ukraine and Europe, then claiming insane shit like "Ukraine started the war", then having that slimey Heritage Fundation lackey come and tell us our "freedom of expression is threatened". At this point you're either a complete lunatic or appalled by Trump and his circus, there can't be another way.
Elon Musk is an idiot, he did abandon his child [1], he did do a nazi salute [2], he did have a neonazi background even before that [3], he did cheat at video game for attention [4]. The guy tweets an average of 800 times a week [5], how is he finding the time to work on his companies AND run a governement agency? He doesn't work, that's the answer.
Obviously you won't open these links, you won't change your mind. You won't document yourself on how Elon failed several ventures through his management, how he didn't build his succesful ones, etc. I'm starting to wonder what is would take for the likes of you to reconsider your position at this point. Have the guy yell "BLOOD AND SOIL" during a rally, maybe? Would that even be enough?
https://archive.ph/h29YP
As a French, I had previously no opinion on Tesla and I could have bought one. I saw it as a geeky, high-end stuff.
But those days I see owning a Tesla as activism (probably unconsciously). I would preferably buy any another brand rather than being flagged as an Elon-fan in my neighborhood.
Out of interest is it his role in American politics or his interference in European politics or other things that you find more annoying.
I and British. I do not really feel there is much political significance in what car you buy, but I am definitely annoyed by his attempts to influence British politics (offering a political party a huge donation if they allowed an extremist to join - they turned him down).
Well, to me, he used to represent technological ambition, impossible achievements made real. Now he represents foreign interference, social violence and neo fascism. And we, European (and especially French people), have a very very low tolerance for social violence and fascism.
As someone who lived in the sud-ouest during the yellow vests protests, "very very low tolerance for social violence" is...not my general impression of the French people.
(Low tolerance for fascism, yes, obviously. But "social violence" is pretty much what passes for entertainment on a Saturday morning)
Social violence describes the gutting of social security, healthcare systems etc to the detriment of primarily the most vulnerable. Not the fact that people protest, however violently. It's just not the right vocabulary.
France is one of the only countries that tells Muslim school children they can’t wear head scarfs.
France has the appetite for fascism, just the victim has to be of a specific group.
I don't know if that's entirely fair. France is staunchly secular, more so than most of its European counterparts. I could be wrong, but I don't think you can wear a crucifix or other religious symbol in French schools either.
Yes you can, "because it's not visible".
France is about as catholic as it gets when it comes to who actually runs the show.
I don't view political organization as violence, I view it as a healthy democracy - even if the country or people don't agree with the conclusions of that group of people. It is healthy that they feel comfortable expressing their wants and needs to the people with power to change it.
What Elon is doing in the US isn't organizing or demanding the system to be better; it's taking control of the system and saying he can do better.
> "very very low tolerance for social violence" is...not my general impression of the French people.
"French people" includes the French police, I presume.
For "social violence" it might be informative to substitute "direct action". For example, there is José Bové.
A rose by any other name...
By the way, "Action Directe" was a famous French terrorist organisation in the 80s [1].
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Action_Directe
The French are the European experts on social violence (and I am French)...
In fact OP's comment somewhat shows the often noxious atmosphere in France. Here in the UK I see Teslas everywhere and people don't say or do anything (maybe they comment on the neighbour's new Tesla at home but they are polite in public in a very British way, and criminal damage is a serious crime...) In France I can believe that a Tesla owner may fear that their car will be vandalised or that some random people might throw insults at them in the street if Tesla is labeled the wrong way...
Edit: TBH, I wouldn't even say that there is a low tolerance for fascism because historically and to this day, economic interventionism, strong state, strong leader, political violence, tendency towards authoritarism, social conservatism have been big part of the culture. That is balanced by a tendency towards anarchism at the same time...
At least in the UK the license plate lets you know when the car was registered, so it's simple to tell if they bought the Tesla before Elon went off the cliff fully. I'm not going to begrudge anyone who doesn't sell their car, my judgement is reserved for the people buying them now
Wow, that is not sinister at all... /s
Edit: My comment is obviously not about cars number plates...
It's harmless, it's a 6 month window. Number plate:
XX24 - registered between 1 Mar 2024 - 31 Aug 2024
XX74 - registered between 1 Sep 2024 - 28 Feb 2025
XX25 - registered between 1 Mar 2025 - 31 Aug 2025
etc
The first two letters of a number plate identifies the location where the vehicle was registered. For example, LA – LY covers London and MA – MY covers Manchester and Merseyside. Nothing personally identifying whatsoever.
If you're truly paranoid about such things you can always buy a car registered hundreds of miles from your residence, and in practice with an abundance of second-hand (used) cars in the marketplace from across all the UK, there's always a huge variety of registration letters driving about anyway!
They said "judgement", not setting them ablaze. I will also, inevitably, have some sort of opinion on people who have bought a Tesla after Jan 2025.
I mean, what's sinister about judging someone for their car?
People are literally putting stickers on Teslas in London calling them Swasticars.
https://www.newsweek.com/activists-brand-tesla-vehicles-swas...
Obviously there are idiots everywhere... My point is about cultural and societal tendencies.
https://www.instagram.com/gainzilla80_ifbbpro/p/DFdRzMAvv6k/
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRaK8eM...
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTEMZ4w...
> have a very very low tolerance social violence and fascism
Except when it comes to enforcing mandates and putting people in jail for stuff they post online.
It's always the same thing. Don't pretend Europeans have principles when they failed every test in the past 10 years
Not the OP, but to me it's all of it. Just the nazi salutes would be enough for me not to buy Teslas (or StarLink), but at this point I would avoid any US car.
Ford is based though. I mean the CEO said publicly (on a podcast ) that the Xiaomi Car is better then anything they've ever produced.
Now that's a statement! (also the Xiaomi Car has massively under specced breaks. But that's hard to notice as a normal driver as he is)
I wouldn't say Jim Farley (Ford CEO) is a normal driver; he races vintage cars, modern Mustangs and other things too.
> Ford is based though.
Well. the Wikipedia article on Henry Ford has a whole section entitled "Antisemitism" which starts "Ford was a conspiracy theorist" and details Nazi links.
So, what else is new in the world of Car Company tycoons?
See, the critical thing is, Henry Ford is, thankfully, very, very dead. Ford, the modern company, is not run by a 150 year old zombie bigot. It's a very different situation.
[flagged]
I'm not convinced. Compare a genuine Musk my heart goes out https://x.com/kingore91/status/1884580205185954045 with the iffy one https://youtu.be/s5hiprV-KXQ?t=7
There's no such thing as a "genuine Musk heart goes out", there's only random shit people do in over-excited election result moments, in front of crowds. He's saying "thank you" while slapping his heart and mentioning his heart. It's on the level of cognitive malfunction not to understand this, or else, trolling.
It’s odd how Musk never seems to have that awkwardness cause him to make other random gestures which don’t look like Nazi salutes.
Similarly, while it’s true that the ADL tried to excuse it, that’s the opinion of their controversial new president and is far from a consensus position. Many other people, including their former national director, did describe it as a fascist salute:
https://forward.com/fast-forward/690745/adl-elon-musk-sieg-h...
https://www.lemkininstitute.com/red-flag-alerts/red-flag-ale...
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/jan/21/the-gestu...
Most tellingly, of course, is that extremists all over the world recognized and celebrated rated it. The whole “Roman salute” excuse started as a claim by Musk’s connection to the Italian far-right, apparently hoping that American audiences didn’t know that was a fascist symbol:
https://apnews.com/article/musk-gesture-salute-antisemitism-...
> Musk himself mocked those accusing him, threatened to sue, and has made jokes about raising his arm the wrong way. Nazi saluters don't do that, they're proud to nazi salute that's the point. But I suppose if you hate Musk you'll cling to your story even with evidence supporting the contrary.
This is simply intellectual dishonesty: while they say they’re joking, that doesn’t mean that they’re being honest when they do so, that other people are not allowed to disagree with that excuse, that the only motivation for disagreement is some personal hatred for Musk, or that personal opinions constitute incontrovertible evidence which cannot be argued.
A self-reflected sane person would see how that gesture in that context can be misinterpreted and would have avoided it in the first place. It's not like you can't express throwing your heart out only in this way.
So I guess it was deliberate. Deliberate to look like and walk like a sieg heil, only missing the quack. Maybe a provocation, but an unnecessary one and provoking with Nazi symbolism is completely unacceptable.
Surely you're having a laugh presenting that argument?
He's literally in the middle of saying "thank you"... that's what's coming out his mouth. Nobody in history has given nazi salutes while expressing elated smiling, laughing gratitude to cheering crowds, who in turn are not saluting back or even in the same universe as your nazi claim.
Let the frog boil.
He never even bothered to apologize for "making a gesture that could be misinterpreted" himself, he gets random fanboys to apologize for him.
German here. He directly and openly supported the far-right AfD party in the last election by publicly asking people to vote for them, and by holding a video-call audience with the party leadership.
I don't care who votes what, but I certainly do not like when people who do not live here and do not have to deal with any consequences of an election result try do to election interference.
Clearly, if you want to buy a Tesla because of "Ecology" and "the Planet", there is no reason to do so anymore as your purchase directly funds the exact opposite of what you want to achieve. Same with superchargers.
This is an honest question, in good faith. How so? I'm just curious, an interesting thought.
Because he forwards political causes in the US and abroad that are vehemently anti-global warming and anti environmental protection in general (among other things...). This will likely more than undo any contributions he's theoretically made.
And actions that may likely indirectly increase the odds of a larger war in Europe.
> This is an honest question, in good faith. How so? I'm just curious, an interesting thought.
Giving more money to Tesla is giving more power to Musk, who is helping Trump and others achieve implement policies:
* https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c977njnvq2do
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_2025
On the eco stuff specifically, Trump literally said that climate change was a Chinese hoax:
* https://www.politifact.com/factchecks/2016/jun/03/hillary-cl...
* https://www.factcheck.org/2024/09/trump-clings-to-inaccurate...
* https://climate.law.columbia.edu/content/trump-issues-execut...
Most recently "Trump bars federal scientists from working on pivotal global [IPCC] climate report":
* https://www.cnn.com/2025/02/21/climate/trump-blocks-scientis...
These are things even oil-man Dubya Bush didn't do.
He's a co-president with Trump recently forbidding mentioning climate change in documents, destroying ecology research, pushing energy policy EO supporting fossil fuel producers, and dumping federal EVs and existing chargers in the buildings. It looks like he just cares about the profit from EVs and completely disregards the environment part.
The richer Elon Musk gets, the more he (appears) to use that wealth to skew politics towards anti-"eco" policies. By giving Trump an unprecedented $250 million during the 2024 election, he may have even been the deciding factor in funding some of the advertising that led people to decide to vote Trump, or to stay home instead of vote for Harris.
And needless to say, Trump's policies on the environment ("drill baby drill") don't exactly align with the hippie stereotype of electric car buyers ("no more oil").
He was literally and directly funding targeted advertising that told people in Muslim areas that Harris supported Israel and in Jewish dominated areas that she supported Hamas.
He was working with Stephen Miller, one of the crazier members of Trump's team (no easy achievement), on this.
fwiw microtargeting ads is extremely common, all presidential campaigns for the past 20 years at least have been doing this. If you're not cynical about ~everyone in politics you're probably drinking too much microtargeted kool-aid (your favorite flavor!):
A CNN investigation found that Vice President Kamala Harris is running contradictory ads about the war in Israel, depending on where you live.
If you live in Michigan, a state with a dense Muslim-American population, you will see ads about how she supports the relief efforts in Gaza, where she says she "will not be silent."
The Michigan ad states: "What has happened in Gaza in the past nine months in devastating, we cannot allow ourselves to become numb to the suffering," Harris is quoted in the ad.
If you drive East to Pennsylvania and flip on a television, you'll see the vice president at a different podium in an ad saying: "Let me be clear, I will always stand up for Israel's right to defend itself, and I will always ensure Israel's ability to defend itself."
For the second ad, taken from her DNC speech, the part where she advocates for peace in Gaza was edited out. CNN reports it was taken out so her message could be more strongly accepted by Jewish voters in Pennsylvania.
https://cbsaustin.com/news/beyond-the-podium/cnn-kamalas-con...
