A San Franciscan transport advocacy group, Safe Street Rebel, has found a novel way to further its aims.
Share with friends
The group, which by its own account “fight for car-free spaces, transit equity and the end of car dominance”, believes “people, community and park space must be prioritised over polluting, dangerous and murderous vehicles”.
Earlier this week, as part of its “Week of Cone”-campaign, a Tik Tok video posted by the group went viral. In the video, the group encourages its followers, who are opposed to autonomous vehicles (AVs), to start placing the city’s many orange traffic cones on their hoods to disable them.
Over and above being a protest, it is also a way to highlight an important decision by the state regulator on whether to significantly expand robo-taxi services that were due to be made on July 13. This has been delayed until August 10, and Safe Street Rebel believes the delay is a sign of the success of the campaign.
The San Francisco Standard reported that the cones immobilise the autonomous vehicles by forcing them into “shutdown mode” with their hazard lights on, “until the cone is removed, or a company technician comes to reset the car’s system”.
For a substantial amount of time, Google’s Waymo and GM’s Cruise AVs have been causing havoc on the streets of San Francisco, including incidents where the vehicles interfered with emergency response teams and the killing of a dog.
Concerned activists also feel the AVs have become a new form of ubiquitous surveillance to aid the police department.
Toyota South Africa Motors (TSAM) is set to make history with a series of Guinness World Records attempts, bringing Hilux owners together from across the country in a bold, large-scale celebration of the all-new 9th generation Toyota Hilux.
To be named the overall Hyundai Dealer of the Year is not something that simply happens. It is the result of hard work, dedication, looking after your staff and customers, and maintaining a clear focus on your goal. That goal is to be the best.
Chery is intensifying its European expansion by exploring partnerships that would allow the company to utilise existing automotive factories rather than constructing new ones.
BYD and Tesla, two giants of the electric vehicle industry, are navigating diverging challenges. BYD faces mounting competition in China and questions over its pricing strategy, while Tesla grapples with fading incentives and unsold inventory in the United States.
Volvo has commenced on-road testing of heavy trucks powered by hydrogen combustion engines. This pioneering solution places Volvo at the forefront of the industry, with commercial launch planned before 2030.
While rising fuel prices often trigger spikes in interest around electric vehicles, Volvo Car South Africa believes the real reasons South Africans are starting to consider EVs go far beyond the petrol pump.