Tesla Takedown organizers plan 500 protests worldwide in campaign against Musk

Organizers behind the “Tesla Takedown” protests are planning their “biggest day of action” to date with demonstrations at 500 showrooms across the world on March 29, the group said in a " target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">planning call late Wednesday.

Protesters around the world are targeting Elon Musk and his publicly traded EV company in response to his role as a senior adviser to President Donald Trump and his efforts to slash budgets and workforces within the U.S. government.

What began in February with a handful of protests outside Tesla showrooms has since grown into a global wave of demonstrations. Organizers are now urging consumers to sell their Tesla stock and vehicles, aiming to pressure Musk—whose status as the world’s richest man is largely tied to his stake in Tesla—to back off.

“The reason we’re calling for this is simple: It’s because we need people to step up,” New York organizer Alice Hu, who is also the executive director of the climate-focused nonprofit Planet Over Profit, said on the call. “We need to show Elon that he can throw a tantrum online because his stocks are tanking, he can get Trump to put on a humiliating used car show in front of the White House, that these wannabe authoritarians can try to intimidate us from exercising our First Amendment rights, but they can’t stop us from fighting back.”

The group aims to stage protests at all 277 Tesla showrooms across the U.S., and would need 223 protests to take place in other countries to meet its target of 500. Speakers on Wednesday’s call stressed that demonstrations must remain peaceful.

Since Trump took office and Musk was put in charge of the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, Tesla owners and dealerships have seen an increase in vandalism. The Department of Justice on Thursday announced it had charged three individuals with using Molotov cocktails to set fire to Tesla vehicles and charging stations.

“The swarm of violent attacks on Tesla property is nothing short of domestic terrorism,” Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement this week. “We will continue investigations that impose severe consequences on those involved in these attacks, including those operating behind the scenes to coordinate and fund these crimes.”

Lauren Regan, founder of the Civil Liberties Defense Center, said on Wednesday’s Tesla Takedown call that the Trump administration is trying to pick out a few individuals to scare the rest “into submission and apathy,” noting, “During time periods where the government and corporations are attempting to crack down on dissent or crack down on activism, if they believe that that tactic is working for them, if they think that state repression is actually successful in silencing you, then you’re going to see them double down on that tactic,” Regan said. “It’s only going to get more pronounced and more impactful on our movement spaces.”


https://www.fastcompany.com/91302976/tesla-takedown-organizers-are-planning-500-protests-worldwide-in-their-campaign-against-elon-musk?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Vytvořeno 5mo | 21. 3. 2025 11:40:08


Chcete-li přidat komentář, přihlaste se

Ostatní příspěvky v této skupině

This free web timer puts your computer’s Clock app to shame

For something as simple as setting a timer, the built-in apps on our computers can be awfully fiddly.

Usually you have to open a Clock app first, then navigate to a separate tab for time

13. 8. 2025 11:20:08 | Fast company - tech
Is agentic AI more than hype? This company thinks it knows how to find out

Over the past five years, advances in AI models’ data processing and r

13. 8. 2025 11:20:06 | Fast company - tech
How AI can finally fix prior authorization

If you’ve ever been a patient waiting—days, sometimes more than a week—for treatment approval, or a clinician stuck chasing it, you know what prior authorization feels like. Patients sit in limbo,

13. 8. 2025 11:20:04 | Fast company - tech
Perplexity’s bid to buy Chrome is likely more stunt than strategy

The AI search startup Perplexity has tendered an unsolicited offer to

12. 8. 2025 23:40:04 | Fast company - tech
Musk to sue Apple for featuring OpenAI over X, Grok in the App Store’s top apps

Billionaire SpaceX, Tesla and X owner Elon Musk says he plans to sue

12. 8. 2025 19:10:04 | Fast company - tech
Companies explore their own stablecoins under new law, but hurdles remain

Financial companies from Bank of America to Fiserv are preparing to launch their own dollar-backed crypto tokens now that a new U.S. law has established the first-ever rules for

12. 8. 2025 19:10:03 | Fast company - tech