TheMickey
I carry a 4' section of clothes dryer flex pipe, and when it rains I use duct tape to attach it to my air cleaner and make a snorkle. You haven't lived until you hit 3' of water at 30mph.
Hold my beer bubba!
I am just imagining her last moments thinking:" I am a billionaire and I and dying this way?"
%%In the summer time there are huge down pours. Florida is a tropical state... it has heavy tropical rains all summer long. And the Rains come very fast and heavy...without warning. The roads have high medians and large curbs in the urban city and extended sprawl. The roads are often poorly engineered and there are numerous low points at intersections and stretches of road. The roads are congested and cars are mostly stopped in traffic when the rains pour heavily. The low points can retain up to 2 feet of water. The drainage systems cant handle the huge amount of sudden water.
Not sure how much better I can explain this...you dont seem to have the capacity to understand what I am speaking about. It seems to be beyond your comprehension.




I am just imagining her last moments thinking:" I am a billionaire and I and dying this way?"
Another way to look at it is how many times has that bulletproof glass saved a life? Maybe someone survived a drive by shooting in that car, why wasn't that on the news?
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Because halfwit; that would be a comparative argument. It's like saying hey too bad the guy lost both is legs but our lawnmower has saved thousands in valuable man hours. No one cares about that. This issue is the death of a human being in a terrible circumstance.
When you die it's an "absolute" condition, not comparative. As evolved humans we appreciate that and express condolences.
I was making a joke, but since you brought it up, it's a TSLA, not a Chyrsler. Freshwater is not going to rust the frame of most vehicles lol. (Any more than they would already rust from normal use that is.)Risk = losing car, rusting the frame and all the other metal, possibly getting wet and losing life