2
0

Elon Musk take a hit of a blunt, Americans freak the fuck out


 invite response                
2018 Sep 7, 2:38pm   6,396 views  40 comments

by MrBark   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Last night, Elon Musk was a guest on the Joe Rogan Experience. He drank whiskey -- and later in the episode, he took one hit of Joe's blunt, didn't even inhale. Predictably, the headlines today are straight out of Reefer Madness. Honestly, living in California, I had no idea the country was still so backwards on the herb.

What's patnet think? CEO gone wild, or a bunch of panties getting bunched up?

Comments 1 - 40 of 40        Search these comments

1   MisterLefty   2018 Sep 7, 2:50pm  

What if it had been a glass of Chardonnay?
2   RWSGFY   2018 Sep 7, 2:57pm  

MisterLefty says
What if it had been a glass of Chardonnay?


He had a glass of whisky at the same interview.

On the pot he said he doesn't really enjoy it and it doesn't do much for him.

The freak-out is because of all the short-sellers drumming up any little thing in an attempt to make the stock dip.
3   Shaman   2018 Sep 7, 3:03pm  

Yah I don’t get the madness engendered by this. Reefer madness seems to be experienced by teetotalers the worst.
4   Goran_K   2018 Sep 7, 3:07pm  

Who flipped out? Some dork? Who cares?
5   Tenpoundbass   2018 Sep 7, 4:00pm  

He's an Angry Toker.
6   EBGuy   2018 Sep 7, 4:35pm  

Rituals are important...www.youtube.com/embed/dO-F3HemD1o
7   MrBark   2018 Sep 7, 4:40pm  

Vapebot. I need this.
8   MAGA   2018 Sep 7, 4:50pm  

I guess they don't require drug testing at Tesla.
9   MisdemeanorRebel   2018 Sep 7, 4:55pm  

Hyperloopin'
10   clambo   2018 Sep 7, 5:06pm  

The fact that Musk may be a pothead is not so significant. The fact that he doesn't care what people think about his manic behavior is.

The difference between weed today and a "glass of Chardonnay" is you won't hallucinate and have an anxiety attack if you drink two glasses of it.

He's in trouble with the SEC over his false claims that he had "funding secured" to take Tesla private.

The stock is a bubble waiting to pop.

The pressure is on him because 1. real car companies are coming after Tesla with their battery cars 2. Tesla cars are losing their $7500 "credit". It's reduced in 2019 by 1/2 later another 1/2 later it goes to $0 .
11   Patrick   2018 Sep 7, 5:34pm  

clambo says
The fact that he doesn't care what people think about his manic behavior


... is why I have some respect for Elon. He's not a prisoner of the SJW churchladies like pretty much everyone else is.
12   RWSGFY   2018 Sep 7, 5:37pm  

clambo says
The fact that Musk may be a pothead is not so significant.


Eh? He specifically stated that he doesn't smoke that stuff regularly because it hurts productivity. Can a person with this kind of view on MJ be legitimately classified as "pothead"? What's next: calling a guy who drinks a six-pack over a weekend an "alcoholic"?
13   Strategist   2018 Sep 7, 6:04pm  

MrBark says
What's patnet think? CEO gone wild, or a bunch of panties getting bunched up?


Did Musk break any law? What's the fuss about?
If you don't like him, that's OK. If you don't like his cars, don't buy them. The rest of us think he is a hero. He is playing the biggest part in cleaning up the world's pollution, destroying the Saudis, and saving us a truck load of money.
I checked ExxonMobil stock a couple of days ago. The S&P was up 73% in the last 5 years, while XOM was down 9% at the same time. Adios pollution.
14   Patrick   2018 Sep 7, 6:23pm  

Strategist says
If you don't like him, that's OK. If you don't like his cars, don't buy them. The rest of us think he is a hero. He is playing the biggest part in cleaning up the world's pollution, destroying the Saudis, and saving us a truck load of money.
I checked ExxonMobil stock a couple of days ago. The S&P was up 73% in the last 5 years, while XOM was down 9% at the same time. Adios pollution.


I agree. He's doing some good things.

Solar is free energy falling from the sky down on every country, needing only to be collected and stored. Beats the fuck out of oil and Islamic terrorism.
15   clambo   2018 Sep 7, 7:13pm  

CEOs are responsible for other people's money and some people's jobs. Musk acts like he's bipolar. There are workers, investors and bond holders he is responsible to.

I wish he would take Tesla private, I just noticed my "International Growth Fund" contains Tesla stock. What the hell? I hope the fund bails out quickly.

It's too bad the CNG (natural gas) cars didn't become popular; we have a gigantic supply, and of course waste can be digested and more of it produced.

