Cybertruck Officially 17X Less Safe Than Ford Pinto

While Tesla was busy confessing to the California DMV that Autopilot was never real, FuelArc ran the numbers on the Cybertruck’s fire fatality rate against the Ford Pinto — the historic benchmark for corporate greed killing customers.

The Cybertruck is 17 times worse.

SEVENTEEN TIMES WORSE THAN A PINTO

Five fire fatalities in 34,438 vehicles gives the Cybertruck a fatality rate of 14.52 per 100,000 units.

The Ford Pinto, across a decade of production and 3.17 million vehicles, managed 0.85.

The Pinto became a national scandal.

The Cybertruck army of Elon Musk adherents sent a death threat to the journalist who did math.

The NHTSA still hasn’t crash-tested the Cybertruck. Tesla still hasn’t released official delivery numbers. And the company that just admitted its entire “driverless” branding was a lie is simultaneously selling an untested vehicle that burns its occupants at a rate that would have gotten any other manufacturer shut-down and hauled before Congress.

The Pinto at least had the excuse of being a Ford, and cheap.

The Cybertruck, marketed as a “survivalist” design, costs six figures for a barely operational bucket of half-baked bolts that kills faster than the Pinto.

Tesla Confesses to DMV That Autopilot is a Lie, in Order to Keep Selling Deadly Swasticars

Tesla accepted every correction, then sued to erase the record that forced them.

Tesla officially admitted it never had Autopilot. Not on Twitter. Not in SEC filings. In the most boring and quiet way possible: compliance with a California DMV order to stop lying to the public.

On February 17, 2026, the California DMV announced that Tesla had removed “Autopilot” from its marketing and discontinued it as a standalone product in the US and Canada.

This followed a December 2025 ruling by an administrative law judge (ALJ) who found that Tesla’s use of the term was misleading and violated state law. The ALJ called Full Self-Driving a name that is “actually, unambiguously false.”

And water is wet.

The DMV’s own language is unsparing when you see how they officially describe vehicles equipped with those ADAS features:

…could not at the time of those advertisements, and cannot now, operate as autonomous vehicles.

Elon Musk lied. He never, ever corrected the lies, even as hundreds were killed.

Tesla had every opportunity to fight.

They could have contested the findings, challenged the ALJ’s authority, appealed through administrative channels. Instead they quietly complied within the 60-day window, stripped the branding, and restructured their entire ADAS product line around the order. All on the same date.

Their compliance is a HUGE confession.

The Lawsuit That Explains Everything

Four days before the DMV announced Tesla’s compliance, Tesla filed suit in Los Angeles Superior Court to erase the ruling entirely. The company alleges the DMV “wrongfully and baselessly” labeled it a false advertiser.

Tesla’s legal argument is that no California customer was ever actually confused about whether their car could drive itself. This is a company that accepted the marketing was indefensible, made every change the state demanded, then sued to eliminate the official record that forced those changes.

They don’t want the word “Autopilot” anymore, because the ruse is up. They want the finding gone. They want their victims to be at fault.

The reason is straightforward.

Tesla has told investors it has 1.1 million “FSD subscribers” and its entire valuation thesis depends on becoming a robotaxi company. A formal, on-the-record finding of false advertising about self-driving capabilities is a powerful staff of justice handed to every plaintiff’s attorney in the country. The lawsuit is all about liability containment.

The Damage Already Done

The liability is real. A federal judge just upheld a $243 million verdict against Tesla in a fatal Autopilot crash — the first major plaintiff victory in an Autopilot wrongful death case. Tesla had rejected a $60 million settlement before trial.

Since that August 2025 verdict, the company has quietly settled at least four additional crash lawsuits rather than let more juries hear the evidence.

In January 2026, Tesla was sued over a Model X crash that killed an entire family of four when the vehicle allegedly veered into oncoming traffic. A separate class-action involves customers who bought Full Self-Driving expecting their cars to become robotaxis and now want refunds. NHTSA launched a probe in October 2025 into 2.88 million Tesla vehicles after connecting 58 incidents to FSD, including vehicles running red lights and driving into oncoming lanes.

