Lol nothing insincere about it, you're just butthurt because you love US propaganda like a good little patriot. If you want to spread that brainrot so badly you can pay for it yourself.
It is absolutely nothing like the invention of the printing press
You're blaming China for shit that is being done by US companies, wrong and stupid and also arguably racist
The car adapter did kick ass, but I never got to use it because looking at anything other than the road while in a moving vehicle would instantly make me nauseous. I do vaguely remember it getting very hot, alarmingly so in retrospect, but I didn't know shit about exploding batteries at 5 years old so I never worried about it.
I can't speak with confidence about the legal situation in other countries, but in the US frivolous lawsuits are routinely punished by having the plaintiff cover the defendant's legal costs plus compensation for their trouble. Avoiding liability in general is still best practice, but there's no significant risk of liability from actions taken by a customer in the dining area, customers are supposed to be there and nobody could reasonably expect the restaurant owner/management to predict and/or control the behavior of all of their customers. The customer would be held responsible for their actions and would be on the hook for any damages.
"they represent a highly complex and dynamic area of tort law. They pose especially complex legal issues"
Like I said, not simple at all. If the business owner wants to reduce liability they should definitely not be serving anything on a scalding hot piece of metal. A customer spilling any amount of non-scalding food onto another customer will absolutely not result in a successful lawsuit, at worst they might have to comp a meal or two. Feel free to try finding even a single example to the contrary, I'm open to being proven wrong.
Nothing in this wiki article proves me wrong, any injury to himself or other customers could just as easily occur without him carrying his own plate and the legal liability sitiation for it would be completely unchanged. And it is absolutely not simple, try actually reading the article you linked.
There is no evidence that he was carrying fajitas or anything else served on a scalding hot piece of metal, you can plainly see a normal plate in his hand. And yeah actually serving food on a scalding hot piece of metal is fundamentally fucking unsafe. There is no evidence he got in any employees way or disrupted any workflow. There is no evidence that he isn't trained, dude could just as easily be a food service employee himself. Quit making shit up and just admit you don't know enough to judge.
A year later and you're still wrong and too far up your own ass to admit it even when confronted with evidence assembled by people more qualified than you'll ever be
Idk what part of "they will make shit up anyway" you're not understanding