All Teslas in the Bay Area are really running on natural gas anyway, Duke Power in Moss Landing burns it to make electricity.
16   MrMagic   2018 Sep 7, 7:37pm  

Patrick says
Solar is free energy falling from the sky down on every country, needing only to be collected and stored. Beats the fuck out of oil and Islamic terrorism.


Any idea how much environmental pollution is created by the production of solar panels and high capacity batteries and how much power it takes to make them?
17   Strategist   2018 Sep 7, 7:40pm  

TrumpingTits says
Strategist says
The rest of us think he is a hero. He is playing the biggest part in cleaning up the world's pollution, destroying the Saudis, and saving us a truck load of money.


Keep drinking that Kool Aid!

I love watching the Musk Fluffers rush to defend this guy despite him being nothing more than a variation of the Wizard of Oz.


Bad mouth Musk and Tesla all you want, you will never stop the snowball he has started. China, India, Europe, half the US, and most of all other countries see clean energy and electric cars as the only way forward. Clean energy to produce electricity and charge cars is much more beneficial to society, a lot cheaper and continuing to get much cheaper, than fossil fuels. The fat lady is singing, and the lazy Arabs are panicking.
18   Strategist   2018 Sep 7, 7:47pm  

clambo says

It's too bad the CNG (natural gas) cars didn't become popular; we have a gigantic supply, and of course waste can be digested and more of it produced.

We have an even greater supply of sun rays, and the fuel is free.

clambo says

All Teslas in the Bay Area are really running on natural gas anyway, Duke Power in Moss Landing burns it to make electricity.

They are only partly running by natural gas. In San Diego County, 44% of the electricity comes from renewables. None from coal, and about 35% from natural gas. Only for for now. The ball is rolling rolling rolling. Adios fossil fuels.
Why do you guys love fossil fuels and pollution, anyway? Does breathing exhaust fumes gives you some kind of a high? Exhaust fumes actually lowers IQ.
19   mell   2018 Sep 7, 7:48pm  

MrMagic says
Patrick says
Solar is free energy falling from the sky down on every country, needing only to be collected and stored. Beats the fuck out of oil and Islamic terrorism.


Any idea how much environmental pollution is created by the production of solar panels and high capacity batteries and how much power it takes to make them?


I think the pollution is significant and there have been studies corroborating that, however if the production is done overseas or in China it will benefit the US and its citizens with cleaner air while polluting the place of manufacturing. So from a standpoint of Nimby-ism it could be regarded as successful.
20   FortWayne   2018 Sep 7, 8:12pm  

They do. And only hire those who don’t pass.

jvolstad says
I guess they don't require drug testing at Tesla.
21   MrMagic   2018 Sep 7, 8:19pm  

clambo says
All Teslas in the Bay Area are really running on natural gas anyway, Duke Power in Moss Landing burns it to make electricity.


Ahhh, just a minor technical correct on where electricity comes from.

Strategist says
In San Diego County, 44% of the electricity comes from renewables.


Even at night?

mell says
I think the pollution is significant and there have been studies corroborating that, however if the production is done overseas or in China it will benefit the US and its citizens with cleaner air while polluting the place of manufacturing. So from a standpoint of Nimby-ism it could be regarded as successful.


Musk is making batteries here in the Gigafactory 1 and solar panels here in Gigafactory 2.
22   Strategist   2018 Sep 7, 8:24pm  

mell says

Any idea how much environmental pollution is created by the production of solar panels and high capacity batteries and how much power it takes to make them?


I think the pollution is significant and there have been studies corroborating that, however if the production is done overseas or in China it will benefit the US and its citizens with cleaner air while polluting the place of manufacturing.


I have heard an argument like this a few years ago that claimed solar panels used more energy to manufacture than the energy it produced over 25 years. It was a good laugh because if it was true:
1. Pollution would increase and they would not bother making them.
2. The cost would be so high, they would never be economical to make. No country in their right minds would promote it.
3. The manufacturing costs of solar panels would not have fallen 80% in the last few years. Did the the cost of energy we always use fall 80%?
----
These are just oil company propaganda designed to slow down or eliminate the competition. It's too silly to even comprehend.
23   mell   2018 Sep 7, 8:29pm  

Strategist says
mell says

Any idea how much environmental pollution is created by the production of solar panels and high capacity batteries and how much power it takes to make them?


I think the pollution is significant and there have been studies corroborating that, however if the production is done overseas or in China it will benefit the US and its citizens with cleaner air while polluting the place of manufacturing.


I have heard an argument like this a few years ago that claimed solar panels used more energy to manufacture than the energy it produced over 25 years. It was a good laugh because if it was true:
1. Pollution would increase and they would not bother making them.
2. The cost would be so high, they would never be economical to make. No country in their right minds would promote it.
3. The manufacturing costs of solar panels would not have fallen 80% in t...