> The richer Elon Musk gets, the more he (appears) to use that wealth to skew politics towards anti-"eco" policies
Which is odd as it directly goes against his own interests.
> the hippie stereotype of electric car buyers ("no more oil").
Is that still the stereotype? This might depend on where you are (I am in the UK) but my stereotype of EV buyers is affluent with a tilt to urban.
> Which is odd as it directly goes against his own interests.
His recent interest is power. He can use that for profit later in many different ways - he's working on firing people who wanted to investigate his idea of using X as a payment network, for example.
That is a reasonable explanation. He is well past the point where people want money for spending power. Any billionaire is after power and status.
Definitely wouldn't buy a car from someone who feels it's ok to do a couple of nazi salutes in a very public way.
> I do not really feel there is much political significance in what car you buy
It is who you pay. You are directly supporting him with the purchase.
Him and every other shareholders.
According to this Musk only own 13%
https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/TESLA-INC-6344549...
Barely more than Vanguard + Blackrock.
Looking at Tesla resale values and the reliability issues over longer periods of ownership it’s just a sane consumer decision.
I mean, that hasn't changed in the last quarter so people buying Teslas before had already come to terms with the fact that they were buying an unreliable luxury vehicle they can't get rid of...
I know it’s a ceo playtoy but for me the cybertruck with its design quirks killed the brand for me. They are so many idiotic decisions on the truck that I just don’t trust the engineering and design teams anymore. I was driving with a colleague and we had to clean the headlights every 40 minutes because of snow…
Source on Tesla reliability stats?
> Consumer Reports (CR):
> Tesla has consistently ranked low in CR's reliability surveys:
> In the 2021 Brand Report Card, Tesla ranked 16th out of 32 brands, down from 11th in 2020.
> In 2022, Tesla ranked 23rd out of 28 brands with a reliability score of 39 out of 100.
> J.D. Power:
> In the 2023 U.S. Vehicle Dependability Study, Tesla had 242 issues per 100 vehicles, significantly above the industry average of 186, placing it 28th out of 32 brands.
> RepairPal:
> Tesla vehicles average 171 mechanical issues per 100 vehicles, compared to the industry average of around 120.
> 27th out of 28 brands in CR's reliability study (BusinessInsider.com and InsideEVs.com).
https://www.carscoops.com/2024/11/tesla-model-3-comes-bottom...
https://www.tuvsud.com/en/press-and-media/2024/november/the-...
Also expensive insurance, which is partly influenced by reliability.
Elon vs Reform UK is extremely funny, because Reform is the wholly owned pet project of Richard Tice. A local real estate guy who's a mere millionaire and unimpressed at a foreign billionaire trying to run him over with superior money.
Nah, it's even funnier than that. It's majority owned by Farage the guy Elon wanted to oust, with Tice holding the rest, because as you say he's a money man whose pet project is giving Farage power.
Also, even Farage's most implacable opponents would concede that he's by far the most effective campaigning MP in the UK, as well as an avid Trump supporter, so dumping him would be a hilarious own goal if it was even possible especially when it's dumping him for not endorsing a football hooligan. It would also be history repeating itself since Farage's old party went from winning elections to being a complete irrelevance when Farage "retired" and the hooligans joined...
Did he want to dump Farage?
I thought he wanted Farage to let Tommy Robinson join reform in return for a large donation.
> It would also be history repeating itself since Farage's old party went from winning elections to being a complete irrelevance when Farage "retired" and the hooligans joined
IIRC the trigger for Farage to leave that party (he had already resigned as leader) was the new party leader wanted to form an alliance with Tommy Robinson's lot.
> Did he want to dump Farage?
He wanted Farage to bend all the way over. Farage refused so Elon tried to oust him, completely misunderstanding that the Reform party is Farage. It'd be like if Elon had gotten in a spat with Trump during the election and tried to swap him out for Vivek as the head of MAGA.
Musk turned on Farage: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c70ep8lp4jjo
Which came as a surprise to Farage who had previously welcomed and endorsed Musk's desire to interfere in UK politics: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1kez8d2dygo
It's remarkable how much both Trump and Farage are cults of personality. I don't think they could easily be replaced. I wonder if Brexit would have happened if Farage hadn't survived his plane crash? Or would the media elect another figurehead to put on all the talk shows?
Almost certainly not, given how close the vote was.
> I wonder if Brexit would have happened if Farage hadn't survived his plane crash? Or would the media elect another figurehead to put on all the talk shows?
Seeing as the difference was 1.89%, even marginally less effective campaigning would've doubtless resulted in a vote to remain in the EU.
Is there are cult of personality around Farage? He is an effective campaigner as previous comments said, but its not personal charisma or adulation.
On the other hand Trump supporters so seem to think he is absolutely wonderful - some sort of messiah.
The evidence is the chain of parties that Farage has been through. The support follows him, leaving the previous party as an empty shell.
Farage is a great speaker, and is extremely good at making what he's saying seem the truth, even if it's not so.
But it's far from the support people have for Trump.
Farage is quite reasonable on many policy positions also and reflects the views of quite a lot of the British public who would prefer traditional values, less immigration and the like. While I don't think I'd vote for him personally he has a good chance of being the next PM.
I think its also that people greatly dislike the big parties, and have turned away from the Blair/Cameron "centrist" consensus.
AT the last election the parties that got the biggest increases in their share of the vote were Reform and Green. Two very different parties and they have little in common other than not being Labour or the Conservatives. I suspect they would have done even better without a FPTP system.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/election/2024/uk/results (scroll down to see a graph of changes in vote percentage of votes cast).
Yeah, they're quite _different_. I'd call Farage very good at what he does (lying, largely), but he doesn't have the same sort of cult of personality as Trump (or for that matter Musk).
All of it? That he sig heiled on live TV was probably the nail on the coffin for a lot of (sane) people.
I'm British and think Elon Musk does a lot of cool things. I don't really care about what he does in American politics, I actually think the idea that government needs to stop wasting money is a good thing.
But he tries to influence European/British politics without living here, often believing mistruths or things out of context. Americans moan (rightfully so) when Europeans try get involved in their politics, but are happy to do the reverse.
Regarding Tesla, the UK/EU is going to make zero effort to protect Tesla from Chinese imports that the US will. Musk has burned that bridge.
> I don't really care about what he does in American politics.
You should. Whether you like it or not, what he is doing in the US is going to affect you one way or another, irrespective of his meddling in UK politics. Even if he focused his attention solely on US, the world is connected and particularly the US/European relationship has been one of the defining features of geopolitics over the last 70 years. Musk and company are basically dismantling this relationship.
The current US administration will profoundly alter the relationships between countries and power blocks for the foreseeable future. The US will cease being a reliable partner for it's old allies the UK included.
Musk was doing many cool things, but currently his focus seems to be to dismantle democracy, and this should definitely worry you if you value freedom.
It's not so much his actions, it's just that giving money to someone who gives a Nazi salute is a problem for me.
Not previous user, but as an Italian I am genuinely worried about how powerful and dangerous Elon is. The man effectively controls a good bunch of the telecom and space capabilities of the most powerful country in the world and its allies.
I want to have nothing to do with any of his businesses, socials, services and I'm extremely worried about doge and his presence in the US administration.
The person completely lacks any empathy, it's a full blown sociopath. His politics are just a reflection of his deep psychological malaise.
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How has he "interfered" in European politics? AFAIK all he has done is state his opinion.
https://eu.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2025/02/24/germany-...
https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20250216-germany-s-far...
https://www.dw.com/en/how-elon-musk-meddled-in-germanys-elec...
These are all links to him supporting a party. That's not interference.
From articles:
> led German regulators to investigate Musk for election interference.
> How Elon Musk meddled in Germany's elections
Those articles disagree with your categorisation.
The foreign owner of a major social media platform is not in the same position as any random citizen donating 10 euros or tweeting once.
I know multiple people who've sold their Teslas in the last two years, because they've worried about how people will perceive them for owning a Tesla.
I have a friend who bought a Tesla almost a decade ago. He still owns it, but he is not proud of it and jokingly calls it "the Swasticar".
Even ignoring the Musk thing, Tesla has fierce competition now when it comes to EVs.
Both Kia and VW latest models do well against Teslas on range/battery (see the 2025 ID4 or EV models from Kia) e.g.
Even Citroen has an EV Berlingo and that model is the bread and butter of Southern Europe.
BYD too, I've seen more and more of their models lately.
I've been lusting after an ioniq 5 (preferably N).
Tesla are not even as cool as Hyundai these days.
Do you have an opinion of Ioniq vs Mercedes EQS ? Just curious, as these seem really great and want a human opinion.
I have not driven the Mercedes but I have driven the Ioniq. It was a very nice vehicle. The showstopper for me was that it had no rear wiper. This seems like a minor thing, but I live in a part of New England where half of the roads are unpaved and during the winter the paved roads are heavily salted, so a wiper really is a necessity. The newest model now has this, but I already pulled the trigger on a new vehicle.
I ended up buying a Chevy Bolt during its final model year. This may be more of a reflection of my own history of buying inexpensive vehicles, but it is the best vehicle I have ever owned. I could not get over the price of the Ioniq. I just needed something that got me from point A to point B, and I wanted something that did so without gasoline. The Bolt far surpassed my requirements, and it was affordable. Honestly, I avoided American-made vehicles for a long time, having had bad experiences with the unreliability of a sequence of Dodges and Fords when I was younger. The Bolt changed my opinion about Chevrolet, although the CarPlay situation is pretty tragic…
FWIW, we bought an Ioniq 5 last spring, live in Michigan, and the lack of a rear wiper has been a non-issue completely. However, and this is a big caveat, I like the rearview camera and never use my rearview mirror as a mirror. Some people prefer the mirror, since the camera display requires you to shift your field of view in a weird way, and if you like the mirror, then the lack of a wiper would be a big deal. For me, I completely forget there is no rear wiper, and actually prefer it now as it makes cleaning snow off a tad bit easier!
You can add it to the old version, but the new version now has a wiper.
Bolt sounds good.
Thank you!
I've had an Ioniq since last spring, and while I briefly looked at the Mercedes, it was never a serious contender for me given its cost. The ioniq is awesome, though. The only complaints I have are really minor. Now, part of my love for the car is that it is my first EV, and EVs are just way better than ICE cars - except for the range issue, and we just drive around town 99% of the time, so that's a non issue. It is just so much simpler, powerful, and fun than I expected.
The ioniq 5, specifically, is great, although I kind of wish we would've waited for the 2025 model. I like physical buttons (which is one of the reason I like the Ioniq) and the 2025 model added some more. Plus it has wireless Android Auto, and a few other nice improvements.
Oh, the only actual complaint, still minor, is that it's turning radius isn't the greatest. That's really the only thing that bugs me about it.
Have no hands-on experience with EQS, other than that it stands next to my door (neighbour's), but EQS is huge, costs 2x Ionic 5, has a 100 kWh battery, aerodynamics of a brick, presumably better suspension... a completely different segment.
I way looking at Ionic 5, but it was shortly before the facelift, so I could not even configure it anymore. Got a VW ID.7, very happy with it.
> aerodynamics of a brick
Are you referring to the SUV?
Because the sedan is extremely efficient aereodynamically:
https://media.mercedes-benz.ca/releases/release-c6ffb9918e70...
Yes, the SUV - I have barely seen the limousine on the road. The "luxury limousine" segment seems to be pretty dead here, in Germany, too :/
I'd like to warn that VW's latest ID models still suffer from the same UI/UX problems and sluggishness reported when they arrived.
While at the same time, Tesla’s have none of those UI issues.
Right? Right?
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To me, people who ever said or believed 'vote with your wallet' or 'consumers made their choice' then complained about boycott or people not buying/threatening not to buy specific brands are hypocritical (and those unaware of how hypocritical they are are just idiots, because it's obvious).
Count how many things you bought Made in China over the years, purchases that have been directly funding the CCP to commit actual genocide and crimes against humanity for years, then apply your anti-Tesla-owner logic to that fact, then look at the clown you see in the mirror because that's what you are with that logic when you apply it to yourself.
