Trump / Musk (other than DOGE)

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Elderly Woman Keeps Mind Active Justifying Trump’s Actions — MAGAs on ZZL, take notes!

 
I ultimately don't think this is great for human rights. Hope I'm wrong. Tesla is led by a garbage human with garbage workers' rights and safety record, that lives only due to the patronage of the US citizenry. It also likely significantly exceeds the workers' rights and abuses built into BYD's absurdly low priced vehicles and rapid overtaking of Tesla.
 
I ultimately don't think this is great for human rights. Hope I'm wrong. Tesla is led by a garbage human with garbage workers' rights and safety record, that lives only due to the patronage of the US citizenry. It also likely significantly exceeds the workers' rights and abuses built into BYD's absurdly low priced vehicles and rapid overtaking of Tesla.
Nor do I, but Tesla ceded the space thanks to Musk's mid-life hard-right crisis. Look at this as a metaphor for what is going to happen to the whole globe. BYD is going to fill the vacuum left by Tesla like China is going to fill the void as global leader in soft power left by the US. Both institutions have ceded their advantage thanks to graft and idealogical pandering.
 
I ultimately don't think this is great for human rights. Hope I'm wrong. Tesla is led by a garbage human with garbage workers' rights and safety record, that lives only due to the patronage of the US citizenry. It also likely significantly exceeds the workers' rights and abuses built into BYD's absurdly low priced vehicles and rapid overtaking of Tesla.
I doubt BYDs are assembled with human rights violations. You don't build precision electronics with slave labor.
 
I doubt BYDs are assembled with human rights violations. You don't build precision electronics with slave labor.
Maybe. Is it just a case of the ccp massively subsidizing? BYD vehicles are cheap - real cheap. Also, it wasn’t just a comment on the factory conditions, rather the fast growing influence of China on various markets, which will increase their influence on the world stage. Not to say the US is a beacon of human rights, but we once were pretty good and China isn’t.
 
Maybe. Is it just a case of the ccp massively subsidizing? BYD vehicles are cheap - real cheap. Also, it wasn’t just a comment on the factory conditions, rather the fast growing influence of China on various markets, which will increase their influence on the world stage. Not to say the US is a beacon of human rights, but we once were pretty good and China isn’t.
I don't know enough to have any clue. But I suspect they have automated/streamlined a lot of their production.

My son was just telling me literally today about Tesla's auto structures. He's interning at Hyundai R&D and he went to a presentation about chassis tech. Apparently the main Tesla chassis is super efficient to produce -- something like 1/10 of the cost of an average vehicle -- because it's all cast metal and it is much quicker to fab. It was a short discussion and I can't say anything more about it, but the point is that there are a lot of cost savings out there.

One reason that leadership in tech industries tends to oscillate is the problem of depreciating equipment. When you build a manufacturing facility for $1B this year, you're not building a new one two years from now. So the company gets tied down to a specific method of fabrication. That might not always or even usually be a problem, but in a fast changing field, a new process could be developed in the very near future that dramatically reduces costs -- but the whole facility has to designed around that process.

BYD and pretty much everything in the Chinese EV industrial system is new. American automakers are producing cars out of old plants. The plants are modernized and updated, but there is only so much efficiency that can be squeezed. Ford and GM can't make cast metal chassis without building entirely new plants. At least that's my cursory understanding with some of my own inferences, so take it for what it's worth.
 
I don't know enough to have any clue. But I suspect they have automated/streamlined a lot of their production.

My son was just telling me literally today about Tesla's auto structures. He's interning at Hyundai R&D and he went to a presentation about chassis tech. Apparently the main Tesla chassis is super efficient to produce -- something like 1/10 of the cost of an average vehicle -- because it's all cast metal and it is much quicker to fab. It was a short discussion and I can't say anything more about it, but the point is that there are a lot of cost savings out there.

One reason that leadership in tech industries tends to oscillate is the problem of depreciating equipment. When you build a manufacturing facility for $1B this year, you're not building a new one two years from now. So the company gets tied down to a specific method of fabrication. That might not always or even usually be a problem, but in a fast changing field, a new process could be developed in the very near future that dramatically reduces costs -- but the whole facility has to designed around that process.

