I’m not sure if you understood the comment you responded to…
Considering said Wikipedia entry did not exist 5 years ago, when I mentioned the prior requirements of mine that were met at the time, that wouldn’t have helped me much at the time. Seems pretty convenient for current prospective buyers as of the article’s publishing, 3 years ago.
Regardless, to reiterate, there is no ethical consumption under capitalism, but I’m sure you’ve never consumed a product from a company that’s committed any form of fraud or other unethical act.
Having said all of this, please do not take what I’m saying here as support for Tesla, Elon, or unethical corporate practices in general. There is no way in hell I would buy a Tesla as of now, and I do indeed try to limit my consumption from companies I disagree with on moral and ethical grounds.
Call me ignorant at the time of purchase, if you want, I suppose.
You can say that about literally any company that exists under capitalism.
Nah, for sure, I don’t disagree, I just saw the opportunity for a dumb low effort oneliner, lol.
And you wouldn’t be supporting a Nazi in doing so! I’d support you in your goofy lil EV truck.
That’s assuming a lot. I wanted a car that was fast, electric, had easy charging, good range, and didn’t cost $100,000. 5 years ago, that was a Model 3.
Didn’t give a shit about Musk’s lies, always knew he was full of it and was a typical scumbag CEO; I did not peg him as someone to go full on Nazi mode.
Huh, I didn’t think it was possible to out-ugly the cybertruck
What’s so fascinating to me is that, while the “er” vowel sound is super rare in languages as a whole, it happens to be in the two most widely spoken languages, English and Mandarin.
The spelling of the word, much like any and all words, changes based on how it is used by the people. Standards and definitions follow the usage. It’s not about debate, that’s literally just language. You can already see this reflected in many sources, such as Wikipedia here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_System_of_Units#Unit_names
The English spelling and even names for certain SI units, prefixes and non-SI units depend on the variety of English used. US English uses the spelling deka-, meter, and liter, and International English uses deca-, metre, and litre. The name of the unit whose symbol is t and which is defined by 1 t = 103 kg is ‘metric ton’ in US English and ‘tonne’ in International English.[4]: iii
or here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Litre
The litre (Commonwealth spelling) or liter (American spelling) (SI symbols L and l,[1] other symbol used: ℓ) is a metric unit of volume.
Well, here’s the thing with language, it is whatever people who use the language use. If you can spell litre as liter and it’s widely accepted, welp, liter is a correct and valid form then.
Also, you spell tire as tyre, you lunatics lol
Don’t forget to flush the bathroom
Liter us how it’s spelled in American English. Like centre becoming center, fibre to fiber, etc. Language changes, neither is incorrect.
Eh, checking out the source (Drazen Zigic via Getty Images), he seems legit.
coyotes can smuggle iphones across the border
Aaaaand the US is the new North Korea…
Which is what subsidies are for. Encourage companies to do the things you want, don’t destroy the economy by making everything else impractical lmao. I see what the end goal is, supposedly, it’s just an extremely stupid, naive, or outright malicious way of accomplishing it.
I’m not going to lie, I almost had a stroke writing it…
Affectively, does it realy mater if someone has slite misstakes in there righting?
In Javascript, no less
-1/10 bait