And with that egg on your face, hypocrites like you dare lecture people for buying a car brand, just because the company's owner raised his right arm. Two-faced cherry-picking hypocrites. You have no logical arguments, just cheap appeals to emotional manipulation. It's best to be quiet and let people assume you're stupid than talk and remove all doubt.
BTW, did you know VW, BMW, Mercedes and Porsche used slave labor in WW2? What do you say about the owners of those brands? Why don't you all hate those users too using the same logic?
> You have no logical arguments, just cheap appeals to emotional manipulation
What? i mean, people who argue for "voting with their wallet" and then crying when people do just that are not hypocritical?
It seem very factual to me, where is the appeal to emotion? Is it on the "people who can't see how hypocritical it is are idiots" ? Where is the manipulation? I truly think that, i don't see a flaw in my logic there
> BTW, did you know VW, BMW, Mercedes and Porsche used slave labor in WW2? What do you say about the owners of those brands?
Yes, as did Renault, and i own one (well, i share the ownership of one). Honestly i don't care (like i don't care about people buying Tesla or not), i don't think people should vote with their wallet, i'd rather have people go out and protest or organize, because action is better than passivity. I was never in the "consumer made their choice"/"vote with your wallet" crowd, i always tought it was a discussion closer that people used to avoid thinking about issues. I'm quite happy however than a part of that crowd show how hypocritical they are, and i try to make them remember that.
My comment wasn't aimed at you, i couldn't have known you ever said "vote with your wallet", but i make it my duty to remind people who say that they should then shut up about boycotts.
But i guess you will probably avoid responding to that comment now that you understand how wrong you are (THIS is emotional manipulation, or a bad attempt at it :D)
You're entitled to your own opinion, but one of the few things you can do as an individual is choose carefully what you buy.
I do care, and I understand why many people do care as well. But again, it's your right not to care.
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Yes sir, FirmwareBurner sir!
What better person to take advice from than one who refers to his fellows as NPCs with special mental illnesses.
You must have a reading disability or are trolling in bad faith. If you could read, you would see that I referred to people hating other people just for the brands they own as NPCs. But you couldn't resist and needed to rush for a cheap shot before even reading my comment fully.
That, or your incessant self-aggrandizing misantrophy rubs me the wrong way.
In a flagged thread where you refer to others you don't agree with as having mental illnesses, you try to defend yourself by suggesting that I might have a reading disability.
Here's what an impartial LLM has to say about your replies to my arguments using the reasoning deep thinking option:
>Please read these comments below. Is fredrikholm correct or did he misinterpret what FirmwareBurner was saying? Would you say fredrikholm was arguing in good or in bad faith towards FirmwareBurner ?
>Conclusion Fredrikholm misinterpreted what FirmwareBurner was saying. FirmwareBurner’s criticism was specific to people who judge others’ buying choices, not a blanket dismissal of everyone who cares about purchases. Fredrikholm’s sarcastic reply exaggerates and distorts this into a broader attack, missing the clarification FirmwareBurner provided in response to palata. Thus, fredrikholm did not correctly interpret FirmwareBurner’s intended meaning.
Fredrikholm’s comment leans heavily toward bad faith. The sarcastic tone, misrepresentation of FirmwareBurner’s position, and reliance on a personal jab rather than substantive rebuttal indicate a lack of sincere engagement. While online miscommunication or emotional reactions could explain some of this, the overall approach—especially ignoring the clarification and contributing nothing constructive—suggests fredrikholm was not arguing in good faith toward FirmwareBurner.
In other words, you've been caught acting as what youngsters refer to as "a roach bitch" in the comments mate.
> caught ... roach bitch
Do you not see the level of anti-social hatred you spew in response to all the people pushing back on your (flagged) comment?
Of course I am not meeting your argument; I'm matching your level of acerbic tone to demonstrate just how bad it sounds.
If there is one adult in this subthread, it's AnimalMuppet. I'm taking them up on their advice.
Two words ... Roach. Bitch.
Personal attacks are against site rules. You've been here long enough; you should know that.
And yes, "you must have a reading disability" is a personal attack.
>And yes, "you must have a reading disability" is a personal attack.
How else would you address those who attack you in a way that doesn't break the rules, when they obviously are not reading your arguments and are instead pulling made up shit out of their ass to twist the narrative in their (malicious) direction? Now suddenly I'm the bad guy for calling them out?
Here's what an impartial LLM has to say about this thread using the deep reasoning option:
>Please read these comments below. Is fredrikholm correct or did he misinterpret what FirmwareBurner was saying? Would you say fredrikholm was arguing in good or in bad faith towards FirmwareBurner ?
>Conclusion Fredrikholm misinterpreted what FirmwareBurner was saying. FirmwareBurner’s criticism was specific to people who judge others’ buying choices, not a blanket dismissal of everyone who cares about purchases. Fredrikholm’s sarcastic reply exaggerates and distorts this into a broader attack, missing the clarification FirmwareBurner provided in response to palata. Thus, fredrikholm did not correctly interpret FirmwareBurner’s intended meaning.
Fredrikholm’s comment leans heavily toward bad faith. The sarcastic tone, misrepresentation of FirmwareBurner’s position, and reliance on a personal jab rather than substantive rebuttal indicate a lack of sincere engagement. While online miscommunication or emotional reactions could explain some of this, the overall approach—especially ignoring the clarification and contributing nothing constructive—suggests fredrikholm was not arguing in good faith toward FirmwareBurner.
And yet I'm still the bad guy here for some reason.
You point out that they're not responding to what you actually said. You do it without saying that they have mental illnesses.
You even might say "this seems like trolling; I didn't say X at all..."
And, if it's clearly trolling, you flag it.
And you leave it there.
See, the conversation isn't just you and them. The conversation is you and them and all of us reading it. And if you go more over the top, more ad hominem than they do, then the rest of us reading it see you as the unhinged one.
Don't try to win the conversation with people who are in bad faith. You can't. (Don't even try to out-insult them. You aren't going to get them to go "Oh, hey, he used a better insult than me. Maybe he's right...") Instead, try to win the readers. You can't do that by being more insulting than the one you're arguing with.
That flavor of "illness" isn't special at all, it's very normal. Behold any boycott pretty much ever.
> I do care about what I buy, I just don't care what others buy and what other people think about the things that I buy. Is that clear now? You need special flavor of mental illness to care and vocalize about the shit other people buy with their own money.
Are you fine with someone buying a human slave, then?
If it harms others or me, I will tell you about it. You can ignore it from a distance, but if you tend to purchase those things, the illness is not in my head.
Depends. If it does harm you, in some way or another, it's not absurd to talk about it.
You may not care, but everything we do is a statement about ourselves, consciously or not.
And yet you felt the need to inject that viewpoint into a thread where everyone is pointing out their own personal preferences and not telling others what to buy.
> You need special flavor of mental illness to ...
I did not downvote you before, because I believe it's your right not to care (even though I disagree).
But being so far away from understanding why people may care as to say that they "need special flavor of mental illness"... you are the one who seemingly needs to learn about the world.
Wow that's even more ignorant. Not bad not bad
But you know at the end of the day we do life on the same planet.
If your spending habit affects me, I do care.
I care about CO2 / weather changes, toxin in earth and water, Nazis, genocide etc.
You do understand that there are plenty of reasons that you do affect others?!
Strong brands and marketers disagree with your perception of brands. People buy brands, they buy stories, they want to support what they like.
>getting me from A to B safely and cheaply
And how do you expect that to be true when Elon, through his political power, has all regulators under his thumb?
Ah, the irony of suggesting anyone who isn't thoughtlessly consuming is an "NPC"
You’re not going to guilt anyone into buying a Tesla.
Even if you see it as a white good and not as activism then surely the fact that the resale value will be much lower may assist your decision, unless you're being an activist and choosing the car specifically for what it stands for, no?
What about the activism in your comment? I don't own a Tesla but why would you care about what I do with my money?
It's called silent complicity, have you read the "First, they came for" poem?
You're free to (legally) spend your money how you want, but other people are free to form an impression you and adjust their interactions with you as a result. The car you buy shouldn't subject you to physical violence, but it's perfectly acceptable for people to choose not to associate with you or do business with you as a result and that's a consequence of choices you make.
Then I'm happy I don't have shallow friends who judge people based on the car they drive.
Did you know VW, BMW, Mercedes and Porsche used slave labor in WW2? What do you say about the owners of those brands?
Do you really know that for sure? Have you asked them if they'd think less of you if you bought a Tesla now?
I judge people by their actions, not the sins of their parents. The companies you list aren't run by the same people, so your question is irrelevant. If Tesla were to toss out Musk and ensure he has no influence then people would likely stop judging Tesla owners the same way they do today.
I'm responding to your comment in a public forum - why would you specifically choose the chance of a low return on your money vs other cars unless you're specifically choosing to be an activist, that's not activism?
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What's wrong with making just one moral choice? Isn't it better than making zero moral choices?
People do what they can, based on what they believe is right (which you may well disagree with), their knowledge, skills, money and time available. That may not be all that much, they might be ill informed, but it is _something_. Perfect is the enemy of good.
Not giving a cent to Elon Musk seems like a reasonable cause if you believe he's gonna use that money for nefarious things. And at least for the things he's (very) publicly involved in, it's quite easy. Most people doing nefarious things do it in the shadows, and are funded in difficult to understand ways.
People judging each other for who they support by giving them money seems fair. You make some great points about what else they would probably see as problematic. This sounds like it could be a fruitful conversation without the name calling.
> To me, a car is a white good... As long as it fulfills my needs, getting me from A to B safely and cheaply, that's all I care.
Given that the resale value is the most significant factor of "cheaply" in a £40,000 asset, a negative brand image is an important factor here - even if you consider your fellow citizens to be NPCs.
Not everyone Posts critisism at Starbucks.
And yes people care. They can't always care to different reasons but doing something is better than nothing.
But good for you being condescending and making it clear that you don't do anything.
I don’t take my microwave out in public.
So then you agree with me that's it's all optics and virtue signaling rather than any ethics based in logic.
I disagree with your assertion that optics and “virtue signalling” are not based in logic.
What's the logic that you used? I never saw any.
When you buy something, you do participate in the cash flow that makes the seller/builder company function.
If that company has other activities or influences that you do not agree on, boycotting is not virtue signalling, it's voting with your money.
And while protesting some system from a place built with it may not be perfect, it is still better than refraining from protesting at all, if one has reasons to.
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Most people soon forget and really don't care about these things.
The Volkswagen company originated during the Third Reich in an attempt to create an affordable car for the German people. Volkswagen used both Jewish and non-Jewish forced labor, primarily from eastern Europe. The company operated four concentration camps and eight forced-labor camps on its property.
7 Brands With Nazi Ties That We All Use https://allthatsinteresting.com/major-brands-nazi-collaborat...
I'd argue that, as horrible as that was, it wasn't as centered in one person as famous and important as Musk. Like buying phones we know were perhaps made by people treated like slaves in China, versus buying something that is represented by one famous person that wants to bring back slavery.
Making decisions about VW based on 80 years ago is silly. The 2020s reason to hate VW is their lying about emissions scandal.
Yep, for sure.
But even that goes to my point, people still buy VW because they're either ignorant or soon forget these things.
This is the world we live in.
What a ridiculous comparison!
VW didn't even build cars for consumers during the war years.
Yeah the whole "people's car" was actually a Nazi memcoin rug-pull scam. They got millions of Germans to put down deposits and make payments for "future delivery" of their "people's car" but zero were ever delivered during the third reich.
People selling their Teslas afraid of associating with Musk is the topic here and the point I'm making is that the current political climate around this company will be a footnote in history that most people will care little about (if not already).
This too shall pass, frankly I think it's a form of cringe virtue signaling.
It's also a form of collective punishment, "I won't buy Tesla because I don't like Elon" is certainly a valid opinion, but what about all the workers who have nothing to do with his politics?
> but what about all the workers who have nothing to do with his politics?
This is a preposterous argument, I'm sorry. Should I feel sorry for people who enable Musk's antics? Why? They get paid very well to work for him I'm sure.
