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This came across my feed on YT. They got this video through freedoms or information act. In other words they had force the hand of who ever had this video to release it. Why?
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Again this was discussed pages back on this very thread. Memory gone now as well?This came across my feed on YT. They got this video through freedoms or information act. In other words they had force the hand of who ever had this video to release it. Why?
Hello; Had to go thru the freedom of information act for the same reason Gregs is so very quick to try to dismiss the event. Which he did soonest along with throwing a putdown at you.This came across my feed on YT. They got this video through freedoms or information act. In other words they had force the hand of who ever had this video to release it. Why?
Seriously you’re like those really smart guys who knows everything yet knows nothing. It’s not about them going up in flames that I posted this. You shouldn’t have to file a FOIA to get a video of a burning car.Again this was discussed pages back on this very thread. Memory gone now as well?
EV's are LESS likely to burn than ICE cars. You even posted that yourself!
Well what is it about if it isn't about them going up in flames?Seriously you’re like those really smart guys who knows everything yet knows nothing. It’s not about them going up in flames that I posted this. You shouldn’t have to file a FOIA to get a video of a burning car.
Hello; As opposed to you trying to make nothing out of something??? The intensity and difficulty to extinguish of the battery fires is a big deal. Maybe the EV ought to come with a bottle of AFFF foam fire retardant?Well what is it about if it isn't about them going up in flames?
Why would any government agency post videos of burning cars without an FOI request? The video would have been by the fire service wouldn't it? So how do fire service videos get released normally or do they just stick everything on YouTube automatically?
You really are trying to make something out of nothing
But surely an FOI is for a governmental organisation only - not a private company? Certainly in the UK you wouldn't use an FOI request to Ford. Yes to the fire service, but not a companyFrom what I can tell it required FOIA because it was video taken on Ford‘s property without Ford’s permission. In order to preserve provenance over video on their property Ford has to object to any 3rd party distribution of such video or it can be implied that they are willing to release any video taken on their property. In other words, the issue is procedural, not conspiratorial. I’m sure Ford also would just as soon that video ever see the light of day.
So, if you want a fire service video then of course YES you do need to use FOIA.You shouldn’t have to file a FOIA to get a video of a burning car.
Hello; I agree that Ford would just as soon the video never see the light of day. Not hard to understand. A thing is the video in the posted link was from a local news station. Channel four it appears.From what I can tell it required FOIA because it was video taken on Ford‘s property without Ford’s permission. In order to preserve provenance over video on their property Ford has to object to any 3rd party distribution of such video or it can be implied that they are willing to release any video taken on their property. In other words, the issue is procedural, not conspiratorial. I’m sure Ford also would just as soon that video ever see the light of day.
It’s one of our local Detroit stations. I’m very familiar with the station and the reporters involved. We are right in Ford’s backyard. Ford World HQ is literally about a five minute expressway drive from my house. The incident had already been discussed on each local station’s broadcasts for several weeks before the video aired. I assume the lag time between when the fire happened and when the video aired was all legal time in getting the FOIA.Hello; I agree that Ford would just as soon the video never see the light of day. Not hard to understand. A thing is the video in the posted link was from a local news station. Channel four it appears.
After storms, shootings, auto accidents or pretty much anything of interest that happens on or around car lots the video makes the news broadcasts. Does not make your take wrong about being procedural. Not exactly a snafu however. Gotta figure the bad press angle was on the minds of Ford, so make sense they would suppress damaging video.
Not true at all, but then I’ve sawed off on this enough times.Ford along with the other manufactures are being forced to get into the electric vehicle making business.
The idea that people don’t want them runs counter to the fact that Tesla Model Y is now outselling Ford F-Series, Toyota RAV4, Camry and Highlander, Silverado, and Sierra, and other vehicles that usually top the monthly sales charts. Tesla Model 3 is #10 on the sales charts. Not a bad showing for a company that barely existed 10 years ago with a product that “most people don’t want”.Most people do not yet want them so the powers that be are pressing the agendas. The pickups shown on fire have already had the prices raised a lot.
