Context
A new analysis by independent automotive blog FuelArc suggests that fire fatalities are 17 times more likely in a Cybertruck than in the infamous Ford Pinto — the posterchild of deadly cars if ever there was one.
Context
A new analysis by independent automotive blog FuelArc suggests that fire fatalities are 17 times more likely in a Cybertruck than in the infamous Ford Pinto — the posterchild of deadly cars if ever there was one.
Yeah its a pre-internet myth I doubt there is much about it easily findable.
It’s funny to see an article describe it as a copy-and-paste urban myth when the article itself is probably accurate but still no thought and no effort copy-and-paste garbage. Even NPR let me down. I know there must be something good (a blog post?) but I don’t feel like fighting with google for dozens and dozens of minutes to maybe find it. Or not.
snopes article from 1999 is p good
(Found from a citation in the section about the myth on the Chevy Nova Wikipedia article)
Thanks. I started to instinctively ignore Snopes but that can be very dumb of me. Even if so many recent articles are garbage - the site is very old and it used to be good.
Lol yeah I wasn’t sure about either it until I saw the publish date, that’s why I specified the year. Not sure when it got bad but anything like pre-2010 seems likely aligned with their original purpose of debunking urban legends, and the older the better
That seems about right. It was bad in the years just before Trump 1.0. I remember trying to use it for r/PoliticalHumor. I wanted a simple quote that said in effect “No - the Nazi party wasn’t socialist. And here’s why…” The Snopes article was ridiculously large. Don’t remember how long it was. ~2,000+ words? I kept scrolling down and down and down. Finally the very last two paragraphs were pretty good so I shared them. Snopes did that for any simple situation. You’d have to scroll and scroll to maybe find anything good.
Then it started to turn to shit pretty quickly after Trump 1.0 started. Fact checking™ became a liberal thought terminating cliché and Snopes had a lot of competition for ad revenue from WaPo, Politifact, etc.