I disagree with Musk's antics and as such I'm not going to give him money. What's so difficult to understand about this?
I don't care that in 20 years time he'll be forgotten. We are here and now, and the best way to send him a message that what he is doing is not OK is by hurting his wallet.
You're sending a message to Elon about as much as sending a message to Mars Inc by not buying a Snickers bar.
Sending "real" messages is more than not buying things from companies or people you don't like and then virtue signaling about it online from the comfort of your armchair.
I think it's highfalutin.
Do you think many people opposing the Nazis were buying VWs during the war?
"Those Nazis are killing our soldiers right now in the north, but I will still buy one of their good cars", said nobody.
That's a moot point. Tesla was making cars before Musk became what he is today.
Moot or not, I won't buy a Tesla after what Must has become, and I will shame whoever does.
And now it's a public company with a CEO so obscure that he _does not even have a wikipedia page_. "Oh, well, Ford and VW used to be run by evil bastards most of a century ago so it's improper to point out that Tesla currently is" is a bizarre argument.
At least you could buy a VW from 1945 on and not finance the Nazi war machine.
But before that? You were a clear collaborator.
The British Military Government rebooted Volkswagen after they firebombed the Nazis to the ground and hung a few of the ringleaders.
https://www.volkswagen-group.com/en/volkswagen-chronicle-173...
Apart from the political implications, it certainly doesn't help that European news are full of reports that Tesla cars place last in national reliability rankings for EVs.
https://www.carscoops.com/2024/11/tesla-model-3-comes-bottom...
I'm Spanish and I've seen many friends dismiss Tesla because of this notion of their cars being cheaply made and because most people here live in flats, and the shared garages don't have sockets for charging them. Many people are leaning towards hybrid vehicles with autonomous features like Hyundai. The suscription model for a car also plays a big role.
If you can't charge an electric car, you shouldn't take a hybrid either, it's the same problem. If you only charge the battery when braking the overall CO2 footprint over the lifecycle of the car is higher than if you had a thermal vehicle.
The reason is a combination of markedly higher CO2-equivalent emissions for manufacturing (two motors instead of one + big battery), increased weight for the same reason which causes an increase in fuel consumption + elevated tire/brakes degradation + decommissioning of the car causes more emissions. And this doesn't include the other negative externalities such as the ecological impact of the additional metal and rare earth extraction.
Hybrid cars only make sense from a CO2 perspective if you charge them and drive exclusively on electricity inside cities, with only an occasional fuel refill before long distance trips.
> only charge the battery when braking
No, good hybrid drivetrains charge the battery during normal driving not just breaking. It saves gas by avoiding the least efficient RPM ranges of the engine.
~80%(battery & conversion losses) of 35% fuel efficiency easily beats 100% of 10% fuel efficiency. Using a 200HP engine to creep around a flat parking lot or run the AC while waiting etc is simply inherently inefficient so they turn the engine off. As a bonus you get that quick EV acceleration without an oversized engine that’s rarely operating efficiently.
As to emissions from car manufacturing, don’t ignore emissions from gasoline manufacturing. People get these comparisons wildly wrong by only looking at tailpipe emissions and ignoring upstream extraction, refining, and transportation emissions over the 25+ lifetime of an average car.
> two motors instead of one + big battery ... elevated brakes degradation
You might be simplifying a bit too much here. The most successful hybrid powertrains are built from the ground up as hybrids and the "hybridized" parts actually replace ICE parts that aren't needed anymore. For example, the HSD system in a Toyota hybrid replaces the clutch, gearbox, starter and alternator, and the result is much more robust.
Also the brakes on a hybrid usually degrade slower, because of recuperation.
Just out of curiosity, wouldn't it be a no-brainer for the owner of the building to layer the roof with solar panels and fill the garage with chargers? Seems like free money in a country with lots of sunshine.
The usual problems with this approach are 1) the roof is not big enough for solar panels to power multiple chargers and 2) the power is generated when people are not at home (and probably using their car to go to work).
Then the obvious solution is to put solar panels over parking spots at work. Doesn't need to be that much power, 1-2kW is enough if the car sits there all day (for typical distances people commute with cars)
The most common estimate of the average payback period for solar panels is five to fifteen years. Seems more like a sloppy investment not "free money"
Then you'd have to charge during the day and drive during the night.
An important factor for choosing hybrid is that it must have the same benefits as an EV.
In Denmark there has been a trial in Copenhagen, where fossil fueled cars AND hybrids were not allowed on a particular road, only EVs were allowed.
Yes, a bit tangential, but I feel hybrids were discarded too quickly (the 2030/35 ban on new petrol cars includes hybrids) when they should have probably been encouraged as a stepping stone and because indeed in many European areas charging at home is a challenge.
Hybrids weren't making a dent in the ICE car market, whereas EVs are:
https://ti-insight.com/briefs/have-internal-combustion-engin...
It's just that we don't see it in the geopolitical west, as it's all happening in China, which is currently by far the single largest passenger vehicle market in the world.
Personally I drive a hybrid because that was the most electrified car I could afford back in 2017.
And on top of that - there is a lot of good competent competition now, gone are the times were the Model 3 was pretty much undisputed king of cheap-ish EVs. The only thing they really still have going for them is the Supercharger network, but honestly fewer people seem to care than you'd think.
I'm surprised they're still not much worse than other, long established companies. Modern EVs are newish tech, TESLA is a newish company and the Model 3 is built to be "cheap".
And the TÜV's HU is a very thorough checkup. Failing it is easily caused by neglecting regular maintenance or careless driving. If you absolutely need to pass your test, befriend your local DEKRA guy, let him have a short look, and get your HU done early.
Tesla was always going to face a harder time at some point (leaving politics aside).
They had a good time because they had this 'cool' image and had no real competition for a time, although their quality and realiability issues (in addition to American cars' reputation) were known.
But now you have alternatives both on price and quality as all the European and Japanese incombents have an EV lineup and Chinese are pushing hard. So they are becoming one brand among many in a cut-throat market and don't really shine in any aspect.
agreed, I made money on tsla but even I would have avoided the product like the plague, it is tat, and now that Toyota no longer helps with the design it's likely even worse.
To say nothing of the CEO.
Interesting stats. I notice cheaper cars start to dominate in later years.
One obvious conclusion is that they are cheaply made but I wonder how much is the possibly sensible decision of owners of low cost cars to skip expensive regular maintenance and wait for something to fail a legally required test before getting it fixed?
Now that I think about it, I think the last time these stats were shared there was some chatter about these faults being caught and fixed by service mechanics before the test in other brands. Can't quite remember the mechanism by which such fixes wouldn't be counted in these stats though. Possibly just Tesla fan copium, there's a lot of that about.
I dropped my car to dealership and asked them to do MOT for me as service. They will first check everything and likely call me for approval to fix it. Or if under warranty do the repairs under warranty without prompt. Thus clear visible issues will be handled even before car arrives in inspection. This covers things like tires, lights, but also suspension components or if OBH tells something is wrong.
In general the inspection is not even attempted if there is something to fix.
People who skip the regular maintenance either don't understand the outsized impact it will have on long term reliability and the eventual costs, or they do but they have more pressing matters to address with that money.
> In general the inspection is not even attempted if there is something to fix.
Where I live in Central/Western Europe the sheer number of cars which can't possibly drive in legal conditions (rolling chimney stack exhaust or stadium light headlights) astonishes me. They get the "all green" at the inspection regardless of what needs to be fixed.
Well because you can remove all of this for the inspection and then put it back on after, even if we ignore straight up bribery to pass the test, which still exists in places. It should be the job of the road enforcement teams to find these people, stop them and impound the car until it's brought back to a road worthy condition. And there are some European countries which are very good at this and if you drive with some wonky car that is clearly not compliant you will be stopped, and some where such enforcement is almost non existent.
> Well because you can remove all of this for the inspection and then put it back on after, even if we ignore straight up bribery to pass the test
I'm not talking (only) about after market modding, rolling coal, or xenon upgrades but about plain old unmaintained clunkers. This is deep in "bribery to pass the test" territory. and law enforcement isn't willing to do anything about it on the road even if spotting these cars is trivial. Look out for a smoke plume during the day, or for the rolling artificial sun at night.
And this is in the country which is the source of clunkers for everyone else, not the destination.
Many cars in the belt from Lithuania through Poland down to Romania are cars imported from Germany and USA with status "totaled". The reincarnation procedure includes deactivating and cutting off ad blue, DPF and other sorcery.
There should be no scheduled maintenance the first two or three years, other than maybe tires and oil change, but skipping those don't "cause defects".
Typical faults that cause failure are; uneven brake force, badly aligned headlights, uneven tire wear, play and wear in suspension components, and so on.
https://www.whatcar.com/news/most-reliable-cars/n27337 and here the Model Y is in the top 10 most reliable.
It's as if all these news articles are useless...
Tesla sales down as new Model Y being released, big surprise
> It's as if all these news articles are useless...
But the news article linked in the post is based on the official ranking of TÜV in Germany. TÜV does a thorough inspection of each car registered in Germany, every 24 months. Roughly 20% of the cars fail that test, and the ranking is simply based on these numbers. Corresponding agencies in other countries had very similar rankings.
No surprise. The car salesman has gone mad.
In addition, people are finding out that an EV is not a high-tech product (except for maybe the battery), and can be made just as well and cheaper in low-wage countries.
I think Elon saw the writing on the way a long time ago.
So he's in the process of trying to pivot Tesla to a self-driving taxi, humanoid, energy company. In addition, he's trying to buy as much time as possible by lobbying for huge Chinese tariffs in the US.
That's not it. He did that stuff to frame it as a tech company not as a car company. WeWork did the same thing. If you are seen as a tech company. Not just another normal company then you can justify the ludicrous evaluations you are getting. While dismissing questions about why your company is worth more than any of your competitor with saner financial statements.
Maybe I'm naive but I don't think you need to construct an argument of ill intent/deceit to explain Tesla's actions and marketing. Nothing Tesla has done is in conflict with the strategy laid out at the beginning which was to first sell expensive cars, and then selling increasingly cheaper cars.
FSD is not in the strategy to frame it as a tech company, but to make use of software margins. If you can sell a car that cost 30k to manufacture for 40k instead of 35k because it has software on it, that greatly improves your margins because the software doesn't have manufacturing cost beyond the initial R&D.
There's a lot about Elon to dislike, but his business ideas are sound. At the same time I fully believe his behavior is going to run Tesla into the ground which will be a real shame. He really took the incredible amount of goodwill they got for being the first to make a car that could be both cheaper and better for the environment in the face of both established car companies and the oil industry, and he just flushed all that goodwill down the shitter.
Tesla's saving grace would be to produce cars at a competitive price point, I think money always trumps politics, and with tariffs on Chinese imports that might be achieved, but they'd still be losing the European market and any extra margin they might have gotten from their previously good reputation.
That strategy is just for raising money, as far as I know Tesla doesn't raise money from investors anymore. Although you do have to keep stockholders happy and framing as a tech company helps with that.
No it seems he really wants to pivot tesla away from cars to services like Apple. Sell the hardware but have the massive profits on services. Remains to be seen if the strategy will work out, it is a very risky bet.
Chinese cars are already effectively barred from the USA.
And Canada, which has, as I recall, a one hundred percent tariff on something like a BYD or any other car made in China, even if they did submit them for federal road safety compliance testing.
Nope. There's no way to disguise or explain away his recent actions: Elon's actions are clearly those of a person who has grudges against certain segments of society and wants to use political power to fix them.
If he just wanted tariffs on China he could have just imitated Miriam Adelson: give the Trump campaign $200M & state your demands without mincing words. Or, split the amount between both parties and ride whichever horse that comes out on top.
> EV is not a high-tech product
EV doesn't have to be a high-tech product, although you need some fairly high tech stuff in the charger and BMS; the problem with modern cars is (1) protectionist questionable tech mandates like backup cameras and tyre pressure sensors and "phone home in event of crash" which inflate the BOM and (2) the need to add "features" to inflate the margin, like complicated dashboard computers and subscription heated seats.
This is why average Chinese drivers are picking up huge numbers of moderately priced EVs that the West is preventing from being sold.
