Justice Demands Accountability: Tesla Must Face Consequences for Intentional Defects

In an era where corporate responsibility should be paramount, the recent revelation that Tesla planned to use arbitration agreements to shield itself from lawsuits stemming from intentionally dangerous defects is nothing short of a disgrace. Such actions demonstrate a disturbing willful disregard for public safety, and they should be met with swift and decisive consequences.

Tesla has managed to weasel its way out of a class-action lawsuit over its Full Self-Driving claims because it argued that customers have agreed to take any issue to arbitration in their contracts. The situation around Tesla selling its “Full Self-Driving Capability” (FSD) package before actually having figured out self-driving technology would inevitably lead to legal action. After years of Tesla saying that its self-driving technology was right around the corner and not delivering on it, a group of Tesla owners who paid up to $15,000 for the package finally decided to take Tesla to court in California over the issue last year. The proposed class-action lawsuit was expected to create an important precedent for Tesla and potential consequence for its failure to deliver on its self-driving promises. However, Tesla has managed to avoid the class action altogether by using the controversial tactic of forced arbitration.

When a car manufacturer deliberately conceals or ignores fatal defects in its products, it not only puts the lives of its customers at risk but also betrays the trust placed in any new vehicle on the road. It especially betrays trust in “driverless” when that car manufacturer has been exposed for dangerous fraud. This breach of trust goes beyond mere negligence; it is a calculated decision to prioritize profits over human lives.

Arbitration agreements, in this context, become a convenient tool for these companies to evade the justice system. By compelling customers to sign away their right to sue in court, these manufacturers effectively stifle the public’s ability to hold them accountable for their actions. This is a grave injustice, one that should not be tolerated in any society that values safety and accountability.

Tesla clauses that violate public policy should be thrown out by the courts. For example, if their arbitration agreement required parties to waive a right to bring legal claims that are considered fundamental rights or if it prevents individuals from pursuing certain statutory rights, they should be invalidated. Public policy generally should favor access to the legal system for victims of Tesla, since we’re talking about intentional misconduct or harm.

It is essential to recognize that intentional defects are not accidents; they are premeditated actions that knowingly imperil lives. Tesla allegedly cut corners, ignored safety protocols, and covered up defects to maximize profits, and it would seem obvious they should face consequences commensurate with their actions. Arbitration doesn’t fit the crimes. Mounting evidence has come forward that Tesla created defective cars with the knowledge that it could result in harm or death, which must weigh against enforcing an arbitration clause.

One of the reasons public policy frowns on arbitration is because American companies have been known to grossly corrupt the arbitration process.

…one of the largest arbitration service providers agreed to get out of the business of consumer arbitration. The National Arbitration Forum settled a case brought by the state of Minnesota, which detailed the company’s ties to debt collection firms. …National Arbitration Forum held itself out as neutral and independent and operating like an impartial court system, but it wasn’t impartial at all.

Tesla also could run into “unconscionable” violations that invalidate its arbitration, given the procedural nightmare it cooked into contracts to prevent customers from opting out.

The contract does include the ability for buyers to opt out of the arbitration clause if they send Tesla a letter saying as much within the first month of having bought the car. But the directions for opting out of the arbitration clause are buried in the fine print and most people aren’t aware they have that option.

Other car companies use arbitration less because they don’t use direct contract terms to restrict customer rights like Tesla does. Tesla in fact is known to press arbitration into every aspect of their business, including trying to censor all complaints of sexual harassment and racism.

When Tesla tried to defend and perpetuate racism through arbitration, courts already struck it down based on the concept of a simple public benefit.

Under Civil Code section 3513, parties cannot write a contract which contravenes a law that exists for the public good. Therefore, the court held the FAA does not preempt California law on public injunctions… As a threshold matter, the court found that FEHA authorizes public injunctions: a public injunction under FEHA would benefit the general public, and FEHA’s purpose in prohibiting racial discrimination and harassment inures to the benefit of the public at large. “An injunction against further employment discrimination by Defendant [Tesla] would inure to the benefit of not only current Tesla employees, but to the benefit of their families and their communities, as well as to the benefit of future Tesla applicants and employees.” Therefore, the court concluded, FEHA provides relief in the form of public injunctions against employers such as Tesla, and an aggrieved person has non-waivable standing to seek such an injunction.