BYD and pretty much everything in the Chinese EV industrial system is new. American automakers are producing cars out of old plants. The plants are modernized and updated, but there is only so much efficiency that can be squeezed. Ford and GM can't make cast metal chassis without building entirely new plants. At least that's my cursory understanding with some of my own inferences, so take it for what it's worth.
Interesting. Appreciate the anecdote and insight. I obviously have next to zero knowledge of the industry, much less BYD, so my base assumption is that cars retailing for those price points must be rife with human rights abuses in the manufacturing. Certainly hope your insight is the reality.
 
Interesting. Appreciate the anecdote and insight. I obviously have next to zero knowledge of the industry, much less BYD, so my base assumption is that cars retailing for those price points must be rife with human rights abuses in the manufacturing. Certainly hope your insight is the reality.
I mean, I don't know for sure. Here's how I think about it:

If I was making shoes and I cared for nothing but profits, I'd open a sweatshop and pay very low wages. What would happen? Maybe my low morale, low quality workforce wouldn't stitch the best but I can automate much of that. Worst case scenario, I have to toss out some shoes upon inspection.

If was making autos and I cared for nothing but profits, I wouldn't want a low morale workforce. If they fail to apply enough glue don't fasten everything perfectly, I might not be able to detect it but 15000 miles later I have a warranty claim to deal with. It seems a lot more cost effective -- not to mention competitively useful -- to have at least decently paid workers with skills and some vested interest in doing a good job.
 
You would think DOGE would have sniffed out this government waste.


Elon Musk, the rightwing culture warrior waging a “civilization-saving” battle against the “woke mind virus,” apparently isn’t above taking advantage of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs when it serves his business purposes. Neuralink, the brain implant startup that Musk founded that was recently reported to be valued at $9 billion, characterized itself as a “small disadvantaged business” in a federal filing with the Small Business Administration.


The SBA website notes that Neuralink attested in its filings that it is a “Self-Certified Small Disadvantaged Business.” According to the SBA, businesses can qualify for this designation if the company is “51% or more owned and controlled by one or more disadvantaged persons.” The firm must also “be small, according to SBA’s size standards,” the site states. According to the code of federal regulations, socially disadvantaged people are defined thusly:

…those who have been subjected to racial or ethnic prejudice or cultural bias within American society because of their identities as members of groups and without regard to their individual qualities. The social disadvantage must stem from circumstances beyond their control.
 
Some instructive dialog from The Dead Zone (movie):

  • Roger Stuart: [watching Greg Stillson on TV] Do you believe this guy? He's just getting warmed up. Gonna vote for him, John?
  • Johnny Smith: I'm not even registered.
  • Roger Stuart: You're not registered?
  • Johnny Smith: No.
  • Roger Stuart: Well, get registered, pal, and vote against this turkey. He's dangerous.
  • Greg Stillson: ...my opponent. And I see all around me so many unemployed. What are you people doing here in the middle of the day? Middle of a workday! You're standing out in the cold! Look around. Look at each other. How do you feel about each other? Are you proud of your communities? Would you send the guy next to you to the U.S. Senate? Huh? You can't even trust your own local people. You don't feel good about yourself!
  • Roger Stuart: A real man of the people. Jesus, what an act. Can't they see through this guy?
  • Johnny Smith: I'm mixed up. You both acted like you were friends this morning.
  • Roger Stuart: Guys like Stillson, you got to walk a thin line. You can't get too close, 'cause if they lose, they'll drag you down with 'em. On the other hand, if he wins - and this turkey just might - you got to make sure you're thought of as a good friend.
 

Tesla Awards ‘Good Faith’ Shares to Musk Worth $29 Billion​

The “interim” package announced on Monday was intended to help retain Elon Musk, whose previous pay plan was invalidated by a judge. The car maker’s chief has hinted that he needed a larger stake in the company.

Gift link:
 
gift article


Elon even makes food vaporware:

'In its first hectic days of business, most of the menu items advertised across platforms weren’t available. When I went, there were no salads, no veggie patties, no club sandwiches, no avocado toasts, no beef tallow-fried hash browns, no biscuits, no pies, no cookies, no soft serve, no milkshakes, no “epic bacon.”'

...

'For now, you never know how long it will take to get into the Tesla Diner or, when you do, what may or may not be available. Last week, after a post about the restaurant’s “epic bacon” went viral on X, disparaging the abyss between its artificially glossy image on the touch screen and its actual, grimmer presentation in real life, the bacon disappeared from the menu. What bacon? It was as if it never existed.'
 
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