I honestly and unironically think that our EV(a Volkswagen e-UP) is what most buyers actually want, but what manufacturers aren't making. It's simple, everything inside is using normal analogue dials including the one for battery level, it gets ~150-180 miles of range out of its 36kWh battery(even Tesla doesn't do those kinds of efficiency numbers), it doesn't have satnav just a factory holder for your phone.......that's all you need. You get in, turn(!!!) the key and go. It works day in and day out. No software updates, no phantom braking, no beeping at you because it read a sign wrong....it's what an EV(and I'd argue - any car) should be. Obviously package it in a larger body for people who need the space(eGolf exists and uses exact same EV drivetrain), but yeah stop cramming EVs with every gadget under the sun, most people don't want it and they certainly don't want to be paying for it.
Does “salesman” figure actually affect your choice of car? Shouldn’t it be objective characteristics like TCO, reliability, etc
Cars are one of the most brand and image driven purchases that people make, certainly when weighted by cost.
There's very little cold logical thought involved in most new car purchases.
This should clarify a few things: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human
Have you ever talked to carbon based humanoid life forms before?
Yes.
I have not bought that kitchen by that weird sales guy who ignored my wives kitchen 3d model (ah we don't need that, we will start from scratch)
I will not buy a Tesla either.
Yes, yes it does. Why is it inconceivable that people don't want to give money to Musk? It's called voting with your wallet. I may like the car, but I deeply disagree with the business owner's views and deranged behavior over the last couple of years. The easiest thing I can do is to give my money to someone else instead.
Ultimately it doesn't matter whether Musk truly believes some of the lunacy he says, his actions speak for him. I disagree with his actions and don't want to support him. He could make the best car in the world for all I care.
what do you think of Volkswagen then?
It's not so simple with companies, if you view them as a single entity, because they are composed of many individuals and you interface with them at different layers.
In the case of Tesla, you have a very public figure embodying the figure of the company. If Tesla has the best EVs it's not really Tesla that has them but _Elon Musk's Tesla_ (whether that's true or not in terms of his stocks doesn't matter to the general public).
Same with SpaceX. It's not SpaceX's great engineering team launching rockets that people remember, it's "did you see Elon's latest rocket launch? amazing!"
The fact we don't remember who VW's CEO is speaks volumes about this (in the opposite way).
If it was 1940, I'd avoid buying one. If you are aware of the Volkswagen profits going directly to a known nazi supporter, I'd love to know.
People can change, as can ownership of companies. If Musk divested himself completely of Tesla, I'd be happy to buy one. I have no bias against Tesla or it's employees, I have a bias against the owner currently hard at work trying to destroy democracy in the US and across the globe.
More to the point, are you deliberately trolling or you genuinely do not see the point being made?
>Does “salesman” figure actually affect your choice of car?
If I have multiple choices that are equivalent then I will use other criterias like "Am I giving money to nazis?"
Still not reflecting in the stock. His constant lying that “fsd is coming in a few months” hasn’t reflected in the stock either.
FSD within 12 months! Yes, it wasn't true when he said it in 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023 or 2024. (https://www.jalopnik.com/elon-musk-tesla-self-driving-cars-a...)
But 2025 is the year baby! I'm a complete believer!
Tesla doesn't have shareholders. They have a congregation.
The market will remain irrational longer than you can stay solvent. Stock price is not directly tied to a company's performance. It's tied to investor sentiment of a company's performance in the future.
How it used to work maybe, meme stocks are not tied to any performance or prediction other than stock going up.
Yes, that's what I said. They think the stock will perform better in the future.
You said companies performance, maybe you meant to say stock performance?
I mean both. Investors tell themselves a stock price will go up due to company performance. Performance can mean a lot of things to different people and isn't necessarily tied to fiscal performance. No one is buying stock and thinking, "this company will tank, and that will cause the stock to shoot up" outside of very specific situations and events.
Exactly, which is why this stock is going to zero. ZERO.
In the US, cars are a huge part of people's identity, and brand is everything. It's a major purchase and a multi-year commitment.
Imagine you don't follow politics closely, but you're in the market for a car sometime in the next 12 months. All of a sudden when you go to the Tesla dealership, you have to fight your way past protesters. You start to see Teslas spray painted with swastikas for some reason. You hear the phrase "swasticar."
Tesla is destroying their most valuable asset (their brand), which takes years to build and usually can't be rebuilt. As sales begin to take a meaningful hit, institutional investors will start to get out, and it will be a feedback loop that will force the price down. They'll sell the assets to Ford for pennies.
You should research Henry Ford if you think that supporting Nazis is enough to take a magnate's auto company down.
A lot has changed in the past 90 years. Let’s see how it goes this time.
I hope so. I feel like we've been sliding backwards.
If you really believe that, you should short the stock.
Now that you mention it, I will!
* ETA: done
I hope you make out. TSLA has been taking a beating over the last month. I think a lot of (tech) stocks are about to crash. I think the tariffs and government layoffs will finally burst the bubble that the FED has been trying to pop for a while.
OP, probably like me, isn't putting money against Tesla.
And at some point, reality comes crashing down.
Tesla will not dominate the autonomous taxi market. Basically every major car company has tech comparable with Tesla (Mercedes, GM, etc).
Tesla will not dominate the battery market. Heck, I think they still DON'T make their own batteries (it's all collaborations with LG Chemical and other chemical companies and they have shared licensing and stuff).
And you can fool some people all the time and all the people some time, but you can't fool all the people, all the time.
Once Tesla becomes a bit player in China (Chinese companies are ruthless), gets mauled in Europe (starting to happen), what could possibly justify their market cap? The US? It will be saturated at a certain point. India? Not growing fast enough to make up for it, the Indian economy is 1/7th the US one and Indian disposable incomes are probably 1/50th the US ones...
To be fair, in the US, Tesla has the best FSD, by far.
But in the EU the self-driving software they released sucks (even Mercedes has way better system, at least in Germany, and takes liability on their shoulders), other electric cars have better finish, and they have support for things like Stalks, that European users actually want, due to roundabouts.
Seeing 'the best FSD' in a sentence is odd - it makes it sound there are multiple FSDs out there, and Tesla's FSD is the best. At the same time, it is not actually self-driving, rather it is a supervised system that has been called FSD for marketing and false promise purposes.
Isn't Waymo way ahead in the US?
Markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent, and all of that.
> His constant lying that “fsd is coming in a few months”
Can't we start a class action suit?
It's crazy! They have a 149.04 PE ratio! Their humanoid robots are behind Chinese counterparts, in fact, they are catching up rather than leading. Tesla is losing ground to other EVs while being lower in quality, more expensive, and carrying a negative connotation due to Musk. Taxis? Look at Waymo or the self-driving system currently working in China, sold by Huawei (ADS v3.2). The only thing they have is their CEO, a charlatan, selling tales about future.
It went down a lot again in the last weeks. It remains volatile, goes up quickly on a lot of promises, but then retreats etc.
Yes but the stock has obviously not reflected reality for a while. Tesla as a car company never justified the stock valuation, which implied it would take over 100% of the entire US market.
It's a memestock like GameStop became.
I got one recently (UK). Luckily my pals are nice people, so rather than give me a hard time about Elon, they instead complemented my car on how much luggage will fit in das boot.
It goes from 0 to 1939 in 3 seconds!
We all thought that the 88 mph easter-egg was an easter-egg for Back to the future. But in reality, it might be the other 88 (see, "what means 88 in germany")
Also, the decimal ASCII code for capital letter X is 88, and Musk likes to quote the infamous “14 words” slightly paraphrased.
Damn strange coincidences.
I can’t believe I bought a car from this dude. Never again. (He also lied to me about FSD for years after I’d already paid for it, but now that fraud pales in comparison to all his latest insane bullshit.)
I guess he just doesn’t need us, his customers, anymore now that he’s captured an authoritarian government.
I was saying it as a joke, but ahem, this 14 words thing is a bit concerning.
I wouldn't be surprised if he sees himself as some sort of Wernher von Braun.
He was named after the elon in von Braun's book.
His response to Trumps napoleon tweet had 14 American flags.
I would like to have stickers of Elon doing his nazi salutes, that I could put on Teslas I see in the streets.
I see several Teslas a day and have never thought to associate the personal property of an individual with with the political beliefs of a shareholder of the company that makes it.
I'm curious what you are compelled to do when you see a Volkswagen.
What I am compelled to do now, or what I would have been compelled to do in 1943 if my neighbour had bought a VW?
It's pretty different, isn't it?
In 4+ years if we are 4 years into a global war, involving mass genocide, and 10s of million of dead, and your neighbor buys a Tesla, I would be fine if you defaced it with a sticker.
It's not even 1939 yet. Leave the Tesla alone.
Perhaps stopping before 1933 would be preferable?
You asked my opinion, I gave it.
But dude, you don't get to tell me what I must think of Tesla. I couldn't care less about you being fine with me "defacing a Telsa with a sticker".
Wanna talk about genocide? Read about "Gaza".
As a car enthusiast, I know that the history of VW is nuanced. And you should know that also.
Right now, with Tesla, there is no nuance. It's as clear day. A meme-lord douche is currently CEO and I absolutely detest what he currently stands for. When I see a Tesla, I see said douche sieg heiling.
The history of every german car maker that was around in the 30ies is "nuanced" in that way.
Some American as well.
Agreed. But it is history. For example, you'll know that it was the allies who effectively restarted VW as a practical solution after WW2 and who can be credited with its existence.
Tesla is here and now.
I wouldn't buy a VW before/during WW2. I wouldn't buy a Tesla now.
Not making the two equivalent - but who knows where history is going. We're talking about a US government with fascist tendencies, openly flirting with a mafia superpower.
Did they indicate the amount of luggage with a raised right hand?
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Easter Egg to help you out - on standard models, you can unlock Ludicrous mode by shouting: Schneil !!!
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It's not mentioned in the article, but the EU imposed tariffs on Chinese made EVs at the end of October.
Tesla had a 7.8% tariff imposed. BMW's are at 20.7%.
Most Teslas sold in the EU last year were imported from China.
Both companies are fighting it in court.
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/jan/27/tesla-tak...
> BMW's are at 20.7%.
BYD?
17.0% for BYD.
https://www.euronews.com/business/2025/01/28/tesla-and-bmw-s...
I'm very annoyed by this; if Europe is serious about the EV transition and the ban on new ICE sales, it should not be putting trade barriers in front of cheap EVs!
They're to protect Europe's car manufacturing industry, which is a significant industry which directly and indirectly employs a lot of people and circulates a lot of money. Part of that industry is green technology, which is exactly what Europe needs to build up. Europe has a challenge in that it wants to keep local manufacturing industries but also make sure that they are environmentally and socially responsible, which costs a lot more than other countries without those concerns and cheaper costs. I'm no fan of the ridiculous trade wars but totally free trade hasn't proved to be an outright success. I know the playing fields aren't level but I don't know what the sensible middle ground solution is.
I'd rather we tax foreign imports and give subsidies for locally-made EVs. Especially now that Europe seems to be on its own for the near future.
As european and a driver of a model 3, I would also not consider buying a tesla again. It's not the car, it has some flaws, I never bought into the FSD bullshit and basically knew what I was going into. But now it more and more feels like driving a car with a huge swastika sticker on it, and I don't see that going away in the foreseeable future.
Sales of "I bought this before Elon went crazy" stickers are up, however.
https://sticker-depot.de/products/aufkleber-i-bought-this-be...
ah, they also have the I love Elon sticker, covering all bases. Just like Elivs manager. https://www.grunge.com/1058095/why-colonel-parker-sold-i-hat...
Classic market segmentation.
In Ireland car licenses start with the year of manufacture, so if your license starts dates it from 2020 or after, that excuse isn't too convincing.
I think 2018 he called the cave diver a pedo, who tried to rescue the group of small kids.
That was my frist "wat.jpeg" moment about Musk, at least the one I remember.
"Best" part of that story is that the court protected Musk's "freedom to insult" and considered it was an insult and not defamatory, so there is really no justice on that planet.
I think that was the year he went off the rail with the flamethrower, right?