Dozens more cases are working through the courts, because Tesla is a death trap based on lies.

The Defense That Convicts

Tesla’s arguments in the lawsuit deserve attention for what they reveal.

First:

It is impossible to buy a Tesla equipped with either Autopilot or Full Self-Driving Capability without seeing clear and repeated statements that they do not make the vehicle autonomous.

This is an admission that the product names were always misleading enough to require disclaimers, which existed precisely because the branding said something the technology couldn’t deliver.

I’ve written before how this directly contributed to mass death. No marketing would have been far better than the fraud of claiming a capability, and then warning against it. It’s like walking into a room and saying “I’m not going to accuse this person of murder” and then pretending you never said anything people should think.

Second: the DMV had known about the “Autopilot” branding since 2014 and “Full Self-Driving” since 2016, and therefore shouldn’t be able to act now. This is the argument that you’ve been getting away with a crime for so long that your crimes should be legalized. Tesla tried this same defense in 2023. It didn’t work then either.

The ALJ addressed the consumer confusion argument directly in her ruling. The DMV’s authority to regulate vehicle advertising:

…does not depend on evidence that any particular advertising actually has deceived or harmed any person.

The state can act to prevent deceptive advertising. It doesn’t need to wait for a body count, though Tesla has provided one anyway.

Supervised Self-Driving

Tesla’s retreat position is “Full Self-Driving (Supervised)” as an obnoxious oxymoron that exists because they needed language that preserved the FSD brand while denying FSD has any brand value. It’s like selling a life preserver (concrete shoes) and then shrugging at all the drowned victims. Supervised self-driving is driving with a huge marketing budget and propaganda office working round the clock. The parenthetical does the liability shift while the product name does the toxic selling.

Meanwhile, Tesla is building the fraud of a Cybercab (1950s science fiction of no steering wheel and no pedals) on the premise that full autonomy is imminent. The company that just admitted it can’t call its current system “Autopilot” because that overstates its capabilities is simultaneously manufacturing a car that pretends to have no manual controls at all.

This is a contradiction Tesla is betting everyone and especially investors won’t care about.

What Compliance Means

Tesla complied with the DMV order, removed the branding, restructured its product line, and then sued to pretend none of it happened. The sequence tells you everything. The marketing was false. The technology was oversold. People died in cars they were told could drive themselves. The state called it what it was. Tesla accepted the correction and is now trying to shred the receipt.

The ALJ noted in her decision that without the threat of suspension, Tesla offered:

…no reason for the DMV to expect that respondent will alter the Autopilot name, or will act to avoid continuing its misrepresentations to the public.

She is right.

Tesla didn’t stop because it agreed. It stopped because California is its largest EV market and a 30-day sales ban was unacceptable. Compliance was a business decision. The lawsuit is the tell that it was never a moral one.

Autopilot is gone because a judge ruled it was always a lie and Tesla chose market access over defending the claim.

That’s the core admission. Tesla is and has always been fraud. Elon Musk is worthless.

Everything else is lawyering.

Trump Supreme Court Rules He Can Destroy Election Ballots He Dislikes

The Committees of Correspondence existed because the British Crown controlled colonial mail and used it for surveillance. The first thing revolutionaries built was a secure postal network outside royal control. Benjamin Franklin, fired as colonial postmaster for sympathizing with rebels, became the Continental Congress’s first Postmaster General in 1775. The Constitution puts postal authority in Article I, Section 8, alongside coining money and raising armies. The Post Office Act of 1792 criminalized mail tampering and subsidized newspaper delivery so political information reached every citizen. Mail sanctity was the precondition of the republic.

Kings intercept mail.

Kings destroy mail.

That’s what made them kings.

The entire American founding was organized around the principle that a government which controls who receives information and whose voice reaches the public square is a tyranny.

Trump thinks he will be king.