Your memory serves you well for the most part. By the time the video aired Ford had stopped production for 5 weeks, made process and quality improvements at the plant that assembles the batteries, and resumed production.If memory serves production of the trucks was stopped for a time. Makes sense to check to see if change needed to be made in the design of the trucks to prevent such a fire. I hope the fire thing can be fixed.
I’m well aware of your position and it is not an uncommon position. What I have been trying to point out is that many of the reservations you have offered have already been dealt with even though you like to consider them as “someday”. For most (not all) of the issues you identify, someday is today.Not sure when you joined in this ongoing discussion. You may have missed earlier comments from me and others who are critical of the EV agendas. I am not against the concept of an EV vehicle. To each his own sort of attitude. Should the BEV's ever get the problems worked out for a reasonable price I could see having a base type to run errands in.
The push back for me is that the BEV's are not a good replacement for an ICE yet. Not even close.
Objectively speaking, I think Burkey has been very transparent in his reasoning. I think you are actively ignoring his main point and emphasizing his minor point.Still a someday thing. Sorry Burkey, but even one of the more vocal champions on here decided for the ICE recently. That tells the story better than my comments.
I do agree that the ZEV mandates in certain states are a bit over the top as well as rife with loopholes. That’s a whole new discussion. But most of those occurred AFTER major auto makers publicly communicated their shift in strategies from ICE to EV. The automakers have made their shifts because they could see the impact Tesla has had on the market. They see stats like “65% of people who own an EV expect their next purchase to be an EV”. When you take into account that most of those initial buyers purchased their first EV as a second or third vehicle, what the stat really says is that these people were already poised to step up and make an EV their primary vehicle. Tie to that the fact that companies like GM can transition their portfolios to go from approximately two dozen platform architectures down to two architectures, each with one or two derivatives and you can start to understand the automakers’ motivation For the shift in product strategy. Platform architectures drive billion$ of dollars per year to support with engineering and manufacturing investments. Commonizing down to a handful of architectures is a huge savings.Then the real things bothering me are the mandates and other policies making my owning an ICE more expensive than they need to be just to promote an agenda. I can be led with reason but balk at being forced. Especially being forced into an inferior vehicle or energy system.
Before i go. You are a good wordsmith. Unlike the harsh and vulgar Gregs , you make you take on things easy to understand.
)But Ford could have released it with absolutely zero problems.From what I can tell it required FOIA because it was video taken on Ford‘s property without Ford’s permission. In order to preserve provenance over video on their property Ford has to object to any 3rd party distribution of such video or it can be implied that they are willing to release any video taken on their property. In other words, the issue is procedural, not conspiratorial. I’m sure Ford also would just as soon that video ever see the light of day.
Well could they? They would need to get the video from the Police Department to start with. Even a cursory Google reveals it was the Police that took the video.But Ford could have released it with absolutely zero problems.
“We had a fire this is what happened and we are doing everything with in our power to make sure it doesn’t happen again to keep our employees and the public safe.”
It doesn’t look good on Ford that someone had to file a FOIA request to get the video. Conspiracy or not it just doesn’t present itself well to the public.

So you’re telling me that Ford had no cameras on their property. Are you that thick? So you’re telling me that Ford has no cameras that caught this on their property and could have released it on their own. Seriously take a break from the forum sit down and think about the garbage you just posted.Well could they? They would need to get the video from the Police Department to start with. Even a cursory Google reveals it was the Police that took the video.
You clearly haven't read or understood what has been said above have you? The Police WILL NOT give out their video without a FOI request.
Your words:
“We had a fire this is what happened and we are doing everything with in our power to make sure it doesn’t happen again to keep our employees and the public safe.”
That is EXACTLY what Ford did. They investigated the fires, identified the source and recalled the 18 affected vehicles. No conspiracy, nothing hidden. So actually WELL DONE FORD for a thorough investigation and appropriate action.
Ford recalls over a dozen F-150 Lightnings after battery fire, will restart production Monday - The Verge
Even better: The fire incident involving Ford's EV truck happened on Feb. 4, during a pre-delivery quality inspection at its Dearborn, Michigan plant, causing the company to halt production the next day.
This is such a non-story that you are trying to make something big out of![]()