Note to aspiring founders: insulting your core customers is not good business.
Gerald Ratner's speech [0] was supposed to be a case study, not an aspiration.
> After the speech, the value of the Ratner group plummeted by around £500 million, which very nearly resulted in the group's collapse.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerald_Ratner#Career
I was wondering if this was a Ratner moment. There are a lot of similarities.
Same goes for politicians. Insulting your potential voters is moronic.
He's the got ear (and more) of the President of the United States at a time when the Executive Power in the US is the strongest it has ever been, if any "aspiring founder" sees that as a thing not to emulate then they should start thinking about doing something else with their lives.
And considering a lot of them probably are aspiring to emulate it, everyone else should be figuring out how to avoid this sort of power consolidation and capture.
The US government is not going to replace the foreign markets he's busy trashing.
Brought to you by the same guy who got up on a stage and told the major X advertisers "go fuck yourself".
In case of a war between US and Denmark, or whole Europe, remotely controlled cars can be used as weapons.
Please tell that to European countries buying F35.
NATO will have to rethink that as well if they consider the US an unreliable partner.
Hopefully, this insanity ends in four years.
Well the US have been very clearly saying that NATO is pretty much dead.
And NATO-countries are very much considering the US an unreliable partner. Also it's interesting that you wrote "partner": 2 months ago people would have said "allies", now it's "unreliable partner".
Even if the insanity ends in four years (which is starting to seem increasingly unlikely tbh, does anyone still believe next elections will be smooth and fair?), the US will be considered an unreliable partner for much longer.
A reputation of reliability explicitly means not pulling tricks like these. If you do, it means you're unreliable.
if it only happened once I'd say the electorate made a mistake, which is part of liberal democracy
however they saw what happened (including the events of Jan 6th), and they did it again
so it's not a one-off, it's a pattern
the rest of the west would be foolish to treat this as anything other than a permanent new direction
NATO doesn’t have to rethink anything, NATO is an extension of EUCOM for all intents and purposes. That’s why the title of Supreme Allied Commander Europe goes to the same guy that runs EUCOM.
If people try to go back to the way things were in 4 years they're stupid. Trump threatens allies, nakidly goes after political enemies and makes 'jokes' about becoming a dictator and the people love it unless/even if it negatively impacts them.
Hell, Korea almost turned into a dictatorship in the last few months and Yoon still has a lot of support even after being found out and removed. Democracies are fragile and the only way I can see them surviving is if power isn't concentrated.
The Europeans are very aware of such a threat. There is growing support for buying only domestically produced arms.
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The figure that matters the most is proportion of EV sales. It looks like that went down, but the figure itself is not included.
Apparently overall EV sales went up over 37%: https://www.reuters.com/business/autos-transportation/europe...
Numbers are available here [1][2].
BEVs sells represents 124,341 units in 01/25 when they were 92,741 units in 01/24.
EV market shares on sells jump from 10% of sells to 15% in EU.
Meanwhile Tesla sells drop around to 7.5k units from 15k units.
With the current popularity decline of the Tesla CEO in Europe, this is hardly surprising [3].
This is very likely not the only reason, the late release of the new model Y is very likely playing a role too.
[1]: https://www.acea.auto/pc-registrations/new-car-registrations...
[2]: https://www.acea.auto/pc-registrations/new-car-registrations...
[3]: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/jan/17/elon-musk...
You would have to be making a strong statement to buy a Tesla now, even a second hand one.
And sadly, not a statement about cars.
Over 50% of Tesla's sales are model Y which is going through a version upgrade at the moment. The new version is widely publicised, much better than the old one, and will be available in the next few months. Why would you buy a model Y now?
A big dip was also observed during the model 3 upgrade in Q1 2024.
Everybody is obsessing so much over Elon's behaviour right now that they are glossing over important other factors.
Much as people want this to be political, I think it's just business. The European EV market has rapidly become very competitive and Tesla just aren't keeping up. They haven't launched a new model for several years, but there's a flood of new cars from European, Korean and Chinese brands that offer very compelling features and value.
The Model 3 was supposed to be a breakthrough in affordable EVs, but it's now twice as expensive as the cheapest EVs on the European market. It also isn't particularly small by European standards, which leaves Tesla with nothing to compete in the very popular city car and supermini segments.
Tesla's cars aren't particularly sexy or novel any more, they're just a bit weird. European brands are selling EVs that look and feel like normal cars, come with the backing of a trusted local dealer, and aren't very much more expensive than their internal combustion counterparts. The huge drop in Tesla sales was entirely predictable based on market fundamentals.
Hard to believe anyone is still buying them at all. Surely the company is totally irredeemable in the eyes of the vast majority of their customer base.
Beside the person of Elon himself, there is another thing too: Tesla cars are old. Yesterday's design with yesterday's features. There hasn't been a new Tesla since what... a decade? Sure, Cybertruck exists, but that's not really comparable to a Tesla 3 for example, in its function, target customers and price...
But that really isn't true either. The model 3, for example, has undergone 3 or 4 refreshes that change a lot. They have not dramatically changed the exterior of the car, which I know a lot of people think is absolutely critical, since an 8 year old model 3 looks almost identical to a new model 3.
Most car makers haven't released new models in a long time, they just update their current models, and make them visibly different from the outside.
Now… if you were talking about the lack of new feature _in_ the car, then I would be happy to agree. And if you want to talk about the _still_ lacking functionality of automatic wipers…
Yes - Tesla seem to make very big changes under the hood that aren't obvious from outside so you don't realise they're actually refreshing the models. For example at a refresh of the Y they changed it so that the whole floor was battery and the seats etc bolted to that. Massive castings come and go. Pretty huge updates.
What's the benefit to the customer? Usually the silent changes are for making the product cheaper and increasing profits. Did it provide more leg room or battery capacity, or something else?
True. Norway is an EV leader and a few years ago the only real option for an affordable long range EV was a Tesla. The Nissan Leaf was next popular as it was a perfect city car but useless for the drive to the mountain cabin. Now there's a range of cars of all sizes and budgets in both the new and used car markets and Teslas are the "meh" brand.
Every single Tesla ad I've seen is for the cybertruck. Which you can't get in my country. I researched cars online when I bought a car last year and saw a lot of youtube and Facebook ads for Tesla ever since, and I basically viewed Tesla as "the cybertruck company". Is it like this in the EU?
The cybertruck is not sold in europe, is is too big, too heavy and does not meet our pedestrian safety regulations.
In France no one knows about the cybertruck. It’s only regular Teslas.
Remember that... we don't have numbers yet from Tesla in Europe after Musk did the Sieg Heil.
I live in Europe and people absolutely went batshit crazy about it, not only in Germany. People really despise that gesture.
I'm willing to bet sales in Europe for Tesla FY2025 will be terrible.
I know many Tesla owners here that are considering selling the car because they are also afraid of the car dropping even further in price because too many people will want to sell it.
I'm in the Netherlands and the used market for Tesla has already dropped like a rock. It is flooded with cars from leasing companies who after 5 years now want to sell them on for deprecation and tax purposes.
This is comforting, as an Argentinian living in Germany. 1 out of 5 people here voted for the AFD...
On average, yes. But if you look on a voting map[0], you'll notice that the majority of those votes comes out of the former DDR. In many other areas, much less than 1 in 5 voted for the brownshirts.
[0]: https://www.tagesschau.de/inland/bundestagswahl/wahlkreiserg...
If you look even deeper, at people's actual attitudes[1], you'll see that far-right positions are approx. equally distributed in Eastern and Western Germany - the kind of people voting AfD in Eastern Germany (currently) just vote CDU in Western Germany.
[1] = Leipziger Autoritarismus-Studie, https://www.boell.de/de/leipziger-autoritarismus-studie
Yes. But: The map does not reflect polulation density. (Which is rather low)
DDR is not a proper Germany, cant count them
No, the point I am making is that it very much depends on their location if this "1 in 5"-average is even remotely true. And looking at overall population statistics and concentration of jobs, it's comparatively likely that somebody migrating to germany is _not_ in those areas.
And I do think that's important to point out.
But immigrants do not vote unless they become citizens, do they?
I was originally replying to this comment:
>> This is comforting, as an Argentinian living in Germany. 1 out of 5 people here voted for the AFD...
My fundamental aim here was to show the poster, that it's likely not as bad where they are - and since they are a migrant, I assumed that they were likely not in those really bad areas. Intended as a positive message. Sadly, I apparently butchered the delivery of this message, as several people interpreted it completely differently.
What about Germans living in Argentina? :)
Lmao
And 4 out of 5 didn’t.
Around 50% of the population has an IQ of less than 100.
> I know many Tesla owners here that are considering selling the car because they are also afraid of the car dropping even further in price because too many people will want to sell it.
I know some who are considering selling the car because they are afraid of what other people will think knowing they drive a Tesla.
I would encourage you to watch the whole video of the incident, with sound, and then put your hand on your heart and honestly say you think that was a sieg heil. (but don't throw it to the crowd after)
Wanna explain this white supremacy dog whistle?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourteen_Words
https://theconversation.com/musks-inauguration-salute-is-not...
It was not a coincidence that it looked like one. Nobody with knowledge of contemporary history would make a gesture that could be interpreted as "Sieg Heil" by mistake at an event that is watched worldwide.
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Why do people keep saying that Elon is on ketamine? What news did I miss? Did he check himself in a rehab? Did he do something outrageous a a party? I am curious. Thanks!
https://www.wsj.com/business/elon-musk-illegal-drugs-e826a9e... https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/18/tech/elon-musk-ketamine-u... https://www.foxnews.com/health/elon-musk-reveals-takes-ketam...
etc.
just ask any search engine
https://www.wired.com/story/ketamine-psychedelic-slumber-par...
> “Ketamine is helpful for getting one out of the negative frame of mind,” Elon Musk told an interviewer last year. The unelected man currently gutting US federal programs isn’t the only one who thinks so. Ketamine, approved decades ago as a surgical anesthetic and long used as a party drug, is the off-label mental-health treatment of the moment. It induces a “trancelike” state of “sensory isolation,” researchers say, and may temporarily boost the brain’s neuroplasticity—which, in theory, makes mental ruts easier to escape. At the same time, ketamine abuse can be deadly, and the drug remains illegal to use without a prescription. (Musk says he has one from “an actual, real doctor.”)
Basically costs $350 to get a prescription.
I've watched it, many people have, and have still firmly concluded it was a purposeful action. It's debatable whether it was a true "I'm a Nazi" move or a "I'm a troll" move but the smirk on the face, the long, long history of trolling and antagonizing opponents, the previous comments from Musk that the left was calling him a Nazi, etc... all indicate that he intentionally did something provoking.
This is even more true for the latest copycats from CPAC, which show that the Fascist salute is being normalised and becoming a MAGA symbol. Think about that. Whatever Elon's original intent, the American right is now knowingly doing the fascist salute, not as satire but as a open sign of their politics and provocation to their opponents.
I watched the video with sound quite a few times. It was totally heil hitler salute. (Not to bring up the statement Elon made about how Germans should stop apologizing for holocaust. At that point even the anti-defamation league gave upon him. Elon is fascist to the core)
I don't understand why modern day Germans would have to apologise for the holocaust either, maybe I'm out of touch.
I also don't know why HN keeps these Elon posts up because they're always a shit-show of reddit-ness and I believe most other similarly high-conflict subjects would have been nixed by now.
In France, Tesla Model Y is -57% (compared to Jan '24) at 640 units in January, while other brands are growing at 2813 (Renault 5), 1548 (Citroen E C3), 1177 (Renault Scenic), 762 (Peugeot 3008), among others.
Source: https://www.autojournal.fr/environnement/voitures-electrique...
Actually, I think they went "batshit sane", what other reaction could a sane person have after seeing that happening on live TV, during the POTUS investiture?
I would not buy it anyway because it's too expensive and I don't want an EV but if I was looking for this kind of car, seeing the CEO acting so stupid would put me off
I always wanted a Tesla before Elon turned far-right.
Now I would never buy one. This is the "find out" part of the old adage.
Article ties sales with politics, but I think that main reason is people finally realising that EV are not so good and cheap as advertised.
