> if you want those fees waived, you’ll have to file a waiver and then wait for it to be approved.
Oh, the horror! Do you know that to get government services, you also have to file a form and wait for it to be approved?
> if you want those fees waived, you’ll have to file a waiver and then wait for it to be approved.
Oh, the horror! Do you know that to get government services, you also have to file a form and wait for it to be approved?
Nice cherry-picking. Your post framed it like Musk was Father Christmas, handing out gifts to needy kids. It’s more like Columbia House [1] for internet access, and targeting hurricane victims to boot.
1. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbia_House
FEMA failed, and Musk stepped in to help.
If people didn't like Musk, nobody made them do business with him.
Complaining that someone would have to fill out a form to get free money is not a compelling argument.
So “help” and “buyer beware” are now synonyms. Got it.
> Complaining that someone would have to fill out a form to get free money is not a compelling argument.
Again, A+ effort on the cherry-picking. I call BS on the expectation that hurricane victims will read the fine print about a $120/month rate increase after they’ve just lost their homes. If Musk’s goal is to “help” hurricane victims, maybe he can offer them something better than a bait-and-switch.