The cost says nothing about the pollution, I am not arguing the economic side. Also wrt solar panels I am unsure, but the batteries cause significant pollution. This is not propaganda. I am not against solar power, but I am not convinced at all so far that a Tesla is overall less polluting than a hybrid or (turbo) diesel that gets 50+ miles per gallon.
24   Strategist   2018 Sep 7, 8:47pm  

mell says
The cost says nothing about the pollution, I am not arguing the economic side. Also wrt solar panels I am unsure, but the batteries cause significant pollution. This is not propaganda.

Lets just use renewable energy to manufacture them. Problem solved.
25   mell   2018 Sep 7, 8:59pm  

Strategist says
mell says
The cost says nothing about the pollution, I am not arguing the economic side. Also wrt solar panels I am unsure, but the batteries cause significant pollution. This is not propaganda.

Lets just use renewable energy to manufacture them. Problem solved.


That's a good step, and for charging them. It's also the materials for the battery themselves and the extraction process for those that cause pollution beyond carbon footprint (which is currently significant). But I don't see why we should legislate this, sure demand efficient cars and make guzzlers progressively more expensive (of course you may harm the poor with this), but energy has always been and should always be a mix. Banning combustion engines is plain stupid IMO.
26   BayArea   2018 Sep 7, 10:03pm  

Good for him.

I have no issue with this whatsoever.
27   RWSGFY   2018 Sep 7, 11:30pm  

TrumpingTits says
DASKAA says
The freak-out is because of all the short-sellers drumming up any little thing in an attempt to make the stock dip.


Wrong. The short sellers are not driving the stock down. It is the collapsing stock that is drawing the short sellers in, instead.


Right. I bet the poor souls who got burned on shorting Volkswagen stock a decade ago wished it was that simple.
28   clambo   2018 Sep 8, 3:31am  

So those who like Musk do so because he is a proponent of solar energy, not because he is an effective CEO and not because Tesla makes any money besides corporate welfare.

At least we all have it straight.

CNG cars (which I like) don't make "smoke" and produce no particulates. CO2 produced is less than from burning gasoline also because of the chemical structure of methane.

CO2 also is not a pollutant despite the baloney from non-scientists like Al Gore (a hash achiever in college)
29   Reality   2018 Sep 8, 5:20am  

IMHO, solar panels have value in giving household energy independence. The mining processes that produce the special mineral material necessary for making batteries and high torque electric motors however are highly polluting. Natural gas, oil and even coal are renewable energy sources too: they are produced by radioactive decay of Uranium and Thorium inside the earth and earth-moon tidal force generating heat and high pressure environment below the earth's crust turning limestone (laid down at ocean floor then subducted into the earth at tectonic plate boundaries) and water into natural gas (CH4, methane); then bacterial action stripping hydrogen atoms (as bacteria's own food/energy source) turn CH4 into C2H6 (ethane) followed by further hydrogen-stripping and elongation of the carbon chain, eventually resulting in chains long than 4-carbon (carbon chain 5-40 in length is petroleum/oil). Eventually bacteria stripping away all hydrogen and leave behind carbon/coal. The real problems with burning coal are particulate/soot/sulpher pollution during combustion, human cost in mining and high transportation cost compared to pipelines.

The real issue I see with Musk is that, his recent actions seem to indicate a man who wants to be fired by the board. Who knows, perhaps getting fired would allow him to sell his shares in a sinking ship?
30   Strategist   2018 Sep 8, 6:37am  

Reality says
IMHO, solar panels have value in giving household energy independence. The mining processes that produce the special mineral material necessary for making batteries and high torque electric motors however are highly polluting.


Mining anything from the earth is polluting. The gasoline engine pollutes while it materials are mined, during the manufacturing process, while being used, and when it reaches the landfill. The crude oil that will be used is even more polluting while being extracted, transported in ships and pipelines, during the refinery process, during the distribution process, and when it's used.
Claiming we should not use batteries and and electric cars because it pollutes while being mined is plain silly when we know the lifetime pollution caused by gasoline engines is overwhelming by any standard.
It's Big Oil propaganda to mislead Joe Sixpack and nothing else. If I was to lose $trillions I would lie to protect it too. I don't see the scientific world buying this nonsense.
31   Strategist   2018 Sep 8, 6:47am  

clambo says
So those who like Musk do so because he is a proponent of solar energy, not because he is an effective CEO and not because Tesla makes any money besides corporate welfare.

At least we all have it straight.