Actually, people are realizing EV are better than advertised. Batteries are lasting longer than the warranties. Also, Chinese EVs are very inexpensive so this indicates the price of EVs everywhere is going to drop a lot in the near future, even if Chinese EVs are banned or tariffed in some countries.
Wrong, EV sales are up 34% overall in Europe [1].
[1] https://www.electrive.com/2025/02/25/january-figures-ev-sale...
My go to joke on this is: "Oh, so it was USAID that was buying all the Teslas"
I own a Model Y and love it.
No way my next car will be a Tesla though.
I mean I would be embarrassed in front of everyone I know if I got one independent even of my own feelings.
Here in Norway there is a ridiculous number of Teslas. I think just in the houses I can see on my street I count 5 of them.
So perhaps understandably many in Norway are still in denial about the nazi salute. Media talked about "strange arm gesture" at the time.
But the 14 US flag posts on X should remove any doubt.
Also the effect is clear: Bannon did a less veiled and undeniable salute, with much less attention since Musk had gone before.
Accidentally signalling that you are a nazi and being too stressed and embarassed to properly apologize about it? Perhaps. But twice in a month? Don't think so.
I'm wondering to what degree Elon's political activism would have affected his wealth if he owned a boring commodities business. That, I think, is the only niche that creates a loophole for Elon-style social activism. Whether your company sells bulk minerals, or exports millions of tons of wheat, iron ore, or coal, your customers are mostly faceless corporations and you can quietly funnel money to politics or even take a public stance without losing money.
That Koch model is hard to replicate when your main cash cow are high-end, $50k to $100k consumer devices that people spend months researching before making a decision.
Good, now our (european) politicians should stop forcing companies like Volkswagen, with an incredible history and technological background, giving money to Musk for carbon credits. Use the same money to improve public transportation and the long term impact on CO2 will be better for sure. Not only civil cars are a trivial part of CO2 emissions, but there are many other effective ways to improve things: avoid trucks to move goods, in favor of trains (we have good trains on average) and boats, like 30/40 years ago. Public transportation, as I said. Warming systems... All changes that could have greater effects without destroying our car industry. For reference: Volkswagen has 650k employees. 300k in Germany, 350k outside.
What shocks me with European automakers is that all small EVs have disappeared from their offerings. Renault Zoe, Twingo, VW Up, etc. SUVs on the other hand are absolutely everywhere. Public transports are the ultimate solution of course, but we can't do without cars after decades of car-centric urban development.
The eUp at least is getting a replacement (i2) though I think it's delayed til next year.
My wife spends more than two hours in public transport every day and believe me, it is the ultimate nightmare, not the ultimate solution.
I grew up in a city with well-functioning public transportation. Biggest luxury I ever had. I miss it.
I live in a city with one of the best public transport systems in the world. Anywhere I want to go, there's a bus/tram/trolleybus/subway that goes there and leaves in less than 15 minutes. It costs $150 a year. If that isn't luxury then I don't know what is.
Maybe something could be done to make public transport better in your city/region?
> cars are a trivial part of CO2 emissions
Sadly this isn't true. Not to mention the particulates which VW defrauded everyone about.
VW need to stop their engine division running the company and get with the affordable EV programme.
> Sadly this isn't true.
CO2 emissions from fossil fuels is 38 billion tones in 2023 (https://ourworldindata.org/co2-emissions)
Oceania: ~0.5 billion tones
Aviation: ~1 billion tones
Africa: ~1.5 billion tones
Europe: ~5 billion tones
America: ~7.2 billion tones
Asia: ~22.5 billion tones
This includes the fossil fuels from the whole industry and not only the civil transportation. Europe constitutes ~13% of total (world) emissions.
How much does the fossile fuel car industry contribute to these numbers? I couldn't find that information.
> How much does the fossile fuel car industry contribute to these numbers? I couldn't find that information.
Let's try to deduce this number.
According to https://www.acea.auto/files/ACEA-report-vehicles-in-use-euro... in 2023 there had been ~294M passenger cars registered (on the road) in EU+EFTA+UK (page nr 4).
Roughly around 93% of those ~294M passenger cars are either petrol or diesel, so ~274M (page nr 14).
According to https://www.acea.auto/figure/average-co2-emissions-from-new-... the average CO2/km consumption for new cars is 110g.
Let's correct this figure so that it also includes the older cars so let's assume that the CO2/km consumption is 130g.
Let the average passenger car distance travel be 15k km a year.
274M cars * 15k km * 130g = 5.343×10¹⁴g = 0.5343 billion tonnes.
So, only 10% of total CO2 emissions from Europe and 0.01% of total CO2 emissions in the world?
This seems completely out of line vs https://www.europarl.europa.eu/topics/en/article/20190313STO... of which 60% is cars?
The source you mention is
> according to a report from the European Environment Agency
and I don't know how they got to their numbers. Don't have time to read it right now but do you see a mistake in my calculations? I think I used valid sources?
Shouldn't that be 1% of emissions in the world? Btw, still more practical to address other stuff. Not that EV are a bad idea, but you can't force such change: the EU plans failed, because people don't have often a viable setup to switch to EV, so it should be made more incremental and together with other infrastructural changes.
Yeah, c/p mistake, thanks for noticing. ~1% it is.
> Not that EV are a bad idea
From an engineering point of view, if we were to solve the pollution problem, and if the numbers above are not terribly wrong, then the EVs are not an answer. There is a huge (operating) cost attached to rebuilding the whole industry with apparently a very small impact. And I'd say with a reasonably large negative impact since we see many automotive manufacturers folding under the EV pressure.
> because people don't have often a viable setup to switch to EV
I agree and I would also add that not that many people can afford buying a new car for ~40k EUR. For many people this is inaccessible.
I have a Tesla, and up until Elon did a hitler salute, I was more then willing considering that my next car would be a Tesla too (my main annoyance being that windshield wipers was enabled/disabled on the screen on model 3s).
After the Hitler salute? Nope. No. Absolutely not. I want absolutely nothing to do with anything new that man ever comes up with again. Which hurts, given how much I've loved watching SpaceX launched, and how much I've loved watching Tesla get cooler and cooler.
What are you going to get instead? I think that Chinese EVs are flooding the market but it's absolutely not better to support China than supporting Tesla. Hyundai/Kia - maybe an option, primarily because people don't know that much about South Korea :)
I find it very sad that purchasing a car from a publicly traded company with tens of thousands of employees is somehow interpreted as supporting the politics of the CEO of said company. Life shouldn't be politicised that much
> it's absolutely not better to support China than supporting Tesla
I disagree. Right now, I wouldn't criticise anyone who buys a Chinese EV. But I would put stickers of Musk doing his nazi salute on Teslas I find in the streets.
> Life shouldn't be politicised that much
That's what one says about political topics that don't impact them. Go tell Ukrainians that they should buy Russian products because "life shouldn't be politicised that much".
> But I would put stickers of Musk doing his nazi salute on Teslas I find in the streets.
I know people who were so upset about the other side (in that case, Republican voters) that they said that they (the other side) should be deported from the US. I think this level of mania is too much and it is the real life manifestation of what people do on the Internet. I recommend that you put a sticker on the car when the owner is there, and look them in the eye.
> Go tell Ukrainians that they should buy Russian products because "life shouldn't be politicised that much".
I am likely much-much closer to this problem than you think (personally and physically), and I absolutely think that what's happening in Ukraine and what is happening in the US right now is incomparable.
You know, Ukrainians and Russians still live and work closely in many parts of the world because they can differentiate between Putin and the person who's in front of them. You're not beating Elon with your stickers, just screwing up a day of a random human person who has bought a car they liked.
Yes it is sad, but the stakes are too high to ignore. I don't know where you live but in Europe most people are very disappointed in recent actions by the US. Any decision, from small to large, now should factor in if it benefits Europe or the US. It is a matter of being reciprocal.
Well the US stopped being allies of Europe/Canada, now they are merely partners. And pretty unstable ones. So it seems fair to take it into account.
Ioniq is so fucking amazing. It's also always the top EV seller ex. Tesla.
It's the best parts of Tesla mixed with the best qualities of Korean manufacturing.
Volkswagen's ID5s are also very good since last year. Many of the software woes seems to be fixed.
Drove an ID5 on a trip in France last year, really good car.
> Life shouldn't be politicised that much
Musk is the one politicizing it that much, we're just responding to it. If he shut up and stopped his nonsense, it would quiet back down.
I almost never judge a work by it's creator, but sometimes the creator really goes out of their way to make me ignore that principle. Musk, Kanye, and a handful of others.
At this point I'm wondering what China is doing that is so bad that they're not the vastly better superpower compared to the US.
The ethnic cleansing Uyghur concentration camps are probably the biggest one. Also threatening Taiwan, which is a lovely country I would hate to see destroyed. Besides that the social control the government exerts is pretty frightening to me (I've lived in China).
All that said I still see China as less of a direct threat right now.
Some good points, I was aware of them, but comparing to the current US it doesn't seem as bad.
I just don't know how bad the Uyghur was/is considering the propaganda that both sides would push, with China not letting independant investigators or reporters do anything in and the whole US manufacturing consent media and US government propaganda. Then them calling it a genocide while Palestine is not.
> I find it very sad that purchasing a car from a publicly traded company with tens of thousands of employees is somehow interpreted as supporting the politics of the CEO of said company.
I'm sure there were also good people in IG Farben who just wanted to get through their day during WW2, right?
Nobody would bat an eye if some random shmuck on the Tesla manufacturing floor held some silly ideas, but arguing that the extremely public facing CEO of a company gets a pass because he's just one of many at a large firm is a wrong take, I'm sorry.
The CEO is the company. If the janitor posts a silly youtube video doing a sieg heil, the janitor is in trouble. If the CEO of the company does a nazi salute, the company is in trouble.
Wild to post that second part underneath "don't support China".
>I find it very sad that purchasing a car from a publicly traded company with tens of thousands of employees is somehow interpreted as supporting the politics of the CEO of said company.
But this is the reality, parts of your money go to the CEO salary, and if the sales are good the CEO will get a giant bonus that he can use to buy a president/dictator and convince them to do super insane shit.
There was a news yesterday where twitter AI system prompt had a filter for Trump and Elon, they were caught and they reversed it, IMO that topic should have been a bigger thread here
https://techcrunch.com/2025/02/23/grok-3-appears-to-have-bri...
your money supports this hypocrite that is a free speech absolutists and then silences critics.
I agree.
Obviously it wasn't a Hitler Salute. Are you cross-trolling from reddit, or associated with a competitor EV brand? Both?
The whole point behind any salute is clear communication and intent. It wouldn't make sense to back-pedal a nazi salute.
Americans fought the Nazis and lost 400k young men. If you honestly think a leading American businessman or politician would align with Hitler ideology and try to pump up the crowd using a nazi salute, I would suggest taking a vacation because your judgement is seriously impaired.
What about the 14 US flags posts on X?
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.timesnownews.com/world/us/u...
There is a long string of veiled and plausably deniable nazi references from Musk now.
No the intention wasn't to make a crystal clear nazi salute. The intention was to make a veiled salute, gradually testing the waters and reducing society's defenses. Same as the long string of similar things on X.
And if YOU got half the worlds press to talk about your arm -- would you not issue some clarification or apology where you explicitly rejected nazism?
The motivation isn't to unequivocally support nazists as you assume.
It is to slowly rehabilitate the symbols and remove society's immune system. This year, it is seen by many Musk fans as just about for LOLs and joking around.
But already Bannon did the salute properly and now he is "only the 2nd one". See how Musk cleared the way for Bannon's more explicit salute?
In 2-3 years, people will as a consequence have less knee jerk reactions against the real nazi groups. In 4 years, Trump can openly use the symbol if he so wishes, as it now represents a new movement and not the "old", and so on.
> a veiled salute....reducing society's defenses
Conspiracy alert. Amusing how you'll settle for a half-baked nazi salute in order to hold your argument.
What would be the end game? Self-sabotage every gain they made winning the election? Real nazi salutes are like fingers down a blackboard for the majority of people. They also look different to what he did, and are delivered not with elated gratitude, but with authoritative posture.