In other words an important public concern should be brought to court where it benefits the public good, to prevent vital speech being censored by Tesla. All those being killed by Tesla’s defective designs and gross conspiracy to undermine reporting, given “driverless” has been proven little more than an advanced fee fraud scam, make it more demonstrably harmful to society than even Tesla’s rampant sexism and racism. Since courts already have rejected arbitration in other harmful areas, it only makes sense that courts also deny Tesla’s arbitration and protect the public from manslaughtering “Full Self-Driving”.

Source: Tesladeaths.com

Striking down Tesla, if proven guilty of its many intentional defects, is not only justifiable but necessary to send a strong message that corporate recklessness and fraud will not be tolerated. This would serve as a deterrent for other companies, reminding them that they cannot put mere profits ahead of human safety without facing severe repercussions.

Moreover, regulatory bodies and legislators must step up their efforts to protect consumers from such unscrupulous practices. Stricter regulations, harsh penalties, and increased transparency are essential tools in preventing and addressing intentional defects within the automotive industry.

In conclusion, a car company that intentionally places the lives of its customers in jeopardy and then uses arbitration agreements to avoid accountability should not be allowed to operate with impunity. Justice demands that we hold such companies responsible for their actions and take measures to ensure the safety and well-being of consumers come before corporate profits.

Tesla’s CEO used very specific language in official PR to customers in 2016 that it was “safest car on the road” and that by 2018 customers “do not need to touch the wheel”. A brand new 2018 Model 3 in California immediately revealed a sinister lie that would become a national safety crisis on public roads: without fraud there would be no Tesla. More than 400 people including innocent bystanders have been killed in the expanding scam.

Sweden Pulls Screens Out of Schools to Improve Education

The announcement comes as a result of scientific research showing screens have negative effect on young children.

Swedish Minister for Schools [Liberal politician] Lotta Edholm, who took office 11 months ago as part of a new center-right coalition government, was one of the biggest critics of the all-out embrace of technology.

[…]

The minister announced last month in a statement that the government … plans to go further and to completely end digital learning for children under age 6, the ministry also told The Associated Press.

[…]

“There’s clear scientific evidence that digital tools impair rather than enhance student learning,” Sweden’s Karolinska Institute said in a statement last month on the country’s national digitalization strategy in education.

It’s a strong statement that digital tools impair learning. The liberal politician leading the charge seems to have decades of experience in schools, so this is apparently a long time coming. Even more interesting is that it’s happening under a coalition led by conservatives.

The change makes sense, however, given how writing and reading without screens is proven to sharpen the mind. Screens instead destroy attention span, destroy the sense of satisfaction and motivation that comes from physical work. The impairment can be critical with kids under six, because it’s the optimal time to learn basic skills.

Screens are an integrity disaster. They still are overloaded with saccharin distractions and irrelevant noise, not to mention predatory promotions, rarely if ever designed with the kind of mental clarity found with a pen and blank sheet of lined paper.

The FTC in America even is starting to wake up. Ronald Reagan’s sinister and pernicious deregulation of content targeting children still hasn’t been reversed, but there is a new weak tea report.

The best way to prevent harms stemming from blurred advertising is to not blur advertising,” the agency writes in the report, “Protecting Kids from Stealth Advertising in Digital Media.”

Clearly America is far behind, but maybe if they can get liberal and conservative politicians to form a coalition… haha, who am I kidding. Heavy screen use causes the exact kind of attention deficit that prevents formation of lasting and meaningful coalitions.

CA Tesla Kills One in “Veered” Crash Into Pole

Why would yet another Tesla driver suddenly “veer” into a pole, killing herself?

