TechCrunch News 03月29日 05:57
‘Tesla Takedown’ protesters are planning a global day of action on March 29, and things might get ugly
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本文探讨了针对特斯拉及其CEO埃隆·马斯克的抗议活动,以及随之而来的争议。抗议活动组织者计划在全球范围内举行大规模示威,以表达对马斯克在削减政府支出方面的立场的反对。然而,抗议活动与破坏行为之间的界限变得模糊,引发了关于言论自由、政府反应以及对异议的潜在压制的讨论。文章重点关注了政府和执法部门将抗议活动定为犯罪行为的趋势,以及这种做法对和平示威者的影响。文章还分析了马斯克和特朗普政府的回应,以及抗议组织者的策略。

📢 抗议活动升级:全球范围内的“特斯拉抗议”活动计划在特斯拉展厅、经销商和充电站举行,目的是反对埃隆·马斯克在削减政府支出中的作用,但抗议活动与破坏行为的界限变得模糊。

🚨 政府反应:特朗普将针对特斯拉的袭击定为“国内恐怖主义”,并威胁采取行动。美国司法部长承诺起诉幕后协调和资助这些犯罪的人,即使证据表明袭击是由“单独犯罪者”实施的。

🗣️ 言论自由与压制:文章引用专家观点,指出将抗议活动与暴力行为等同起来,可能导致对第一修正案保护下的活动的压制。抗议组织者强调非暴力原则,目标是促使人们出售特斯拉股票。

💰 马斯克的财富与影响力:文章指出,马斯克拥有巨额财富,这使他能够通过推特等平台影响公众舆论,并向政治活动捐款。这种财富和影响力是抗议活动针对的目标。

🛡️ 抗议者的应对:抗议组织者建议参与者将自身安全放在首位,遵守当地规定,并在必要时寻求法律帮助。他们强调抗议活动的非暴力性质,并表示不会被恐吓沉默。

‘Tesla Takedown’ organizers have promised their biggest day of global action this weekend, encouraging thousands to protest outside Tesla showrooms, dealerships, and even charging stations to peacefully object to Elon Musk’s role in slashing government spending

As Tesla protests have spread, so has the backlash. Activists holding up signs are being conflated with masked vandals throwing Molotov cocktails. On social media, and in Washington, the distinction is fading fast. 

President Donald Trump has called attacks on Tesla “domestic terrorism” and threatened to send “terrorist thugs” to prisons in El Salvador. U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi has pledged to prosecute “those operating behind the scenes to coordinate and fund these crimes,” even though evidence suggests the attacks were carried out by “lone offenders.” And Musk’s decision to accuse at least one peaceful protester of “committing crimes” on X has fueled a public discourse that equates protest with vandalism, and vandalism with terrorism. 

If the government or law enforcement starts treating all anti-Tesla actions as criminal, peaceful protesters could find themselves facing consequences meant for extremists. 

“Terrorism is a problematic concept in law enforcement because it is by definition differentiated from other violence by its political nature,” Mike German, a former FBI special agent and fellow at the Brennan Center’s Liberty and National Security Program, told TechCrunch. “That’s why we’ve seen counter terrorism measures so often result in problematic outcomes targeting the civil rights of people engaged in First Amendment-protected activity, rather than the people who are committing acts of violence.”

The Tesla Takedown protesters have consistently preached nonviolence at rallies and on their website. The movement’s stated goal is not to physically harm Tesla or Musk, but rather to encourage people to sell their Teslas, sell their stock, and stop buying new Teslas. 

“The reason that [Musk] is in the position that he is in is because of his wealth, and we feel that if we can continue to drive that Tesla stock price down, we will hit him in the spot that it matters,” Natasha Purdum, a New Jersey-based organizer, told TechCrunch. “Ultimately, we see that as a key to taking down some of the major destruction that is happening in our federal government, courtesy of DOGE and Elon Musk.”

Musk is the world’s richest person in large part due to his Tesla stock. He owns roughly 13% of the company, which today is valued at around $829 billion, making Musk’s share worth around $107.8 billion. That wealth has allowed Musk to spend $44 billion to buy Twitter, the primary platform he uses to communicate to his 219 million followers. Musk has also dipped into his own funds to donate more than $260 million to the America PAC that helped Trump clinch the election. 

As someone who spent 16 years as an FBI special agent focused on domestic terrorism,  German says he wouldn’t be surprised to see local police working hand in glove with terrorism taskforces – like the one the FBI just formed – to monitor Tesla Takedown protests. Per the Attorney General’s Guidelines, the FBI doesn’t require a factual basis for a suspicion of terrorism to begin conducting physical surveillance, which includes taking photos of people, cars, and license plates, deploying informants to infiltrate a group, accessing private databases, and more. 

“It’s also important to understand that law enforcement in the United States is primarily intended to protect the property of the wealthy,” German said. “Corporations in the United States are politically powerful and have access to elected officials and top law enforcement officials. And when their interests are challenged, particularly by protest, they want to present that as a law enforcement issue, rather than as legitimate public concerns about their corporate activities.”

The FBI declined to comment on TechCrunch’s question about whether the agency is taking any special action this weekend.  

Musk and the Trump administration have ramped up their rhetoric in the lead up to March 29, when at least 213 Tesla Takedown protests are scheduled around the world, from Colorado and Kentucky to Germany, Minnesota, France, and Texas. 

On Thursday, Musk appeared on Fox News’s “Special Report” to say that he and Trump are going to “go after…the ones providing the money, the ones pushing the lies and propaganda.”

Trump has suggested that the attacks on Tesla property were coordinated to intimidate Musk, despite internal assessments finding otherwise. Musk has also claimed, without showing proof, that certain Tesla Takedown organizers were funded by ActBlue, a nonprofit that funds progressive causes and Democratic candidates. 

And Bondi has accused Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) of “calling for further insurrection” after Crockett said that Musk needed to be “taken down” at a virtual Tesla Takedown rally last week. Crockett couched that statement with calls for nonviolence and peaceful demonstrations, but regardless, Bondi said she needs to “tread very carefully.”

German says this rhetoric, too, is an old government trick to try to discredit and suppress protest movements by claiming “a handful of acts of violence are the result of the spread of bad ideas, radical ideas.”

Purdum, one of the Tesla organizers, advised protesters to put their wellbeing first. Leave if you feel unsafe, adhere to your local protest regulations, don’t trespass, follow police orders, and have a lawyer’s number in your back pocket just in case, she said.  

“Authoritarian regimes have a long history of equating peaceful protest with violence,” Stephanie Frizzell, a Tesla Takedown organizer from Dallas, said. “The Tesla Takedown movement has always been and will remain nonviolent. Their goal is to intimidate us into silence as we stand against Musk’s destructive actions – but defending free speech is fundamental to democracy. We will not be deterred.”

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