Giggling "let's go to Mars" super-nerds are not toying with actual Nazism. His choice of hand motion was clumsy, that's the crime.
> would you not issue some clarification or apology where you explicitly rejected nazism?
Not if I thought those making accusations were "woke morons." Why would Musk play your game of needing to apologise for something he never intended?
Straight from the cancel culture playbook: "He may not be racist, but has anyone actually heard him reject racism?"
Corner someone with accusations until they're forced to make a statement. It's an attempt to legitimise the complaint. Musk is not playing by those rules. As much as that might irritate you, surely you can respect someone for, dare I say it, following his heart.
With this interpretation at least I hope you agree the 14 US flags were intentional?
It can of course be read as "trolling the ones who think he is a nazi".
Problem is that kind of double-signalling and layers of irony is so widespread in white supremacist circles on the internet.
Musk's X/Twitter history has been steadily going in a direction, he wasn't a "going to Mars nerd", he was a "going to Mars nerd whose Twitter history showed someone clearly falling down a political rabbit hole" (and BTW working for someone who pardoned people who assaulted police officers as long as they did it for him -- an act that has nothing to do with left vs right politics or what people vote for, but is easily associated with authoritanism)
Curious what you think of Bannon's hand gesture...
Gonna keep that frog boiling huh.
Whether you or I see a conspiracy or not the nazis out there have got the message. The support for the AFd, for which their leader thanked him publicly, has just accentuated it.
Same salut as Hitler. It’s pretty obvious but also: Musk is not from the USA, and what about the KKK in the USA? You can get that vacation to read a few books.
Last but not least, he back-pedaled because he’s a fucking idiot full of drugs.
It's true that car sales declined a little during the same time, but the sales of EV increased a lot. This is a very poor result for Tesla.
It looks like Tesla is entering the "find out" part of the FAFO equation.
Shareholders could bring back Eberhard as CEO and Tarpenning as Chair of the board. Musk has just 20 percent. He can be kicked out.
The damage he's done to the Tesla brand will take a while to fix, maybe a decade or more until people forget about it. That is, if the damaging stops.
Shareholders like him enough to support an irrationally high price/earnings ratio of (currently) 165 or so — for comparison, "normal" is (from what I understand) 15-20, and BMW's is just under 5.
I won't be surprised if Tesla shares lose 90% of their current price, which is part of why I've sold all my shares and don't even feel too bad about having missed the exact timing of the peak.
Sure, but he will keep owning 20%. People simply don't want to put any more money in his pocket.
This seems unlikely whilst Tesla is basically a memestock for people bullish on Elon Musk.
TSLA would drastically drop if Musk is removed as CEO. TSLA is pure Musk and his promises and connections to Trump.
Would never happen.
Shareholder votes to give Elon $50B in compensation.
The courts threw it out, so they voted again.
And gave it to him again.
They know Tesla’s success hinges on having Musk run it.
Yet members of the board are already selling off shares...
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I don’t imagine this has the slightest concern for people having an absolute blast of a time cutting costs.
If only such people had as much fun taxing wealthy people and companies as they do firing people and making middle class people into people poor.
As I understand it, Musk's stake in Tesla is roughly half his net worth.
And while SpaceX currently has a monopoly on the affordable launch market, my understanding is that's about to go away. I wouldn't like to be SpaceX seeking new government contracts under the next Democratic administration.
> I wouldn't like to be SpaceX seeking new government contracts under the next Democratic administration.
I think the limits of government contracts are why they've diversified into Starlink. Even without political aspects (which Musk may not have planned correctly for), the global mobile broadband market is just bigger than the pot of money governments want to spend on spying and weather forecasts.
What may well mess him up that side is that even if he gets a monopoly in the USA satellite broadband industry, China has no reason to sit back and just allow US dominance over their geopolitical zones of influence, and will fund their own. Even aside from Kessler cascade risks (I have absolutely no idea how far away that really is), the competition risk is real.
They launched Starlink because the opportunity was there and vertical integration gave them better cost structure and speed of execution than putative competitors. Commercial demand for payload space is substantial and growing and lacking in quality competition so they're probably less beholden to govt than many other space contractors
But yeah, vibes are shifting from "well more realistic European launch options would be a nice thing to have but SpaceX's cost/kg and schedule is very good" to "actually it may be necessary for security for governments to back launch competitors and OneWeb"
In France the tax rebate for Tesla purchases is gone since January 1st so that must have had a negative effect on sales.
Yes, they had a 57% drop, so greater than Europe as a whole.
If you look at Tesla sales globally they’ve never been higher.
I think Tesla will survive.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/502208/tesla-quarterly-v...
The link shows data up to and including 2024. The biggest drop in sales in Europe had started in 2025.
Sure, it’s 1 month of 2025.
Maybe best to wait before we mourn or celebrate the death of Tesla?
The drop didn't begin until Elon's salute on Jan 20th, so only the last 1/3 of the month. February is going to show a much larger drop, possibly around 90%. Tesla board members are already selling their stock because they know it's going to crash hard when the February numbers come out.
On top of alienating the target audience, it doesn't help that Musk is going all in associating himself with people who will give up their fuel nozzles when they pry them from their cold dead hands.
Just a reminder: People supporting Elon do not typically post here or on reddit. Do not fall into illusions that DOGE team is loosing support.
see
>Is America tired of Musk and DOGE? Poll shows dwindling support for cost-cutting billionaire https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politic...
Took me a while to find poll results: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/u/0/d/1kdcXmy8B1zajwnb6...
2k respondents is not very representative tbh
Guess it'll depend on how things go. I imagine a lot of people are like the Robert McCabe guy:
>I thought that someone with his business acumen would have come in with a fine-tooth comb and actually found it instead of coming in with a wrecking ball and destroying people’s lives for no reason. https://www.nj.com/politics/2025/02/trump-voter-shocked-to-g...
We are very much shifting away from Tesla/Musk topic.
Here in Europe we've all seen what happens when you inflate the socialistic bubble, especially with government jobs. Greece have not yet fully recovered to this day.
The number of respondents isn't what is important. The important thing is that the people polled are representative, which typically means they are as diverse as the population as a whole. Do you have any reason to think they're not as diverse as the population as a whole?
>Just a reminder: People supporting Elon do not typically post here or on reddit.
There are subreddits where for sure Elon fans are posting, I can see them in the Tesla one, I have no idea where MAGAs and nazis are gathering but I bet Elon fans are tehre too
It is not about subreddits and their count per se, it’s about the fuzz around some topics. Algorithms detect boiling shit very well and apparently today there's no reason for Elon supporters to throw shit on the fan.
I feel somewhat vindicated seeing no pro-Elon comments here anymore (or very few). I've been saying since 2017 that he's crooked and full of sh*t, when he engaged in union-busting while describing himself as a "socialist". Now that he's overtly showing his incompetency, stupidity and rancid ideas to the world, people see him for what he always was. A failed father abandoning his children, a pathetic man cheating at video games to seek attention, a mediocre self-serving neonazi.
It's really surprising to see that in HN.
I personally fucking love rockets and what he did. But for the past years made me hate the man.
My guess is that most people here are center-right wing, or at least a majority of HN isn't left-leaning.
It's surprising he managed to make even that audience hate him
To be clear, I think it's fine to be excited about what SpaceX does. Elon is not the one thinking, designing, building and flying the rockets.
HN is extremely (American) left-leaning. Do you not remember the threads about the murderer of the health insurance CEO? Any thread about US politics? Or just the simple fact every thread about office politics or workplace relations is VERY pro-unionisation, VERY anti-manager. HN highly favours higher taxes, higher minimum wage, trade unionism, work from home, open borders, net zero etc. Of course it is an American leftism rather than European leftism or Commonwealth leftism which have different focuses.
They're probably in the minority here like they are in real life, but there's plenty of right wing extremists, just scroll through any politics trump/musk thread in the past few weeks and about Israel for the past year.
Even the current administrations project 2025 comes from right wing tech extremists (mixed with christian faschists) that believe that tech CEOs should be feudal kings in a broken up America, I don't think any website is closer to this than hackernews.
Working from home isn't leftwing, nor anti-manager, nor is netzero and nor are a lot of your other issues.
That you think they are is the propaganda working on you.
I can believe in the profit motive without thinking that we should ignore science.
Honestly, until very recently, I haven't felt that at all. Just look at the thread on Trump winning the elections. You might be right in that the majority of users may be democrats, but that doesn't mean they are all pro-union, pro-redistribution, etc.
I wouldn't call management-bashing leftist, everyone engages in that, even if right-wingers refuse to go further than individual action.
If you post anything pro-Musk, or even anything questioning people posting deranged conspiracy theories about him without evidence, you just get flagged and downvoted and yelled at.
Why bother engaging? Lefties in America are mad they lost the election and lefties in Europe are mad that Americans are expressing their opinions about European politics. They are angry, and don't want to engage in good faith or have a real conversation. So why bother trying to engage with people that just want to rant.
It is like if your girlfriend comes to you and rants about her day. She doesn't want to debate the issue she is ranting about and if you tried to do so you'd be reading the room very wrong.
Your entire comment, by the way, is inaccurate. He is not incompetent or stupid, obviously. He isn't failing: the EU is putting tariffs on EVs made in China because it can't compete on price. The rest of the stuff is just pathetic. Nazi! REALLY? That is the level of discourse on HN now.
It is so obvious that these threads are brigaded.
The weirdest part about Europeans is they were totally cool with the U.S assisting im sabotaging the NordStream pipeline. They accept U.S imperialism whole heartedly and now that we're withdrawing from running an empire they're mad.
I've seen some weird meltdowns from people who were Ukraine boosters saying they should ally with China. Russia and China are allies though, so this doesn't make much sense. Europe is so ridiculously weak militarily and ideologically opposed to spending money on defense that all they can do is talk. They're just a minor player on the world stage now, like South America or something. At least South America decided war was a bad idea in the 19th century with the war of the Triple Alliance and smartly sat out all the 20th century's wars.
I'm a Mrs Thatcher fan in the UK and I'm angry about Musk supporting the Afd and saluting- and of course calling a hero cave diver a paedophile. I am very angry about his incredible behavior and statements about Ukraine.
I'm from Rhodesia - not far from where Musk was - and my dad was called up to fight the communist guerillas there that you Americans helped to get into power.
I'd be interested to know how do you spin that to make it about "lefties?"
It is sad. Also, because people who do post something that can be construed to be "pro-Musk" on one issue can also post "anti-Musk" statements on other issues.
Apart from the leftists, the pro war lobby is also mad at peace talks. And they have many more organizations like USAID.
"USAID is pro-war", "Russia is pro-peace", "freedom is slavery", etc. It's impressive how you're able to completely disconnect your critical thinking. Fox News, Rogan and X really did a number on you, poor soul.
Musk is one of the largest beneficiaries of the "pro-war lobby", through government contracts. See how well DOGE will go after that, you might be surprised. I won't.
We don't care about Vance expressing his backwards views in public, we care about America allying with fascist Russia against Ukraine and Europe, then claiming insane shit like "Ukraine started the war", then having that slimey Heritage Fundation lackey come and tell us our "freedom of expression is threatened". At this point you're either a complete lunatic or appalled by Trump and his circus, there can't be another way.
Elon Musk is an idiot, he did abandon his child [1], he did do a nazi salute [2], he did have a neonazi background even before that [3], he did cheat at video game for attention [4]. The guy tweets an average of 800 times a week [5], how is he finding the time to work on his companies AND run a governement agency? He doesn't work, that's the answer.
Obviously you won't open these links, you won't change your mind. You won't document yourself on how Elon failed several ventures through his management, how he didn't build his succesful ones, etc. I'm starting to wonder what is would take for the likes of you to reconsider your position at this point. Have the guy yell "BLOOD AND SOIL" during a rally, maybe? Would that even be enough?
[1] https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/elon-musk-...
[2] https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/jan/21/the-gestu...
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Views_of_Elon_Musk#Race_and_wh...
[4] https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/jan/22/elon-musk...
[5] https://techcrunch.com/2025/01/14/elon-musk-tweets-so-much-p...
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