The crash happened shortly after midnight near the intersection of Pelandale Avenue and Carver Road. Police said the eastbound Tesla Model Y struck a corner lightpole, claiming the life of the driver. The passenger, a man from Fresno, suffered moderate injuries. The Tesla was the only involved vehicle in the collision, police said.

Source: Google Maps

Jasjit Gill of Modesto reportedly was a nurse who worked nearby in Ceres, California and only 33 years old when her Tesla suddenly drove off the road and killed her.

Source: Modesto Fire Department

She fits a pattern of wealthy professional Asian-Americans in California being an increasingly common victim profile of the Tesla scams.

Notable is how Tesla have been suddenly “veering” into very obvious road-side poles (trees included), in stark contradiction to how the company CEO very loudly promoted to potential customers that by 2018 they no longer have to touch their steering wheel.

I’ve written about such basic engineering problems before as evidence of an advance fee fraud. Tesla has been in a careless, negligent pace to the bottom of safety, taking huge payments up front for low or even no quality control, while tragically misrepresenting to customers what a phrase like “pole position” will likely mean for them (death).

CA Tesla Kills Two After Entering Wrong Side of Highway

A Tesla started driving the wrong way on a highway just after midnight and crashed head-on into oncoming traffic, killing two.

Rescuers were able to pull the victim, 22-year-old Placentia resident Jeremy Breen, from his Mitsubishi Lancer, said Officer Javier Navarro, a CHP spokesman. But he was pronounced dead about 25 minutes later, the Riverside County Coroner’s Office said. The other driver, in a Tesla Model 3, could not be rescued, Navarro said. That driver was not publicly identified. Both drivers were traveling alone. Investigators were trying to determine where the Tesla entered the freeway and why it was headed in the wrong direction, Navarro said.

The incident reminds me of Canada, where an official statement condemned Tesla for putting society at risk with poorly engineered low-quality cars operated with predictable disregard for laws.

ICBC released a statement Tuesday afternoon saying that the incident captured on video by a Richmond News reader – which showed a driverless Tesla coasting on the wrong side of the road in Richmond Centre – is not permitted under B.C. laws. …it doesn’t appear as if the owner in question on Monday afternoon read the instructions properly, as the driverless car entered the lot on the complete wrong side of an intersection and continued for at least 50 yards on the wrong side of the road.

There have been many, many examples posted of Tesla choosing the wrong side of a road to drive on. It’s a horrible reality of a company that doesn’t seem to care at all about the extremely high risk they pose to human life.

Here’s a five-year old clarion warning from greentheonly in 2018, where the Tesla “vision” had two sides of a yellow line and chose the obviously wrong side. On a dangerously blind hill, while still thinking it was on the other side (see lower left diagram), the Tesla launches into an oncoming traffic lane.

Source: Streamable

This research was picked up and became more widely known in 2019 by attention-seeking “hackers” who gave a conference presentation on why and how greentheonly was right.

…the Autopilot system will [misread lines, become overconfident and] make an abnormal judgement, which causes the vehicle to enter into the reverse lane

It wasn’t theoretical, however. A conference wasn’t necessary. Wrong-way Tesla were in 2019 news for real risks on real roads.

The CHP said multiple reports came in of the vehicle going the wrong way — eastbound in westbound lanes — on Interstate Highway 80 near Fremont Street at 2:46 a.m.. The suspect, who wasn’t identified, continued the full length of the San Francisco Bay Bridge, through the toll plaza and onto northbound Interstate Highway 880, where a CHP spike strip stopped him around Fifth Avenue in Oakland, police said. The driver is in custody, and the CHP is investigating what prompted the wrong-way driving.

What prompted wrong-way driving? Tesla design failures with culpable negligence seems to be the simple answer.

Sadly by 2021 these warnings still did not stop Tesla from pushing its unsafe cars onto public roads, as documented by the NHTSA.

I tried to turn the wheel to avoid it from going into the wrong lane but the car by itself took control and forced itself into the incorrect lane

Fixed yet? Apparently NOT.

Two more people are dead.