It's irrelevant how good of a CEO Musk is in this context.
It's irrelevant wether Tesla makes money or even ceases to exist.
What is relevant is that fossil fuels are well on it's way to being replaced by a clean, free, and abundant fuel. The benefits to mankind are just immeasurable.
32   tovarichpeter   2018 Sep 8, 8:29am  

Good time to BUY Tesla
33   clambo   2018 Sep 9, 11:01am  

Do not buy Tesla stock.

They 1. don't sell many cars 2. don't make money 3. are in danger from competitors 4. are losing the Federal subsidy of $7500 per car (i.e. soon Tesla price rises by $7500) 5. have bad management 6 upper managers are leaving like rats jumping from a ship
34   Ceffer   2018 Sep 9, 11:28am  

I'm inventing a zero point energy car that will make Tesla obsolete. I just have to find the zero point energy.
35   Strategist   2018 Sep 9, 11:32am  

Ceffer says
I'm inventing a zero point energy car that will make Tesla obsolete. I just have to find the zero point energy.


I think the Cave Men already invented that. They called it a wheel going downhill.
36   RWSGFY   2018 Sep 9, 1:53pm  

No more lag between Model3 order and delivery: cars are available immediately to reservation holders. Still no standard-range trim though.
37   Patrick   2018 Sep 9, 4:48pm  

I expect the oil interests to fight back with a lot of propaganda about how polluting solar cells and batteries are, but solar is not inherently polluting the environment the way oil is.

Note that every green plant on earth is a solar cell. Takes sunlight, makes sugars. Farms are giant solar cells. They even look like solar cells when viewed from an airplane. The only question is how to maximize efficiency while minimizing pollution.
38   RWSGFY   2018 Sep 9, 11:13pm  

Aphroman says
DASKAA says
clambo says
The fact that Musk may be a pothead is not so significant.


Eh? He specifically stated that he doesn't smoke that stuff regularly because it hurts productivity. Can a person with this kind of view on MJ be legitimately classified as "pothead"? What's next: calling a guy who drinks a six-pack over a weekend an "alcoholic"?


Who other than alcoholics drink a six pack of beer over the weekend?


Pretty much everybody except the fucking pothead zombies who's stoned 24x7x365. :-P
39   RWSGFY   2018 Sep 10, 4:03am  

Aphroman says
I’m pretty sure that someone who drinks a six pack every weekend is by definition, an alcoholic. They’re exhibiting dependence of alcohol.


I'm pretty sure that a person capable to not drink any alcohol for 5 days and then consuming only 6 bottles of weak juice over 48 hours will not fit the definition of an alcoholic.

Let's see: "In a medical context, alcoholism is said to exist when two or more of the following conditions are present: a person drinks large amounts over a long time period, has difficulty cutting down, acquiring and drinking alcohol takes up a great deal of time, alcohol is strongly desired, usage results in not fulfilling responsibilities, usage results in social problems, usage results in health problems, usage results in risky situations, withdrawal occurs when stopping, and alcohol tolerance has occurred with use.[1] Risky situations include drinking and driving or having unsafe sex, among other things."

Nope, doesn't fit.
40   WookieMan   2018 Sep 10, 6:46am  

DASKAA says
Aphroman says
I’m pretty sure that someone who drinks a six pack every weekend is by definition, an alcoholic. They’re exhibiting dependence of alcohol.


I'm pretty sure that a person capable to not drink any alcohol for 5 days and then consuming only 6 bottles of weak juice over 48 hours will not fit the definition of an alcoholic.

Let's see: "In a medical context, alcoholism is said to exist when two or more of the following conditions are present: a person drinks large amounts over a long time period, has difficulty cutting down, acquiring and drinking alcohol takes up a great deal of time, alcohol is strongly desired, usage results in not fulfilling responsibilities, usage results in social problems, usage results in health problems, usage results in risky situations, withdrawal occurs when stopping, and alcohol tolerance has occurred with use.[1] Risky situations include drinking and d...


I'd say it's more binge then alcoholic if we're looking to categorize it somehow. Just consuming a lot at one time, but that's it for a while. I know very, very few people who don't consume in this way. And yes 3 beers a day over a weekend is a nothing burger.

Even my buddies that are like 130lbs will throw back 6 beers on a Saturday night over 4-5 hours. A beer an hour on average is pretty minimal if you're hanging out for a while. These guys smoke the reefer while doing this and they seem pretty straight at the end of the night or after a round of golf (no, they don't drive - carpool or cab/uber).

I agree alcohol is not good for you, but throwing down a 6 pack every Saturday night (especially with a light beer) is likely to not have any serious long term consequences. It's the daily usage where you run into health risks. Or massive binges of 10 plus drinks in a short period of time.

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions