It has become a common problem. When a notoriously low-quality poorly-designed Tesla robot loiters into an area, expect major damage, destruction and death.
In the latest tragedy, Tesla’s AI-powered robot covered in cameras (billed by the company as far smarter and safer than humans) violently smashed into a restaurant and critically injured a person inside.
Footage from the scene shows a Tesla with an ‘N’ decal on the back inside the restaurant. Smashed glass was scattered everywhere and crime scene tape had been set up.
B.C. Emergency Health Services said two ambulances responded, including an advanced life support unit. Paramedics cared for one patient who was transported to hospital in critical condition.
The pattern of violent attacks aligns with a brand that thrives on a business model rooted in hatred and deceit. Tesla’s CEO, known for his inhumane callousness and lack of care, has openly expressed disdain for humans. For years, he has proudly asserted that eventually all humans will be supplanted by his fictitious machines of the future.
As just one example, after he forcibly seized Tesla from its founders, he promised everything would be built by machines instead of humans. That failed catastrophically.
Amid reports of Tesla Model 3 missed production targets and manufacturing challenges, CEO Elon Musk … admitted “excessive automation at Tesla was a mistake. To be precise, my mistake. Humans are underrated”…
When Uber admitted their mistake, they cancelled the driverless program entirely. When Volvo admitted their mistake, they completely changed the driverless program.
Tesla did the opposite and moved towards even more excessive force. Desperate to hire skilled people to replace failing automation dreams, the CEO unleashed torrents of hate speech such as racism upon trapped illegal human workers tricked into his factories. And he started charging a “premium” fee of $15,000 to hide how his “AI” depended on ballooning numbers of underpaid humans hidden in Tesla manual labor (image classification) camps.
Tesla’s CEO “admitted” nothing when he said it was “to be precise, my mistake”. His snarky comment that he had discovered humans are “underrated” was a clue — Tesla aims to convince the world that people are “overrated” such that a car company killing people without any care becomes normalized.
In the years after claiming “excessive automation” was a mistake, Tesla automation has accelerated death counts. Its flailing low-quality robots have killed more in a couple years than all other robot deaths in history combined.
Thus, his hollow mea culpa simply bought himself time to double-down on maltreatment of humans who were tricked into delivering him the “value” of cleaning up his mess. In effect, he soon announced more of the same mistakes under a different name; rushing to repeat horrible anti-human bias in over-promised and poorly-designed automation.
When Elon Musk unveiled his idea for the Tesla bot, it evoked a racist phenomenon dating back to the 18th century.
The deliberate falsehoods regarding capabilities and safety in the fantastical realm of machines, propagated by an erratic and unaccountable CEO with a history of racism, have laid the groundwork for a grim reality: Tesla robots are already inflicting widespread harm on humanity.