On Tuesday, the Supreme Court sided with his tin-pot crown.

The Ruling

The infamously corrupt Justice Clarence Thomas, writing for a 5-4 majority in USPS v. Konan, held that Americans cannot sue the Postal Service when its employees deliberately steal or destroy their mail.

That’s right, under Trump Americans now have no recourse when their post office targets them and destroys or tampers with their mail.

The case began when Lebene Konan, a landlord in Euless, Texas, alleged that local carriers intentionally refused to deliver mail to her tenants for two years simply because a Black woman leased rooms to white people. She sued under the Federal Tort Claims Act, which waives government immunity for certain lawsuits but bars claims “arising out of the loss, miscarriage, or negligent transmission of letters or postal matter.” The 5th Circuit ruled the obvious: that provision covers accidents. Congress wrote it to shield routine delays from litigation, and ONLY routine delays.

Thomas then performed the kind of linguistic integrity breach that would get a first-year law student failed. He tortured language until it served an authoritarian end.

He swapped in a synonym that changes the meaning, then pretended the synonym was there all along. “Loss” became “deprivation.” And since you can be deprived of something when someone steals it, stolen mail has merely been “lost.”

By this logic, a mugging is merely the involuntary transfer of assets. Slavery is simply waking up one day in chains.

Newspaper Archaeology

The “miscarriage” analysis was bolder. Thomas needed to show that ordinary English speakers use the word to describe intentional withholding of mail. The government’s lawyers found zero examples. So Thomas did his own research and produced two citations: an 1893 article from the Carbondale Leader and a 1911 piece from the Kansas City Star. Two newspaper clippings, twenty years apart, at least thirty years before the FTCA was enacted.

As Sotomayor noted in dissent, if this usage were common, better evidence would exist than century-old small-town journalism the justice dug up himself. The opinion reflects a decision made before the reasoning was assembled.

The Quiet Part

Every Republican-appointed justice signed on except Neil Gorsuch, who joined Sotomayor’s dissent. The ruling arrives eight months before midterm elections in which millions of Americans will vote by mail. USPS processed nearly 100 million mail ballots in 2024. Several states conduct elections entirely by mail.

The FTCA created a deterrent: if a postal worker destroyed your ballot, you could sue. The lawsuit was the mechanism of accountability — it uncovered misconduct, generated public records, and created professional consequences. That deterrent is gone. A court will dismiss the case before any investigation begins.

Trump has installed his own man atop the Postal Service. He controls the Justice Department. The federal agencies that would normally investigate ballot destruction answer to a president who has openly telegraphed his intent to undermine the next election. The Supreme Court just removed the one remaining civil remedy available to individual voters whose ballots are deliberately destroyed.

Thomas Against Thomas

Thomas has previously written about the “risk of fraud” posed by mail voting, specifically citing the danger of “stealing absentee ballots.” He identified the correct threat vector. Then in Konan, he eliminated one of the few legal tools designed to deter exactly that threat.

This is a pattern. The same court that treats hypothetical fraud as grounds for restricting voting rights treats actual fraud — committed by government employees against voters — as immunized activity. The risk is only legible when it justifies making voting harder. When it justifies accountability, it disappears.

Margaret Schaack laid this out in the University of Chicago Law Review last year: a ruling for the government in Konan would deny “direct recourse to potential litigants whose ballots are stolen,” embolden postal workers to interfere with elections, and disincentivize USPS from preventing intentional misconduct.

The court ruled for the government anyway.

The founders built a republic on the principle that mail belongs to the people, and a government that tampers with it is a tyranny.

Mail theft is a federal crime.

The Supreme Court just ruled that when the government commits it, the people have no recourse.

The Crown wins, apparently. The midterms are in November.

Fishing Nets Reverse Russian Drone Kill Zone

The most important detail in the Financial Times’ investigation of Ukraine’s front lines isn’t the kill zone, the fiber-optic drones, or the soldiers trapped for 165 days without rotation. It’s the fishing nets.

