For a car that was promised to be safe, the safest on the road even, Tesla sure does kill a lot of people with abrupt high speed veered crashes into trees.
A driver died after a Tesla crashed into a tree in Laguna Hills on Wednesday, authorities said. The Tesla sedan crashed into a tree near 2300 Avenida de la Carlota at around 9:30 a.m., according to the Orange County Sheriff’s Department.
my mother saw this happen, it happened right in front of us. it was all such a blur, but my mother SWEARS he didnt come from avenida de la carlota. he came from the 5SB on ramp which wasnt far from where he landed
I work in a nearby business building and saw the car engulfed in flames—a truly horrific sight. Although I didn’t witness the accident itself, it’s important to remember how other car manufacturers strive to make their vehicles as safe as possible by real measures of safety, and the differences are unmistakable. Nissan and Chevy had virtually no harms while Tesla stands out constantly crashing. Ultimately, it’s Tesla crashes every day on our streets that means they should bear responsibility for mounting evidence of defects in vehicle safely. Avoiding blame for Tesla now seems unfair—because if we followed that logic, other car companies still would be accountable like always, paying their share, while Tesla somehow ignores reality and escapes the law. A car has always been inherently dangerous since the very first one every made; so many design changes have been forced because true risk comes from reckless and unsafe manufacturers, which Ford Pinto proved without a doubt and forever. Instead of Tesla being a horrible regression, constantly shifting blame onto consumers as a rounding error on a death sheet paying out settlements as hush money, the public should force responsibility for the most defective robots in history on our roads.