French and Swedish fishing nets, suspended over roads, hospitals, and critical infrastructure in Kherson, are intercepting 95% of incoming Russian drones. Up from 80% last May. Not with radar-guided missiles, not with electronic warfare, not with AI-powered counter-drone systems. Nets. The oldest barrier technology in human history is defeating precision-guided munitions at a cost ratio that inverts everything the defense industry has been selling for decades.

Simple Economics as Strategy

An FPV drone costs a few hundred dollars. A fiber-optic variant under $1000. Russia produces them by the million. And soon they’ll be 3D printed by field teams themselves. The standard counter-drone response of jamming, directed energy, and kinetic intercept costs orders of magnitude more per engagement than the drone itself. That’s an attacker’s economy. The defender bleeds money and time faster than the attacker spends it.

Fishing nets flip the ratio back. The cost per meter of industrial netting is trivial. Once installed, it works continuously with zero per-engagement cost. No operator, no ammunition, no power supply. A drone hits the net, tangles, detonates harmlessly or falls. The net gets repaired or replaced for almost nothing. The attacker has to keep spending thousands per attempt against a barrier that costs pennies per interception.

That’s an economic advantage that’s sustainable.

Who Built It First

Kherson has been the laboratory. The city’s population dropped from 250,000 to 60,000 under relentless Russian drone strikes, with over 9,500 attacks on civilians by December 2024. Governor Prokudin responded with what he calls a “drone dome”: layered netting over critical routes and buildings, combined with EW systems, sensors, and civilians trained with shotguns. In some districts the sky is barely visible through the mesh.

The FT describes the same approach spreading across the front. Thousands of kilometers of nets now form tunnels over main highways, stopping suicide FPV drones from diving at vehicles. The Pentagon recently issued guidance recommending nets, barriers, and camouflage as low-cost physical defenses against small drones. Taiwan is building its T-Dome program directly from Kherson’s experience.

Nets Answer the Drone Zone Question

Last November I wrote about Ukraine’s quartermaster problem in Pokrovsk — the 20km death zone where centralized linear logistics had become suicidal under persistent drone interdiction. The FT’s kill zone report confirms that condition now covers the entire front. Two soldiers held position near Orikhiv for 165 days, thirty relief attempts failed, fog saved them. Supplies move by cargo drone and UGV. Troops crawl under thermal cloaks for days.

I compared the problem to Grant’s quartermaster insight: you don’t counter interdiction with better tactics, you build a supply architecture more resilient than the enemy’s ability to disrupt it. Multiple independent routes, pre-positioned caches, expendable logistics with losses built into planning ratios.

Nets are one such logistics architecture. Cover the supply routes with physical barriers, and the kill zone starts to shrink. Vehicles can move under netting. Positions can be resupplied. The 30 failed relief attempts become possible when the approach route is physically shielded. The engineering problem I described, to sustain forces inside a drone-saturated environment, has an inexpensive answer.

Machine Guns and Barbed Wire

The defense establishment keeps comparing drones to the tank of 1916 as if a new offensive capability awaiting doctrinal innovation. That’s backwards. Drones are the machine gun. They destroyed the old paradigm of conventional movement.

The kill zone is no man’s land. And nets are barbed wire’s inversion.

In WWI, barbed wire made from surplus telegraph supplies was cheap passive defense that made the kill zone lethal for attackers. Nets are cheap passive defense that makes the kill zone survivable for defenders. Same principle. Physical barriers that cost almost nothing defeat expensive offensive systems, by working in the opposite direction. Wire aided the machine guns. Nets defeat the drones.

The 40km fiber-optic cables, the dynamic mining, the electronic warfare stalemate — all of that is real and accelerating. But the counter already exists. It’s sitting in declining or dormant fishing ports. Defense spending could revive coastal economies instead of enriching bumbling contractors.

The question is whether militaries will scale it as infrastructure or keep chasing expensive technological and ideological unicorns while soldiers crawl through the mud under thermal blankets.

General Grant would have ordered net production over six months ago.